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+Project Gutenberg's Expositions of Holy Scripture, by Alexander Maclaren
+#5 in our series by Alexander Maclaren
+
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
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+
+Title: Expositions of Holy Scripture
+ Isaiah and Jeremiah
+
+Author: Alexander Maclaren
+
+Release Date: May, 2005 [EBook #8069]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on June 11, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Charles Franks, Michelle Shephard
+and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team.
+
+
+
+
+EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE
+
+
+ALEXANDER MACLAREN, D. D., Litt. D.
+
+ISAIAH AND JEREMIAH
+
+
+
+
+EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE
+
+ALEXANDER MACLAREN, D. D., Litt. D.
+
+ISAIAH
+
+_Chaps. I to XLVIII_
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+THE GREAT SUIT: JEHOVAH _versus_ JUDAH (Isaiah i. 1-9; 16-20)
+
+THE STUPIDITY OF GODLESSNESS (Isaiah i. 3)
+
+WHAT SIN DOES TO MEN (Isaiah i. 30-31)
+
+THE PERPETUAL PILLAR OF CLOUD AND FIRE (Isaiah iv. 5)
+
+A PROPHET'S WOES (Isaiah v. 8-30)
+
+VISION AND SERVICE (Isaiah vi. 1-13)
+
+THE EMPTY THRONE FILLED (Isaiah vi. 1)
+
+A SERAPH'S WINGS (Isaiah vi. 2)
+
+THE MAKING OF A PROPHET (Isaiah vi. 5)
+
+SHILOAH AND EUPHRATES (Isaiah viii. 6, 7)
+
+THE KINGDOM AND THE KING (Isaiah ix. 2-7)
+
+LIGHT OR FIRE? (Isaiah x. 17)
+
+THE SUCKER FROM THE FELLED OAK (Isaiah xi. 1-10)
+
+THE WELL-SPRING OF SALVATION (Isaiah xii. 3)
+
+THE HARVEST OF A GODLESS LIFE (Isaiah xvii. 10, 11)
+
+'IN THIS MOUNTAIN' (Isaiah xxv. 6-8)
+
+THE FEAST ON THE SACRIFICE (Isaiah xxv. 6)
+
+THE VEIL OVER ALL NATIONS (Isaiah xxv. 7)
+
+THE SONG OF TWO CITIES (Isaiah xxvi. 1-10)
+
+OUR STRONG CITY (Isaiah xxvi. 1-2)
+
+THE INHABITANT OF THE ROCK (Isaiah xxvi. 3-4)
+
+THE GRASP THAT BRINGS PEACE (Isaiah xxvii. 5)
+
+THE JUDGMENT OF DRUNKARDS AND MOCKERS (Isaiah xxviii. 1-13)
+
+A CROWN OF PRIDE OR A CROWN OF GLORY (Isaiah xxviii 3-5)
+
+MAN'S CROWN AND GOD'S (Isaiah lxii 3)
+
+THE FOUNDATION OF GOD (Isaiah xxviii. 16)
+
+GOD'S STRANGE WORK (Isaiah xxviii. 21)
+
+THE HUSBANDMAN AND HIS OPERATIONS (Isaiah xxviii. 23-29)
+
+'QUIETNESS AND CONFIDENCE' (Isaiah xxx. 15)
+
+GOD'S WAITING AND MAN'S (Isaiah xxx. 18)
+
+THREE PICTURES OF ONE REALITY (Isaiah xxxi. 5)
+
+THE LORD'S FURNACE (Isaiah xxxi. 9)
+
+THE HIDING-PLACE (Isaiah xxxii. 2)
+
+HOW TO DWELL IN THE FIRE OF GOD (Isaiah xxxiii. 14, 15; I John iv. 16)
+
+THE FORTRESS OF THE FAITHFUL (Isaiah xxxiii. 16)
+
+THE RIVERS OF GOD (Isaiah xxxiii. 21)
+
+JUDGE, LAWGIVER, KING (Isaiah xxxiii. 22)
+
+MIRACLES OF HEALING (Isaiah xxxv. 5-6)
+
+MIRAGE OR LAKE (Isaiah xxxv. 6-7)
+
+THE KING'S HIGHWAY (Isaiah xxxv. 8-9)
+
+WHAT LIFE'S JOURNEY MAY BE (Isaiah xxxv. 9-10)
+
+THE TRIUMPH OF FAITH (Isaiah xxxvii 14-21; 33-38)
+
+WHERE TO CARRY TROUBLES (Isaiah xxxvii. 14)
+
+GREAT VOICES FROM HEAVEN (Isaiah xl. 1-10)
+
+O THOU THAT BRINGEST GOOD TIDINGS (Isaiah xl. 9)
+
+'HAVE YE NOT? HAST THOU NOT' (Isaiah xl. 2; 28)
+
+UNFAILING STARS AND FAINTING MEN (Isaiah xl. 26; 29)
+
+THE SECRET OF IMMORTAL YOUTH (Isaiah xl. 30, 31)
+
+CHRIST THE ARRESTER OF INCIPIENT EVIL AND THE NOURISHER OF INCIPIENT
+GOOD (Isaiah xlii. 3, 4)
+
+THE BLIND MAN'S GUIDE (Isaiah xlii. 16)
+
+THY NAME: MY NAME (Isaiah xliii, 1; 7)
+
+JACOB--ISRAEL--JESHURUN (Isaiah xliv. 1, 2)
+
+FEEDING ON ASHES (Isaiah xliv. 20)
+
+WRITING BLOTTED OUT AND MIST MELTED (Isaiah xliv. 22)
+
+HIDDEN AND REVEALED (Isaiah xlv. 15, 19)
+
+A RIGHTEOUSNESS NEAR AND A SWIFT SALVATION (Isaiah xlv. 12, 13)
+
+A RIVER OF PEACE AND WAVES OF RIGHTEOUSNESS (Isaiah xlviii. 18)
+
+
+
+
+THE GREAT SUIT: JEHOVAH _VERSUS_ JUDAH
+
+'The vision of Isaiah the son of Amoz, which he saw concerning Judah and
+Jerusalem, in the days of Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz, and Hezekiah, kings of
+Judah. I Hear, O heavens, and give ear, O earth, for the Lord hath
+spoken: I have nourished and brought up children, and they have rebelled
+against Me. 3. The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib:
+but Israel doth not know, my people doth not consider. 4. Ah sinful
+nation, a people laden with iniquity, a seed of evildoers, children that
+are corrupters: they have forsaken the Lord, they have provoked the Holy
+One of Israel unto anger, they are gone away backward. 5. Why should ye
+be stricken any more? ye will revolt more and more: the whole head is
+sick, and the whole heart faint. 6. From the sole of the foot even unto
+the head there is no soundness in it; but wounds, and bruises, and
+putrifying sores: they have not been closed, neither bound up, neither
+mollified with ointment. 7. Your country is desolate, your cities are
+burned with fire: your land, strangers devour it in your presence, and
+it is desolate, as overthrown by strangers. 8. And the daughter of Zion
+is left as a cottage in a vineyard, as a lodge in a garden of cucumbers,
+as a besieged city. 9. Except the Lord of hosts had left unto us a very
+small remnant, we should have been as Sodom, and we should have been
+like unto Gomorrah.... 16. Wash you, make you clean; put away the evil
+of your doings from before Mine eyes; cease to do evil; 17. Learn to do
+well; seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead
+for the widow. 18. Come now, and let us reason together, saith the Lord:
+though your sins be as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow: though
+they be red like crimson, they shall be as wool. 19. If ye be willing
+and obedient, ye shall eat the good of the land. 20. But if ye refuse
+and rebel, ye shall be devoured with the sword: for the mouth of the
+Lord hath spoken it.'--ISAIAH 1,1-9; 16-20.
+
+
+The first bars of the great overture to Isaiah's great oratorio are here
+sounded. These first chapters give out the themes which run through all
+the rest of his prophecies. Like most introductions, they were probably
+written last, when the prophet collected and arranged his life's
+labours. The text deals with the three great thoughts, the _leit-motifs_
+that are sounded over and over again in the prophet's message.
+
+First comes the great indictment (vs. 2-4). A true prophet's words are
+of universal application, even when they are most specially addressed to
+a particular audience. Just because this indictment was so true of
+Judah, is it true of all men, for it is not concerned with details
+peculiar to a long-past period and state of society, but with the broad
+generalities common to us all. As another great teacher in Old Testament
+times said, 'I will not reprove thee for thy sacrifices or thy
+burnt-offerings, to have been continually before me.' Isaiah has nothing
+to say about ritual or ceremonial omissions, which to him were but
+surface matters after all, but he sets in blazing light the foundation
+facts of Judah's (and every man's) distorted relation to God. And how
+lovingly, as well as sternly, God speaks through him! That divine lament
+which heralds the searching indictment is not unworthy to be the very
+words of the Almighty Lover of all men, sorrowing over His prodigal and
+fugitive sons. Nor is its deep truth less than its tenderness. For is
+not man's sin blackest when seen against the bright background of God's
+fatherly love? True, the fatherhood that Isaiah knew referred to God's
+relation to the nation rather than to the individual, but the great
+truth which is perfectly revealed by the Perfect Son was in part shown
+to the prophet. The east was bright with the unrisen sun, and the tinted
+clouds that hovered above the place of its rising seemed as if yearning
+to open and let him through. Man's neglect of God's benefits puts him
+below the animals that 'know' the hand that feeds and governs them. Some
+men think it a token of superior 'culture' and advanced views to throw
+off allegiance to God. It is a token that they have less intelligence
+than their dog.
+
+There is something very beautiful and pathetic in the fact that Judah is
+not directly addressed, but that verses 2-4 are a divine soliloquy. They
+might rather be called a father's lament than an indictment. The
+forsaken father is, as it were, sadly brooding over his erring child's
+sins, which are his father's sorrows and his own miseries. In verse 4
+the black catalogue of the prodigal's doings begins on the surface with
+what we call 'moral' delinquencies, and then digs deeper to disclose the
+root of these in what we call 'religious' relations perverted. The two
+are inseparably united, for no man who is wrong with God can be right
+with duty or with men. Notice, too, how one word flashes into clearness
+the sad truth of universal experience--that 'iniquity,' however it may
+delude us into fancying that by it we throw off the burden of conscience
+and duty, piles heavier weights on our backs. The doer of iniquity is
+'laden with iniquity.' Notice, too, how the awful entail of evil from
+parents to children is adduced--shall we say as aggravating, or as
+lessening, the guilt of each generation? Isaiah's contemporaries are 'a
+seed of evil-doers,' spring from such, and in their turn are 'children
+that are corrupters.' The fatal bias becomes stronger as it passes down.
+Heredity is a fact, whether you call it original sin or not.
+
+But the bitter fountain of all evil lies in distorted relations to God.
+'They have forsaken the Lord'; that is why they 'do corruptly.' They
+have 'despised the Holy One of Israel'; that is why they are 'laden with
+iniquity.' Alienated hearts separate from Him. To forsake Him is to
+despise Him. To go from Him is to go 'away backward.' Whatever may have
+been our inheritance of evil, we each go further from Him. And this
+fatherly lament over Judah is indeed a wail over every child of man.
+Does it not echo in the 'pearl of parables,' and may we not suppose that
+it suggested that supreme revelation of man's misery and God's love?
+
+After the indictment comes the sentence (vs. 5-8). Perhaps 'sentence' is
+not altogether accurate, for these verses do not so much decree a future
+as describe a present, and the deep tone of pitying wonder sounds
+through them as they tell of the bitter harvest sown by sin. The
+penetrating question, 'Why will ye be still stricken, that ye revolt
+more and more?' brings out the solemn truth that all which men gain by
+rebellion against God is chastisement. The ox that 'kicks against the
+pricks' only makes its own hocks bleed. We aim at some imagined good,
+and we get--blows. No rational answer to that stern 'Why?' is possible.
+Every sin is an act of unreason, essentially an absurdity. The
+consequences of Judah's sin are first darkly drawn under the metaphor of
+a man desperately wounded in some fight, and far away from physicians or
+nurses, and then the metaphor is interpreted by the plain facts of
+hostile invasion, flaming cities, devastated fields. It destroys the
+coherence of the verses to take the gruesome picture of the wounded man
+as a description of men's sins; it is plainly a description of the
+consequences of their sins. In accordance with the Old Testament point
+of view, Isaiah deals with national calamities as the punishment of
+national sins. He does not touch on the far worse results of individual
+sins on individual character. But while we are not to ignore his
+doctrine that nations are individual entities, and that 'righteousness
+exalteth a nation' in our days as well as in his, the Christian form of
+his teaching is that men lay waste their own lives and wound their own
+souls by every sin. The fugitive son comes down to be a swine-herd, and
+cannot get enough even of the swine's food to stay his hunger.
+
+The note of pity sounds very clearly in the pathetic description of the
+deserted 'daughter of Zion.' Jerusalem stands forlorn and defenceless,
+like a frail booth in a vineyard, hastily run up with boughs, and open
+to fierce sunshine or howling winds. Once 'beautiful for situation, the
+joy of the whole earth,... the city of the great King'--and now!
+
+Verse 9 breaks the solemn flow of the divine Voice, but breaks it as it
+desires to be broken. For in it hearts made soft and penitent by the
+Voice, breathe out lowly acknowledgment of widespread sin, and see God's
+mercy in the continuance of 'a very small remnant' of still faithful
+ones. There is a little island not yet submerged by the sea of iniquity,
+and it is to Him, not to themselves, that the 'holy seed' owe their
+being kept from following the multitude to do evil. What a smiting
+comparison for the national pride that is--'as Sodom,' 'like unto
+Gomorrah'!
+
+After the sentence comes pardon. Verses 16 and 17 properly belong to the
+paragraph omitted from the text, and close the stern special word to the
+'rulers' which, in its severe tone, contrasts so strongly with the
+wounded love and grieved pity of the preceding verses. Moral amendment
+is demanded of these high-placed sinners and false guides. It is John
+the Baptist's message in an earlier form, and it clears the way for the
+evangelical message. Repentance and cleansing of life come first.
+
+But these stern requirements, if taken alone, kindle despair. 'Wash you,
+make you clean'--easy to say, plainly necessary, and as plainly
+hopelessly above my reach. If that is all that a prophet has to say to
+me, he may as well say nothing. For what is the use of saying 'Arise and
+walk' to the man who has been lame from his mother's womb? How can a
+foul body be washed clean by filthy hands? Ancient or modern preachers
+of a self-wrought-out morality exhort to impossibilities, and unless
+they follow their preaching of an unattainable ideal as Isaiah followed
+his, they are doomed to waste their words. He cried, 'Make you clean,'
+but he immediately went on to point to One who could make clean, could
+turn scarlet into snowy white, crimson into the lustrous purity of the
+unstained fleeces of sheep in green pastures. The assurance of God's
+forgiveness which deals with guilt, and of God's cleansing which deals
+with inclination and habit, must be the foundation of our cleansing
+ourselves from filthiness of flesh and spirit. The call to repentance
+needs the promise of pardon and divine help to purifying in order to
+become a gospel. And the call to 'repentance toward God, and faith
+toward our Lord Jesus Christ,' is what we all, who are 'laden with
+iniquity,' and have forsaken the Lord, need, if ever we are to cease to
+do evil and learn to do well.
+
+As with one thunder-clap the prophecy closes, pealing forth the eternal
+alternative set before every soul of man. Willing obedience to our
+Father God secures all good, the full satisfaction of our else hungry
+and ravenous desires. To refuse and rebel is to condemn ourselves to
+destruction. And no man can avert that consequence, or break the
+necessary connection between goodness and blessedness, 'for the mouth of
+the Lord hath spoken it,' and what He speaks stands fast for ever and
+ever.
+
+
+
+
+THE STUPIDITY OF GODLESSNESS
+
+'The ox knoweth his owner, and the ass his master's crib: but Israel
+doth not know, My people doth not consider.'--ISAIAH i. 3.
+
+
+This is primarily an indictment against Israel, but it touches us all.
+'Doth not know' _i.e._ has no familiar acquaintance with; 'doth not
+consider,' _i.e._ frivolously ignores, never meditates on.
+
+I. This is a common attitude of mind towards God.
+
+Blank indifference towards Him is far more frequent than conscious
+hostility. Take a hundred men at random as they hurry through the
+streets, and how many of them would have to acknowledge that no thought
+of God had crossed their minds for days or months? So far as they are
+concerned, either in regard to their thoughts or actions, He _is_ 'a
+superfluous hypothesis.' Most men are not conscious of rebellion against
+Him, and to charge them with it does not rouse conscience, but they
+cannot but plead guilty to this indictment, 'God is not in all their
+thoughts.'
+
+II. This attitude is strange and unnatural.
+
+That a man should be able to forget God, and live as if there were no
+such Being, is strange. It is one instance of that awful power of
+ignoring the most important subjects, of which every life affords so
+many and tragic instances. It seems as if we had above us an opium sky
+which rains down soporifics, go that we are fast asleep to all that it
+most concerns us to wake to. But still stranger is it that, having that
+power of attending or not attending to subjects, we should so commonly
+exercise it on _this_ subject. For, as the ox that knows the hand that
+feeds him, and the ass that makes for his 'master's crib' where he is
+sure of fodder and straw, might teach us, the stupidest brute has sense
+enough to recognise who is kind to him, or has authority over him, and
+where he can find what he needs. The godless man descends below the
+animals' level. And to ignore Him is intensely stupid. But it is worse
+than foolish, for
+
+III. This attitude is voluntary and criminal.
+
+Though there is not conscious hostility in it, the root of it is a sub-
+conscious sense of discordance with God and of antagonism between His
+will and the man's When we are quite sure that we love another, and that
+hearts beat in accord and wills go out towards the same things, we do
+not need to make efforts to think of that other, but our minds turn
+towards him or her as to a home, whenever released from the holding-
+back force of necessary occupations. If we love God, and have our will
+set to do His will, our thoughts will fly to Him, 'as doves to their
+windows.'
+
+It is fed by preoccupation of thought with other things. We have but a
+certain limited amount of energy of thought or attention, and if we
+waste it, as much as most of us do, on 'things seen and temporal,' there
+is none left for the unseen realities and the God who is 'eternal,
+invisible.' It is often reinforced by theoretical uncertainty, sometimes
+real, often largely unreal. But after all, the true basis of it is, what
+Paul gives as its cause, 'they did not _like_ to retain God in their
+knowledge.'
+
+The criminality of this indifference! It is heartlessly ungrateful. Dogs
+lick the hand that feeds them; ox and ass in their dull way recognise
+something almost like obligation arising from benefits and care. No
+ingratitude is meaner and baser than that of which we are guilty, if we
+do not requite Him 'in whose hands our breath is, and whose are all our
+ways,' by even one thankful heart-throb or one word shaped out of the
+breath that He gives.
+
+IV. This attitude is fatal.
+
+It separates us from God, and separation from Him is the very definition
+of Death. A God of whom we never think is all the same to us as a God
+who does not exist. Strike God out of a life, and you strike the sun out
+of the system, and wrap all in darkness and weltering chaos. 'This is
+life eternal, to know Thee'; but if 'Israel doth not know,' Israel has
+slain itself.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT SIN DOES TO MEN
+
+'Ye shall be as an oak whose leaf fadeth, and as a garden that hath no
+water. 31. And the strong shall be as tow, and His work as a spark; and
+they shall both burn together, and none shall quench them.'--ISAIAH i.
+30-31.
+
+
+The original reference of these words is to the threatened retribution
+for national idolatry, of which 'oaks' and 'gardens' were both seats.
+The nation was, as it were, dried up and made inflammable; the idol was
+as the 'spark' or the occasion for destruction. But a wider application,
+which comes home to us all, is to the fatal results of sin. These need
+to be very plainly stated, because of the deceitfulness of sin, which
+goes on slaying men by thousands in silence.
+
+ 'That grim wolf with privy paw
+ Daily devours apace.'
+
+I. Sin withers.
+
+We see the picture of a blasted tree in the woods, while all around are
+in full leaf, with tiny leaves half developed and all brown at the
+edges. The prophet draws another picture, that of a garden not
+irrigated, and therefore, in the burning East, given over to barrenness.
+
+Sin makes men fruitless and withered.
+
+It involves separation from God, the source of all fruitfulness (Ps.
+i.).
+
+Think of how many pure desires and innocent susceptibilities die out of
+a sinful soul. Think of how many capacities for good disappear. Think of
+how dry and seared the heart becomes. Think of how conscience is
+stifled.
+
+All sin--any sin--does this.
+
+Not only gross, open transgressions, but any piece of godless living
+will do it.
+
+Whatever a man does against his conscience--neglect of duty, habitual
+unveracity, idleness--in a word, his besetting sin withers him up.
+
+And all the while the evil thing that is drawing his life-blood is
+growing like a poisonous, blotched fungus in a wine-cask.
+
+II. Sin makes men inflammable.
+
+'As tow' or tinder.
+
+A subsidiary reference may be intended to the sinful man as easily
+catching fire at temptation. But the main thought is that sin makes a
+man ready for destruction, 'whose end is to be burned.'
+
+The materials for retribution are laid up in a man's nature by wrong-
+doing. The conspirators store the dynamite in a dark cellar. Conscience
+and memory are charged with explosives.
+
+If tendencies, habits, and desires become tyrannous by long indulgence
+and cannot be indulged, what a fierce fire would rage then!
+
+We have only to suppose a man made to know what is the real moral
+character of his actions, and to be unable to give them up, to have
+hell.
+
+All this is confirmed by occasional glimpses which men get of
+themselves. Our own characters are the true Medusa-head which turns a
+man into stone when he sees it.
+
+What, then, are we really doing by our sins? Piling together fuel for
+burning.
+
+III. Sin burns up.
+
+'Work as a spark.' The evil deeds brought into contact with the doer
+work destruction. That is, if, in a future life or at any time, a man is
+brought face to face with his acts, then retribution begins. We shake
+off the burden of our actions by want of remembrance. But that power of
+ignoring the past may be broken down at any time. Suppose it happens
+that in another world it can no longer be exercised, what then?
+
+Evil deeds are the occasion of the divine retribution. They are 'a
+spark.' It is they who light the pyre, not God. The prophet here
+protests in God's name against the notion that He is to be blamed for
+punishing. Men are their own self-tormentors. The sinful man immolates
+himself. Like Isaac, he carries the wood and lays the pile for his own
+burning.
+
+Christ severs the connection between us and our evil. He restores beauty
+and freshness to the blighted tree, planting it as 'by the river of
+water,' so that it 'bringeth forth its fruit in its season,' and its
+'leaf also doth not wither.'
+
+
+
+
+THE PERPETUAL PILLAR OF CLOUD AND FIRE
+
+'And the Lord will create over the whole habitation of Mount Zion, and
+over her assemblies, a cloud and smoke by day, and the shining of a
+flaming fire by night.'--ISAIAH iv. 5.
+
+
+The pillar of cloud and fire in the Exodus was one: there are to be as
+many pillars as there are 'assemblies' in the new era. Is it straining
+the language too much to find significance in that difference? Instead
+of the formal unity of the Old Covenant, there is a variety which yet is
+a more vital unity. Is there not a hint here of the same lesson that is
+taught by the change of the one golden lamp-stand into the seven, which
+are a better unity because Jesus Christ walks among them?
+
+The heart of this promise, thus cast into the form of ancient
+experiences, but with significant variations, is that of true communion
+with God.
+
+That communion makes those who have it glorious.
+
+That communion supplies unfailing guidance.
+
+A man in close fellowship with God will have wonderful flashes of
+sagacity, even about small practical matters. The gleam of the pillar
+will illumine conscience, and shine on many difficult, dark places. The
+'simplicity' of a saintly soul will often see deeper into puzzling
+contingencies than the vulpine craftiness of the 'prudent.' The darker
+the night, the brighter the guidance.
+
+That communion gives a defence.
+
+The pillar came between Egypt and Israel, and kept the foe off the timid
+crowd of slaves. Whatever forms our enemies take, fellowship with God
+will invest us with a defence as protean as our perils. The same cloud
+is represented in the context as being 'a pavilion for a shadow in the
+heat, and for a refuge and for a covert from storm and from rain.'
+
+
+
+
+A PROPHET'S WOES
+
+'Woe unto them that join house to house, that lay field to field, till
+there be no place, that they may he placed alone in the midst of the
+earth! 9. In mine ears said the Lord of hosts, Of a truth many houses
+shall he desolate, even great and fair, without inhabitant. 10. Yea, ten
+acres of vineyard shall yield one bath, and the seed of an homer shall
+yield an ephah. 11. Woe unto them that rise up early in the morning,
+that they may follow strong drink; that continue until night, till wine
+inflame them! 12. And the harp, and the viol, the tabret, and pipe, and
+wine, are in their feasts: but they regard not the work of the Lord,
+neither consider the operation of His hands. 13. Therefore my people are
+gone into captivity, because they have no knowledge: and their
+honourable men are famished, and their multitude dried up with thirst.
+14. Therefore hell hath enlarged herself, and opened her mouth without
+measure: and their glory and their multitude, and their pomp, and he
+that rejoiceth, shall descend into it. 15. And the mean man shall be
+brought down, and the mighty man shall be humbled, and the eyes of the
+lofty shall be humbled: 16. But the Lord of hosts shall be exalted in
+judgment, and God that is holy shall be sanctified in righteousness. 17.
+Then shall the lambs feed after their manner, and the waste places of
+the fat ones shall strangers eat. 18. Woe unto them that draw iniquity
+with cords of vanity, and sin as it were with a cart rope: 19. That say,
+Let Him make speed, and hasten His work, that we may see it: and let the
+counsel of the Holy One of Israel draw nigh and come, that we may know
+it! 20. Woe unto them that call evil good, and good evil; that put
+darkness for light, and light for darkness; that put bitter for sweet,
+and sweet for bitter! 21. Woe unto them that are wise in their own eyes,
+and prudent in their own sight! 22. Woe unto them that are mighty to
+drink wine, and men of strength to mingle strong drink: 23. Which
+justify the wicked for reward, and take away the righteousness of the
+righteous from him! 24. Therefore as the fire devoureth the stubble, and
+the flame consumeth the chaff, so their root shall be as rottenness, and
+their blossom shall go up as dust: because they have cast away the law
+of the Lord of hosts, and despised the word of the Holy One of Israel.
+25. Therefore is the anger of the Lord kindled against His people, and
+He hath stretched forth His hand against them, and hath smitten them:
+and the hills did tremble, and their carcases were torn in the midst of
+the streets. For all this His anger is not turned away, but His hand is
+stretched out still. 26. And He will lift up an ensign to the nations
+from far, and will hiss unto them from the end of the earth: and,
+behold, they shall come with speed swiftly: 17. None shall be weary nor
+stumble among them; none shall slumber nor sleep; neither shall the
+girdle of their loins be loosed, nor the latchet of their shoes be
+broken: 28. Whose arrows are sharp, and all their bows bent, their
+horses' hoofs shall be counted like flint, and their wheels like a
+whirlwind: 29. Their roaring shall be like a lion, they shall roar like
+young lions: yea, they shall roar, and lay hold of the prey, and shall
+carry it away safe, and none shall deliver it. 30. And in that day they
+shall roar against them like the roaring of the sea: and if one look
+unto the land, behold darkness and sorrow, and the light is darkened in
+the heavens thereof.'--ISAIAH v. 8-30.
+
+
+Drunkenness is, in this text, one of a ring of plague-spots on the body
+politic of Judah. The prophet six times proclaims 'woe' as the
+inevitable end of these; such 'sickness' is 'unto death' unless
+repentance and another course of conduct bring healing. But drunkenness
+appears twice in this grim catalogue, and the longest paragraph of
+denunciation (vv, 11-17) is devoted to it. Its connection with the other
+vices attacked is loose, but it is worth noting that all these have an
+inner kinship, and tend to appear together. They are 'all in a string,'
+and where a community is cursed with one, the others will not be far
+away. They are a knot of serpents intertwined. We touch but slightly on
+the other vices denounced by the prophet's burning words, but we must
+premise the general observation that the same uncompromising plainness
+and boldness in speaking out as to social sins ought to characterise
+Christian teachers to-day. The prophet's office is not extinct in the
+church.
+
+The first plague-spot is the accumulation of wealth in few hands, and
+the selfish withdrawal of its possessors from the life of the community.
+In an agricultural society like that of Judah, that clotting of wealth
+took the shape of 'land-grabbing,' and of evicting the small
+proprietors. We see it in more virulent forms in our great commercial
+centres, where the big men often become big by crushing out the little
+ones, and denude themselves of responsibility to the community in
+proportion as they clothe themselves with wealth. Wherever wealth is
+thus congested, and its obligations ignored by selfish indulgence, the
+seeds are sown which will spring up one day in 'anarchism.' A man need
+not be a prophet to have it whispered in his ear, as Isaiah had, that
+the end of selfish capitalism is a convulsion in which 'many houses
+shall be desolate,' and many fields barren. England needs the warning as
+much as Isaiah's Judah did.
+
+Such selfish wealth leads, among other curses, to indolence and
+drunkenness, as the next woe shows. The people described make drinking
+the business of their lives, beginning early and sitting late. They have
+a varnish of art over their swinishness, and must have music as well as
+wine. So, in many a drink-shop in England, a piano or a band adds to the
+attractions, and gives a false air of aestheticism to pure animalism.
+Isaiah feels the incongruity that music should be so prostituted, and
+expresses it by adding to his list of musical instruments 'and wine' as
+if he would underscore the degradation of the great art to be the
+cupbearer of sots. Such revellers are blind to the manifest tokens of
+God's working, and the 'operation of His hands' excites only the tipsy
+gaze which sees nothing. That is one of the curses which dog the
+drunkard-that he takes no warning from the plain results of his vice as
+seen in others. He knows that it means shattered health, ruined
+prospects, broken hearts, but nothing rouses him from his fancy of
+impunity. High, serious thoughts of God and His government of the world
+and of each life are strange to him. His sin compels him to be godless,
+if he is not to go mad. But sometimes he wakes to a moment's sight of
+realities, and then he is miserable till his next bout buys fatal
+forgetfulness.
+
+The prophet forces the end of a drunken nation on the unwilling
+attention of the roisterers, in verses 13-17, which throb with vehemence
+of warning and gloomy eloquence. What can such a people come to but
+destruction? Knowledge must languish, hunger and thirst must follow.
+Like some monster's gaping mouth, the pit yawns for them; and, drawn as
+by irresistible attraction, the pomp and the wicked, senseless jollity
+elide down into it. In the universal catastrophe, one thing alone stands
+upright, and is lifted higher, because all else has sunk so far,-the
+righteous judgment of the forgotten God. The grim picture is as true for
+individuals and their deaths as for a nation and its decay. And modern
+nations cannot afford to have this ulcer of drunkenness draining away
+their strength any more than Judah could. 'By the soul only are the
+nations great and free,' and a people can be neither where the drink
+fiend has his way.
+
+Three woes follow which are closely connected. That pronounced on daring
+evil-doers, who not only let sin draw them to itself, but go more than
+halfway to meet it, needing no temptation, but drawing it to them
+eagerly, and scoffing at the merciful warnings of fatal consequences,
+comes first. Next is a woe on those who play fast and loose with plain
+morality, sophisticating conscience, and sapping the foundations of law.
+Such juggling follows sensual indulgence such as drunkenness, when it
+becomes habitual and audacious, as in the preceding woe. Loose or
+perverted codes of morality generally spring from bad living, seeking to
+shelter itself. Vicious principles are an afterthought to screen vicious
+practices. The last subject of the triple woes is self-conceit and
+pretence to superior illumination. Such very superior persons are
+emancipated from the rules which bind the common herd. They are so very
+clever that they have far outgrown the creeping moralities, which may do
+for old women and children. Do we not know the sort of people? Have we
+none of them surviving to-day?
+
+Then Isaiah comes back to his theme of drunkenness, but in a new
+connection. It poisons the fountain of justice. There is a world of
+indignant contempt in the prophet's scathing picture of those who are
+'mighty' and 'men of strength,'-but how is their strength shown? They
+can stand any quantity of wine, and can 'mix their drinks,' and yet look
+sober! What a noble use to put a good constitution to! These valiant
+topers are in authority as judges, and they sell their judgments to get
+money for their debauches. We do not see much of such scandals among us,
+but yet we have heard of leagues between liquor-sellers and municipal
+authorities, which certainly do _not_ 'make for righteousness.' When
+shall we learn and practise the lesson that Isaiah was reading his
+countrymen,--that it is fatal to a nation when the private character of
+public men is regarded as of no account in political and civic life? The
+prophet had no doubt as to what must be the end of a state of things in
+which the very courts of law were honeycombed with corruption, and
+demoralised by the power of drink. His tremendous image of a fierce fire
+raging across a dry prairie, and burning the grass to its very roots,
+while the air is stifling with the thick 'dust' of the conflagration,
+proclaims the sure fate, sooner or later, of every community and
+individual that 'rejects the law of the Lord of Hosts, and despises the
+word of the Holy One of Israel.' Change the name, and the tale is told
+of us; for it is 'righteousness that exalteth a nation,' and no single
+vice drags after it more infallibly such a multitude of attendant demons
+as the vice of drunkenness, which is a crying sin of England to-day.
+
+
+
+
+VISION AND SERVICE
+
+'In the year that king Uzziah died I saw also the Lord sitting upon a
+throne, high and lifted up, and His train filled the temple. 2. Above it
+stood the seraphims: each one had six wings; with twain he covered his
+face, and with twain he covered his feet, and with twain he did fly. 3.
+And one cried unto another, and said, Holy, holy, holy, is the Lord of
+Hosts: the whole earth is full of His glory. 4. And the posts of the
+door moved at the voice of him that cried, and the house was filled with
+smoke. 5. Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of
+unclean lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for
+mine eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts. 6. Then flew one of the
+seraphims onto me, having a live coal in his hand, which he had taken
+with the tongs from off the altar: 7. And he laid it upon my mouth, and
+said, Lo, this hath touched thy lips; and thine iniquity is taken away,
+and thy sin purged. 8. Also I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, Whom
+shall I send, and who will go for us? Then said I, Here am I; send me.
+9. And he said, Go, and tell this people, Hear ye indeed, but understand
+not; and see ye indeed, but perceive not. 10. Make the heart of this
+people fat, and make their ears heavy, and shut their eyes; lest they
+see with their eyes, and hear with their ears, and understand with their
+heart, and convert, and be healed. 11. Then said I, Lord, how long? And
+he answered, Until the cities be wasted without inhabitant, and the
+houses without man, and the land be utterly desolate, 12. And the Lord
+have removed men far away, and there be a great forsaking in the midst
+of the land. 13. But yet in it shall be a tenth, and it shall return,
+and shall be eaten: as a tell tree, and as an oak, whose substance is in
+them, when they cast their leaves: so the holy seed shall be the
+substance thereof.'--ISAIAH vi. 1-13.
+
+
+WE may deal with this text as falling into three parts: the vision, its
+effect on the prophet, and his commission.
+
+I. The Vision.--'In the year that King Uzziah died' is more than a date
+for chronological accuracy. It tells not only when, but why, the vision
+was given. The throne of David was empty.
+
+God never empties places in our homes and hearts, or in the nation or
+the Church, without being ready to fill them. He sometimes empties them
+that He may fill them. Sorrow and loss are meant to prepare us for the
+vision of God, and their effect should be to purge the inward eye, that
+it may see Him. When the leaves drop from the forest trees we can see
+the blue sky which their dense abundance hid. Well for us if the passing
+of all that can pass drives us to Him who cannot pass, if the unchanging
+God stands out more clear, more near, more dear, because of change.
+
+As to the substance of this vision, we need not discuss whether, if we
+had been there, we should have seen anything. It was doubtless related
+to Isaiah's thoughts, for God does not send visions which have no point
+of contact in the recipient. However communicated, it was a divine
+communication, and a temporary unveiling of an eternal reality. The form
+was transient, but Isaiah then saw for a moment 'the things which are'
+and always are.
+
+The essential point of the vision is the revelation of Jehovah as king
+of Judah. That relation guaranteed defence and demanded obedience. It
+was a sure basis of hope, but also a stringent motive to loyalty, and it
+had its side of terror as well as of joyfulness. 'You only have I known
+of all the families of the earth: therefore I will punish you for all
+your iniquities.' The place of vision is the heavenly sanctuary of which
+the temple was a prophecy. Eminently significant and characteristic of
+the whole genius of the Old Testament is the absence of any description
+of the divine appearance. The prophet saw things 'which it is not lawful
+for a man to utter,' and his silence is not only reverent, but more
+eloquent than any attempt to put the Ineffable into words. Even in this
+act of manifestation God was veiled, and '_there_ was the hiding of His
+power.' The train of His robe can be spoken of, but not the form which
+it concealed even in revealing it. Nature is the robe of God. It hides
+while it discloses, and discloses while it hides.
+
+The hovering seraphim were in the attitude of service. They are probably
+represented as fiery forms, but are spoken of nowhere else in Scripture.
+The significance of their attitude has been well given by Jewish
+commentators, who say, 'with two he covered his face that he might not
+see, and with two he covered his body that he might not be seen' and we
+may add, 'with two he stood ready for service, by flight whithersoever
+the King would send.' Such awe-stricken reverence, such humble hiding of
+self, such alacrity for swift obedience, such flaming ardours of love
+and devotion, should be ours. Their song celebrated the holiness and the
+glory of Jehovah of hosts. We must ever remember that the root-meaning
+of 'holiness' is separation, and that the popular meaning of moral
+purity is secondary and derivative. What is rapturously sung in the
+threefold invocation of the seraphs is the infinite exaltation of
+Jehovah above all creatural conditions, limitations, and, we may add,
+conceptions. That separation, of course, includes purity, as may be seen
+from the immediate effect of the vision on the prophet, but the
+conception is much wider than that. Very beautifully does the second
+line of the song re-knit the connection between Jehovah and this world,
+so far beneath Him, which the burst of praise of His holiness seems to
+sever. The high heaven is a bending arch; its inaccessible heights ray
+down sunshine and drop down rain, and, as in the physical world, every
+plant grows by Heaven's gift, so in the world of humanity all wisdom,
+goodness, and joy are from the Father of lights. God's 'glory' is the
+flashing lustre of His manifested holiness, which fills the earth as the
+train of the robe filled the temple. The vibrations of that mighty hymn
+shook the 'foundations of the threshold' (Rev. Ver.) with its thunderous
+harmonies. 'The house was filled with smoke' which, since it was an
+effect of the seraph's praise, is best explained as referring to the
+fragrant smoke of incense which, as we know, symbolised 'the prayers of
+saints.'
+
+II. The effect of the vision on the prophet.--The vision kindled as with
+a flash Isaiah's consciousness of sin. He expressed it in regard to his
+words rather than his works, partly because in one aspect speech is even
+more accurately than act a cast, as it were, of character, and partly
+because he could not but feel the difference between the mighty music
+that burst from these pure and burning lips and the words that flowed
+from and soiled his own. Not only the consciousness of sin, but the
+dread of personal evil consequences from the vision of the holy God,
+oppressed his heart. We see ourselves when we see God. Once flash on a
+heart the thought of God's holiness, and, like an electric search-
+light, it discloses flaws which pass unnoticed in dimmer light. The
+easy-going Christianity, which is the apology for religion with so many
+of us, has no deep sense of sin, because it has no clear vision of God.
+'I have heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear; but now mine eye seeth
+Thee: wherefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes.'
+
+The next stage in Isaiah's experience is that sin recognised and
+confessed is burned away. Cleansing rather than forgiveness is here
+emphasised. The latter is, of course, included, but the main point is
+the removal of impurity. It is mediated by one of the seraphim, who is
+the messenger of God, which is just a symbolical way of saying that God
+makes penitents 'partakers of His holiness,' and that nothing less than
+a divine communication will make cleansing possible. It is effected by a
+live coal. Fire is purifying, and the New Testament has taught us that
+the true cleansing fire is that of the Holy Spirit. But that live coal
+was taken from the altar. The atoning sacrifice has been offered there,
+and our cleansing depends on the efficacy of that sacrifice being
+applied to us.
+
+The third stage in the prophet's experience is the readiness for service
+which springs up in his purged heart. God seeks for volunteers. There
+are no pressed men in His army. The previous experiences made Isaiah
+quick to hear God's call, and willing to respond to it by personal
+consecration. Take the motive-power of redemption from sin out of
+Christianity, and you break its mainspring, so that the clock will only
+tick when it is shaken. It is the Christ who died for our sins to whom
+men say, 'Command what Thou wilt, and I obey.'
+
+III. The prophet's commission.--He was not sent on his work with any
+illusions as to its success, but, on the contrary, he had a clear
+premonition that its effect would be to deepen the spiritual deafness
+and blindness of the nation. We must remember that in Scripture the
+certain effect of divine acts is uniformly regarded as a divine design.
+Israel was so sunk in spiritual deadness that the issue of the prophet's
+work would only be to immerse the mass of 'this people' farther in it.
+To some more susceptible souls his message would be a true divine voice,
+rousing them like a trumpet, and that effect was what God desired; but
+to the greater number it would deepen their torpor and increase their
+condemnation. If men love darkness rather than light, the coming of the
+light works only judgment.
+
+Isaiah recoils from the dreary prospect, and feels that this dreadful
+hardening cannot be God's ultimate purpose for the nation. So he humbly
+and wistfully asks how long it is to last. The answer is twofold, heavy
+with a weight of apparently utter ruin in its first part, but disclosing
+a faint, far-off gleam of hope on its second. Complete destruction, and
+the casting of Israel out from the land, are to come. But as, though a
+goodly tree is felled, a stump remains which has vital force (or
+_substance_) in it, so, even in the utmost apparent desperateness of
+Israel's state, there will be in it 'the holy seed,' the 'remnant,' the
+true Israel, from which again the life shall spring, and stem and
+branches and waving foliage once more grow up.
+
+
+
+
+THE EMPTY THRONE FILLED
+
+'In the year that King Uzziah died I saw also the Lord sitting upon a
+throne, high and lifted up, and His train filled the temple.'--ISAIAH
+vi. 1.
+
+
+Uzziah had reigned for fifty-two years, during the greater part of which
+he and his people had been brilliantly prosperous. Victorious in war, he
+was also successful in the arts of peaceful industry. The later years of
+his life were clouded, but on the whole the reign had been a time of
+great well-being. His son and successor was a young man of
+five-and-twenty; and when he came to the throne ominous war-clouds were
+gathering in the North, and threatening to drift to Judah. No wonder
+that the prophet, like other thoughtful patriots, was asking himself
+what was to come in these anxious days, when the helm was in new hands,
+which, perhaps, were not strong enough to hold it. Like a wise man, he
+took his thoughts into the sanctuary; and there he understood. As he
+brooded, this great vision was disclosed to his inward eye. 'In the year
+that King Uzziah died' is a great deal more than a date for
+chronological purposes. It tells us not only the _when_, but the _why_,
+of the vision. The earthly king was laid in the grave; but the prophet
+saw that the true King of Israel was neither the dead Uzziah nor the
+young Jotham, but the Lord of hosts. And, seeing that, fears and
+forebodings and anxieties and the sense of loss, all vanished; and new
+strength came to Isaiah. He went into the temple laden with anxious
+thoughts; he came out of it with a springy step and a lightened heart,
+and the resolve 'Here am I; send me.' There are some lessons that seem
+to me of great importance for the conduct of our daily life which may be
+gathered from this remarkable vision, with the remarkable note of time
+that is appended to it.
+
+Now, before I pass on, let me remind you, in a word, of that apparently
+audacious commentary upon this great vision, which the Evangelist John
+gives us: 'These things said Esaias, when he had beheld _His_ glory and
+spake of _Him_.' Then the Christ is the manifest Jehovah; is the King of
+Glory. Then the vision which was but a transitory revelation is the
+revelation of an eternal reality, and 'the vision splendid' does not
+'fade but brightens, into the light of common day'; when instead of
+being flashed only on the inward eye of a prophet, it is made flesh and
+walks amongst us, and lives our life, and dies our death. Our eyes have
+seen the King in as true a reality, and in better fashion, than ever
+Isaiah did amid the sanctities of the Temple. And the eyes that have
+seen only the near foreground, the cultivated valleys, and the homes of
+men, are raised, and lo! the long line of glittering peaks, calm,
+silent, pure. Who will look at the valleys when the Himalayas stand out,
+and the veil is drawn aside?
+
+I. Let me say a word or two about the ministration of loss and sorrow in
+preparing for the vision.
+
+It was when 'King Uzziah died' that the prophet 'saw the Lord sitting
+upon the throne.' If the Throne of Israel had not been empty, he would
+not have seen the throned God in the heavens. And so it is with all our
+losses, with all our sorrows, with all our disappointments, with all our
+pains; they have a mission to reveal to us the throned God. The
+possession of the things that are taken away from us, the joys which our
+sorrows smite into dust, have the same mission, and the highest purpose
+of every good, of every blessing, of every possession, of every
+gladness, of all love--the highest mission is to lead us to Him. But,
+just as men will frost a window, so that the light may come in but the
+sight cannot go out, so by our own fault and misuse of the good things
+which are meant to lead us up to, and to show us, God, we frost and
+darken the window so that we cannot see what it is meant to show us. And
+then a mighty and merciful hand shivers the painted glass into
+fragments, because it has been dimming 'the white radiance of Eternity.'
+And though the casement may look gaunt, and the edges of the broken
+glass may cut and wound, yet the view is unimpeded. When the gifts that
+we have misused are withdrawn, we can see the heaven that they too often
+hide from us. When the leaves drop there is a wider prospect. When the
+great tree is fallen there is opened a view of the blue above. When the
+night falls the stars sparkle. When other props are struck away we can
+lean our whole weight upon God. When Uzziah dies the King becomes
+visible.
+
+Is that what our sorrows, our pains, losses, disappointments do for us?
+Well for those to whom loss is gain, because it puts them in possession
+of the enduring riches! Well for those to whom the passing of all that
+can pass is a means of revealing Him who 'is the same yesterday, and
+to-day, and for ever'! The message to us of all these our pains and
+griefs is 'Come up hither.' In them all our Father is saying to us,
+'Seek ye My face.' Well for those who answer, 'Thy face, Lord, will I
+seek. Hide not Thy face far from me.'
+
+Let us take care that we do not waste our griefs and sorrows. They
+absorb us sometimes with vain regrets. They jaundice and embitter us
+sometimes with rebellious thoughts. They often break the springs of
+activity and of interest in others, and of sympathy with others. But
+their true intention is to draw back the thin curtain, and to show us
+'the things that are,' the realities of the throned God, the skirts that
+fill the Temple, the hovering seraphim, and the coal from the altar that
+purges.
+
+II. Let me suggest how our text shows us the compensation that is given
+for all losses.
+
+As I have pointed out already, the thought conveyed to the prophet by
+this vision was not only the general one, of God's sovereign rule, but
+the special one of His rule over and for, and His protection of, the
+orphan kingdom which had lost its king. The vision took the special
+shape that the moment required. It was because the earthly king was dead
+that the living, heavenly King was revealed.
+
+So there is just suggested by it this general thought, that the
+consciousness of God's presence and work for us takes in each heart the
+precise shape that its momentary necessities and circumstances require.
+That infinite fulness is of such a nature as that it will assume any
+form for which the weakness and the need of the dependent creature call.
+Like the one force which scientists now are beginning to think underlies
+all the various manifestations of energy in nature, whether they be
+named light, heat, motion, electricity, chemical action, or gravitation,
+the one same vision of the throned God, manifest in Jesus Christ, is
+protean. Here it flames as light, there burns as heat, there flashes as
+electricity; here as gravitation holds the atoms together, there as
+chemical energy separated and decomposes them; here results in motion,
+there in rest; but is the one force. And so the one God will become
+everything and anything that every man, and each man, requires. He
+shapes himself according to our need. The water of life does not disdain
+to take the form imposed upon it by the vessel into which it is poured.
+The Jews used to say that the manna in the wilderness tasted to each man
+as each man desired. And the God, who comes to us all, comes to us each
+in the shape that we need; just as He came to Isaiah in the
+manifestation of His _kingly_ power, because the throne of Judah was
+vacated.
+
+So when our hearts are sore with loss, the New Testament Manifestation
+of the King, even Jesus Christ, comes to us and says, 'The same is my
+mother and sister and brother,' and His sweet love compensates for the
+love that can die, and that has died. When losses come to us He draws
+near, as durable riches and righteousness. In all our pains He is our
+anodyne, and in all our griefs He brings the comfort; He is all in all,
+and each withdrawn gift is compensated, or will be compensated, to each
+in Him.
+
+So, dear friends, let us learn God's purpose in emptying hearts and
+chairs and homes. He empties them that He may fill them with Himself. He
+takes us, if I might so say, into the darkness, as travellers to the
+south are to-day passing through Alpine tunnels, in order that He may
+bring us out into the land where 'God Himself is sun and moon,' and
+where there are ampler ether and brighter constellations than in these
+lands where we dwell. He means that, when Uzziah dies, our hearts shall
+see the King. And for all mourners, for all tortured hearts, for all
+from whom stays have been stricken and resources withdrawn, the old word
+is true: 'Lord shew us the Father, and it sufficeth us.'
+
+Let me recall to you what I have already insisted on more than once,
+that the perfecting of this vision is in the historical fact of the
+Incarnate Son. Jesus Christ shows us God. Jesus Christ is the King of
+Glory. If we will go to Him, and fix our eyes and hearts on Him, then
+losses may come, and we shall be none the poorer; death may unclasp our
+hands from dear hands, but He will close a dearer one round the hand
+that is groping for a stay; and nothing can betaken away but He will
+more than fill the gap it leaves by His own sweet presence. If our eyes
+behold the King, if we are like John the Seer in his rocky Patmos, and
+see the Christ in His glory and royalty, then He will lay His hands on
+us and say, 'Fear not! Weep not; I am the First and the Last,' and
+forebodings, and fears, and sense of loss will all be changed into
+trustfulness and patient submission. 'Seeing Him, who is invisible,' we
+shall be able to endure and to toil, until the time when the vision of
+earth is perfected by the beholding of heaven. Blessed are they who with
+purged eyes see, and with yielding hearts obey, the heavenly vision, and
+turn to the King and offer themselves for any service He may require,
+saying, 'Here am I; send me.'
+
+
+
+
+A SERAPH'S WINGS
+
+'With twain he covered his face, and with twain he covered his feet, and
+with twain he did fly.'--ISAIAH vi. 2.
+
+
+This is the only mention in Scripture of the seraphim. I do not need to
+enter upon the much-debated, and in some respects interesting, question
+as to whether these are to be taken as identical with the cherubim, or
+as to whether they are altogether imaginary and symbolical beings, nor
+as to whether they are identical with the angels, or part of their
+hierarchy. All that may be left on one side. I would only notice, before
+I deal with the specific words of my text, the significance of the name.
+It means 'the flaming' or 'burning ones,' and so the attendants of the
+divine glory in the heavens, whether they be real or imaginary beings,
+are represented as flashing with splendour, as full of swift energy,
+like a flame of fire, as glowing with fervid love, as blazing with
+enthusiasm. That is the type of the highest creatural being, which
+stands closest to God. There is no ice in His presence, and the nearer
+we get to Him in truth, the more we shall glow and burn. Cold religion
+is a contradiction in terms, though, alas, it is a reality in
+professors.
+
+And so with that explanation, and putting aside all these other
+questions, let us gather up some, at least, of the lessons as to the
+essentials of worship, and try to grasp the prophecy of the heavenly
+state, given us in these words.
+
+
+I. The Wings of Reverence.
+
+He covered his face, or _they_ covered _their_ faces, lest they should
+see. As a man brought suddenly into the sunlight, especially if out of a
+darkened chamber, by an instinctive action shades his eyes with his
+hand, so these burning creatures, confronted with the still more fervid
+and fiery light of the divine nature, fold one pair of their great white
+pinions over their shining faces, even whilst they cry 'Holy! Holy!
+Holy! is the Lord God Almighty!'
+
+And does not that teach us the incapacity of the highest creature, with
+the purest vision, to gaze undazzled into the shining light of God? I,
+for my part, do not believe that any conceivable extension of creatural
+faculties, or any conceivable hallowing of creatural natures, can make
+the creature able to gaze upon God. I know that it is often said that
+the joy of the future life for men is what the theologians call 'the
+beatific vision,' in which there shall be direct sight of God, using
+that word in its highest sense, as applied to the perceptions of the
+spirit, and not of the sense. But I do not think the Bible teaches us
+that. It does teach us 'We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He
+is.' But who is the 'Him'? Jesus Christ. And, in my belief, Jesus Christ
+will, to all eternity, be the medium of manifesting God, and there will
+remain, to all eternity, the incapacity which clogs creatures in time--'
+No man hath seen God at any time, nor _can_ see Him.'
+
+But my text, whilst it thus suggests solemn thoughts of a Light that
+cannot be looked at with undazzled eyes, does also suggest to us by
+contrast the possibility of far feebler-sighted and more sinful
+creatures than these symbolical seraphs coming into a Presence in which
+God shall be manifest to them; and they will need no veil drawn by
+themselves across their eyes. God has veiled Himself, that 'we, with
+unveiled faces, beholding His glory, may be changed into the same
+image.' So the seraph, with his white wings folded before his eyes, may
+at once stand to us as a parallel and a contrast to what the Christian
+may expect. We, _we_ can see Jesus, with no incapacity except such as
+may be swept away by His grace and our will. And direct vision of the
+whole Christ is the heaven of heaven, even as the partial vision of the
+partially perceived Christ is the sweetest sweetness of a life on earth.
+
+There is no need for us to draw any screen between our happy eyes and
+the Face in which we 'behold the glory as of the only Begotten of the
+Father.' All the tempering that the divine lustre needed has been done
+by Him who veils His glory with the veil of Christ's flesh, and therein
+does away the need for any veil that we can draw.
+
+But, beyond that, there is another consideration that I should like to
+suggest, as taught us by the use of this first pair of the six wings,
+and that is the absolute need for the lowliest reverence in our worship
+of God. It is strange, but true, I am afraid, that the Christian danger
+is to weaken the sense of the majesty and splendour and separation of
+God from His creatures. And all that is good in the Christian revelation
+may be so abused as that there shall come, what I am sure does in effect
+sometimes come, a terrible lack of due reverence in our so-called
+worship. What does that lofty chorus of 'Holy! Holy! Holy!' that burst
+from those immortal lips mean but the declaration that God is high
+above, and separate from, all limitations and imperfections of
+creatures? And we Christians, who hear it re-echoed in the very last
+Book of Scripture by the four-and-twenty elders who represent redeemed
+humanity, have need to take heed that we do not lose our reverence in
+our confidence, and that we do not part with godly fear in our filial
+love. If one looks at a congregation of professing Christians engaged in
+their worship, does not one feel and see that there is often a
+carelessness and shallowness, a want of realisation of the majesty and
+sanctity and tremendousness of that Father to whom we draw near?
+Brethren, if a seraph hides his face, surely it becomes us to see to it
+that, since we worship a God who is a consuming fire,' we serve Him with
+far deeper 'reverence and godly fear' than ordinarily mark our
+devotions.
+
+
+II. The Wings of Humility.
+
+'With twain he covered his feet.' The less comely and inferior parts of
+that fiery corporeity were veiled lest they should be seen by the Eyes
+that see all things. The wings made no screen that hid the seraph's feet
+from the eye of God, but it was the instinctive lowly sense of
+unworthiness that folded them across the feet, even though they, too,
+burned as a furnace. The nearer we get to God, the more we shall be
+aware of our limitations and unworthiness, and it is because that vision
+of the Lord sitting on 'His throne, high and lifted up,' with the
+thrilling sense of His glory filling the holy temple of the universe,
+does not burn before us that we can conceit ourselves to have anything
+worth pluming ourselves upon. Once lift the curtain, once let my eye be
+flooded with the sight of God, and away goes all my self-conceit, and
+all my fancied superiority above others. One little molehill is pretty
+nearly the same height as another, if you measure them both against the
+top of the Himalayas, that lie in the background, with their glittering
+peaks of snow. 'Star differeth from star in glory' in a winter's night,
+but when the great sun swims into the sky, they all vanish together. If
+you and I saw God burning before us, as Isaiah saw Him, we should veil
+ourselves, and lose all that which so often veils Him from us--the fancy
+that we are anything when we are nothing. And the nearer we get to God,
+and the purer we are, the more shall we be keenly conscious of our
+imperfections and our sins. 'If I say I am perfect,' said Job in his
+wise way, 'this also should prove me perverse.' Consciousness of sin is
+the continual accompaniment of growth in holiness. 'The heavens are not
+pure in His sight, and He chargeth His angels with folly.' Everything
+looks black beside that sovereign whiteness. Get God into your lives,
+and you will see that the feet need to be washed, and you will cry,
+'Lord! not my feet only, but my hands and my head!'
+
+
+III. Lastly-The Wings for Service.
+
+'With twain he did fly.' That is the emblem of joyous, buoyant,
+unhindered motion. It is strongly, sadly contrary to the toilsome
+limitations of us heavy creatures who have no wings, but can at best run
+on His service, and often find it hard to 'walk with patience in the way
+that is set before us.' But--service with wings, or service with lame
+feet, it matters not. Whosoever, beholding God, has found need to hide
+his face from that Light even whilst he comes into the Light, and to
+veil his feet from the all-seeing Eye, will also feel impulses to go
+forth in His service. For the perfection of worship is neither the
+consciousness of my own insufficiency, nor the humble recognition of His
+glory, nor the great voice of praise that thrilled from those immortal
+lips, but it is the doing of His will in daily life. Some people say the
+service of man is the service of God. Yes, when it is service of man,
+done for God's sake, it is so, and only then. The old motto, 'Work is
+worship,' may preach a great truth or a most dangerous error. But there
+is no possibility of error or danger in maintaining this: that the
+climax and crown of all worship, whether for us footsore servants upon
+earth, or for these winged attendants on the throne of the King in the
+heavens, is activity in obedience. And that is what is set before us
+here.
+
+Now, dear brethren, we, as Christians, have a far higher motive for
+service than the seraphs had. We have been redeemed, and the spirit of
+the old Psalm should animate all our obedience: 'O Lord, truly I am Thy
+servant.' Why? The next clause tells us: 'Thou hast loosed my bonds.'
+The seraphs could not say that, and therefore our obedience, our
+activity in doing the will of the Father in heaven, should be more
+buoyant, more joyful, more swift, more unrestricted than even theirs.
+
+The seraphim were winged for service even while they stood above the
+throne and pealed forth their thunderous praise which shook the Temple.
+May we not discern in that a hint of the blessed blending of two modes
+of worship which will be perfectly united in heaven, and which we should
+aim at harmonising even on earth? 'His servants serve Him and see His
+face.' There is possible, even on earth, some foretaste of the
+perfection of that heavenly state in which no worship in service shall
+interfere with the worship in contemplation. Mary, sitting at Christ's
+feet, and Martha, busy in providing for His comfort, may be, to a large
+extent, united in us even here, and will be perfectly so hereafter, when
+the practical and the contemplative, the worship of noble aspiration, of
+heart-filling gazing, and that of active service shall be indissolubly
+blended.
+
+The seraphs sang 'Holy! Holy! Holy!' but they, and all the hosts of
+heaven, learn a new song from the experience of earth, and redeemed men
+are the chorus-leaders of the perfected and eternal worship of the
+heavens. For we read that it is the four-and-twenty elders who begin the
+song and sing to the Lamb that redeemed them by His blood, and that the
+living creatures and all the hosts of the angels to that song can but
+say 'Amen!'
+
+
+
+
+THE MAKING OF A PROPHET
+
+'Then said I, Woe is me! for I am undone; because I am a man of unclean
+lips, and I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips: for mine
+eyes have seen the King, the Lord of hosts.'--ISAIAH vi. 5.
+
+
+In previous pages we have seen how Isaiah's vision of Jehovah throned in
+the Temple, 'high and lifted up,' derived significance from the time of
+its occurrence. It was 'in the year that' the earthly King 'died' that
+the heavenly King was revealed. The passing of the transient prepared
+the way for the revelation of the Eternal, and the revelation of the
+Eternal more than compensated for the passing of the transient. But
+strengthening and calming as these thoughts are, they by no means
+exhaust the purpose of the vision, nor do they describe all its effects
+on the recipient. These were, first and immediately, the consciousness
+of unworthiness and sin, expressed in the words that I have taken for my
+text. Then came the touch of the 'live coal from the altar,' laid on the
+unclean lips by the seraph; and on that followed willing surrender for a
+perilous service.
+
+These three stages flowing from the vision of God, recognition of sin,
+experience of purging, abandonment to obedience and service, must be
+repeated in us all, if we are to live worthy lives. There may be much
+that is beautiful and elevating and noble without these; but unless in
+some measure we pass through the prophet's experience, we shall fail to
+reach the highest possibilities of beauty and of service that open
+before us. So I wish to consider, very simply, these three stages in my
+remarks now.
+
+I. If we see _God_ we shall see our _sin_.
+
+There came on the prophet, as in a flash, the two convictions, one which
+he learned from the song of the seraphs, ringing in music through the
+Temple, and one which rose up, like an answering note from the voice of
+conscience within. They sang 'Holy! holy! holy! Lord God Almighty.' And
+what was the response to that, in the prophet's heart?--'I am unclean.'
+Each major note has a corresponding minor, and the triumphant doxology
+of the seraph wakes in the hearer's conscience the lowly confession of
+personal unlikeness to the holiness of God. It was not joy that sprang
+in Isaiah's heart when he saw the throned King, and heard the
+proclamation of His name. It was not reverence merely that bowed his
+head in the dust, but it was the awakened consciousness, 'Thou art holy;
+and now that I understand, in some measure, what Thy holiness means, I
+look on myself and I say, "unclean! unclean!"'
+
+The prophet's confession assumes a form which may strike us as somewhat
+singular. Why is it that he speaks of 'unclean lips,' rather than of an
+unclean heart? I suppose partly because, in a very deep sense, a man's
+words are more accurately a cast, as it were, from a man's character
+than even his actions, and partly because the immediate occasion of his
+confession was the words of the seraphim, and he could not but contrast
+what came burning from their pure lips with what had trickled from, and
+soiled, his own.
+
+But, however expressed, the consciousness of personal unlikeness to the
+holiness of God is the first result, and the instantaneous result, of
+any real apprehension of that holiness, and of any true vision of Him.
+Like some search-light flung from a ship over the darkling waters,
+revealing the dark doings of the enemy away out yonder in the night, the
+thought of God and His holiness streaming in upon a man's soul, if it
+does so in any adequate measure, is sure to disclose the heaving waters
+and the skulking foes that are busy in the dark.
+
+But it was not only the consciousness of sinfulness and antagonism that
+woke up instantaneously in response to that vision of the holy God. It
+was likewise a shrinking apprehension of personal evil from contact of
+God's light with Isaiah's darkness. 'Who shall ascend into the hill of
+the Lord? He that hath clean hands and a pure heart.' What is to become,
+then, of the man that has neither the one nor the other? The experience
+of all the world witnesses that whenever there comes, in reality, or in
+a man's conceptions or fancy, the contact of the supernatural, as it is
+called, with the natural, there is a shrinking, a sense of eerieness, an
+apprehension of vague possibilities of evil. The sleeping snake that is
+coiled in every soul stirs and begins to heave in its bulk, and wake,
+when the thought of a holy God comes into the heart. Now, I do not
+suppose that consciousness of sin is the whole explanation of that
+universal human feeling, but I am very sure it is an element in it, and
+I suspect that if there were no sin, there would be no shrinking.
+
+At all events, be that as it may, these are the two thoughts that,
+involuntarily and spontaneously and immediately, sprang in this man's
+heart when his purged eyes saw the King on His throne. He did not leap
+up with gladness at the vision. Its consolatory and its strengthening
+aspects were not the first that impinged upon his eye, or upon his
+consciousness, but the first thing was an instinctive recoil, 'Woe is
+me; I am undone.' Now, brethren, I venture to think that one main
+difference between shallow religion and real is to be found here, that
+the dim, far-off vision, if we may venture to call it so, which serves
+the most of us for a sight of God, leaves us quite complacent, and with
+very slight and superficial conceptions of our own evil, and that if
+once we saw, in so far as it is possible for humanity to-day to see, God
+as He is, and heard in the depths of our hearts that 'Holy! holy! holy!'
+from the burning seraphim, the easy-going, self-satisfied judgment of
+ourselves which too many of us cherish would be utterly impossible; and
+would disappear, shrivelled up utterly in the light of God. 'I have
+heard of Thee by the hearing of the ear,' said Job, 'but now mine eye
+seeth Thee; therefore I abhor myself, and repent in dust and ashes.' A
+hearsay God and a self-complacent beholder--a God really seen, and a man
+down in the dust before Him! Has that vision ever blazed in on you? And
+if it has, has not the light shown you the seaminess of much in which a
+dimmer light detects no flaws or stains? Thank God if, having seen Him,
+you see yourselves. If you have not felt, 'I am unclean and undone,'
+depend upon it, your knowledge of God is faint and dim, and He is rather
+One heard of from the lips of others than realised in your own
+experience.
+
+II. Again, note the second stage here, in the education of a soul for
+service--the sin, recognised and repented, is burned away.
+
+'Then flew one of the seraphim unto me, having a live coal in his hand,
+which he had taken with the tongs from off the altar; and he laid it
+upon my mouth, and said, Lo! this hath touched thy lips; and thine
+iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged.'
+
+Now, I would notice as to this stage of the process, first, that Isaiah
+singularly passes beyond all the old ritual in which he had been brought
+up, and recognises another kind of cleansing than that which it
+embodied. He had got beyond the ritual to what the ritual meant. We have
+passed beyond the ritual, too, by another process; and, though I would
+by no means read full, plain, articulate Christian thought into the
+vision of Isaiah--which would be an anachronism, and unfaithful to the
+gradual historical development of the idea and means of redemption--yet
+I cannot help pointing to the fact that, even although this vision is
+located as seen in the Temple, there is not a single reference (except
+that passing allusion to the altar) to the ritual of the Temple, but the
+cleansing comes in another fashion altogether.
+
+But far more important than that thought is the human condition that is
+required ere this cleansing can be realised. 'I am a man of unclean
+lips.' 'I am undone!' It was because that conviction and confession
+sprang in the prophet's consciousness that the seraph winged his way
+with the purifying fire in his hands. Which being translated is just
+this: faith alone will not bring cleansing. There must go with it what
+we call, in our Christian phraseology, repentance, which is but the
+recognition of my own antagonism to the holiness of God, and the resolve
+to turn my back on my own past self. Now, it seems to me that a great
+deal of what is called, and in a sense is, Evangelical teaching, fails
+to represent the full counsel of God, in the matter of man's redemption,
+because it puts a one-sided emphasis on faith, and slurs over the
+accompanying idea of repentance. And I am here to say that a trust in
+Jesus Christ, which is unaccompanied by a profound penitent
+consciousness and abhorrence of one's own sins, and a resolve to turn
+away from them for the time to come, is not a faith which will bring
+either pardon or cleansing. We do not need to have less said about
+trust; we need to have a great deal more said about repentance. You have
+to learn what it is to say, 'I abhor myself'; you have to learn what it
+is to say, 'I will turn right round, and leave all that past behind me;
+and go in the opposite direction'; or the faith which you say you are
+exercising will neither save nor cleanse your souls nor your lives.
+
+Again, note that we have here set forth most strikingly the other great
+truth that, side by side, and as closely synchronous as the flash and
+the peal, as soon as the consciousness of sin and the aversion from it
+spring in a man's heart, the seraph's wings are set in motion. Remember
+that beautiful old story in the historical books, of how the erring
+king, brought to sanity and repentance by Nathan's apologue, put all his
+acknowledgments in these words, 'I have sinned against the Lord'; and
+how the confession was not out of his lips, nor had died in its
+vibration in the atmosphere, before the prophet, with divine authority,
+replied with equal brevity and completeness, and as if the two sayings
+were parts of one sentence, '_And_ the Lord hath made to pass the
+iniquity of thy sin.' That is all. Simultaneous are the two things. To
+confess is to be forgiven, and the moment that the consciousness of sin
+rises in the heart, that moment does the heavenly messenger come to
+still and soothe.
+
+Still further, notice how the cleansing comes as a divine gift. It is
+purifying, much more than pardon, that is set forth in the symbolical
+incident before us. The seraph is the divine messenger, and he brings a
+coal from the altar, and lays that upon the prophet's lips, which is but
+the symbolical way of saying that the man who is conscious of his own
+evil will find in himself a blessed despair of being his own healer, and
+that he has to turn to the divine source, the vision of which has
+kindled the consciousness, to find there that which will take away the
+evil. The Lord is 'He that healeth us.'
+
+But, further, the cleansing is by fire. By which, as I suppose, in the
+present context, and at Isaiah's stage of religious knowledge and
+experience, we are to understand that great thought that God burns away
+our sins, as you put a piece of foul clay into the fire, and the stain
+melts from the surface like a dissipating cloud as the heat finds its
+way into the substance. 'He will baptize with the Holy Ghost and with
+fire'--a fire that quickens. A new impulse will be granted, which will
+become the life of the sinful man's life, and will emancipate him from
+the power of his own darkness and evil.
+
+Now, let us remember that _we_ have the fulness of all that was shadowed
+to the prophet in this vision, and that the reality of every one of
+these emblems is gathered together--if I may so say--not with confusion,
+but with abundance and opulence in Jesus Christ Himself. Is He not the
+seraph? Is He not Himself the burning coal? Is He not the altar from
+which it is taken? All that is needed to make the foulest clean is given
+in Christ's great work. Brethren, we shall never understand the deepest
+secret of Christ and of Christianity until we learn and hold fast by the
+conviction that the central work of Jesus is to deal with man's sin; and
+that whatever else Christianity is, it is first and foremost God's way
+of redeeming the world, and making it possible for the unholy to dwell
+with His holy self.
+
+III. Lastly, and only a word, the third stage here is--the purged spirit
+is ready for service.
+
+God did not bid the prophet go on His mission till the prophet had
+voluntarily accepted the mission. He said, 'Who will go for us?' He
+wants no pressed men in His army. He does not work with reluctant
+servants. There is, first, the yielding of the will, and then there is
+the enduement with the privilege of service. The prophet, having passed
+through the preceding experiences, had thereby received a quick ear to
+hear God's calling for volunteers. And we shall not hear Him asking 'Who
+will go?' unless we have, in our measure, passed through similar
+experiences. It will be a test of having done so, of our having been
+purged from our evil, if, when other people think that it is only Eli
+speaking, we know that it is the Lord that has called us, and say, 'Here
+am I.'
+
+For such experiences as I have been describing do influence the will,
+and mould the heart, and make it a delight to do God's commandments, and
+to execute His purpose, and to be the ministers of His great Word. Some
+of us are willing to say that we have learned God's holiness; that we
+have seen and confessed our sins; that we have received pardon and
+cleansing. Have these experiences made you ready for any service? Have
+they made your will flexible--made you dethrone yourself, and enthrone
+the King whom the prophet saw? If they have, they are genuine; if they
+have not, they are not. Submission of will; glorying in being the
+instrument of the divine purpose; ears sharpened to catch His lowest
+whisper; eyes that, like those of a dog fixed on his master, watch for
+the faintest indication from his guiding eye--these are the infallible
+tests and signs of having had lips and heart touched with the live coal
+that burns away our uncleanness.
+
+So, friends, would that I could flash upon every conscience that vision!
+But you can do so for yourselves. Let me beseech you to bring yourselves
+honestly into that solemn light of the character of God, and to ask
+yourselves, 'How can two walk together except they be agreed?' Do not
+put away such thoughts with any shallow, easy-going talk about how God
+is good and will not be hard upon a poor fellow that has tried to do his
+best. God is good; God is love. But divine goodness and love cannot find
+a way by which the unclean shall dwell with the clean. What then? This
+then--Jesus Christ has come. We may be made clean if we trust in Him,
+and forsake our sins. He will touch the heart and lips with the fire of
+His own Spirit, and then it will be possible to dwell with the
+everlasting burnings of that flaming fire which is a holy God. Blessed
+are they that have seen the vision; blessed they that have felt it
+disclosing their own sins; blessed they whose hearts have been purged.
+Blessed most of all they who, educated and trained through these
+experiences, have taken this as the motto of their lives, 'Here am I;
+send me.'
+
+
+
+
+SHILOAH AND EUPHRATES
+
+Forasmuch as this people refuseth the waters of Shiloah that go softly
+... the Lord bringeth up upon them the waters of the river, strong and
+many.' ISAIAH viii. 6, 7.
+
+
+The kingdom of Judah was threatened with a great danger in an alliance
+between Israel and Damascus. The cowardly King Ahaz, instead of
+listening to Isaiah's strong assurances and relying on the help of God,
+made what he thought a master-stroke of policy in invoking the help of
+the formidable Assyrian power. That ambitious military monarchy was
+eager to find an excuse for meddling in the politics of Syria, and
+nothing loath, marched an army down on the backs of the invaders, which
+very soon compelled them to hasten to Judah in order to defend their own
+land. But, as is always the case, the help invoked was his ruin. Like
+all conquering powers, once having got its foot inside the door, Assyria
+soon followed bodily. First Damascus and Israel were ravaged and
+subdued, and then Judah. That kingdom only purchased the privilege of
+being devoured last. Like the Spaniards in Mexico, the Saxons in
+England, the English in a hundred Indian territories, the allies that
+came to help remained to conquer, and Judah fell, as we all know.
+
+This is the simple original application of these words. They are a
+declaration that in seeking for help from others Judah was forsaking
+God, and that the helper would become ruler, and the ruler an oppressive
+tyrant.
+
+The waters of Shiloah that go softly stand as an emblem of the Davidic
+monarchy as God meant it to be, and, since that monarchy was itself a
+prophecy, they therefore represent the kingdom of God or the Messianic
+King. The 'waters strong and many' are those of the Euphrates, which
+swells and overflows and carries havoc, and are taken as the emblem of
+the wasting sweep of the Assyrian king, whose capital stood on its
+banks.
+
+But while thus there is a plain piece of political history in the words,
+they are also the statement of general principles which apply to every
+individual soul and its relations to the kingdom, the gentle kingdom, of
+our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.
+
+
+I. The Gentle Kingdom.
+
+That little brooklet slipping quietly along; what a striking image of
+the Kingdom of Jesus Christ!
+
+It suggests the character of the King, the 'meek and lowly in heart.' It
+suggests the manner of His rule as wielded in gentleness and exercising
+no compulsion but that of love. It suggests the blessed results of His
+reign under the image of the fertility, freshness, and beauty which
+spring up wherever 'the river cometh.' That kingdom we are all summoned
+to enter.
+
+
+II. The Rejection of the Kingdom.
+
+Strange and awful fact that men do turn away from it and Him.
+
+In what does rejection consist?
+
+In not trusting in His power to help and deliver.
+
+In seeking help from other sources. This rejection is often unconscious
+on the part of men who are guilty of it.
+
+
+III. The Allies who are preferred to the gentle King.
+
+The crowd of worldly things.
+
+What is to be noticed is that at first the preference seems to answer
+and be all right.
+
+
+IV. The Allies becoming Tyrants.
+
+The swift Euphrates in spate. That is what the rejecters have chosen for
+themselves. Better to have lived by Shiloah than to have built their
+houses by the side of such a raging stream. Mark how this is a divine
+retribution indeed, but a natural process too.
+
+(a) If Christ does not rule us, a mob of tyrants will.
+
+Our own passions. Our own evil habits. The fascinating sins around us.
+
+(b) They soon cease to seem helpers, and become tyrants.
+
+How quickly the pleasure of sin disappears--like some bird that loses
+its gay plumage as it grows old.
+
+How stern becomes the necessity to obey; how great the difficulty of
+breaking off evil habits! So a man becomes the slave of his own lusts,
+of his indulged tastes, which rise above all restraints and carry away
+all before them, like the Euphrates in flood. Fertility is turned to
+barrenness; a foul deposit of mud overlays the soil; houses on the sand
+are washed away; corpses float on the tawny wave. The soul that rejects
+Christ's gentle sway is harried and laid waste by a mob of base-born
+tyrants. We have to make our choice--either Christ or these; either a
+service which is freedom, or an apparent freedom which is slavery;
+either a worship which exalts, or a worship which embrutes. 'If the Son
+make you free, ye shall be free indeed.'
+
+'There is a river, the streams whereof make glad the city of God.' It is
+peaceful to pitch our tents beside its calm flow, whereon shall go no
+hostile fleets, and whence we shall but pass to the city above, in the
+midst of the street whereof the 'river of water of life, clear as
+crystal, proceeds out of the throne of God and of the Lamb.'
+
+
+
+
+THE KINGDOM AND THE KING
+
+'The people that walked in darkness hare seen a great light: they that
+dwell in the land of the shadow of death, upon them hath the light
+shined. 3. Thou hast multiplied the nation, and not increased the joy:
+they joy before Thee according to the joy in harvest, and as men rejoice
+when they divide the spoil. 4. For Thou hast broken the yoke of His
+burden, and the staff of His shoulder, the rod of His oppressor, as in
+the day of Midian. 5. For every battle of the warrior is with confused
+noise, and garments rolled in blood: but this shall be with burning and
+fuel of fire. 6. For unto us a Child is born, unto us a Son is given:
+and the government shall be upon His shoulder: and His name shall be
+called Wonderful, Counsellor, The mighty God, The everlasting Father,
+The Prince of Peace. 7. Of the increase of His government and peace
+there shall be no end, upon the throne of David, and upon His kingdom,
+to order it, and to establish it with judgment and with justice from
+henceforth even for ever. The zeal of the Lord of hosts will perform
+this.'--ISAIAH ix. 2-7.
+
+
+The darker the cloud, the brighter is the rainbow. This prophecy has for
+its historical background the calamitous reign of the weak and wicked
+Ahaz, during which the heart of the nation was bowed, like a forest
+before the blast, by the dread of foreign invasion and conquest. The
+prophet predicts a day of gloom and anguish, and then, out of the midst
+of his threatenings, bursts this glorious vision, sudden as sunrise.
+With consummate poetic art, the consequences of Messiah's rule are set
+forth before He Himself is brought into view.
+
+I. Image is heaped on image to tell the blessedness of that reign (vs.
+2-5). Each trait of the glowing description is appropriate to the
+condition of Israel under Ahaz; but each has a meaning far beyond that
+limited application. Isaiah may, or may not, have been aware of 'what'
+or 'what time' his words portrayed in their deepest, that is, their true
+meaning, but if we believe in supernatural prediction which, though it
+may have found its point of attachment in the circumstances of the
+present, was none the less the voice of the Spirit of God, we shall not
+make, as is often done now, the prophet's construction of his words the
+rule for their interpretation. What the prophecy was discerned to point
+to by its utterer or his contemporaries, is one thing; quite another is
+what God meant by it.
+
+First we have the picture of the nation groping in a darkness that might
+be felt, the emblem of ignorance, sin, and sorrow, and inhabiting a land
+over which, like a pall, death cast its shadow. On that dismal gloom
+shines all at once a 'great light,' the emblem of knowledge, purity, and
+joy. The daily mercy of the dawn has a gospel in it to a heart that
+believes in God; for it proclaims the divine will that all who sit in
+darkness shall be enlightened, and that every night but prepares the way
+for the freshness and stir of a new morning. The great prophecy of these
+verses in its indefiniteness goes far beyond its immediate occasion in
+the state of Judah under Ahaz. As surely as the dawn floods all lands,
+so surely shall all who walk in darkness see the great light; and
+wherever is a 'land of the shadow of death,' there shall the light
+shine. It is 'the light of the world.'
+
+Verse 3 gives another phase of blessing. Israel is conceived of as
+dwindled in number by deportation and war. But the process of
+depopulation is arrested and reversed, and numerical increase, which is
+always a prominent feature in Messianic predictions, is predicted. That
+increase follows the dawning of the light, for men will flock to the
+'brightness of its rising.' _We_ know that the increase comes from the
+attractive power of the Cross, drawing men of many tongues to it; and we
+have a right to bring the interpretation, which the world's history
+gives, into our understanding of the prophecy. That enlarged nation is
+to have abounding joy.
+
+Undoubtedly, the rendering 'To it thou hast increased the joy' is
+correct, as that of the Authorized Version (based upon the Hebrew text)
+is clearly one of several cases in which the partial similarity in
+spelling and identity in sound of the Hebrew words for 'not' and 'to
+it,' have led to a mistaken reading. The joy is described in words which
+dance and sing, like the gladness of which they tell. The mirth of the
+harvest-field, when labour is crowned with success, and the sterner joy
+of the victors as they part the booty, with which mingles the
+consciousness of foes overcome and dangers averted, are blended in this
+gladness. We have the joy of reaping a harvest of which we have not
+sowed the seed. Christ has done that; we have but to enjoy the results
+of His toil. We have to divide the spoil of a victory which we have not
+won. He has bound the strong man, and we share the benefits of His
+overcoming the world.
+
+That last image of conquerors dividing the spoil leads naturally to the
+picture in verse 4 of emancipation from bondage, as the result of a
+victory like Gideon's with his handful. Who the Gideon of this new
+triumph is, the prophet will not yet say. The 'yoke of his burden' and
+'the rod of his oppressor' recall Egypt and the taskmasters.
+
+Verse 5 gives the reason for the deliverance of the slaves; namely, the
+utter destruction of the armour and weapons of their enemy. The Revised
+Version is right in its rendering, though it may be doubtful whether its
+margin is not better than its text, since not only are 'boot' and
+'booted' as probable renderings of the doubtful words as 'armour' and
+'armed man,' but the picture of the warrior striding into battle with
+his heavy boots is more graphic than the more generalised description in
+the Revised Version's text. In any case, the whole accoutrements of the
+oppressor are heaped into a pile and set on fire; and, as they blaze up,
+the freed slaves exult in their liberty. The blood-drenched cloaks have
+been stripped from the corpses and tossed on the heap, and, saturated as
+they are, they burn. So complete is the victory that even the weapons of
+the conquered are destroyed. Our conquering King has been manifested,
+that He might annihilate the powers by which evil holds us bound. His
+victory is not by halves. 'He taketh from him all his armour wherein he
+trusted.'
+
+II. Now we are ready to ask, And who is to do all this? The guarantee
+for its accomplishment is the person of the conquering Messiah. The
+hopes of Israel did not, and those of the world do not, rest on
+tendencies, principles, laws of progress, advance of civilisation, or
+the like abstractions or impersonalities, but on a living Person, in
+whom all principles which make for righteousness and blessedness for
+individuals and communities are incarnated, and whose vital action works
+perpetually in mankind.
+
+In this prophecy the prophet is plainly speaking greater things than he
+knew. We do not get to the meaning if we only ask ourselves what did he
+understand by his words, or what did his hearers gather from them? They
+and he would gather the certainty of the coming of Messiah with wondrous
+attributes of power and divine gifts, by whose reign light, gladness,
+liberty would belong to the oppressed nation. But the depth of the
+prophecy needed the history of the Incarnation for its disclosure. If
+this is not a God-given prediction of the entrance into human form of
+the divine, it is something very like miraculous that, somehow or other,
+words should have been spoken, without any such reference, which fit so
+closely to the supernatural fact of Christ's incarnation.
+
+The many attempts to translate verse 6 so as to get rid of the
+application of 'Mighty God,' 'Everlasting Father,' to Messiah, cannot
+here be enumerated or adequately discussed. I must be content with
+pointing out the significance of the august fourfold name of the victor
+King. It seems best to take the two first titles as a compound name, and
+so to recognise four such compounds.
+
+There is a certain connection between the first and second of these
+which respectively lay stress on wisdom of plan and victorious energy of
+accomplishment, while the third and fourth are also connected, in that
+the former gathers into one great and tender name what Messiah is to His
+people, and the latter points to the character of His dominion
+throughout the whole earth. 'A wonder of a counsellor,' as the words may
+be rendered, not only suggests His giving wholesome direction to His
+people, but, still more, the mystery of the wisdom which guides His
+plans. Truly, Jesus purposes wonders in the depth of His redeeming
+design. He intends to do great things, and to reach them by a road which
+none would have imagined. The counsel to save a world, and that by dying
+for it, is the miracle of miracles. 'Who hath been His counsellor in
+that overwhelming wonder?' He needs no teacher; He is Himself the
+teacher of all truth. All may have His direction, and they who follow it
+will not walk in darkness.
+
+'The mighty God.' Chapter x. 21 absolutely forbids taking this as
+anything lower than the divine name. The prophet conceives of Messiah as
+the earthly representative of divinity, as having God with and in Him as
+no other man has. We are not to force upon the prophet the full new
+Testament doctrine of the oneness of the incarnate Word with the Father,
+which would be an anachronism. But we are not to fall into the opposite
+error, and refuse to see in these words, so startling from the lips of a
+rigid monotheist, a real prophecy of a divine Messiah, dimly as the
+utterer may have perceived the figure which he painted. Note, too, that
+the word 'mighty' implies victorious energy in battle. It is often
+applied to human heroes, and here carries warlike connotations, kindred
+with the previous picture of conflict and victory. Thus strength as of
+God, and, in some profound way, strength which is divine, will be the
+hand obeying the brain that counsels wonder, and all His plans shall be
+effected by it.
+
+But these are not all His qualities. He is 'the Father of Eternity'--a
+name in which tender care and immortal life are marvellously blended.
+This King will be in reality what, in old days, monarchs often called
+themselves and seldom were,--the Father of His people, with all the
+attributes of that sacred name, such as guidance, love, providing for
+His children's wants. Nor can Christians forget that Jesus is the source
+of life to them, and that the name has thus a deeper meaning. Further,
+He is possessed of eternity. If He is so closely related to God as the
+former name implies, that predicate is not wonderful. Dying men need and
+have an undying Christ. He is 'the same yesterday, and to-day, and for
+ever.'
+
+The whole series of names culminates in 'the Prince of Peace,' which He
+is by virtue of the characteristics expressed in the foregoing names.
+The name pierces to the heart of Christ's work. For the individual He
+brings peace with God, peace in the else discordant inner nature, peace
+amid storms of calamity--the peace of submission, of fellowship with
+God, of self-control, of received forgiveness and sanctifying. For
+nations and civic communities He brings peace which will one day hush
+the tumult of war, and burn chariots and all warlike implements in the
+fire. The vision tarries, because Christ's followers have not been true
+to their Master's mission, but it comes, though its march is slow. We
+can hasten its arrival.
+
+Verses 7 and 8 declare the perpetuity of Messiah's kingdom, His Davidic
+descent, and those characteristics of His reign, which guarantee its
+perpetuity. 'Judgment' which He exercises, and 'righteousness' which He
+both exercises and bestows, are the pillars on which His throne stands;
+and these are eternal, and it never will totter nor sink, as earthly
+thrones must do. The very life-blood of prophecy, as of religion, is the
+conviction that righteousness outlasts sin, and will survive 'the wreck
+of matter and the crash of worlds.'
+
+The great guarantee for these glowing anticipations is that the 'zeal of
+the Lord of hosts' will accomplish them. _Zeal_, or rather _jealousy_,
+is love stirred to action by opposition. It tolerates no unfaithfulness
+in the object of its love, and flames up against all antagonism to the
+object. 'He that toucheth you, toucheth the apple of Mine eye.' So the
+subjects of that Messiah may be sure that a wall of fire is round about
+them, which to foes without is terror and destruction, and to dwellers
+within its circuit glows with lambent light, and rays out beneficent
+warmth.
+
+
+
+
+LIGHT OR FIRE?
+
+'And the Light of Israel shall be for a fire, and his Holy One for a
+flame: and it shall burn and devour his thorns and his briers in one
+day.'--ISAIAH x. 17.
+
+
+With grand poetry the prophet pictures the Assyrian power as a forest
+consumed like thistles and briers by the fire of God. The text suggests
+solemn truths about the divine Nature and its manifestations.
+
+I. The Essential Character of God.
+
+Light and Holiness are substantially parallel. Light symbolises purity,
+but also knowledge and joy. Holiness is Separation from Creatures, but
+chiefly from their Evils.
+
+II. The Different Attitudes which Men assume to that Character.
+
+'Light of _Israel_': '_His_ Holy One.'
+
+God becomes ours, and we have an interest in that radiant Personality if
+we choose to claim it by faith, love, and obedience. We are free to
+accept God as ours or to reject Him.
+
+III. The Opposite Aspects which that Character accordingly assumes.
+
+(a) The self-same divine Character has two effects according to the
+character of the beholder.
+
+To those who respond to God's love it is--heaven. To those who are
+indifferent or alienated it may be pain, and will harm them if they see
+it and do not yield to it.
+
+God's holiness is not retributive justice but moral perfectness, which
+to a good man will be joy, and to a bad man, intolerable.
+
+The light which is gladsome to a healthy eye is agony to a diseased one.
+
+(b) All the manifestations and operations of that divine Character have
+a twofold aspect. Christ is either a stone of stumbling or a sure
+foundation. Men are either the better or the worse for Him. The Gospel
+is the savour of life unto life or of death unto death. The tremendous
+'either--or.' The Cross rejected harms the moral nature, hardens
+conscience, deepens condemnation.
+
+All divine operations are necessarily on the side of God's lovers and
+against those who love Him not. They are contrary to Him, therefore He
+is so to them. 'With the froward Thou wilt show Thyself froward.'
+
+The final Judgment will be either rapture or despair, like the coming of
+a bridegroom, or the fiery rain that burnt up Sodom.
+
+The very dew of Heavenly Bliss would be corroding poison to a godless
+spirit.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUCKER FROM THE FELLED OAK
+
+'And there shall come forth a rod out of the stem of Jesse, and a Branch
+shall grow out of his roots: 2. And the Spirit of the Lord shall rest
+upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding, the spirit of counsel
+and might, the spirit of knowledge and of the fear of the Lord; 3. And
+shall make him of quick understanding in the fear of the Lord: and he
+shall not judge after the sight of his eyes, neither reprove after the
+hearing of his ears: 4. But with righteousness shall he judge the poor,
+and reprove with equity for the meek of the earth: and he shall smite
+the earth with the rod of his mouth, and with the breath of his lips
+shall he slay the wicked. 5. And righteousness shall be the girdle of
+his loins, and faithfulness the girdle of his reins. 6. The wolf also
+shall dwell with the lamb, and the leopard shall lie down with the kid;
+and the calf and the young lion and the fatling together; and a little
+child shall lead them. 7. And the cow and the bear shall feed; their
+young ones shall lie down together: and the lion shall eat straw like
+the ox. 8. And the sucking child shall play on the hole of the asp, and
+the weaned child shall put his hand on the cockatrice's den. 9. They
+shall not hurt nor destroy in all my holy mountain: for the earth shall
+be full of the knowledge of the Lord, as the waters cover the sea. 10.
+And in that day there shall be a root of Jesse, which shall stand for an
+ensign of the people; to it shall the Gentiles seek: and his rest shall
+be glorious.'--ISAIAH xi. 1-10.
+
+
+The hopeless fall of Assyria is magnificently pictured in the close of
+chapter x., as the felling of the cedars of Lebanon by the axe swung by
+Jehovah's own hand. A cedar once cut down puts out no new shoots; and so
+the Assyrian power, when it falls, will fall for ever. The metaphor is
+carried on with surpassing beauty in the first part of this prophecy,
+which contrasts the indestructible vitality of the Davidic monarchy with
+the irremediable destruction fated for its formidable antagonist. The
+one is a cedar, the stump of which rots slowly, but never recovers. The
+other is an oak, which, every woodman knows, will put out new growth
+from the 'stool.' But instead of a crowd of little suckers, the prophet
+sees but one shoot, and that rising to more than the original height and
+fruitfulness of the tree. The prophecy is distinctly that of One Person,
+in whom the Davidic monarchy is concentrated, and all its decadence more
+than recovered.
+
+Isaiah does not bring the rise of the Messiah into chronological
+connection with the fall of Assyria; for he contemplates a period of
+decay for the Israelitish monarchy, and it was the very burden of his
+message as to Assyria that it should pass away without harming that
+monarchy. The contrast is not intended to suggest continuity in time.
+The period of fulfilment is entirely undetermined.
+
+The first point in the prophecy is the descent of the Messiah from the
+royal stock. That is more than Isaiah's previous Messianic prophecies
+had told. He is to come at a time when the fortunes of David's house
+were at their worst. There is to be nothing left but the stump of the
+tree, and out of it is to come a 'shoot,' slender and insignificant, and
+in strange contrast with the girth of the truncated bole, stately even
+in its mutilation. We do not talk of a growth from the stump as being a
+'branch'; and 'sprout' would better convey Isaiah's meaning. From the
+top of the stump, a shoot; from the roots half buried in the ground, an
+outgrowth,--these two images mean but one person, a descendant of David,
+coming at a time of humiliation and obscurity. But this lowly shoot will
+'bear fruit,' which presupposes its growth.
+
+The King-Messiah thus brought on the scene is then described in regard
+to His character (v. 2), the nature of His rule (vs. 3-5), the universal
+harmony and peace which He will diffuse through nature (vs. 6-9), and
+the gathering of all mankind under His dominion. There is much in the
+prophetic ideal of the Messiah which finds no place in this prophecy.
+The gentler aspects of His reign are not here, nor the deeper
+characteristics of His 'spirit,' nor the chiefest blessings in His gift.
+The suffering Messiah is not yet the theme of the prophet.
+
+The main point as to the character of the Messiah which this prophecy
+sets forth is that, whatever He was to be, He was to be by reason of the
+resting on Him of the Spirit of Jehovah. The directness, fulness, and
+continuousness of His inspiration are emphatically proclaimed in that
+word 'shall rest,' which can scarcely fail to recall John's witness, 'I
+have beheld the Spirit descending as a dove out of heaven; and it abode
+upon Him.' The humanity on which the Divine Spirit uninterruptedly
+abides, ungrieved and unrestrained, must be free from the stains which
+so often drive that heavenly visitant from our breasts. The
+white-breasted Dove of God cannot brood over foulness. There has never
+been but one manhood capable of receiving and retaining the whole
+fulness of the Spirit of God.
+
+The gifts of that Spirit, which become qualities of the Messiah in whom
+He dwells, are arranged (if we may use so cold a word) in three pairs;
+so that, if we include the introductory designation, we have a sevenfold
+characterisation of the Spirit, recalling the seven lamps before the
+throne and the seven eyes of the Lamb in the Apocalypse, and symbolising
+by the number the completeness and sacredness of that inspiration. The
+resulting character of the Messiah is a fair picture of one who realises
+the very ideal of a strong and righteous ruler of men. 'Wisdom and
+understanding' refer mainly to the clearness of intellectual and moral
+insight; 'counsel and might,' to the qualities which give sound
+practical direction and vigour to follow, and carry through, the
+decisions of practical wisdom; while 'the knowledge and fear of the
+Lord' define religion by its two parts of acquaintance with God founded
+on love, and reverential awe which prompts to obedience. The fulfilment,
+and far more than fulfilment, of this ideal is in Jesus, in whom were
+'hid all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge,' to whom no
+circumstances of difficulty ever brought the shadow of perplexity, who
+always saw clearly before Him the path to tread, and had always 'might'
+to tread it, however rough, who lived all His days in unbroken
+fellowship with the Father and in lowly obedience.
+
+The prophet saw not all the wonders of perfect human character which
+that indwelling Spirit would bring to realisation in Him; but what he
+saw was indispensable to a perfect King, and was, at all events, an arc
+of the mighty circle of perfection, which has now been revealed in the
+life of Jesus. The possibilities of humanity under the influence of the
+Divine Spirit are revealed here no less than the actuality of the
+Messiah's character. What Jesus is, He gives it to His subjects to
+become by the dwelling in them of the spirit of life which was in Him.
+
+The rule of the King is accordant with His character. It is described in
+verses 3-5. The first characteristic named may be understood in
+different ways. Accord-to some commentators, who deserve respectful
+consideration, it means, 'He shall draw His breath in the fear of
+Jehovah'; that is, that that fear has become, as it were, His very
+life-breath. But the meaning of 'breathing' is doubtful; and the phrase
+seems rather to express, as the Revised Version puts it, 'His delight
+shall be in the fear of the Lord.' That might mean that those who fear
+Jehovah shall be His delight, and this would free the expression from
+any shade of tautology, when compared with the previous clause, and
+would afford a natural transition to the description of His rule. It
+might, on the other hand, continue the description of His personal
+character, and describe the inward cheerfulness of His obedience, like
+'I delight to do Thy will.' In any case, the 'fear of the Lord' is
+represented as a sweet-smelling fragrance; and, if we adopt the former
+explanation, then it is almost a divine characteristic which is here
+attributed to the Messiah; for it is God to whom the fear of Him in
+men's hearts is 'an odour of a sweet smell.'
+
+Then follow the features of His rule. His unerring judgment pierces
+through the seen and heard. That is the quality of a monarch after the
+antique pattern, when kings were judges. It does not appear that the
+prophet rose to the height of perceiving the divine nature of the
+Messiah; but we cannot but remember how far the reality transcends the
+prophecy, since He whose 'eyes are as a flame of fire' knows what is in
+man, and the earliest prayers of the Church were addressed to Jesus as
+'Thou, Lord, which knowest the hearts of all men.'
+
+The relation of Messiah to two classes is next set forth. The oppressed
+and the meek shall have Him for their defender and avenger,--a striking
+contrast to the oppressive monarchs whom Isaiah had seen. We remember
+who said 'Blessed are the poor in spirit,' 'Blessed are the meek.' The
+King Himself has taught us to deepen the meaning of the words of the
+prophet, and to find in them the expression of the law of His kingdom by
+which its blessings belong to those who know their need and come with
+humble hearts. But the same acts which are for the poor are against the
+oppressors. The emendation which reads 'tyrant' (_arits_) for 'earth'
+(_erets_) brings the two clauses descriptive of the punitive acts into
+parallelism, and is probably to be preferred. The same pillar was light
+to Israel and darkness to the Egyptians. Christ is the savour of life
+unto life and of death unto death. But what is His instrument of
+destruction? 'The rod of His mouth' or 'the breath of His lips.' And who
+is He whose bare word thus has power to kill and make alive? Is not this
+a divine prerogative? and does it not belong in the fullest sense to Him
+whose voice rebuked fevers, storms, and demons, and pierced the dull,
+cold ear of death? Further, righteousness, the absolute conformity of
+character and act to the standard in the will of God, and faithfulness,
+the inflexible constancy, which makes a character consistent with
+itself, and so reliable, are represented by a striking figure as being
+twined together to make the girdle, which holds the vestments in place,
+and girds up the whole frame for effort. This righteous King 'shall not
+fail nor be discouraged.' He is to be reckoned on to the uttermost, or,
+as the New Testament puts it, He is 'the faithful and true witness.'
+This is the strong Son of God, who gathered all His powers together to
+run with patience the race set before Him, and to whom all may turn with
+the confidence that He is faithful 'as a Son over His own house,' and
+will inviolably keep the promise of His word and of His past acts.
+
+We pass from the picture of the character and rule of the King over men
+to that fair vision of Paradise regained, which celebrates the universal
+restoration of peace between man and the animals. The picture is not to
+be taken as a mere allegory, as if 'lions' and 'wolves' and 'snakes'
+meant bad men; but it falls into line with other hints in Scripture,
+which trace the hostility between man and the lower creatures to sin,
+and shadow a future when 'the beasts of the field shall be at peace with
+thee.' The psalm which sings of man's dominion over the creatures is to
+be one day fulfilled; and the Epistle to the Hebrews teaches that it is
+already fulfilled in Christ, who will raise His brethren, for whom He
+tasted death, to partake in His dominion. The present order of things is
+transient; and if earth is to be, as some shadowy hints seem to suggest,
+the scene of the future glories of redeemed humanity, it may be the
+theatre of a fulfilment of such visions as this. But we cannot dogmatise
+on a subject of which we know so little, nor be sure of the extent to
+which symbolism enters into this sweet picture. Enough that there surely
+comes a time when the King of men and Lord of nature shall bring back
+peace between both, and restore 'the fair music that all creatures made
+To their great Lord.'
+
+Verse 10 begins an entirely new section, which describes the relations
+of Messiah's kingdom to the surrounding peoples. The picture preceding
+closed with the vision of the earth filled with the knowledge of the
+Lord, and this verse proclaims the universality of Messiah's kingdom. By
+'the root of Jesse' is meant, not the root from which Jesse sprang, but,
+in accordance with verse 1, the sprout from the house of Jesse. Just as
+in that verse the sprout was prophesied of as growing up to be
+fruitbearing, so here the lowly sucker shoots to a height which makes it
+conspicuous from afar, and becomes, like some tall mast, a sign for the
+nations. The contrast between the obscure beginning and the conspicuous
+destiny of Messiah is the point of the prophecy. 'I, if I be lifted up
+from the earth, will draw all men unto Me.' Strange elevation for a king
+is a cross! But it is because He has died for men that He has the right
+to reign over them, and that they 'shall seek' to Him. 'His
+resting-place shall be glorious.'
+
+The seat of His dominion is also the seat of His repose. The beneficent
+activity just described is wielded from a calm, central palace, and does
+not break the King's tranquillity. That is a paradox, except to those
+who know that Jesus Christ, sitting in undisturbed rest at the right
+hand of God, thence works with and for His servants. His repose is full
+of active energy; His active energy is full of repose. And that place of
+calm abode is 'glorious' or, more emphatically and literally, 'glory. He
+shall dwell in the blaze of the uncreated glory of God,--a prediction
+which is only fulfilled in its true meaning by Christ's ascension and
+session at the right hand of God, in the glory which He had with the
+Father before the world was, and into which He has borne that lowly
+manhood which He drew from the cut-down stem of Jesse.
+
+
+
+
+THE WELL-SPRING OF SALVATION
+
+'Therefore with joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation.
+ISAIAH xii. 3.
+
+
+There are two events separated from each other by more than fifteen
+hundred years which have a bearing upon this prophecy: the one supplied
+the occasion for its utterance, the other claimed to be its
+interpretation and its fulfilment. The first of these is that scene
+familiar to us all, where the Israelites in the wilderness murmured for
+want of water, and the law-giver, being at his wits' end what to do with
+his troublesome charges, took his anxieties to God, and got for an
+answer the command to take with him the elders of Israel and his
+miracle-working rod, and to go to the rock, 'and the Lord shall stand
+upon the rock before thee and them, and the water shall flow forth.' It
+was not the rock, nor the rod, nor Moses and the elders, but the
+presence of God that brought the refreshing draught. And that that
+incident was in Isaiah's mind when he wrote our text is very clear to
+anybody who will observe that it occurs in the middle of a song of
+praise, which corresponds to the Israelites' song at the Red Sea after
+the destruction of Pharaoh, and is part of a great prophecy in which he
+describes God's future blessings and mercies under images constantly
+drawn from the Egyptian bondage and the Exodus in the desert. Now, that
+interpretation, or rather that application, of the words of my text, was
+very familiar to the Jews long, long before the New Testament was
+thought about. For, as many of you will know, there came in the course
+of time a number of ceremonies to be added to a feast established by
+Moses himself--the Feast of Tabernacles. That was a feast in which the
+whole body of the Israelitish people dwelt for a week in leafy booths,
+in order to remind them of the time when they were wanderers in the
+wilderness; and as is usually the case, the ritual of the celebration
+developed a number of additional symbolical observances which were
+tacked on to it in the course of centuries. Amongst these there was this
+very memorable one: that on each of the days of the Feast of
+Tabernacles, at a given point in the ceremonial, the priests went from
+the temple, winding down the rocky path on the temple mountain, to the
+Pool of Siloam in the valley below, and there in their golden vases they
+drew the cool sparkling water, which they bore up, and amidst the blare
+of trumpets and the clash of cymbals poured it on the altar, whilst the
+people chanted the words of my text, 'With joy shall ye draw water out
+of the wells of salvation.'
+
+That ceremonial had been going on for eight hundred years from Isaiah's
+time; and once more the period came round when it was to be performed;
+and on the seven days of the feast, punctually at the appointed time,
+the procession wound down the rocky slopes, drew the water in the golden
+vases, bore it up to the temple, and poured it upon the altar; and on
+the last great day of the feast, the same ceremonial went on up to a
+given point; and just as the last rites of the chant of our text were
+dying on the ears, there was a little stir amidst the crowd, which
+parted to make way for him, and a youngish man, of mean appearance and
+rustic dress, stepped forward, and there, before all the gathered
+multitudes and the priests standing with their empty urns, symbol of the
+impotence of their system, 'on the last day, that great day of the
+feast, Jesus stood and cried, If any man thirst, let him come unto Me
+and drink.' Brethren, such a commentary, at such a time, from such a
+commentator, may well absolve me from the necessity of enforcing the
+evangelistic bearing of the words of my text. And so, then, with that
+understanding of the deepest meaning of these words that we have to look
+at, I ask you to take them in the simplest possible way, and to consider
+three points: the Well of Salvation, the Act of Drawing the Water, the
+Gladness of those that draw. 'With _joy_ shall _ye_ draw water out of
+the fountains of salvation.'
+
+Now, with regard to the first point, let me remind you to begin with,
+that the idea of the word here is not that which we attach to a well,
+but that which we attach to a spring. It does not describe the source of
+salvation as being a mere reservoir, still less as being a created or
+manufactured thing; but there lies in it the deep idea of a source from
+which the water wells up by its own inward energy. Then, when we have
+got that explanation, and the deep, full, pregnant meaning of the word
+salvation as a thing past, a thing present, a thing future, a thing
+which negatively delivers a man from all sin and sorrow, and a thing
+which positively endows a man with beauty, happiness, and holiness--when
+we have got that, then the question next cries aloud for answer--this
+well-spring of salvation, is--what? Who? And the first answer and the
+last answer is GOD--GOD HIMSELF. It is no mere bit of drapery of the
+prophet's imagery, this well-spring of salvation; it is something much
+more substantial, much deeper than that. You remember the old psalm,
+'With Thee is the fountain of life: in Thy light shall we see light';
+and what David and John after him called life, Isaiah and Paul after him
+calls salvation. And you remember too, no doubt, the indictment of
+another of the prophets, laying hold of the same metaphor in order to
+point to the folly and the suicide of all godless living: 'My people
+have committed two evils: they have forsaken Me, the fountain of living
+waters, and they have hewn out for themselves broken cisterns.' They
+were manufactured articles, and because they were made they could be
+cracked, but the fountain, because it rises by its own inherent energy,
+springing up into everlasting life, is all-sufficient. God Himself is
+the well-spring of salvation.
+
+If I had time to enlarge upon this idea, I might remind you how nobly
+and blessedly that principle is confirmed when we think of this great
+salvation, past, present, and future, negative and positive, all-
+sufficient and complete, as having its origin in His deep nature, as
+having its process in His own finished work, and as being in its essence
+the communication of Himself. That last thing I should like to say a
+word or two about. If there is a man or a woman that thinks of salvation
+as if it were merely a shutting up of some material hell, or the dodging
+round a corner so as to escape some external consequence of
+transgression, let him and her hear this: the possession of God is
+salvation, that and nothing else. To have Him within me, that is to be
+saved; to have His life in His dear Son made the foundation of my life,
+to have my whole being penetrated and filled with God, that is the
+essence of the salvation that is in Jesus Christ. And because it comes
+unmotived, uncaused, self-originated, springing up from the depths of
+His own heart; because it is all effected by His own mighty work who has
+trodden the winepress alone, and, single-handed, has wrought the
+salvation of the race; and because its essence and heart is the
+communication of God Himself, and the bestowing upon us the
+participation in a divine nature, therefore the depth of the thought,
+_God Himself_ is the well-fountain of salvation.
+
+But there is still another step to take. If these things which I have
+only just been able to glance at in the most superficial, and perhaps,
+therefore, confused manner, in any measure commend themselves to your
+judgments and your consciences, let me ask you to go with me one step
+further, and to figure to yourselves the significance and the
+strangeness of that moment to which I have already referred, when a man
+stood up in the temple court, and, with distinct allusion to the whole
+of the multitude of Old Testament sayings, in which God and the
+communication of God's own energy were represented as being the fountain
+of salvation and the salvation from the fountain, and said, 'If any man
+thirst, let him come unto Me.' Why, what a thing--let us put it into
+plain, vulgar English--what a thing for a man to say--'If any man
+thirst.' Who art Thou that dost thus plant Thyself opposite the race,
+sure that Thou hast no needs like them, but, contrariwise, canst refresh
+and satiate the thirsty lips of them all? Who art Thou that dost
+proclaim Thyself as sufficient for the fruition of the mind that yearns
+for truth and thirsts for certitude, of the parched heart that wearies
+and cracks for want of love, of the will that longs to be rightly and
+lovingly commanded? Oh, dear brethren, not only the Titanic presumption
+of proposing oneself as enough for a single soul, but the inconceivable
+madness of proposing oneself as enough for all the race in all
+generations to the end of time, except on one hypothesis, marks this
+utterance of Him who has also said, 'I am meek and lowly of heart.'
+Strange lowliness! singular meekness! Who was He? Who is this that steps
+into the place that only a God can fill, and says, 'I can do it all. If
+any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink'?
+
+Dear brethren, some of us can, thank God, answer that question as I pray
+that every one of you may be able to answer it, 'Thou art the King of
+Glory, O Christ; Thou art the everlasting son of the Father. With Thee
+is the fountain of life; Thou Thyself art the living water.'
+
+But I think there is a still further step to be taken. It is not only
+that our Lord Jesus Christ, in His nature, in His person, is the
+communicator of the divine life to man, just as--if you will let me take
+such a metaphor--just as up in the hills sometimes you will find some
+little tarn or loch all shut in; but having trickling from it a thread
+of limpid life, and, wherever it flows, the water of the loch goes;
+only, the one is lake and the other is river, and the latter is the
+medium of communication of the former to the thirsty pastures of the
+wilderness. And not only so, but--if I might venture to build upon a
+word of the context--there seems to be another consideration there. The
+words which precede my text are a quotation from a song of the
+Israelites in their former Exodus: 'The Lord Jehovah is my strength and
+my song; He also is become my salvation.' Now, if our Bible has been
+correct--and I do not enter upon that question--in emphasising the
+difference between _is_ and _is become_, mark where it takes us. It
+takes us to this, that there was some single, definite, historical act
+wherein God _became_ in an eminent manner and in reality what He had
+always been in purpose, intent, and idea. Then that to which my text
+originally alludes, to which it looks back, is the great deliverance
+wrought by the banks of the Red Sea. It was because Pharaoh and his
+hosts were drowned in it that Miriam and her musical sisters, with their
+timbrel and dance, not only said, 'The Lord is my strength,' but 'He
+_has become_ my strength'--there where the corpses are floating yet.
+What answers to that in the matter with which we are concerned?
+Brethren, it is not enough to say that God is the fountain of salvation,
+it is not enough to say that the Incarnate Christ is the medium of
+salvation. Will you take the other step with us, and say that the Cross
+of Christ is the realisation of the divine intention of salvation? Then
+He, who from everlasting was the strength and song of all the strong and
+the songful, _is become_ the salvation of all the lost, and the fountain
+is 'opened for sin and for uncleanness.' A definite, historical act, the
+manifestation of Jesus Christ, is the bringing to man of the salvation
+of God. So much, then, for that first point to which I desired to ask
+your attention.
+
+And now let me say a word or two as to the second. I wish to speak about
+this process of drawing from the fountain. That metaphor, without any
+further explanation, might very naturally suggest more idea of human
+effort than in reality belongs to it. Men have said: 'Yes; no doubt God
+is the fountain of salvation; no doubt Christ is the river of salvation;
+no doubt His death is the opening of the fountain for sin and for
+uncleanness; but how am I to bring myself into contact and connection
+with it?' And there have been all sorts of answers. Every kind of pump
+has been resorted to. Go up to the Agricultural Hall and you will see no
+end of contrivances for bringing water to the surface. There are not so
+many there as men have found out for themselves to bring the water of
+salvation to their lips, and the effect has always been the same. There
+has been something wrong with the valves; the pump has not worked
+properly; there has been something wrong with the crank; the pipe has
+not gone down to the water; and there has been nothing but a great
+jingling of empty buckets, and aching and wearied elbows, and what the
+woman said to Christ has been true all round, 'Sir, thou hast nothing to
+draw with, and the well is deep.' Ay! thank God, it _is_ deep; and if we
+let our Lord be His own interpreter, we have only to put together three
+sayings of His in order to come to the true meaning of this metaphor. My
+text says, 'With joy ye shall draw water'; and Christ, sitting at the
+well of Samaria--what a strange combination of the weakness and the
+weariness of manhood and the strength and self-consciousness of Divinity
+was there!--wearied with His journey, said, 'If thou knewest the gift of
+God, and who it is that saith to thee, Give Me to drink, thou wouldest
+have asked of Him and He would have given thee living water.' So, then,
+drawing is asking. That is step number one.
+
+Take another word of the Master's that I have already quoted for other
+purposes, 'If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink.' So, then,
+drawing, or asking, or coming are all equivalent. That is step number
+two.
+
+And, then, take another word. 'He that cometh unto Me shall never
+hunger, and he that believeth on Me shall never thirst.' So, then,
+drawing, asking, coming, all melt into the one simple word--believing.
+Trust in Him, and thou hast come, thou hast asked, thou hast drawn, thou
+dost possess.
+
+But whilst I would lay the foundation thus broad, thus simple, do not
+forget, dear brethren, what I was saying about a definite historical
+act. You will hear people say, 'Oh, I trust in Christ!' What do you
+trust in Christ? You will hear people say, 'Oh, I look to the goodness
+of God.' Be it so. God forbid I should say a word to prevent that; but
+what I would insist upon is that a mere vague regard to a vague Christ
+is not the faith that is equivalent to drawing from the fountain of
+salvation. There must be a further object in a faith that saves. It must
+lay hold of the definite historical act in which Christ has become the
+salvation of the world.
+
+Do not take it upon my words, take it upon His own. He once said to His
+fellow-countrymen in His lifetime, 'I am the living bread'; and many of
+our modern teachers would go that length heartily. Was that where Christ
+stopped? By no means. Was His Gospel a gospel of incarnation only?
+Certainly not. 'I am the living bread that came down from heaven.'
+Anything more? Yes; this more, 'and the bread which I will give is My
+flesh, which I will give for the life of the world. He that eateth Me he
+shall live by Me.' 'Well,' say some people, 'that means following His
+example, accepting His teaching, being loyal to His Person, absorbing
+His Spirit.' Yes, it means all that; but is that all it means? Take His
+own commentary: 'He that eateth My flesh and drinketh My blood, hath
+eternal life.' Yes, brethren, a Christ incarnate, blessed be God! A
+Christ crucified, blessed be God! And not the one but _both_ must be the
+basis of our faith and our hope.
+
+Now, will you let me say one thing about this matter of drawing the
+water? It is an act of faith in a whole Jesus, and eminently in the
+mighty act and sacrifice of His Cross. But to go back again to the
+context: 'He also is become _my_ salvation. 'That is what I desire, God
+helping me, to lay on the hearts of all my hearers--that a definite act
+of faith in Christ crucified is not enough unless it is a personal act,
+unless it is what our old Puritan forefathers used to call
+'appropriating faith.' Never mind about the somewhat dry and technical
+phraseology; the thing is what I insist upon--'_my_ salvation.' O
+brother! what does it matter though all Niagara were roaring past your
+door; you might die of thirst all the same unless you put your own lips
+to it. Down on your knees like Gideon's men; it is safest there; that is
+the only attitude in which a man can drink of this fountain. Down on
+your knees and put your lips to it--your very own lips--and drink for
+your own soul's salvation. Christ died for the world. Yes; but the world
+for which Christ died is made up of individuals who were in His heart.
+It is Paul's words that I would beseech you to make your own: 'The Son
+of God, who loved _me_ and gave Himself for _me_.' Every one of you is
+entitled to say that, if you will. You remember that verse filled with
+adoring contemplation that we sometimes sing, one word in which seems to
+me to be coloured by the too sombre doctrine of the epoch from which it
+came:--
+
+ 'My soul looks back to see
+ The burden Thou didst bear,
+ When hanging on the accursed tree,
+ And _knows_ her guilt was there.'
+
+'He also is my strength and my song. He is become my salvation;
+therefore, in joy shall ye draw water out of the wells of salvation.'
+
+Now, I have left myself no time to do more than say one word about that
+last point, the gladness of the water-drawers. It is a pretty picture in
+our text, full of the atmosphere and spirit of Eastern life: the cheery
+talk and the ringing laughter round the village well, where the
+shepherds with their flocks linger all day long, and the maidens from
+their tents come--a kind of rude Exchange in the antique world; and,
+says our prophet, 'As the dwellers in the land at their village springs,
+so ye, the weary travellers at "the eye of the desert," will draw with
+gladness.' So we have this joy.
+
+Dear brethren, the Gospel of Jesus Christ is meant for something better
+than to make us glad, but it is meant to make us glad too, and he is but
+a very poor Christian who has not found that it is the joy and rejoicing
+of his heart. We need not put too much emphasis and stress upon that
+side of the truth; but we need not either suppress it or disregard it in
+our modern high-flown disinterestedness. There are joys worth calling so
+which only come from possessing this fountain of salvation. How shall I
+enumerate them? The best way, I think, will be to quote passages.
+
+There is the gladness of forgiven sin and a quieted conscience: 'Make me
+to hear joy and gladness, that the bones which Thou hast broken may
+rejoice.' There is the joy of a conscious possession of God: 'Blessed
+are the people that know the joyful sound; they shall walk, O Lord, in
+the light of Thy countenance. In Thy name shall they rejoice all the
+day.' There is the joy of fellowship and communion with Jesus Christ and
+His full presence: 'I will see you again; and your hearts shall rejoice,
+and your joy no man taketh away from you.' There is the joy of willing
+obedience: 'I delight to do Thy will.' 'It is joy to the just to do
+judgment.' There is the joy of a bright hope of an inheritance
+'incorruptible,' 'wherein ye greatly rejoice,' and there is a joy which,
+like that Greek fire they talk about, burns brighter under water, and
+glows as the darkness deepens--a joy which is independent of
+circumstances, and can say, 'Although the fig-tree shall not blossom,
+neither shall fruit be in the vines, yet I will rejoice in the Lord.'
+
+And all that, brother and friend, may be yours and mine; and then what
+this same prophet says may also be true: 'The ransomed of the Lord shall
+return and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their
+heads'--that is for the pilgrimage; 'They shall obtain joy and gladness,
+and sorrow and sighing shall flee away'--that is for the home. There is
+another prophecy in this same book of Isaiah: 'Ho, every one that
+thirsteth, come ye to the waters'; that was the voice of the Christ in
+prophecy. There is a saying spoken in the temple courts: 'If any man
+thirst, let him come unto Me and drink'; that was the voice of the
+Christ upon earth. There is a saying at the end of Scripture--almost the
+last words that the Seer in Patmos heard: 'Whosoever will, let him take
+of the water of life freely'; that was the voice of the Christ from the
+throne. And the triple invitation comes to every soul of man in the
+world, and to thee, and thee, and thee, my brother. Answer, answer as
+the Samaritan woman did: 'Sir, give me this water that I thirst not,
+neither come hither' any more to draw of the broken cisterns.
+
+
+
+
+THE HARVEST OF A GODLESS LIFE
+
+'Because thou hast forgotten the God of thy salvation, and hast not been
+mindful of the Rock of thy strength, therefore shalt thou plant pleasant
+plants, and shalt set it with strange slips: In the day shalt thou make
+thy plant to grow, and in the morning shalt thou make thy seed to
+flourish: but the harvest shall be a heap in the day of grief and of
+desperate sorrow.'--ISAIAH xvii. 10, 11.
+
+
+The original application of these words is to Judah's alliance with
+Damascus, which Isaiah was dead against. He saw that it would only
+precipitate the Assyrian invasion, as in fact it did. Judah had forsaken
+God, and because they had done so, they had gone to seek for themselves
+delights--alliance with Damascus. The image of planting a garden of
+pleasures, and 'vine slips of a stranger' refers to sensuous idolatry as
+well as to the entangling alliance. Then follows a contemptuous
+description of the rapid growth of this alliance and of the care with
+which Israel cultivated it. 'In a day thou makest thy plant to grow' (or
+fencest it), and next morning it was in blossom, so sedulously had they
+nursed and fostered it. Then comes the smiting contrast of what it was
+all for--'A harvest heap in the day of sickness and incurable pain.'
+
+Now we may take this in a more general way as containing large truths
+which affect the life of every one of us.
+
+I. The Sin of a Godless Life.
+
+(a) Notice the Sin charged. It is merely negative--_forgettest_. There
+is no charge of positive hostility or of any overt act. This
+forgetfulness is most natural and easy to be fallen into. The constant
+pressure of the world. It indicates alienation of heart from God.
+
+It is most common among us, far more so than active infidelity, far more
+so than gross sin, far more so than conscious hostility.
+
+(b) The implied Criminality of it. He is the 'Rock of thy strength' and
+the 'God of thy salvation.' Rock is the grand Old Testament name of God,
+expressing in a pregnant metaphor both what He is in Himself and what in
+relation to those who trust Him. It speaks of stability, elevation,
+massiveness, and of defence and security. The parallel title sets Him
+forth as the Giver of salvation; and both names set in clear light the
+sinful ingratitude of forgetting God, and force home the question: 'Do
+ye thus requite the Lord, oh foolish people and unwise?'
+
+(c) The implied Absurdity of it. What a contrast between the safe
+'munitions of rocks' and the unsheltered security of these Damascene
+gardens! What fools to leave the heights and come down into the plain!
+Think of the contrast between the sufficiency of God and the emptiness
+of the substitutes. Forgetfulness of Him and preference of creatures
+cannot be put into language which does not convict it of absurdity.
+
+II. The Busy Effort and Apparent Success of a Godless Life.
+
+(a) If a man loses his hold on God and has not Him to stay himself on,
+he is driven to painful efforts to make up the loss. God is needed by
+every soul. If the soul is not satisfied in Him, then there are hungry
+desires. This is the explanation of the feverish activity of much of our
+life.
+
+(b) Such work is far harder than the work of serving God. It takes a
+great deal of toil to make that garden grow. The world is a hard
+taskmaster. God's service is easy. He sets us in Eden to till and dress
+it, but when we forget Him, the ground is cursed, and bears thorns and
+thistles, and sweat drips from our brows.
+
+Men take more pains to damn themselves than to save themselves. There is
+nothing more wearying than the pursuit of pleasure. 'Pleasant
+plants'--that is a hopeless kind of gardening. There is nothing more
+degrading.
+
+'Ye lust and desire to have,'--what a contrast is in, Ask and have! We
+might live even as the lilies or the ravens, or with only this
+difference, that we laboured, but were as uncaring and as peaceful as
+they.
+
+God is _given_. The world has to be _bought_. Its terms are 'Nothing for
+nothing.'
+
+(c) Such work has sometimes quick, present success.
+
+'In the day.' It is hard for men to labour towards far-off unseen good.
+We like to have what will grow up in a night, like Jonah's gourd. So
+these present satisfactions in a worldly life appeal to worldly,
+sensuous natures. And it is hard to set over against these a plant which
+grows slowly, and only bears fruit in the next world.
+
+III. The End of it all.
+
+'A harvest heap in the day of grief.' This clearly points on to a solemn
+ending--the day of judgment.
+
+(a) How poor the fruit will he that a God-forgetting man will take out
+of life! There is but _one heap_ from all the long struggle. He has
+'sowed much and brought home little.' What shall we take with us out of
+our busy years as their net result? A very small sack will be large
+enough to hold the harvest that many of us have reaped.
+
+(b) All this God-forgetting life of pleasure-seeking and idolatry is
+bringing on a terrible, inevitable consummation.
+
+'Put in the sickle, for the harvest is ripe.'
+
+No doubt there is often a harvest of grief and desperate sorrow
+springing, even in this life, from forgetting God. For it is only they
+who set their hopes on Him that are never disappointed, and only they
+who have chosen Him for their portion who can always say, 'I have a
+goodly heritage.' But the real harvest is not reaped till death has
+separated the time of sowing from that of ingathering. The sower shall
+reap; i.e. every man shall inherit the consequences of his deeds. 'They
+that have planted it shall eat it.'
+
+(c) That harvest home will be a day of sadness to some. These are
+terrible words--'grief and desperate sorrow,' or 'pain and incurable
+sickness.' We dare not dilate on this. But if we trust in Christ and sow
+to the Spirit, we shall then 'rejoice before God as with the joy of
+harvest,' and 'return with joy, bringing our sheaves with us.'
+
+
+
+
+'IN THIS MOUNTAIN'
+
+'In this mountain shall the Lord of hosts make unto all people a feast
+of fat things, a feast of wines on the lees, of fat things full of
+marrow, of wines on the lees well refined. 7. And He will destroy in
+this mountain the face of the covering cast over all people, and the
+veil that is spread over all nations. 8. He will swallow up death in
+victory.'--ISAIAH xxv. 6-8.
+
+
+A poet's imagination and a prophet's clear vision of the goal to which
+God will lead humanity are both at their highest in this great song of
+the future, whose winged words make music even in a translation. No
+doubt it starts from the comparatively small fact of the restoration of
+the exiled nation to its own land. But it soars far beyond that. It sees
+all mankind associated with them in sharing their blessings. It is the
+vision of God's ideal for humanity. That makes it the more remarkable
+that the prophet, with this wide outlook, should insist with such
+emphasis on the fact that it has a local centre. That phrase 'in this
+mountain' is three times repeated in the hymn; two of the instances
+occurring in the verses of my text have lying side by side with them the
+expressions 'all people' and 'all nations,' as if to bring together the
+local origin, and the universal extent, of the blessings promised.
+
+The sweet waters that are to pour through the world well up from a
+spring opened 'in this mountain.' The beams that are to lighten every
+land stream out from a light blazing there. The world's hopes for that
+golden age which poets have sung, and towards which earnest social
+reformers have worked, and of the coming of which this prophet was sure,
+rest on a definite fact, done in a definite place, at a definite time.
+Isaiah knew the place, but what was to be done, or when it was to be
+done, he knew not. You and I ought to be wiser. History has taught us
+that Jesus Christ fulfils the visioned good that inspired the prophet's
+brilliant words. We might say, with allowable licence, that 'this
+mountain,' in which the Lord does the great things that this song
+magnifies, is not so much Zion as Calvary.
+
+Brethren, in these days, when so many voices are proclaiming so many
+short cuts to the Millennium, this clear declaration of the source of
+the world's hope is worth pondering. For us all, individually, this
+localisation of the origin of the universal good of mankind is an offer
+of blessings to us if we will go thither, where the provision for the
+world's good is stored--'In this mountain'; therefore, to seek it
+anywhere else is to seek it in vain.
+
+Now, I wish, under the impression of that conviction, to put before you
+just these three thoughts: where the world's food comes from; where the
+unveiling which gives light to the world comes from; and where the life
+which destroys death for the world comes from--'In this mountain.'
+
+I. Where does the world's food come from?
+
+Physiologists can tell, by studying the dentition--the system of the
+teeth--and the digestive apparatus of an animal, what it is meant to
+live upon, whether vegetables or flesh, or a mingled diet of both. And
+you can tell, if you will, by studying yourself, what, or whom, you are
+meant to live upon. The poet said, 'We live by admiration, hope, and
+love.' But he did not say on what these faculties, which truly nourish
+man's spirit, are to fix and fasten. He tells of the appetites; he does
+not tell of their food. My text does: 'In this mountain shall the Lord
+make unto all people a feast of fat things, a feast of wines on the less
+well refined.' Friends, look at these hearts of yours with their
+yearnings, with their passionate desires, with their clamant needs. Will
+any human love--the purest, the sweetest, the most unselfish, the most
+utter in its surrender--satisfy the heart-hunger of the poorest of us?
+No! Look at the capacities of grasping thought and truth in our spirits,
+which are ever seek, seek, seeking for absolutely certain foundations on
+which we may build the whole structure of our beliefs. You have to go
+deeper down than the sand of man's thinkings and teachings before you
+can reach what will bear without shifting the foundations of a life's
+credence and confidence. Look at these tumultuous wills of ours that
+fancy they crave to be independent, and really crave an absolute master
+whom it is blessedness to obey. You will find none such beneath the
+stars. The very elements of our being, our heart, will, mind, desires,
+passions, longings, all with one voice proclaim that the only food for a
+man is God.
+
+Jesus Christ brings the food that we need. Remember His own adaptation
+of this great vision of my text in more than one parable; such as the
+supper that was provided, and to which all men were invited, and, 'with
+one consent,' declined the invitation. Remember His own utterance,' I am
+the Bread of God which came down from heaven to give life to the world.'
+Remembering such words, let me plead with you to listen to the voice of
+warning as well as of invitation, which sounds from Cradle and Cross and
+Throne. 'Why will ye spend your money for that which is not bread'--you
+know it is not--'and your labour for that which satisfieth not?'--you
+know it does not. Turn to Him, 'eat, and your souls shall live.' 'In
+this mountain is prepared a feast... for all nations.'
+
+Notice that although it does not appear on the surface, and to English
+readers, this world's festival, in which every want is met, and every
+appetite satisfied, is a feast on a sacrifice. That touches the deepest
+need, about which I shall have a word or two to say presently. But in
+the meantime let me just press this upon you, that the Christ who died
+on the Cross is to be lived on by us; and that it is His sacrifice that
+is to be the nourishment of our spirits.
+
+Would that the earnest men, who are trying to cure the world's evils and
+to still the world's wants, and are leaving Jesus Christ and His
+religion out of their programme, would take thought and ask themselves
+whether there is not something more in the hunger of humanity than their
+ovens can ever bake bread for! They are spinning ropes of sand, if they
+are trying to lift the world clear of its miseries and of its hunger,
+and are not presenting Jesus Christ. I hope I am no bigot; I know that I
+sympathise earnestly with all these other schemes for helping mankind,
+but this I am bound to say here--all of them put together will not reach
+the need of the case, unless they start from, and are subsidiary to, and
+develop out of, the presenting of the primal supply for the universal
+want, Christ, who alone is able to still the hunger of men's hearts.
+Education will do much, but university degrees and the highest culture
+will not satisfy a hungry heart. Fitting environment, as it is
+fashionable to call it, will do a great deal, but nothing outside of a
+man will staunch his evils or still the hunger that coils and grips in
+his heart. Competent wealth is a good-there 1s no need to say that in
+Manchester-but millionaires have been known to be miserable. A heart at
+rest in the love of husband, wife, parent, child, is a blessing
+earnestly to be sought and thankfully to be treasured by us all; but
+there is more than that wanted. Put a man in the most favourable
+circumstances; give him competent worldly means; do all that modern
+philosophers who leave religion out of the question are trying to do;
+put in practice your most advanced Socialistic schemes, and you will
+still have a man with a hungry heart. He may not know what he wants;
+very often he will entirely mistake what that is, but he will be
+restless for want of an unknown good. Here is the only thing that will
+still his heart: 'The bread which I give is My flesh, which I will give
+for the life of the world.'
+
+Brother and sister, this is not a matter only for social reformers, and
+to be dealt with as bearing upon wide movements that influence
+multitudes. It comes home to you and me. Some of you do not in the least
+degree know what I am talking about when I speak of the hunger of men's
+hearts; for you have lost your appetites, as children that eat too many
+sweets have no desire for their wholesome meals. You have lost your
+appetite by feeding upon garbage, and you say you are quite content.
+Yes, at present; but deep down there lies in your hearts a need which
+will awake and speak out some day; and you will find that the husks
+which the swine did eat are scarcely wholesome nutriment for a man. And
+there are some of you that turn away with disgust, and I am glad of it,
+from these low, gross, sensuous delights; and are trying to satisfy
+yourselves with education, culture, refinement, art, science, domestic
+love, wealth, gratified ambition, or the like. There are tribes of
+degraded Indians that in times of famine eat clay. There is a little
+nourishment in it, and it distends their stomachs, and gives them the
+feeling of having had a meal. And that is like what some of you do. Dear
+friends, will you listen to this?--'Why do ye spend your money for that
+which is not bread?' Will you listen to this?--'I am the Bread of Life,'
+Will you listen to this?--'In this mountain will the Lord make unto all
+people a feast of fat things.'
+
+II. Where does the unveiling that gives light to the world come from?
+
+My text, as I have already remarked, emphatically repeats 'in this
+mountain' in its next clause. 'He will destroy in this mountain the face
+of the covering cast over all people, and the veil that is spread over
+all nations.'
+
+Now, of course, the pathetic picture that is implied here, of a dark
+pall that lies over the whole world, suggests the idea of mourning, but
+still more emphatically, I think, that of obscuration and gloom. The
+veil prevents vision and shuts out light, and that is the picture of
+humanity as it presents itself before this prophet--a world of men
+entangled in the folds of a dark pall that lay over their heads, and
+swathed them round about, and prevented them from seeing; shut them up
+in darkness and entangled their feet, so that they stumbled in the
+gloom. It is a pathetic picture, but it does not go beyond the realities
+of the case. For, with all our light on other matters, with all our
+freedom of action, with all our frequent forgetfulness of the fact that
+we are thus encompassed, it remains true that, apart from the
+emancipation and illumination that are effected by Jesus Christ, this is
+the picture of mankind as they are. And you are beneath that veil, and
+swathed, obstructively as regards light and liberty, by its heavy folds,
+unless Christ has freed you.
+
+But we must go a step further than that, I think; and although one does
+not wish to force too much meaning on to a poetic metaphor, still I
+cannot help supposing that that universal pall, as I called it, which is
+cast over all nations, has a very definite and a very tragic meaning.
+There is a universal fact of human experience which answers to the
+figure, and that is sin. That is the black thing whose ebon folds hamper
+us, and darken us, and shut out the visions of God and blessedness, and
+all the glorious blue above us. The heavy, dark mist settles down on the
+plains, though the sky above is undimmed by it, and the sun is blazing
+in the zenith. Not one beam can penetrate through the wet, chill
+obstruction, and men stumble about in the fog with lamps and torches,
+and all the while a hundred feet up it is brightness and day. Or, if at
+some points the obstruction is thinned and the sun does come through, it
+is shorn of all its gracious beams and power to warm and cheer, and
+looks but like a copper-coloured, livid, angry ball. So the 'veil that
+is spread over all nations, 'that awful fact of universal sinfulness,
+shuts out God--who is our light and our joy--from us, and no other
+lights or joys are more than twinkling tapers in the mist. Or it makes
+us see Him as men in a fog see the sun--shorn of His graciousness,
+threatening, wrathful, unlovely.
+
+Brethren, the fact of universal sinfulness is the outstanding fact of
+humanity. Jesus Christ deals with it by His death, which is God's
+sacrifice and the world's atonement. That Lamb of God has borne away the
+world's sins, and my sins and thy sins are there. By the fact of His
+death He has rent the veil from the top to the bottom, and the light
+comes in, unhindered by the terrible solemn fact that all of us have
+sinned and come short of the glory of God. By His life He communicates
+to each of us, if we will trust our poor sinful souls to Him, a new
+power of living which is triumphant over temptation, and gives the
+victory over sin if we will be true to Him. And so the last shreds of
+the veil, like the torn clouds of a spent thunderstorm, are parted into
+filmy rags and float away below the horizon, leaving the untarnished
+heavens and the flaming sunshine; and 'we with unveiled faces' can lift
+them up to be irradiated by the light. 'In this mountain will the Lord
+destroy the covering that is spread over all nations.'
+
+The weak point of all these schemes and methods to which I have already
+referred for helping humanity out of the slough, and making men happier,
+is that they underestimate the fact of sin. If a man comes to them and
+says, 'I have broken God's law. What am I to do? I have a power within
+me that impels me now to evil. How am I to get rid of it?' they have no
+adequate answer. There is only one remedy that deals radically with the
+fact of human transgression; only one power that will deliver each of
+us, if we will, from the penalty, the guilt, the power of sin; and that
+is the sacrifice of Christ on Calvary, and its result, the inspiration
+of the spirit of life that was in Jesus Christ, breathed into us from
+the Throne itself. Thus, and thus only, is the veil done away in Christ.
+
+III. Lastly, where does the life that destroys death come from?
+
+'He will swallow up death in victory,' or, as probably the word more
+correctly means, 'He will swallow up death _for ever_.' None of the
+other panaceas for the world's evils that I have been speaking of even
+attempt to deal with that 'Shadow feared of Man' that sits at the end of
+all our paths. Jesus Christ has dealt with it. Like the warrior of Judah
+who went down into a pit and slew a lion, He has gone down into the lair
+of the dreadful thing, and has come up leaving Death dead on the
+threshold.
+
+By His death Christ has so altered that grim fact, which awaits us all,
+that to those who will trust their souls to Him it ceases to be death,
+even though the physical fact remains unaltered. For what is death? Is
+it simply the separation of soul from body, the cessation of corporeal
+existence? Surely not. We have to add to that all the spiritual tremors,
+all the dreads of passing into the unknown, and leaving this familiar
+order of things, and all the other reluctances and half-conscious
+feelings which make the difference between the death of a man and the
+death of a dog. And all these are swept clean away, if we believe that
+Jesus died, and died as our Redeemer and our Saviour. So, unconsciously
+and instinctively, the New Testament writers will seldom condescend to
+call the physical fact by the ugly old name. It has changed its
+character; it is 'a sleep' now; it is 'an exodus,' a 'going out' from
+the land of Egypt into a land of peace. It is a plucking up of the
+tent-pegs, according to another of the words which the writers employ
+for death, in preparation for entering, when the 'tabernacle is
+dissolved,' into 'a house not made with hands,' a statelier edifice,
+'eternal in the heavens.' To die in Christ is not to die, but becomes a
+mere change of condition and of place, to be with Him, which is far
+'better.' So an Apostle who was coming within measurable distance of his
+own martyrdom, even whilst the headsman's block was all but in his
+sight, said: 'He hath abolished death,' the physical fact remaining
+still.
+
+By His resurrection Jesus Christ has established immortality as a
+certainty for men. I can understand a man, who has persuaded himself
+that when he dies he is done with, dressing his limbs to die without
+dread if without hope. But that is a poor victory over death, which,
+even in the act of getting rid of the fear of it, invests it with
+supreme and ultimate power over humanity. Surely, surely, to believe
+that the grave is a blind alley, with no exit at the other end,--to
+believe that, however it may minister to a quiet departure, is no
+victory over the grave. But to die believing, on the other hand, that it
+is only a short tunnel through which we pass, and come out into fairer
+lands on the other side of the mountains, is to conquer that last foe
+even while it seems to conquer us.
+
+Jesus Christ, who died that we might never die, lives that we may always
+live. For His immortal life will give to each of us, if we join
+ourselves to Him by simple faith and lowly obedience, an immortal life
+that shall persist through, and be increased by, the article of bodily
+death. And when we pass into the higher realm of fulness of joy, then--
+as Paul quotes the words of my text--'shall be brought to pass the
+saying that is written, Death is swallowed up in victory.'
+
+Dear brethren, gather all these thoughts together. Do they not plead
+with you to cast yourselves on Jesus Christ, and to turn to Him alone?
+He will give you the food of your souls; if you will not sit at His
+table you will starve. He will strip you of the covering that is cast
+over you, as over us all; if you will not let Him unwind its folds from
+your limbs, then like the clothes of a drowning man, they will sink you.
+He will give you immortal life, which laughs at death, and you will be
+able to take up the great song, 'O Death, where is thy sting; O grave,
+where is thy victory?... Thanks be to God which giveth us the victory.'
+'In this mountain' and in this mountain only, are the food, the
+illumination, the life of the world. I beseech you, do not turn away
+from them, lest you stumble on the dark mountains, where are starvation
+and gloom and death, but rather join that happy company of pilgrims who
+sing as they march, 'Come! let us go up to the mountain of the Lord. He
+will teach us His ways, and we will walk in His paths.'
+
+
+
+
+THE FEAST ON THE SACRIFICE
+
+And in this mountain shall the Lord of hosts make unto all people a
+feast.' ISAIAH xxv. 6.
+
+
+There is here a reference to Sinai, where a feast followed the vision of
+God. It was the sign of covenant, harmony, and relationship, and was
+furnished by a sacrifice.
+
+I. The General Ideas contained in this Image of a Feast.
+
+We meet it all through Scripture; it culminates in Christ's parables and
+in the 'Marriage Supper of the Lamb.'
+
+In the image are suggested:--
+
+Free familiarity of access, fellowship, and communion with Him.
+
+Abundant Supply of all wants and desires.
+
+Festal Joy.
+
+Family Intercommunion.
+
+II. The Feast follows on Sacrifice. We find that usage of a feast
+following a sacrifice existing in many races and religions. It seems to
+witness to a widespread consciousness of sin as disturbing our relations
+with God. These could be set right only by sacrifice, which therefore
+must precede all joyful communion with Him.
+
+The New Testament accepts that truth and clears it from the admixture of
+heathenism.
+
+God provides the Sacrifice.
+
+It is not brought by man. There is no need for our efforts--no atonement
+to be found by us. The sacrifice is not meant to turn aside God's wrath.
+
+Communion is possible through Christ.
+
+In Him God is revealed.
+
+Objective hindrances are taken away.
+
+Subjective ones are removed.
+
+Dark fears--indifference--dislike of fellowship--Sin--these make
+communion with God impossible.
+
+At Sinai the elders 'saw God, and did eat and drink' Here the end of the
+preceding chapter shows the 'elders' gazing on the glory of Jehovah's
+reign in Zion.
+
+III. The Feast consists of a Sacrifice.
+
+Christ is the food of our souls, He and His work are meant to nourish
+our whole being. He is the object for all our nature.
+
+The Sacrifice must be incorporated with us. It is not enough that it be
+offered, it must also be partaken of.
+
+Now the Sacrifice is eaten by faith, and by occupation with it of each
+part of our being, according to its own proper action. Through love,
+obedience, hope, desire, we may all feed on Jesus.
+
+The Lord's Supper presents the same thoughts, under similar symbols, as
+Isaiah expressed in his prophecy.
+
+Symbolically we feast on the sacrifice when we eat the Bread which is
+the Body broken for us. But the true eating of the true sacrifice is by
+faith. _Crede et manducasti_--Believe, and thou hast eaten.
+
+
+
+
+THE VEIL OVER ALL NATIONS
+
+'He will destroy in this mountain the face of the covering cast over all
+people, and the veil that is spread over all nations.'--ISAIAH xxv. 7.
+
+
+The previous chapter closes with a prediction of the reign of Jehovah in
+Mount Zion 'before His elders' in Glory. The allusion apparently is to
+the elders being summoned up to the Mount and seeing the Glory, 'as the
+body of heaven in its clearness.' The veil in this verse is probably a
+similar allusion to that which covered Moses' face. It will then be an
+emblem of that which obscures for 'all nations the face of God.' And
+what is that but sin?
+
+I. Sin veils God from men's sight.
+
+It is not the necessary inadequacy of the finite mind to conceive of the
+Infinite that most tragically hides God from us. That inadequacy is
+compatible with true and sufficient knowledge of Him. Nor is it 'the
+veils of flesh and sense,' as we often hear it said, that hide Him. But
+it is our sinful moral nature that darkens His face and dulls our eyes.
+'Knowledge' of God, being knowledge of a Person, is not merely an
+intellectual process. It is much more truly acquaintance than
+comprehension; and as such, requires, as all acquaintance does, some
+foundation of sympathy and appreciation.
+
+Every sin darkens the witness to God in ourselves, In a pure nature,
+conscience would perfectly reveal God; but we all know too sadly and
+intimately how it is gradually silenced, and fails to discriminate
+between what pleases and what displeases God. In a pure nature, the
+obedient Will would perfectly reveal God and the man's dependence on
+Him. We all know how sin weakens that.
+
+Every sin diminishes our power of seeing Him in His external Revelation.
+Every sin ruffles the surface of the soul, which is a mirror reflecting
+the light that streams from Creation, from Providence, from History. A
+mass of black rock flung into a still lake shatters the images of the
+girdling woods and the overarching sky.
+
+Every sin bribes us to forget God. It becomes our interest, as we fancy,
+to shut Him out of our thoughts. Adam's impulse is to carry his guilty
+secret with him into hiding among the trees of the garden. We cannot
+shake off His presence, but we can--and when we have sinned, we have but
+too good reason to exercise the power--we can dismiss the thought of
+Him. 'They did not _like_ to retain God in their knowledge.'
+
+Individual sins may seem of small moment, but an opaque veil can be
+woven out of very fine thread.
+
+II. To veil God from our sight is fatal.
+
+We imagine that to forget Him leaves us undisturbed in following aims
+disapproved by Him, and we spend effort to secure that false peace by
+fierce absorption in other pursuits, and impatient shaking off of all
+that might wake our sleeping consciousness of Him.
+
+But what unconscious self-murder that is, which we take such pains to
+achieve! To know God is life eternal; to lose Him from our sight is to
+condemn all that is best in our nature, all that is most conducive to
+blessedness, tranquillity, and strenuousness in our lives, to languish
+and die. Every creature separated from God is cut off from the fountain
+of life, and loses the life it drew from the fountain, of whatever kind
+that life is. And that in man which is most of kin with God languishes
+most when so cut off. And when we have blocked Him out from our field of
+vision, all that remains for us to look at suffers degradation, and
+becomes phantasmal, poor, unworthy to detain, and impotent to satisfy,
+our hungry vision.
+
+III. The Veil is done away in Christ.
+
+He shows us God, instead of our own false conceptions of Him, which are
+but distorted refractions of His true likeness. Only within the limits
+of Christ's revelation is there knowledge of God, as distinguished from
+guesses, doubtful inferences, partial glimpses. Elsewhere, the greatest
+certitude as to Him is a 'peradventure'; Jesus alone says 'Verily,
+verily.'
+
+Jesus makes us able to see God.
+
+Jesus makes us delight in seeing Him.
+
+All dread of the 'steady whole of the Judge's face' is changed to the
+loving heart's joy in seeing its Beloved.
+
+IV. The Veil is wholly removed hereafter.
+
+The prophecy from which the text is taken is obviously not yet
+fulfilled. It waits for the perfect condition of redeemed manhood in
+another life. But even then, the chief reason why the Christian is
+warranted in cherishing an unpresumptuous hope that he will know even as
+he is known is not that then he will have dropped the veil of flesh and
+sense, but that he will have dropped the thicker, more stifling covering
+of sin, and, being perfectly like God, will be able perfectly to gaze on
+Him, and, perfectly gazing on Him, will grow ever more perfectly like
+Him.
+
+The choice for each of us is whether the veil will thicken till it
+darkens the Face altogether, and that is death; or whether it will thin
+away till the last filmy remnant is gone, and 'we shall be like Him, for
+we shall see Him as He is.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SONG OF TWO CITIES
+
+'In that day shall this song he sung in the land of Judah; We have a
+strong city; salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks. 2. Open
+ye the gates, that the righteous nation which keepeth the truth may
+enter in. 3. Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed
+on Thee; because he trusteth in Thee. A. Trust ye in the Lord for ever:
+for in the Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength: 5. For He bringeth down
+them that dwell on high; the lofty city, He layeth it low; He layeth it
+low, even to the ground He bringeth it even to the dust. 6. The foot
+shall tread it down, even the feet of the poor, and the steps of the
+needy. 7. The way of the just is uprightness: Thou, most upright, dost
+weigh the path of the Just. 8. Yea, in the way of Thy judgments, O Lord,
+have we waited for Thee; the desire of our soul is to Thy name, and to
+the remembrance of Thee. 9. With my soul have I desired Thee in the
+night; yea, with my spirit within me will I seek Thee early: for when
+Thy judgments are in the earth, the inhabitants of the world will learn
+righteousness. 10. Let favour be shewed to the wicked, yet will he not
+learn righteousness: in the land of uprightness will he deal unjustly,
+and will not behold the majesty of the Lord.'--ISAIAH xxvi. 1-10.'
+
+
+'This song' is to be interpreted as a song, not with the cold-blooded
+accuracy proper to a scientific treatise. The logic of emotion is as
+sound as that of cool intellect, but it has its own laws and links of
+connection. First, the song sets in sharp contrast the two cities,
+describing, in verses 1-4, the city of God, its strength defences,
+conditions of citizenship, and the peace which reigns within its walls;
+and in verses 5 and 6 the fall and utter ruin of the robber city, its
+antagonist Jerusalem, on its rocky peninsula, supplies the form of
+Isaiah's thought; but it is only a symbol of the true city of God, the
+stable, invisible, but most real, polity and order of things to which
+men, even while wandering lonely and pilgrims, do come, if they will. It
+is possible even here and now to have our citizenship in the heavens,
+and to feel that we belong to a great community beyond the sea of time,
+though our feet have never trodden its golden pavements, nor our eyes
+seen its happy glories.
+
+In one aspect, it is ideal, but in truth it is more real than the
+intrusive and false things of this fleeting present, which call
+themselves realities. 'The things which are' are the things above. The
+things here are but shows and shadows.
+
+The city's walls are salvation. There is no need to name the architect
+of these fortifications. One hand only can pile their strength. God
+appoints salvation in lieu of all visible defences. Whom He purposes to
+save are saved. Whom He wills to keep safe are kept safe. They who can
+shelter behind that strong defence need no other. Weak, sense-governed
+hearts may crave something more palpable, but they do not really need
+it. A parapet on an Alpine road gives no real security, but only
+satisfies imagination. The sky needs no pillars to hold it up.
+
+Then an unknown voice breaks in upon the song, calling on unnamed
+attendants to fling wide the gates. The city is conceived of as empty;
+its destined inhabitants must have certain qualifications. They must be
+righteous, and must 'keep faithfulness' being true to the God who is
+'faithful and true' in all His relations. None but the righteous can
+dwell in conscious citizenship with the Unseen while here, and none but
+the righteous can enter through the gates into the city. That
+requirement is founded in the very nature of the case, and is as
+emphatically proclaimed by the gospel as by the prophet. But the gospel
+tells more articulately than he was enlightened to do, how righteousness
+is to be won. The last vision of the Apocalypse, which is so like this
+song in its central idea, tells us of the fall of Babylon, of the
+descent to earth of the New Jerusalem, and leaves as its last message
+the great saying, 'Blessed are they that wash their robes that they may
+... enter in through the gate into the city.'
+
+Our song gives some hint of similar thoughts by passing from the
+description of the qualifications for entrance to the celebration of the
+security which comes from trust. The safety which is realised within the
+walls of the strong city is akin to the 'perfect peace' in which he who
+trusts is kept; and the juxtaposition of the two representations is
+equivalent to the teaching that trust, which is precisely the same as
+the New Testament faith, is the condition of entrance. We know that
+faith makes righteous, because it opens the heart to receive God's gift
+of righteousness; but that effect of faith is implied rather than stated
+here, where security and peace are the main ideas. As some fugitives
+from the storm of war sit in security behind the battlements of a
+fortress, and scarcely hear the din of conflict in the open field below,
+the heart, which has taken refuge by trust in God, is kept in peace so
+deep that it passes description, and the singer is fain to give a notion
+of its completeness by calling it 'peace, peace.' The mind which trusts
+is steadied thereby, as light things lashed to a firm stay are kept
+steadfast, however the ship toss. The only way to get and keep fixedness
+of temper and spirit amid change and earthquake is to hold on to God,
+and then we may be stable with stability derived from the foundations of
+His throne to which we cling.
+
+Therefore the song breaks into triumphant fervour of summons to all who
+hear it, to 'trust in Jab Jehovah for ever,' Such settled, perpetual
+trust is the only attitude corresponding to His mighty name, and to the
+realities found in His character. He is the 'Bock of Ages' the grand
+figure which Moses learned beneath the cliffs of Sinai and wove into his
+last song, and which tells us of the unchanging strength that makes a
+sure hiding-place for all generations, and the ample space which will
+hold all the souls of men, and be for a shadow from the heat, a covert
+from the tempest, a shelter from the foe, and a home for the homeless,
+with many a springing fountain in its clefts.
+
+The great act of judgment which the song celebrates is now (vs. 5, 6)
+brought into contrast with the blessed picture of the city, and by the
+introductory 'for' is stated as the reason for eternal trust. The
+language, as it were, leaps and dances in jubilation, heaping together
+brief emotional and synonymous clauses. So low is the once proud city
+brought, that the feet of the poor tread it down. These 'poor' and
+'needy' are the true Israel, the suffering saints, who had known how
+cruel the sway of the fallen robber city was; and now they march across
+its site; and its broken columns and ruined palaces strew the ground
+below their feet. 'The righteous nation' of the one picture are 'the
+poor and needy' of the other. No doubt the prophecy has had partial
+accomplishments more than once or twice, when the oppressed church has
+triumphed, and some hoary iniquity been levelled at a blow, or toppled
+over by slow decay. But the complete accomplishment is yet future, and
+not to be realised till that last act, when all antagonism shall be
+ended, and the net result of the weary history of the world be found to
+be just these two pictures of Isaiah's--the strong city of God with its
+happy inhabitants, and the everlasting desolations of the fallen city of
+confusion.
+
+The triumphant hurry of the song pauses for a moment to gaze upon the
+crash, and in verse 7 gathers its lessons into a kind of proverbial
+saying, which is perhaps best translated 'The path of the just is smooth
+(or "plain"); Thou levellest smooth the path of the just.' To render
+'upright' instead of 'smooth' seems to make the statement almost an
+identical proposition, and is tame. What is meant is, that, in the light
+of the end, the path which often seemed rough is vindicated. The
+judgment has showed that the righteous man's course had no unnecessary
+difficulties. The goal explains the road. The good man's path is smooth,
+not because of its own nature, but because God makes it so. We are to
+look for the clearing of our road, not to ourselves, nor to
+circumstances, but to Him; and even when it is engineered through rocks
+and roughnesses, to believe that He will make the rough places plain, or
+give us shoes of iron and brass to encounter them. Trust that when the
+journey is over the road will be explained, and that this reflection,
+which breaks the current of the swift song of the prophet, will be the
+abiding, happy conviction of heaven.
+
+Lastly, the song looks back and tells how the poor and needy, in whose
+name the prophet speaks, had filled the dreary past, while the tyranny
+of the fallen city lasted, with yearning for the judgment which has now
+come at last. Verses 8 and 9 breathe the very spirit of patient longing
+and meek hope. There is a certain tone of triumph in that 'Yea,' as if
+the singer would point to the great judgment now accomplished, as
+vindicating the long, weary hours of hope deferred. That for which 'the
+poor and needy' wait is the coming 'in the path of Thy judgments.' The
+attitude of expectance is as much the duty and support of Christians as
+of Israel. We have a greater future clearer before us than they had. The
+world needs God's coming in judgment more than ever; and it says little
+for either the love to God or the benevolence towards man of average
+Christians, that they should know so little of that yearning of soul
+which breathes through so much of the Old Testament. For the glory of
+God and the good of men, we should have the desire of our souls turned
+to His manifestation of Himself in His righteous judgments. It was no
+personal end which bred the prophet's yearning. True, the 'night' round
+him was dreary enough, and sorrow lay black on his people and himself;
+but it was God's 'name' and 'memorial' that was uppermost in his
+desires. That is to say, the chief object of the devout soul's longings
+should be the glory of God's revealed character. And the deepest reason
+for wishing that He would flash forth from His hiding-place in
+judgments, is because such an apocalypse is the only way by which
+wilfully blind eyes can be made to see, and wilfully unrighteous hearts
+can be made to practise righteousness.
+
+Isaiah believed in the wholesome effect of terror. His confidence in the
+power of judgments to teach the obstinate corresponds to the Old
+Testament point of view, and contains a truth for all points of view;
+but it is not the whole truth. We know only too well that sorrows and
+judgments do not work infallibly, and that men 'being often reproved,
+harden their necks.' We know, too, more clearly than any prophet of old
+could know, that the last arrow in God's quiver is not some unheard-of
+awfulness of judgment, but an unspeakable gift of love, and that if that
+'favour shown to the wicked' in the life and death of God's Son does not
+lead him to 'learn righteousness,' nothing else will.
+
+But while this is true, the prophet's aspirations are founded on the
+facts of human nature too, and judgments do sometimes startle those whom
+kindness had failed to touch. It is an awful thought that human nature
+may so steel itself against the whole armoury of divine weapons as that
+favour and severity are equally blunted, and the heart remains unpierced
+by either. It is an awful thought that there may be induced such
+truculent obstinacy of love of evil that, even when in 'a land of
+uprightness,' a man shall choose evil, and forcibly shut his eyes, that
+he may not see the majesty of the Lord, which he does not wish to see
+because it condemns his choice, and threatens to burn up him and his
+work together. A blasted tree when all the woods are green, a fleece dry
+when all around is rejoicing in the dew, a window dark when the whole
+city is illuminated, one black sheep amid the white flock, or anything
+else anomalous and alone in its evil, is less tragic than the sight, so
+common, of a man so sold to sin that the presence of good only makes him
+angry and restless. It is possible to dwell amidst the full light of
+Christian truth, and in a society moulded by its precepts, and to be
+unblessed, unsoftened thereby. If not softened, then hardened; and the
+wicked who in the land of uprightness deals wrongfully is all the worse
+for the light which he hated because it showed him the sinfulness of the
+sin which he obstinately loved and would keep.
+
+
+
+
+OUR STRONG CITY
+
+'In that day shall this song be sung in the land of Judah; We have a
+strong city; salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks. Open ye
+the gates, that the righteous nation which keepeth the truth may enter
+in.'--ISAIAH xxvi 1-2.
+
+
+What day is 'that day'? The answer carries us back a couple of chapters,
+to the great picture drawn by the prophet of a world-wide judgment,
+which is followed by a burst of song from the ransomed people of
+Jehovah, like Miriam's chant by the shores of the Red Sea. The 'city of
+confusion,' the centre of the power hostile to God and man, falls; and
+its fall is welcomed by a chorus of praises. The words of my text are
+the beginning of one of these songs. Whether or not there were any
+historical event which floated before the prophet's mind is wholly
+uncertain. If there were a smaller judgment upon some city of the enemy,
+it passes in his view into a world-wide judgment; and my text is purely
+ideal, imaginative, and apocalyptic. Its nearest ally is the similar
+vision of the Book of the Revelation, where, when Babylon sank with a
+splash like a millstone in the stream, the ransomed people raised their
+praises.
+
+So, then, whatever may have been the immediate horizon of the prophet,
+and though, there may have stood on it some historical event, the city
+which he sees falling is other than any material Babylon, and the strong
+city in which he rejoices is other than the material Jerusalem, though
+it may have suggested the metaphor of my text. The song fits our lips
+quite as closely as it did the lips from which it first sprang,
+thrilling with triumph: 'We have a strong city; salvation will God
+appoint for walls and bulwarks. Open ye the gates, that the righteous
+nation which keepeth the truth may enter in.'
+
+There are three things, then, here: the city, its defences, its
+citizens.
+
+I. The City.
+
+Now, no doubt the prophet was thinking of the literal Jerusalem; but the
+city is ideal, as is shown by the bulwarks which defend, and by the
+qualifications which permit entrance. And so we must pass beyond the
+literalities of Palestine, and, as I think, must not apply the symbol to
+any visible institution or organisation if we are to come to the depth
+and greatness of the meaning of these words. No church which is
+organised amongst men can be the New Testament representation of this
+strong city. And if the explanation is to be looked for in that
+direction at all, it can only be the invisible aggregate of ransomed
+souls which is regarded as being the Zion of the prophecy.
+
+But perhaps even that is too definite and hard. And we are rather to
+think of the unseen but existent order of things or polity to which men
+here on earth may belong, and which will one day, after shocks and
+convulsions that shatter all which is merely institutional and human, be
+manifested still more gloriously.
+
+The central thought that was moving in the prophet's mind is that of the
+indestructible vitality of the true Israel, and the order which it
+represented, of which Jerusalem on its rock was but to him a symbol. And
+thus for us the lesson is that, apart altogether from the existing and
+visible order of things in which we dwell, there is a polity to which we
+may belong, for 'ye are come unto Mount Zion, the city of the living
+God,' and that that order is indestructible. Convulsions come, every
+Babylon falls, all human institutions change and pass. 'The kingdoms
+old' are 'cast into another mould.' But persistent through them all, and
+at the last, high above them all, will stand the stable polity of
+Heaven, '_the_ city which hath _the_ foundations.'
+
+_There_ is a lesson for us, brethren, in times of fluctuation, of change
+of opinion, of shaking of institutions, and of new social, economical,
+and political questions, threatening day by day to reorganise society.
+'We have a strong city'; and whatever may come--and much destructive
+will come, and much that is venerable and antique, rooted in men's
+prejudices, and having survived through and oppressed the centuries,
+will have to go; but God's polity, His form of human society of which
+the perfect ideal and antitype, so to speak, lies concealed in the
+heavens, is everlasting. Therefore, whatsoever changes, whatsoever
+ancient and venerable things come to be regarded as of no account,
+howsoever the nations, like clay in the hands of the potter, may have to
+assume new forms, as certainly they will, yet the foundation of God
+standeth sure. And for Christian men in revolutionary epochs, whether
+these revolutions affect the forms in which truth is grasped, or whether
+they affect the moulds into which society is run, the only worthy temper
+is the calm, triumphant expectation that through all the dust,
+contradiction, and distraction, the fair city of God will be brought
+nearer and made more manifest to man. Isaiah, or whoever was the writer
+of these great words of my text, stayed his own and his people's hearts
+in a time of confusion and distress, by the thought that it was only
+Babylon that could fall, and that Jerusalem was the possessor of a
+charmed, immortal life.
+
+This strong city, the order of human society which God has appointed,
+and which exists, though it be hidden in the heavens, will be manifested
+one day when, like the fair vision of the goddess rising from amidst the
+ocean's foam, and shedding peace and beauty over the charmed waves,
+there will emerge from all the wild confusion and tossing billows of the
+sea of the peoples the fair form of the 'Bride, the Lamb's wife.' There
+shall be an apocalypse of the city, and whether the old words which
+catch up the spirit of my text, and speak of that Holy City as
+'descending from heaven' upon earth, at the close of the history of the
+world, are to be taken, as perhaps they are, as expressive of the truth
+that a renewed earth is to be the dwelling of the ransomed or no, this
+at least is clear, that the city shall be revealed, and when Babylon is
+swept away, Zion shall stand.
+
+To this city--existent, immortal, and waiting to be revealed--you and I
+may belong to-day. 'We _have_ a strong city.' You may lay hold of life
+either by the side of it which is transient and trivial and
+contemptible, or by the side of it which goes down through all the
+mutable and is rooted in eternity. As in some seaweed, far out in the
+depths of the ocean, the tiny frond that floats upon the billow goes
+down and down and down, by filaments that bind it to the basal rock, so
+the most insignificant act of our fleeting days has a hold upon
+eternity, and life in all its moments may be knit to the permanent. We
+may unite our lives with the surface of time or with the centre of
+eternity. Though we dwell in tabernacles, we may still be 'come to Mount
+Zion,' and all life be awful, noble, solemn, religions, because it is
+all connected with the unseen city across the seas. It is for us to
+determine to which of these orders--the perishable, noisy and intrusive
+and persistent in its appeals, or the calm, silent, most real, eternal
+order beyond the stars--our petty lives shall attach themselves.
+
+II. Now note, secondly, the defences.
+
+'Salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks.' This 'evangelical
+prophet,' as he has been called, is distinguished, not only by the
+clearness of his anticipations of Jesus Christ and His work, but by the
+fulness and depth which he attaches to that word 'salvation.' He all but
+anticipates the New Testament completeness and fulness of meaning, and
+lifts it from all merely material associations of earthly or transitory
+deliverance, into the sphere in which we are accustomed to regard it as
+especially moving. By 'salvation' he means and we mean, not only
+negative but positive blessings. Negatively it includes the removal of
+every conceivable or endurable evil, 'all the ills that flesh is heir
+to,' whether they be evils of sin or evils of sorrow; and, positively,
+the investiture with every possible good that humanity is capable of,
+whether it be good of goodness, or good of happiness. This is what the
+prophet tells us is the wall and bulwark of his ideal-real city.
+
+Mark the eloquent omission of the name of the builder of the wall. 'God'
+is a supplement. Salvation 'will _He_ appoint for walls and bulwarks.'
+No need to say who it is that flings such a fortification around the
+city. There is only one hand that can trace the lines of such walls;
+only one hand that can pile their stones; only one that can lay them, as
+the walls of Jericho were laid, in the blood of His first-born Son.
+'Salvation will He appoint for walls and bulwarks.' That is to say in a
+highly imaginative and picturesque form, that the defense of the City is
+God Himself; and it is substantially a parallel with other words which
+speak about Him as being 'a wall of fire round about it and the glory in
+the midst of it.' The fact of salvation is the wall and the bulwark. And
+the consciousness of the fact and the sense of possessing it, is for our
+poor hearts, one of our best defenses against both the evil of sin and
+the evil of sorrow. For nothing so robs temptation of its power, so
+lightens the pressure of calamities, and draws the poison from the fangs
+of sin and sorrow, as the assurance that the loving purpose of God to
+save grasps and keeps us. They who shelter behind that wall, feel that
+between them and sin, and them and sorrow, there rises the inexpugnable
+defense of an Almighty purpose and power to save, lie safe whatever
+betides. There is no need of other defenses. Zion
+
+ 'Needs no bulwarks,
+ No towers along the steep.'
+
+God Himself is the shield and none other is required.
+
+So, brethren, let us walk by the faith that is always confident, though
+it depends on an unseen hand. It is a grand thing to be able to stand,
+as it were, in the open, a mark for all 'the slings and arrows of
+outrageous fortune' and yet to feel that around us there are walls most
+real, though invisible, which permit no harm to come to us. Our feeble
+sense-bound souls much prefer a visible wall. We, like a handrail on the
+stair. Though it does not at all guard the descent, it keeps our heads
+from getting dizzy. It is hard for us, as some travellers may have to
+do, to walk with steady foot and unthrobbing heart along a narrow ledge
+of rock with beetling precipice above us and black depths beneath, and
+we would like a little bit of a wall of some sort, for imagination if
+not for reality, between us and the sheer descent. But it is blessed to
+learn that naked we are clothed, solitary we have a Companion, and
+unarmed we have our defenceless heads covered with the shadow of the
+great wing, which, though sense sees it not, faith knows is there. A
+servant of God is never without a friend, and when most unsheltered
+
+ 'From marge to blue marge
+ The whole sky grows his targe,
+ With sun's self for visible boss,'
+
+beneath which he lies safe.
+
+'Salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks,' and if we realise,
+as we ought to do, His purpose to keep us safe, and His power to keep us
+safe, and the actual operation of His hand keeping us safe at every
+moment, we shall not ask that these defences shall be supplemented by
+the poor feeble earthworks that sense can throw up.
+
+III. Lastly, note the citizens.
+
+Our text is part of a 'song,' and is not to be interpreted in the cold-
+blooded fashion that might suit prose. A voice, coming from whom we know
+not, breaks in upon the first strain with a command, addressed to whom
+we know not--'Open ye the gates'--the city thus far being supposed to be
+empty--'that the righteous nation which keepeth the truth may enter in.'
+The central idea there is just this, 'Thy people shall be all
+righteous.' The one qualification for entrance into the city is absolute
+purity.
+
+Now, brethren, that is true in regard to our present imperfect
+denizenship within the city; and it is true in regard to men's passing
+into it in its perfect and final form. As to the former, there is
+nothing that you Christian people need more to have dinned into you than
+this, that your continuance in the state of a redeemed man, with all the
+security and blessing that attach thereto, depends upon your continuing
+to be righteous. Every sin, every flaw, every dropping beneath our own
+standard in conscience of what we ought to be, has for its inevitable
+result that we are robbed for the time being of consciousness of the
+walls of the city being about us and of our being citizens thereof. 'Who
+shall ascend into the hill of the Lord? And who shall stand in His holy
+place?' The New Testament, as emphatically as the old psalm, answers,'
+He that hath clean hands and a pure heart.' 'Let no man deceive you. He
+that doeth righteousness is righteous.' There is no way by which
+Christian men here on earth can pass into and keep within the city of
+the living God, except they possess personal purity, righteousness of
+life, and cleanness of heart.
+
+They used to say that Venice glass was so made that any poison poured
+into it shivered the vessel. Any drop of sin poured into your cup of
+communion with God, shatters the cup and spills the wine. Whosoever
+thinks himself a citizen of that great city, if he falls into
+transgression, and soils the cleanness of his hands, and ruffles the
+calm of his pure heart by self-willed sinfulness, will wake to find
+himself not within the battlements, but lying wounded, robbed, solitary,
+in the pitiless desert. My brother, it is 'the righteous nation' that
+'enters in,' even here on earth.
+
+I do not need to remind you how, admittedly by us all, that is the case
+in regard to the final form of the city of our God, into which nothing
+shall enter 'that defileth, neither whatsoever worketh abomination or
+maketh a lie.' Heaven can only be entered into hereafter by, as here and
+now it can only enter into, those who are pure of heart. All else there
+would shrivel as foul things born In the darkness do in the light, and
+be consumed in the fire. None but the pure can enter and see God.
+
+'The nation which keepeth the truth'--that does not mean adherence to
+any revelation, or true creed, or the like. The word which is employed
+means, not truth of thought, but truth of character; and might, perhaps,
+be better represented by the more familiar word in such a connection,
+'faithfulness.' A man who is true to God, keeping up a faithful relation
+to Him who is faithful to us, he, and only he, will pass into, and abide
+in, the city.
+
+Now, brethren, so far our text carries us, but no further; unless,
+perhaps, there may be a hint of something yet deeper in the next clause
+of this song. If any one asks, How does the nation become righteous? the
+answer may lie in the immediately following exhortation--'Trust ye in
+the Lord for ever.' But whether that be so or not, if we want an answer
+to the questions, How can my stained feet be cleansed so as to be fit to
+tread the crystal pavements? how can my foul garments be so purged as
+not to be a blot and an eyesore, beside the white, lustrous robes that
+sweep along them and gather no defilement there? the only answer that I
+know of is to be found by turning to the final visions of the New
+Testament, where the spirit of this whole section of our prophet is
+reproduced. Again, Babylon falls amidst the songs of saints; and then,
+down upon all the dust and confusion of the crash of ruin, the seer
+beholds the Lamb's wife, the new Jerusalem, descending from above. To
+his happy eyes its glories are unveiled, its golden streets, its open
+gates, its walls of precious stones, its flashing river, its peaceful
+inhabitants, its light streaming from the throne of God and of the Lamb.
+And when that vision passes, his last message to us is, 'Blessed are
+they that wash their robes that they may enter through the gates into
+the city.' None but those who wash their garments, and make them white
+in the blood of the Lamb, can, living, come unto the city of the living
+God, the heavenly Jerusalem; or, dying, can pass through the iron gate
+that opens to them of its own accord, and find themselves as day breaks
+in the street of the Jerusalem which is above.
+
+
+
+
+THE INHABITANT OF THE ROCK
+
+'Thou wilt keep him In perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on Thee:
+because he trusteth in Thee. Trust ye in the Lord for ever: for in the
+Lord Jehovah is everlasting strength.'--ISAIAH xxvi. 3-4.
+
+
+There is an obvious parallel between these verses and the two preceding
+ones. The safety which was there set forth as the result of dwelling in
+the strong city is here presented as the consequence of trust. The
+emblem of the fortified place passes into that of the Rock of Ages.
+There is the further resemblance in form, that, just as in the two
+preceding verses we had the triumphant declaration of security followed
+by a summons to some unknown persons to 'open the gates,' so here we
+have the triumphant declaration of perfect peace, followed by a summons
+to all to 'trust in the Lord for ever.' If we may suppose the invocation
+of the preceding verses to be addressed to the watchers at the gate of
+the strong city, it is perhaps not too fanciful to suppose that the
+invitation in my text is the watcher's answer, pointing the way by which
+men may pass into the city.
+
+Whether that be so or no, at all events I take it as by no means
+accidental that, immediately upon the statement of the Old Testament law
+that righteousness alone admits to the presence of God, there follows so
+clear and emphatic an anticipation of the great New Testament Gospel
+that faith is the condition of righteousness, and that immediately after
+hearing that only 'the righteous nation which keepeth the truth' can
+enter there, we hear the merciful call, 'Trust ye in the Lord for ever.'
+So, then, I think we have in the words before us, though not formally
+yet really, very large teaching as to the nature, the object, the
+blessed effects, and the universal duty of that trust in the Lord which
+makes the very nexus between man and God, according to the teaching of
+the New Testament.
+
+I. First, then, I desire to notice in a sentence the insight into the
+true nature of trust or faith given by the word employed here.
+
+Now the literal meaning of the expression here rendered 'to trust' is to
+lean upon anything. As we say, trust is reliance. As a weak man might
+stay his faltering, tottering steps upon some strong staff, or might
+lean upon the outstretched arm of a friend, so we, conscious of our
+weakness, aware of our faltering feet, and realising the roughness of
+the road, and the smallness of our strength, may lay the whole weight of
+ourselves upon the loving strength of Jehovah.
+
+And that is the trust of the Old Testament, the faith of the New--the
+simple act of reliance, going out of myself to find the basis of my
+being, forsaking myself to touch and rest upon the ground of my
+security, passing from my own weakness and laying my trembling hand into
+the strong hand of God, like some weak-handed youth on a coach-box who
+turns to a stronger beside him and says: 'Take thou the reins, for I am
+feeble to direct or to restrain.' Trust is reliance, and reliance is
+always blessedness.
+
+II. Notice, secondly, the steadfast peacefulness of trust.
+
+Now there are difficulties about the rendering and precise significance
+of the first verse of my text with which I do not need to trouble you.
+The Authorised Version, and still more perhaps the Revised Version, give
+substantially, as I take it, the prophet's meaning; and the margin of
+the Revised Version is still more literal and accurate than the text, 'A
+steadfast mind Thou keepest in perfect peace, because it trusteth in
+Thee.' If this, then, be the true meaning of the words, you observe that
+it is the steadfast mind, steadfast because it trusts, which God keeps
+In the deep peace that is expressed by the reduplication of the word.
+
+And if we break up that complex thought into its elements, it just comes
+to this, first, that trust makes steadfastness. Most men's lives are
+blown about by winds of circumstance, directed by gusts of passion,
+shaped by accidents, and are fragmentary and jerky, like some ship at
+sea with nobody at the helm, heading here and there, as the force of the
+wind or the flow of the current may carry them. If my life is to be
+steadied, there must not only be a strong hand at the tiller, but some
+outward object which shall be for me the point of aim and the point of
+rest. No man can steady his life except by clinging to a holdfast
+without himself. Some of us look for that stay in the fluctuations and
+fleetingnesses of creatures; and some of us are wiser and saner, and
+look for it in the steadfastness of the unchanging God. The men who do
+the former are the sport of circumstances, and the slaves of their own
+natures, and there is no consistency in noble aim and effort throughout
+their lives, corresponding to their circumstances, relations, and
+nature. Only they who stay themselves upon God, and get down through all
+the superficial shifting strata of drift and gravel, to the base-rock,
+are steadfast and solid.
+
+My brother, if you desire to govern yourself, you must let God govern
+you. If you desire to be firm, you must draw your firmness from the
+unchangingness of that divine nature which you grasp. How can a willow
+be stiffened into an iron pillar? Only--if I might use such a violent
+metaphor--when it receives into its substance the iron particles that it
+draws from the soil in which it is rooted. How can a bit of thistledown
+be kept motionless amidst the tempest? Only by being glued to something
+that is fixed. What do men do with light things on deck when the ship is
+pitching? Lash them to a fixed point. Lash yourselves to God by simple
+trust, and then you will partake of His serene immutability in such
+fashion as it is possible for the creature to participate in the
+attributes of the Creator.
+
+And then, still further, the steadfast mind--steadfast because it
+trusts--is rewarded in that it is kept by God. It is no mere mistake in
+the order of his thought which leads this prophet to allege that it is
+the steadfast mind which God keeps. For, though it is true, on the one
+hand, that the real fixity and solidity of a human character come more
+surely and fully through trust in God than by any other means, on the
+other hand it is true that, in order to receive the full blessed effects
+of trust into our characters and lives, we must persistently and
+doggedly keep on in the attitude of confidence. If a man holds out to
+God a tremulous hand with a shaking cup in it, which Le sometimes
+presents and sometimes twitches back, it is not to be expected that God
+will pour the treasure of His grace into such a vessel, with the risk of
+most of it being spilt upon the ground. There must be a steadfast
+waiting if there is to be a continual flow.
+
+It is the mind that cleaves to God which God keeps. I suppose that there
+was floating before Paul's thoughts some remembrance of this great
+passage of the evangelical prophet when he uttered his words, which ring
+so strikingly with so many echoes of them, when he said, 'The peace of
+God which passeth understanding shall keep your hearts and minds in
+Christ Jesus.' It is the steadfast mind that is kept in perfect peace.
+If we 'keep ourselves,' by that divine help which is always waiting to
+be given,' in the' faith and 'love of God,' He will keep us in the hour
+of temptation, will keep us from falling, and will garrison our hearts
+and minds in Christ Jesus.
+
+And then, still further, this faithful, steadfast heart and mind, kept
+by God, is a mind filled with deepest peace. There is something very
+beautiful in the prophet's abandoning the attempt to find any adjective
+of quality which adequately characterises the peace of which he has been
+speaking. He falls back upon the expedient which is the confession of
+the impotence of human speech worthily to portray its subject when he
+simply says, 'Thou shalt keep in peace, peace ... because he trusteth in
+Thee.' The reduplication expresses the depth, the completeness of the
+tranquillity which flows into the heart, Such continuity, wave after
+wave, or rather ripple after ripple, is possible even for us. For, dear
+brethren, the possession of this deep, unbroken peace does not depend on
+the absence of conflict, on distraction, trouble, or sorrow, but on the
+presence of God. If we are in touch with Him, then our troubled days may
+be calm, and beneath all the surface tumult there may be a centre of
+rest. The garrison in some high hill-fortress looks down upon the open
+where the enemy's ranks are crawling like insects across the grass, and
+scarcely hears the noise of the tumult, and no arrow can reach the lofty
+hold. So, up in God we may dwell at rest whate'er betide. Strange that
+we should prefer to live down amongst the unwalled villages, which every
+spoiler can harry and burn, when we might climb, and by the might and
+the magic of trust in the Lord bring round about ourselves a wall of
+fire which shall consume the poison out of the evil, even whilst it
+permits the sorrow to do its beneficent work upon us!
+
+III. Note again the worthiness of the divine Name to evoke, and the
+power of the divine character to reward, the trust.
+
+We pass to the last words of _my_ text:--'In the Lord Jehovah is
+everlasting strength.'
+
+Now I suppose we all know that the words feebly rendered in the
+Authorised Version 'everlasting strength' are literally 'the Rock of
+Ages'; and that this verse is the source of that hallowed figure which,
+by one of the greatest of our English hymns, is made familiar and
+immortal to all English-speaking people.
+
+But there is another peculiarity about the words on which I dwell for a
+moment, and that is, that here we have, for one of the only two times in
+which the expression occurs in Scripture, the great name of Jehovah
+reduplicated. 'In Jab Jehovah is the Rock of Ages.' In the former verse
+the prophet had given up in despair the attempt to characterise the
+peace which God gave, and fallen back upon the expedient of naming it
+twice over. In this verse, with similar eloquence of reticence, he
+abandons the attempt to describe or characterise that great Name, and in
+adoration, contents himself with twice taking it upon his lips, in order
+to _impress_ what he cannot _express_, the majesty and the sufficiency
+of that name.
+
+What, then, is the force of that name? We do not need, I suppose, to do
+more than simply remind you that there are two great thoughts
+communicated by that self-revelation of God which lies in it. _Jehovah_,
+in its literal grammatical signification, puts emphasis upon the
+absolute, underived, and therefore unlimited, unconditioned,
+unchangeable, eternal being of God. 'I AM THAT I AM.' Men and creatures
+are what they are made, are what they become, and some time or other
+cease to be what they were. But God is what He is, and is because He is.
+He is the Source, the Motive, the Law, the Sustenance of His own Being;
+and changeless and eternal He is for ever. In that name is the Rock of
+Ages.
+
+That mighty name, by its place in the history of Revelation, conveys to
+us still further thoughts, for it is the name of the God who entered
+into covenant with His ancient people, and remains bound by His covenant
+to bless us. That Is to say, He hath not left us in darkness as to the
+methods and purpose of His dealings with us, or as to the attitude of
+His heart towards us. He has bound Himself by solemn words, and by deeds
+as revealing as words. So we can reckon on God. To use a vulgarism which
+is stripped of its vulgarity if employed reverently, as I would do
+it--we know where to have Him. He has given us the elements to calculate
+His orbit; and we are sure that the calculation will come right. So,
+because the name flashes upon men the thought of an absolute Being,
+eternal, and all-sufficient, and self-modified, and changeless, and
+because it reveals to us the very inmost heart of the mystery, and makes
+it possible for us to forecast the movements of this great Sun of our
+heavens, therefore in the name '_Jab Jehovah_ is the Bock of Ages.'
+
+The metaphor needs no expansion. We understand that it conveys the idea
+of unchangeable defence. As the cliffs tower above the river that swirls
+at their base, and takes centuries to eat the faintest line upon their
+shining surface, so the changeless God rises above the stream of time,
+of which the brief breakers are human lives, 'sparkling, bursting, borne
+away.' They who fasten themselves to that Rock are safe in its
+unchangeable strength, God the Unchangeable is the amulet against any
+change, that is not growth, in the lives of those who trust Him. Some of
+us may recall some great precipice rising above the foliage, which
+stands to-day as it did when we were boys, unwasted in its silent
+strength, while generations of leaves have opened and withered at its
+base, and we have passed from childhood to age. Thus, unaffected by the
+transiency that changes all beneath, God rises, the Bock of Ages in whom
+we may trust. 'The conies are a feeble folk, but they make their houses
+in the rocks.' So our weakness may house itself there and be at rest.
+
+IV. Lastly, note the summons to trust.
+
+We know not whose voice it is that is heard in the last words of my
+text, but we know to whose ears it is addressed. It is to all. 'Trust ye
+in the Lord for ever.'
+
+Surely, surely the blessed effects of trust, of which we have been
+speaking, have a voice of merciful invitation summoning us to exercise
+it. The promise of peace appeals to the deepest, though often neglected
+and misunderstood, longings of the human heart. Inly we sigh for that
+repose.' O dear brethren, if it is true that into our agitated and
+struggling lives there may steal, and in them there may abide, this
+priceless blessing of a great tranquillity, surely nothing else should
+be needed to woo us to accept the conditions and put forth the trust. It
+is strange that we should turn away, as we are all tempted to do, from
+that rest in God, and try to find repose in what was only meant for
+stimulus, and is altogether incapable of imparting rest. Storms live in
+the lower regions of the atmosphere; get up higher and there is peace.
+Waves dash and break on the surface region of the ocean; get down
+deeper, nearer the heart of things, and again there is peace.
+
+Surely the name of the Bock of Ages is an invitation to us to put our
+trust in Him. If a man knew God as He is, he could not choose but trust
+Him. It is because we have blackened His face with our own doubts, and
+darkened His character with the mists that rise from our own sinful
+hearts, that we have made that bright Sun in the heavens, which ought to
+fall upon our hearts with healing in its beams, into a lurid ball of
+fire that shines threatening through the dim obscurity of our misty
+hearts. But if we knew Him we should love Him, and if we would only
+listen to His own self-revelation, we should find that He draws us to
+Himself by the manifestation of Himself, as the sun binds all the
+planets to his mass and his flame by the eradiation of his own mystic
+energies.
+
+The summons is a summons to a faith corresponding to that upon which it
+is built. 'Trust ye in the Lora for ever, for in the Lord is the
+strength that endures for ever.' Our continual faith is the only fit
+response to His unchanging faithfulness. Build rock upon rock.
+
+The summons is a summons addressed to us all. 'Trust ye'--whoever ye
+are--'in the Lord for ever.' You and I, dear friends, hear the summons
+in a yet more beseeching and tender voice than was audible to the
+prophet, for our faith has a nobler object, and may have a mightier
+operation, seeing that its object is 'the Lamb of God that taketh away
+the sin of the world'; and its operation, to bring to us peace with God
+through our Lord Jesus Christ. When from the Cross there comes to all
+our hearts the merciful invitation, 'Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ,
+and thou shalt be saved,' why should not we each answer,
+
+ 'Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee'?
+
+
+
+
+THE GRASP THAT BRINGS PEACE
+
+'Let him take hold of My strength, that he may make peace with Me; yea,
+let him make peace with Me.'--ISAIAH xxvii. 5.
+
+
+Lyrical emotion makes the prophet's language obscure by reason of its
+swift transitions from one mood of feeling to another. But the main
+drift here is discernible. God is guarding Israel, His vineyard, and
+before Him its foes are weak as 'thorns and briers,' whose end is to be
+burned. With daring anthropomorphism, the prophet puts into God's mouth
+a longing for the enemies to measure their strength against His, a
+warrior's eagerness for the fight. But at once this martial tone gives
+place to the tender invitation of the text, and the infinite divine
+willingness to be reconciled to the enemy speaks wooingly and offers
+conditions of peace. All this has universal application to our relations
+to God.
+
+I. The Hostility.
+
+That our relations with God are 'strained,' and that men are 'enemies of
+God,' is often repelled as exaggeration, if not as directly false. And,
+no doubt, the Scripture representation has often been so handled as to
+become caricature rather than portraiture. Scripture does not deny the
+lingering presence in men of goodness, partial and defective, nor does
+it assert that conscious antagonism to God is active in godless men. But
+it does assert that 'God is not in all their thoughts,' and that their
+wills are 'not subject to the law of God.' And in such a case as man's
+relations to God, indifference and forgetfulness cannot but rest upon
+divergence of will and contrast of character. Why do men 'not like to
+retain God in their knowledge, 'but because they feel that the thought
+of Him would spoil the feast, like the skeleton in the banqueting
+chamber? Beneath the apparent indifference lie opposition of will,
+meeting God's 'Thou shalt' with man's 'I will not'; opposition of moral
+nature, impurity shrinking from perfect purity; opposition of affection,
+the warmth of human love being diverted to other objects than God.
+
+II. The entreating Love that is not turned aside by hostility.
+
+The antagonism is wholly on man's part.
+
+True, man's opposition necessarily turns certain sides of the divine
+character to present a hostile front to him. Not only God's physical
+attributes, if we may so call them, but the moral attributes which guide
+the energies of these, namely, His holiness and His righteousness, and
+the acts of His sovereignty which flow from these, must be in opposition
+to the man who has set himself in opposition to God. 'The face of the
+Lord is against them that do evil.' If it were not, He would not be God.
+
+But still, God's love enfolds all men in its close and tender clasp. As
+the context says, in close connection with the threat to burn the briers
+and thorns, 'Fury is not in Me.' Man's hostility does not rouse God's.
+He wars against the sin because He still loves the sinner. His love
+'must come with a rod,' but, at the same time, it comes 'with the spirit
+of meekness.' It gives its enemy all that it can; but it cannot give all
+that it would.
+
+He stoops to sue for our amity. It is the creditor who exhausts
+beseechings on His debtor, so much does He wish to 'agree with His
+adversary quickly.' The tender pleading of the Apostle was but a faint
+echo of the marvellous condescension of God, when he, 'in God's stead,
+besought: 'Be ye reconciled to God.'
+
+III. The grasp which ends alienation.
+
+The word for 'strength' here means a stronghold or fortified place,
+which serves as an asylum or refuge. There may be some mingling of an
+allusion to the fugitive's taking hold of the horns of the altar, and so
+being safe from the vengeance of his pursuers. If we may take this
+double metaphor as implied in the text, it vividly illustrates the
+essence of the faith which brings us into peace with God. That faith is
+the flight of the soul to God, and, in another aspect, it is the
+clinging of the soul to Him. How much more these two metaphors tell of
+the real nature of faith than many a theological treatise! They speak of
+the urgency of the peril from which it seeks deliverance. A fugitive
+with the hot breath of the avenger of blood panting behind him, and
+almost feeling the spear-point in his back, would not let the grass grow
+under his feet. They speak of the energetic clutch of faith, as that of
+the man gripping the horns of the altar. They suggest that faith is
+something much more vital than intellectual assent or credence, namely,
+an act of the whole man realising his need and casting himself on God.
+
+And they set in clear light what is the connection between faith and
+salvation. It is not the hand that grasps the altar that secures safety,
+but the altar itself. It is not the flight to the fortress, but the
+massive walls themselves, which keeps those who hunt after the fugitive
+at bay. It is not my faith, but the God on whom my faith fastens, that
+brings peace to my conscience.
+
+IV. The peace that this grasp brings.
+
+In Christ God has 'put away all His wrath, and turned Himself from the
+fierceness of His anger.' And He was in Christ, reconciling the world to
+Himself. It is a one-sided warfare that men wage with Him, and when we
+abandon our opposition to Him, the war is ended. We might say that God,
+clasped by faith and trusted in and loved, is the asylum from God
+opposed and feared. His moral nature must be against evil, but faith
+unites us to Jesus, and, by union with Him, we receive the germ of a
+nature which has no affinity with evil, and which God wholly delights in
+and loves. To those who live by the life, and growingly bear the image
+of His Son, the divine Nature turns a face all bright and favouring, and
+His moral and physical attributes are all enlisted on their side. The
+fortress looks grim to outsiders gazing up at its strong walls and
+frowning battlements, but to dwellers within, these give security, and
+in its inmost centre is a garden, with flowers and a springing fountain,
+whither the noise of fighting never penetrates. We have but to cease to
+be against Him, and to grasp the facts of His love as revealed in the
+Cross of Christ, the sacrifice who taketh away the sin of the world, and
+we are at peace with God. Being at peace with Him, the discords of our
+natures warring against themselves are attuned into harmony, and we are
+at peace within. And when God and we are at one, and we are at one with
+ourselves, then all things will be on our side, and will work together
+for good. To such a man the ancient promise will be fulfilled: 'Thou
+shalt be in league with the stones of the field, and the beasts of the
+field shall be at peace with thee.'
+
+
+
+
+THE JUDGMENT OF DRUNKARDS AND MOCKERS
+
+'Woe to the crown of pride, to the drunkards of Ephraim, whose glorious
+beauty is a fading flower, which are on the head of the fat valleys of
+them that are overcome with wine! 2. Behold, the Lord hath a mighty and
+strong one, which, as a tempest of hail, and a destroying storm, as a
+flood of mighty waters overflowing, shall cast down to the earth with
+the hand. 3. The crown of pride, the drunkards of Ephraim, shall be
+trodden under feet: 4. And the glorious beauty, which is on the head of
+the fat valley, shall be a fading flower, and as the hasty fruit before
+the summer; which when he that looketh upon it seeth, while it is yet in
+his hand he eateth it up. 5. In that day shall the Lord of hosts be for
+a crown of glory, and for a diadem of beauty, unto the residue of His
+people. 6. And for a spirit of judgment to him that sitteth in judgment,
+and for strength to them that turn the battle to the gate. 7. But they
+also have erred through wine, and through strong drink are out of the
+way: the priest and the prophet have erred through strong drink, they
+are swallowed up of wine, they are out of the way through strong drink;
+they err in vision, they stumble in judgment. 8. For all tables are full
+of vomit and filthiness, so that there is no place clean. 9. Whom shall
+He teach knowledge? and whom shall He make to understand doctrine? them
+that are weaned from the milk, and drawn from the breasts. 10. For
+precept must be upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon line, line
+upon line; here a little, and there a little: 11. For with stammering
+lips, and another tongue, will He speak to this people. 12. To whom He
+said, This is the rest wherewith ye may cause the weary to rest; and
+this is the refreshing: yet they would not hear. 13. But the word of the
+Lord was unto them precept upon precept, precept upon precept; line upon
+line, line upon line; here a little, and there a little; that they might
+go, and fall backward, and be broken, and snared, and taken.'--ISAIAH
+xxviii. 1-13.
+
+
+This prophecy probably falls in the first years of Hezekiah, when
+Samaria still stood, and the storm of war was gathering black in the
+north. The portion included in the text predicts the fall of Samaria
+(verses 1-6) and then turns to Judah, which is guilty of the same sins
+as the northern capital, and adds to them mockery of the prophet's
+message. Isaiah speaks with fiery indignation and sharp sarcasm. His
+words are aflame with loathing of the moral corruption of both kingdoms,
+and he fastens on the one common vice of drunkenness--not as if it were
+the only sin, but because it shows in the grossest form the rottenness
+underlying the apparent beauty.
+
+I. The woe on Samaria (verses 1-6). Travellers are unanimous in their
+raptures over the fertility and beauty of the valley in which Samaria
+stood, perched on its sunny, fruitful hill, amid its vineyards. The
+situation of the city naturally suggests the figure which regards it as
+a sparkling coronet or flowery wreath, twined round the brows of the
+hill; and that poetical metaphor is the more natural, since revellers
+were wont to twist garlands in their hair, when they reclined at their
+orgies. The city is 'the crown of pride'--that is, the object of
+boasting and foolish confidence--and is also 'the fading flower of his
+sparkling ornament'; that is, the flower which is the ornament of
+Ephraim, but is destined to fade.
+
+The picture of the city passes into that of the drunken debauch, where
+the chief men of Samaria sprawl, 'smitten down' by wine, and with the
+innocent flowers on their hot temples drooping in the fumes of the
+feast. But bright and sunny as the valley is, glittering in the light as
+the city sits on her hill, careless and confident as the revellers are,
+a black cloud lies on the horizon, and one of the terrible sudden storms
+which such lands know comes driving up the valley. 'The Lord hath a
+mighty and strong one'--the conqueror from the north, who is God's
+instrument, though he knows it not.
+
+The swift, sudden, irresistible onslaught of the Assyrian is described,
+in harmony with the figure of the flowery coronal, as a tempest which
+beats down the flowers and flings the sodden crown to the ground. The
+word rendered 'tempest' is graphic, meaning literally a 'downpour.'
+First comes hail, which batters the flowers to shreds; then the effect
+of the storm is described as 'destruction,' and then the hurrying words
+turn back to paint the downpour of rain, 'mighty' from its force in
+falling, and 'overflowing' from its abundance, which soon sets all the
+fields swimming with flood water. What chance has a poor twist of
+flowers in such a storm? Its beauty will be marred, and all the petals
+beaten off, and nothing remains but that it should be trampled into mud.
+The rush of the prophet's denunciation is swift and irresistible as the
+assault it describes, and it flashes from one metaphor to another
+without pause. The fertility of the valley of Samaria shapes the
+figures. As the picture of the flowery chaplet, so that which follows of
+the early fig, is full of local colour. A fig in June is a delicacy,
+which is sure to be plucked and eaten as soon as seen. Such a dainty,
+desirable morsel will Samaria be, as sweet and as little satisfying to
+the all-devouring hunger of the Assyrian.
+
+But storms sweep the air clear, and everything will not go down before
+this one. The flower fadeth, but there is a chaplet of beauty which men
+may wreathe round their heads, which shall bloom for ever. All sensuous
+enjoyment has its limits in time, as well as in nobleness and
+exquisiteness; but when it is all done with, the beauty and festal
+ornament which truly crowns humanity shall smell sweet and blossom. The
+prophecy had regard simply to the issue of the historical disaster to
+which it pointed, and it meant that, after the storm of Assyrian
+conquest, there would still be, for the servants of God, the residue of
+the people, both in Israel and in Judah, a fuller possession of the
+blessings which descend on the men who make God their portion. But the
+principle involved is for ever true. The sweeping away of the perishable
+does draw true hearts nearer to God.
+
+So the two halves of this prophecy give us eternal truths as to the
+certain destruction awaiting the joys of sense, and the permanence of
+the beauty and strength which belong to those who take God for their
+portion.
+
+Drunkenness seems to have been a national sin in Israel; for Micah
+rebukes it as vehemently as Isaiah, and it is a clear bit of Christian
+duty in England to-day to 'set the trumpet to thy mouth and show the
+people' this sin. But the lessons of the prophecy are wider than the
+specific form of evil denounced. All setting of affection and seeking of
+satisfaction in that which, in all the pride of its beauty, is 'a fading
+flower,' is madness and sin. Into every life thus turned to the
+perishable will come the crash of the destroying storm, the mutterings
+of which might reach the ears of the feasters, if they were not drunk
+with the fumes of their deceiving delights. Only one kind of life has
+its roots in that which abides, and is safe from tempest and change.
+Amaranthine flowers bloom only in heaven, and must be brought thence, if
+they are to garland earthly foreheads. If we take God for ours, then
+whatever tempests may howl, and whatever fragile though fragrant joys
+may be swept away, we shall find in Him all that the world 'fails to
+give to its votaries. He is 'a crown of glory' and 'a diadem of beauty.'
+Our humanity is never so fair as when it is made beautiful by the
+possession of Him. All that sense vainly seeks in earth, faith finds in
+God. Not only beauty, but 'a spirit of judgment,' in its narrower sense
+and in its widest, is breathed into those to whom God is 'the master
+light of all their seeing'; and, yet more, He is strength to all who
+have to fight. Thus the close union of trustful souls with God, the
+actual inspiration of these, and the perfecting of their nature from
+communion with God, are taught us in the great words, which tell how
+beauty, justice, and strength are all given in the gift of Jehovah
+Himself to His people.
+
+II. The prophet turns to Judah (vs. 7-13), and charges them with the
+same disgusting debauchery. His language is vehement in its loathing,
+and describes the filthy orgies of those who should have been the guides
+of the people with almost painful realism. Note how the words 'reel' and
+'stagger' are repeated, and also the words 'wine' and 'strong drink.' We
+see the priests' and prophets' unsteady gait, and then they 'stumble' or
+fall. There they lie amid the filth, like hogs in a sty. It is very
+coarse language, but fine words are the Devil's veils for coarse sins;
+and it is needful sometimes to call spades spades, and not to be ashamed
+to tell men plainly how ugly are the vices which they are not ashamed to
+commit. No doubt some of the drunken priests and false prophets in
+Jerusalem thought Isaiah extremely vulgar and indelicate, in talking
+about staggering teachers and tables swimming in 'vomit.' But he had to
+speak out. So deep was the corruption that the officials were tipsy even
+when engaged in their official duties, the prophets reeled while they
+were seeing visions; the judges could not sit upright even when
+pronouncing judgment.
+
+Verses 9 and 10 are generally taken as a sarcastic quotation of the
+drunkards' scoffs at the prophet. They might be put in inverted commas.
+Their meaning is, 'Does he take us grave and reverend seigniors, priests
+and prophets, to be babies just weaned, that he pesters us with these
+monotonous petty preachings, fit only for the nursery, which he calls
+his "message"?' In verse 10, the original for 'precept upon precept,'
+etc., is a series of short words, which may be taken as reproducing the
+'babbling tones of the drunken mockers.'
+
+The loose livers of all generations talk in the same fashion about the
+stern morality which rebukes their vice. They call it weak, commonplace,
+fit for children, and they pretend that they despise it. They are much
+too enlightened for such antiquated teaching. Old women and children may
+take it in, but men of the world, who have seen life, and know what is
+what, are not to be fooled so. 'What will this babbler say?' was asked
+by the wise men of Athens, who were but repeating the scoffs of the
+prophets and priests of Jerusalem, and the same jeers are bitter in the
+mouth of many a profligate man to-day. It is the fate of all strict
+morality to be accounted childish by the people whom it inconveniently
+condemns.
+
+In verse 11 and onwards the prophet speaks. He catches up the mockers'
+words, and retorts them. They have scoffed at his message as if it were
+stammering speech. They shall hear another kind of stammerers when the
+fierce invaders' harsh and unintelligible language commands them. The
+reason why these foreign voices would have authority, was the national
+disregard of God's voice. 'Ye would not hear' Him when, by His prophet,
+He spoke gracious invitations to rest, and to give the nation rest, in
+obedience and trust. Therefore they shall hear the battle-cry of the
+conqueror, and have to obey orders spoken in a barbarous tongue.
+
+Of course, the language meant is the Assyrian, which, though cognate
+with Hebrew, is so unlike as to be unintelligible to the people. But is
+not the threat the statement of a great truth always being fulfilled
+towards the disobedient? If we will not listen to that loving Voice
+which calls us to rest, we shall be forced to listen to the harsh and
+strident tones of conquering enemies who command us to slavish toil. If
+we will not be guided by His eye and voice, we shall be governed by whip
+and bridle. Our choice is either to hearken to the divine call, which is
+loving and gentle, and invites to deep repose springing from faith, or
+to have to hear the voice of the taskmasters. The monotony of despised
+moral and religious teaching shall give place to a more terrible
+monotony, even that of continuous judgments.
+
+'The mills of God grind slowly.' Bit by bit, with gradual steps, with
+dismal persistence, like the slow drops on the rock, the judgments of
+God trickle out on the mocking heart. It takes a long time for a child
+to learn a pageful when he gets his lesson a sentence at a time. So
+slowly do His chastisements fall on men who have despised the continuous
+messages of His love. The word of the Lord, which was laughed at when it
+clothed itself in a prophet's speech, will be heard in more formidable
+shape, when it is wrapped in the long-drawn-out miseries of years of
+bondage. The warning is as needful for us as for these drunken priests
+and scornful rulers. The principle embodied is true in this day as it
+was then, and we too have to choose between serving God in gladness,
+hearkening to the voice of His word, and so finding rest to our souls,
+and serving the world, the flesh, and the devil, and so experiencing the
+perpetual dropping of the fiery rain of His judgments.
+
+
+
+
+A CROWN OP PRIDE OR A CROWN OF GLORY
+
+'The crown of pride, the drunkards of Ephraim, shall be trodden under
+feet; 4. And the glorious beauty, which is on the head of the fat
+valley, shall be a fading flower, and as the hasty fruit before the
+summer; which when he that looketh upon it seeth, while it is yet in his
+hand he eateth it up. 5. In that day shall the Lord of hosts be for a
+crown of glory, and for a diadem of beauty, unto the residue of his
+people.'--ISAIAH xxviii. 3-5.
+
+
+The reference is probably to Samaria as a chief city of Israel. The
+image is suggested by the situation of Samaria, high on a hill-side,
+crowning the valley, and by the rich vegetation and bright flowers which
+makes it even now one of the few lovely scenes in Palestine; and by the
+luxurious riot and sensual excess that were always characteristic of the
+northern kingdom.
+
+The destruction of Samaria and of the kingdom, then, is here
+prophesied--the garland will fade, the hail will batter all its drooping
+flowerets, and it shall be trodden under foot. Look at that withered
+wreath that gleamed yesterday on some fair head, to-day flung into the
+ashpit or kicked about the street. That is a modern rendering of the
+prophet's imagery. But the reference goes further than merely to the
+city: the whole state of the nation is expressed by the symbol, as
+doomed to quick decay, fading in itself, and further smitten down by
+divine judgments.
+
+There is a contrasted picture, that of 'the residue of the people' to
+whom there is an amaranthine crown, a festal diadem glorious and
+beautiful, which can never fade, even God Himself. To them who love Him
+He is an ornament, and His presence is the consecration of the true
+joyful feast. They who are crowned by Him are crowned, not for idle
+revelry, but for strenuous toil ('sit in judgment') and for brave
+purpose ('turn the battle to the gate,') and their coronation day is
+ever the day when earthly garlands are withered, whether it be the
+crises and convulsions of nations and institutions, or times of personal
+trial, or 'in the hour of death or in the day of judgment.'
+
+Expanding then these thoughts, we have--
+
+I. All godless joys are but fading chaplets.
+
+Of course the first application of such words is to purely sensuous
+delights.
+
+Men who seek to make life a mere revel and banquet.
+
+Nothing is so short-lived as gratification of appetite. It is not merely
+that each act lasts but for a moment, but also that past gratifications
+leave no sort of solace to the appetite behind them; whereas past
+acquirements or deeds of goodness are a perpetual joy as well as the
+foundation of the present. There is something essentially isolated in
+each act of sensuous delight. No man can by so willing recall the taste
+of eaten food, nor slake his thirst by remembrance of former draughts,
+or cool himself by thinking of 'frosty Caucasus.' But each such
+gratification is done when it is done, and there is an end of its power
+to gratify.
+
+Further, the power of enjoyment wanes, though the lust for it waxes.
+Hence each act has less and less power of satisfying.
+
+One sees _blase_ young men of twenty-five. It was a man of under
+thirty-five who wrote, 'Man delights not me, no, nor woman neither.' It
+was a used-up _roue_ that was represented as saying, 'Vanity of
+vanities, all is vanity.' It was of sensuous 'pleasures' that poor Burns
+wrote,--
+
+ 'Like the snowfall in the river,
+ A moment white,--then melts for ever.'
+
+When a people is given over to such excess, late or soon the fate of
+Samaria comes upon them. Think of the French Revolution or of the fall
+of Rome, and learn that the prophet was announcing a law for all
+nations, in his fiery denunciation, and one which holds good to-day as
+ever.
+
+But we may generalise more widely. Every godless life is essentially
+transitory; of course, all life is so in one view. But suppose two men,
+working side by side at the same occupation, passing through the same
+circumstances. So far as physical changes go, these men are the same.
+Both lose much. Both leave behind much. Both cease to be interested in
+much that was dear to them. Both die at last, and leave it all. Is there
+any difference? The transitoriness is the same, and the eternal
+consequences are eternal alike in both; and yet there is a very solemn
+sense in which the one man's life has utterly perished, and the other's
+abides. Suppose a man, educated to be a first-rate man of business,
+dies. Which of his trained faculties will he have scope for in that new
+order of things? Or a student, or a lawyer, or a statesman?
+
+Oh, it is not our natural mortality that makes these thoughts so awful;
+but it is the thought that the man who is doing these things is
+immortal. The head which wears the fading wreath will live for ever.
+'What will ye do in the end?'
+
+II. Godly life brings unfading joys.
+
+Communion with God yields abiding joys. The law of change remains the
+same. The law of death remains the same. But the motives which direct
+and impel the godly man are beyond the reach of change.
+
+The habits which he contracts are for heaven as well as for earth. The
+treasures which he amasses will always be his.
+
+His life in its essence and his work are one in all worlds. What a grand
+continuity, then, knits into one a godly life whether it is lived on
+earth or in heaven!
+
+Communion with God gives beauty and ornament to the whole character. It
+brings the true refining and perfecting of the soul. No doubt many
+Christian men, as we see them, are but poor specimens of this effect of
+godliness; still, it is an effect produced in proportion to the depth
+and continuity of their communion. We might dwell on the effect on Will,
+Affections, Understanding, produced by dwelling in God. It is simple
+fact that the highest conceivable type of beauty is only reached through
+communion with God.
+
+Communion with God gives power as well as gladness. The life of abiding
+with God is also one of strenuous effort and real warfare. In the
+context it is promised that God will be for strength to them that turn
+the battle to the gate.
+
+The luxurious life of self-indulgence ends, as all selfish life must do,
+in the vanishing of delights. The life of joy in God issues, as all true
+joy does, in power for work and in power for conflict.
+
+'God doth anoint thee with His odorous oil, to wrestle, not to reign.'
+
+III. There will be a coronation day.
+
+'In that day,' the day when 'the crown of pride shall be trodden under
+foot,' the people of God are crowned with the diadem of beauty which is
+God Himself. That twofold work of that one day suggests--
+
+The double aspect of trials and sorrows.
+
+The double aspect of death.
+
+The double aspect of final Judgment.
+
+'Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of righteousness, which the
+Lord, the righteous Judge, shall give me at that day.'
+
+To be crowned or discrowned 'in that day' is the alternative set before
+each of us. Which of the two do we choose?
+
+
+
+
+MAN'S CROWN AND GOD'S
+
+'In that day shall the Lord of hosts be for a crown of glory, and for a
+diadem of beauty.'--ISAIAH xxviii. 5.
+
+'Thou shall also be a crown of glory in the hand of the Lord.'--ISAIAH
+lxii 3.
+
+
+Connection of first prophecy--destruction of Samaria. Its situation,
+crowning the hill with its walls and towers, its fertile 'fat valley,'
+the flagrant immorality and drunkenness of its inhabitants, and its
+final ruin, are all presented in the highly imaginative picture of its
+fall as being like the trampling under foot of a garland on a reveller's
+head, the roses of which fade and droop amid the fumes of the banqueting
+hall, and are then flung out on the highway. The contrast presented is
+very striking and beautiful. When all that gross and tumultuous beauty
+has faded and died, then God Himself will be a crown of beauty to His
+people.
+
+The second text comes into remarkable line with this. The verbal
+resemblance is not quite so strong in the original. The words for
+_diadem_ and _crown_ are not the same; the word rendered _glory_ in the
+second text is rendered _beauty_ in the first, but the two texts are
+entirely one in meaning. The same metaphor, then, is used with reference
+to what God is to the Church and what the Church is to God. He is its
+crown, it is His.
+
+I. The Possession of God is the Coronation of Man.
+
+(a) Crowns were worn by guests at feasts. They who possess God sit at a
+table perpetually spread with all which the soul can wish or want.
+Contrast the perishable delights of sense and godless life with the calm
+and immortal joys of communion with God; 'a crown that fadeth not away'
+beside withered garlands.
+
+(b) Crowns were worn by kings. They who serve God are thereby invested
+with rule over selves, over circumstances, over all externals. He alone
+gives completeness to self-control.
+
+(c) Crowns were worn by priests. The highest honour and dignity of man's
+nature is thereby reached. To have God is like a beam of sunshine on a
+garden, which brings out the colours of all the flowers; contrast with
+the same garden in the grey monotony of a cloudy twilight.
+
+II. The Coronation of Man in God is the Coronation of God in Man.
+
+That includes the following thoughts.
+
+The true glory of God is in the communication of Himself. What a
+wonderful light that throws on divine character! It is equivalent to
+'God is Love.'
+
+He who is glorified by God glorifies God, as showing the most wonderful
+working of His power in making such a man out of such material, by an
+alchemy that can convert base metal into fine gold; as showing the most
+wonderful condescension of His love in taking to His heart man, into
+whose flesh the rotting leprosy of sin has eaten.
+
+Such a man will glorify God by becoming a conscious herald of His
+praise. He who has God in his heart will magnify Him by lip and life.
+Redeemed men are 'secretaries of His praise' to men, and 'to
+principalities and powers in heavenly places is made known by the Church
+the manifold wisdom of God.'
+
+He who thus glorifies God is held in God's hand.
+
+'None shall pluck them out of My Father's hand.'
+
+All this will be perfected in heaven. Redeemed men lead the universal
+chorus that thunders forth 'glory to Him that sitteth on the throne.'
+
+'He shall come to be glorified in His saints.'
+
+'Glorify Thy Son, that Thy Son also may glorify Thee.'
+
+
+
+
+THE FOUNDATION OF GOD
+
+'Therefore thus saith the Lord God, Behold, I lay in Zion for a
+foundation a stone, a tried stone, a precious corner stone, a sure
+foundation: he that believeth shall not make haste.'--ISAIAH xxviii. 16.
+
+
+'Therefore thus saith the Lord.' Then these great words are God's answer
+to something. And that something is the scornful defiance by the rulers
+of Israel of the prophet's threatenings. By their deeds, whether by
+their words or no, they said that they had made friends of their
+enemies, and that so they were sure that, whatsoever came, they were
+safe. To this contemptuous and false reliance God answers, not as we
+might expect, first of all, by a repetition of the threatenings, but by
+a majestic disclosure of the sure refuge which He has provided, set in
+contrast to the flimsy and false ones, on which these men built their
+truculent confidence; 'I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone.' And
+then, after the exhibition of the great mercy which has been evoked by
+the very blasphemy of the rulers, and not till then, does He reiterate
+the threatenings of judgment, against which this foundation is laid,
+that men may escape; God first declares the refuge, and then warns of
+the tempest.
+
+Without entering at all upon the question, which for all believing and
+simple souls is settled by the New Testament, of the Messianic
+application of the words before us, I take it for granted. There may no
+doubt be an allusion here to the great solid blocks which travellers
+tell us may still be seen at the base of the encircling walls of the
+Temple hill. A stone so gigantic and so firm God has laid for man to
+build upon.
+
+I. Note, then, first, the foundation, which is Christ.
+
+There are many aspects of the great thought on which I cannot touch even
+for a moment. For instance, let me remind you how, in a very deep sense,
+Jesus Christ is the foundation of the whole of the divine dealings with
+us; and how, in another aspect, historically, since the day on which He
+appeared on earth, He has more and more manifestly and completely been
+the foundation of the whole history of the world. But passing these
+aspects, let us rather fix upon those which are more immediately in the
+prophet's mind.
+
+Jesus Christ is the foundation laid for all men's security against every
+tempest or assault. The context has portrayed the coming of a tremendous
+storm and inundation, in view of which this foundation is laid. The
+building reared on it then is, therefore, to be a refuge and an asylum.
+Have not we all of us, like these scornful men in Jerusalem, built our
+refuges on vain hopes, on creatural affections, on earthly possessions,
+on this, that, and the other false thing, all of which are to be swept
+away when the storm comes? And does there not come upon us all the blast
+of the ordinary calamities to which flesh is heir, and have we not all
+more or less consciousness of our own evil and sinfulness; and does
+there not lie before every one of us at the end of life that solemn last
+struggle, and beyond that, as we most of us believe, a judgment for all
+that we have done in the body? 'I lay in Zion for a foundation a stone.'
+Build upon that, and neither the tempest of earthly calamities, changes,
+disappointments, sorrows, losses, nor the scourge that is wielded
+because of our sins, nor the last wild tempest that sweeps a man on the
+wings of its strong blast from out of life into the dark region, nor the
+solemn final retribution and judgment, shall ever touch us. And when the
+hail sweeps away the refuge of lies, and the waters overflow the
+hiding-place, this foundation stands sure--
+
+ And lo! from sin and grief and shame
+ I hide me, Jesus, in Thy name.
+
+Brethren, the one foundation on which building, we can build secure, and
+safe as well as secure, is that foundation which is laid in the
+incarnation, death, resurrection, and ascension of the Son of God. The
+foundation of all our security is Jesus Christ.
+
+We may look at the same thought under somewhat different aspects. He is
+the foundation for all our thinking and opinions, for all our belief and
+our knowledge. 'In Him are hid all the treasures of wisdom and
+knowledge,' and whatsoever of solid fact men can grasp in their
+thinkings in regard to all the most important facts and truths with
+which they come into relation, is to be found in the life and death of
+Jesus Christ, and in the truths which these reveal. He is the foundation
+of all our knowledge of God, and of all our true knowledge of ourselves,
+of all our true knowledge of duty, and all our true knowledge of the
+relations between the present and the future, between man and God.
+
+And in His life, in the history of His death and resurrection, is the
+only foundation for any real knowledge of the awful mysteries that lie
+beyond the grave. He is the Alpha from whom all truth must be deduced,
+the Omega to which it all leads up. Certitude is in Him. Apart from Him
+we are but groping amid peradventures. If we _know_ anything about God
+it is due to Jesus Christ. If we _know_ anything about ourselves it is
+due to Him. If we _know_ anything about what men ought to do, it is
+because He has done all human duty. And if, into the mist and darkness
+that wraps the future, there has ever travelled one clear beam of
+insight, it is because He has died and risen again. If we have Him, and
+ponder upon the principles that are involved in, and flow from, the
+facts of His life and death, then we know; and 'the truth as it is in
+Jesus' is the truth indeed. To possess Him is to hold the key to all
+mysteries, and knowledge without Him is but knowledge of the husk, the
+kernel being all unreached. That Stone is the foundation on which the
+whole stately fabric of man's knowledge of the highest things must ever
+be reared.
+
+He is the foundation of all restful love. A Czar of Russia, in the old
+days, was mad enough to build a great palace upon the ice-blocks of the
+Neva. And when the spring came, and the foundations melted, the house,
+full of delights and luxury, sank beneath the river. We build upon
+frozen water, and when the thaw comes, what we build sinks and is lost
+to sight. Instead of love that twines round the creature and trails,
+bleeding and bruised, along the ground when the prop is taken away, let
+us turn our hearts to the warm, close, pure, perfect changeless love of
+the undying Christ, and we shall build above the fear of change. The
+dove's nest in the pine-tree falls in ruin when the axe is laid to the
+root. Let us build our nests in the clefts of the rock and no hand will
+ever reach them. Christ is the foundation on which we may build an
+immortal love.
+
+He is the foundation for all noble and pure living. He is the fixed
+pattern to which it may be conformed. Otherwise man's notions of what is
+virtuous and good are much at the mercy of conventional variations of
+opinion. This class, that community, this generation, that school, all
+differ in their notions of what is true nobleness and goodness of life.
+And we are left at the mercy of fluctuating standards unless we take
+Christ in His recorded life as the one realised ideal of manhood, the
+pattern of what we ought to be. We cannot find a fixed and available
+model for conduct anywhere so useful, so complete, so capable of
+application to all varieties of human life and disposition as we find in
+Him, who was not this man or that man, in whom the manly and the
+feminine, the gentle and the strong, the public and the private graces
+were equally developed. In Christ there is no limitation or taint. In
+Christ there is nothing narrow or belonging to a school. This water has
+no taste of any of the rocks through which it flowed. You cannot say of
+Jesus Christ that He is a Jew or a Gentile, that He is man or woman,
+that He is of the ancient age or the modern type, that He is cut after
+this pattern or that. All beauty and all grace are in Him, and every man
+finds there the example that he needs. So, as the perfect pattern, He is
+the foundation for all noble character.
+
+As the one sufficient motive for holy and beauteous living, He is the
+foundation. 'If ye love Me, keep My commandments.' That is a new thing
+in the world's morality, and that one motive, and that motive alone, has
+power, as the spring sunshine has, to draw beauty from out the little
+sheaths of green, and to tempt the radiance of the flowers to unfold
+their lustre. They that find the reason and the motive for goodness and
+purity in Christ's love to them, and their answering love to Christ,
+will build a far fairer fabric of a life than any others, let them toil
+at the building as they may. So, dear brethren, on this foundation God
+has built His mercy to all generations, and on this foundation you and I
+may build our safety, our love, our thinkings, our obedience, and rest
+secure.
+
+II. Note next the tried preciousness of the foundation.
+
+The language of the text, 'a stone of proof,' as it reads in the
+original, probably means a stone which has been tested and stood the
+trial. And because it is thus a tested stone, it therefore is a precious
+stone. There are two kinds of testing--the testing from the assaults of
+enemies, and the testing by the building upon it of friends. And both
+these methods of proof have been applied, and it has stood the test.
+
+Think of all the assaults that have been made from this side and the
+other against Christ and His gospel, and what has become of them all?
+Travellers tell us how they often see some wandering tribes of savage
+Arabs trying to move the great stones, for instance, of Baalbec--those
+wonders of unfinished architecture. But what can a crowd of such people,
+with all their crowbars and levers, do to the great stone bedded there,
+where it has been for centuries? They cannot stir it one hair's-breadth.
+And so, against Jesus Christ and His gospel there has stormed for
+eighteen hundred years an assaulting crowd, varying in its individuals
+and in its methods of attack, but the same in its purpose, and the same
+in the fruitlessness of its effort. Century after century they have
+said, as they are saying to-day, '_Now_ the final assault is going to be
+delivered; it can never stand _this_.' And when the smoke has cleared
+away there may be a little blackening upon the edge, but there is not a
+chip off its bulk, and it stands in its bed where it did; and of all the
+grand preparations for a shattering explosion, nothing is left but a
+sulphurous smell, and a wreath of smoke, and both are floating away down
+into the distance. Generation after generation has attacked the gospel;
+generation after generation has been foiled; and I do not need to be a
+prophet, or the son of a prophet, to be quite sure of this, that all who
+to-day are trying to destroy men's faith in the Incarnate Son of God,
+who died for them and rose again, will meet the same fate. I can see the
+ancient and discredited systems of unbelief, that have gone down into
+oblivion, rising from their seats, as the prophet in his great vision
+saw the kings of the earth, to greet the last comer who had fought
+against God and failed, with 'Art thou also become weak as we? Art thou
+become like unto us?' The stone will stand, whosoever tries to blow it
+up with his dynamite, or to pound it with his hammers.
+
+But there is the other kind of testing. One proves the foundation by
+building upon it. If the stone be soft, if it be slender, if it be
+imperfectly bedded, it will crumble, it will shift, it will sink. But
+this stone has borne all the weight that the world has laid upon it, and
+borne it up. Did any man ever come to Jesus Christ with a sorrow that He
+could not comfort, with a sin that He could not forgive, with a soul
+that He could not save? And we may trust Him to the end. He is a 'tried
+stone.' 'This poor man cried, and the Lord heard him, and saved him out
+of all his troubles,' has been the experience of nineteen centuries.
+
+So, being tried, it is precious,--precious to God who laid it there at a
+great and real cost to Himself--having given up 'His only begotten Son';
+precious, inasmuch as building upon it is the one safety from the raging
+tempest and flood that would else engulf and destroy us.
+
+III. Note, next, the process of building.
+
+The metaphor seems to be abandoned in the last words of our text, but it
+is only apparently so. 'He that believeth shall not make haste.' So,
+then, we build by believing. The act of building is simple faith in
+Jesus Christ. We _come_ to Him, as the Apostle Peter has it in his
+quotation of this text--come to Him as unto a living stone, and the
+coming and the building are both of them metaphors for the one simple
+thing, trust in the Lord. The bond that unites men on earth with Christ
+in Heaven, is the exercise of simple faith in Him. By it they come into
+contact with Him, and receive from Him the security and the blessing
+that He can bestow. Nothing else brings a man into living fellowship
+with Him. When we trust in the Lord we, as it were, are bedded into Him;
+and resting upon Him with all our weight, then we are safe. That
+confidence involves the abandonment of all the 'refuges of lies.' There
+must be utter self-distrust and forsaking and turning away from every
+dependence upon anything else, if we are to trust ourselves to Jesus
+Christ. But the figure of a foundation which gives security and
+stability to the stones laid upon it, does not exhaust all the
+blessedness of this building upon Christ. For when we really rest upon
+Him, there comes from the foundation up through all the courses a vital
+power. Thus Peter puts it: 'To whom, coming as unto a living stone, ye
+also as living stones are built up.' We might illustrate this by the
+supposition of some fortress perched upon a rock, and in the heart of
+the rock a clear fountain, which is guided by some pipe or other into
+the innermost rooms of the citadel. Thus, builded upon Christ, 'our
+defence shall be the munitions of rocks, and our waters shall be sure.'
+From Him, the foundation, there will rise into all the stones, built
+upon Him, the power of His own endless life, and they, too, become
+living stones.
+
+IV. So note, lastly, the quiet confidence of the builders.
+
+'He that believeth shall not _make haste._' The word is somewhat
+obscure, and the LXX., which is followed by the New Testament, readers
+it, 'Shall not be confounded or put to shame.' But the rendering of our
+text seems to be accurate enough. 'He shall not make haste.' Remember
+the picture of the context--a suddenly descending storm, a swiftly
+rising and turbid flood, the lashing of the rain, the howling of the
+wind. The men in the clay-built hovels on the flat have to take to
+flight to some higher ground above the reach of the innundation, on some
+sheltered rock out of the flashing of the rain and the force of the
+tempest. He who is built upon the true foundation knows that his house
+is above the water-level, and he does not need to be in a hurry. He can
+remain quietly there till the flood subsides, knowing that it will not
+rise high enough to drown or even disturb him. When all the other
+buildings are gone, his stands. And he that thus dwells on high may look
+out over the wild flood, washing and weltering to the horizon, and feel
+that he is safe. So shall he not have to make haste, but may wait calm
+and quiet, knowing that all is well.
+
+Dear friends, there is only one refuge for any of us--only one from the
+little annoyances and from the great ones; from to-day's petty troubles,
+and from the day of judgment; from the slight stings, if I may so say,
+of little sorrows, cares, burdens, and from the poisoned dart of the
+great serpent. There is only one refuge for any of us, to build upon
+Jesus Christ, as we can do by simple faith.
+
+And oh! remember, He must either be the foundation on which we build, or
+the stone of stumbling against which we stumble, and which one day will
+fall upon us and grind us to powder. Do you make your choice; and when
+God says, as He says to each of us: 'Behold! I lay in Zion a
+foundation,' do you say, 'And, Lord, I build upon the foundation which
+Thou hast laid.'
+
+
+
+
+GOD'S STRANGE WORK
+
+'That He may do His work, His strange work; and bring to pass His act,
+His strange act.'--ISAIAH xxviii. 21.
+
+
+How the great events of one generation fall dead to another! There is
+something very pathetic in the oblivion that swallows up world-
+resounding deeds. Here the prophet selects two instances which to him
+are solemn and singular examples of divine judgment, and we have
+difficulty in finding out to what he refers. To him they seemed the most
+luminous illustrations he could find of the principle which he is
+proclaiming, and to us all the light is burned out of them. They are the
+darkest portion of the verse. Several different events have been
+suggested. But most probably the historical references here are to
+David's slaughter of the Philistines (2 Sam. v., and I Chron. xiv.).
+This is probable, but by no means certain. If so, the words are made
+still more threatening by asserting that He will treat the Israelites as
+if they were Philistines. But the point on which we should concentrate
+attention is this remarkable expression, according to which judgment is
+God's strange work. And that is made more emphatic by the use of a word
+translated 'act,' which means service, and is almost always used for
+work that is hard and heavy--a toil or a task.
+
+I. The work in which God delights.
+
+It is here implied that the opposite kind of activity is congenial to
+Him. The text declares judgment to be an anomaly, out of His ordinary
+course of action and foreign to His nature.
+
+We may pause for a moment on that great thought that God has a usual
+course of action, which is usual because it is the spontaneous
+expression and true mirror of His character. What He thus does shows
+that character to His creatures, who cannot see Him but in the glass of
+His works, and have to infer His nature, as they best may, from His
+works. The Bible begins with His nature and thence interprets His work.
+
+The work in which God delights is the utterance of His love in blessing.
+
+The very essence of love is self-manifestation.
+
+The very being of God is love, and all being delights in its own self-
+manifestation, in its own activity.
+
+How great the thought is that He is glad when we let Him satisfy His
+nature by making us glad!
+
+The ordinary course of His government in the world is blessing.
+
+II. The Task in which He does not delight, or His Strange Work.
+
+The consequences of sin are God's work. The miseries consequent on sin
+are self-inflicted, but they are also God's judgments on sin. We may say
+that sin automatically works out its results, but its results follow by
+the will of God on account of sin.
+
+That work is a necessity arising from the nature of God. It is foreign
+to His heart but not to His nature. God is both 'the light of Israel'
+for blessing, and 'a consuming fire.' The two opposite effects are
+equally the result of the contact of God and man. Light pains a diseased
+eye and gladdens a sound one. The sun seen through a mist becomes like a
+ball of red-hot iron. The whole revelation of God becomes a pain to an
+unloving soul.
+
+But God's very love compels Him to punish.
+
+Some modern notions of the love of God seem to strike out righteousness
+from His nature altogether, and substitute for it a mere good nature
+which is weakness, not love, and is cruelty, not kindness.
+
+There is nothing in the facts of the world or in the teachings of the
+gospel which countenances the notion of a God whose fondness prevents
+Him from scourging.
+
+What do you call it when a father spares the rod and spoils the child?
+
+Even this world is a very serious place for a man who sets himself
+against its laws. Its punishments come down surely and not always
+slowly. There is nothing in it to encourage the idea of impunity.
+
+That work is to Him an Unwelcome Necessity. Bold words. 'I have no
+pleasure in the death of a sinner.' 'He doth not willingly inflict.' The
+awful power of sin to divert the current of blessing. Christ's tears
+over Jerusalem. How unwelcome that work is to them is shown by the
+slowness of His judgments, by multiplied warnings. 'Rising up early,' He
+tells men that He will smite, in order that He may never need to smite.
+
+That work is a certainty. However reluctantly He smites, the blow _will_
+fall.
+
+III. The Strange Work of Redemption.
+
+The mightiest miracle. The revelation of God's deepest nature. The
+wonder of the universe.
+
+
+
+
+THE HUSBANDMAN AND HIS OPERATIONS
+
+'Give ye ear, and hear my voice; hearken, and hear my speech. 24. Doth
+the plowman plow all day to sow? doth he open and break the clods of his
+ground! 25. When lie hath made plain the face thereof, doth he not cast
+abroad the fitches, and scatter the cummin, and cast in the principal
+wheat and the appointed barley and the rie in their place? 26. For his
+God doth instruct him to discretion, and doth teach him. 27. For the
+fitches are not threshed with a threshing instrument, neither is a cart
+wheel turned about upon the cummin; but the fitches are beaten out with
+a staff, and the cummin with a rod. 28. Bread corn is bruised; because
+he will not ever be threshing it, nor break it with the wheel of his
+cart, nor bruise it with his horsemen. 29. This also cometh forth from
+the Lord of Hosts, which is wonderful in counsel, and excellent in
+working.'--ISAIAH xxviii. 23-29.
+
+
+The prophet has been foretelling a destruction which he calls God's
+_strange_ act. The Jews were incredulous, 'scornful men.' They did not
+believe him; and the main reason for their incredulity was that a divine
+destruction of the nation was so opposite to the divine conservation of
+it as to amount to an impossibility. God had raised up and watched over
+the people. He had planted it in the mountain of His inheritance, and
+now was it going to be thrown down by the same hand which had built it
+up? Impossible.
+
+The prophet's answer to that question is this parable of the husbandman,
+who has to perform a great variety of operations. He ploughs, but that
+is not all. He lays aside the plough when it has done its work, and
+takes up the seed-basket, and, in different ways, sows different seeds,
+scattering some broadcast, and dropping others carefully, grain by
+grain, into their place--'dibbling' it in, as we should say. But
+seedtime too, passes, and then he cuts down what he had so carefully
+sown, and pulls up what he had so sedulously planted, and, in different
+ways, breaks and bruises the grain. Is he inconsistent because he
+ploughs in winter and reaps in harvest? Does his carrying the
+seed-basket at one time make it impossible that he shall come with flail
+and threshing-oxen at another? Are not all the various operations
+co-operant to one end? Does not the end need them all? Is not one
+purpose going steadily forward through ploughing, sowing, reaping,
+threshing? Is not that like the work of the great Husbandman, who
+changes His methods and preserves His plan through them all, who has His
+'time to sow' and His 'time to reap,' and who orders the affairs of men
+and kingdoms, for the one purpose that He may gather His wheat into His
+garner, and purge from it its chaff?
+
+This parable sets forth a philosophy of the divine operations very
+beautiful and true, and none the less impressive for the simple garb in
+which it is clothed.
+
+I. All things come from one steady, divine purpose.
+
+We may notice in passing how reverentially the prophet believes that
+agriculture is taught by God. He would have said the same of cotton-
+spinning or coal-mining. Think how striking a figure that is, of all the
+world as God's farm, where He practises His husbandry to grow the crops
+which He desires.
+
+What a picture the parable gives of sedulous and patient labour for a
+far-off result!
+
+It insists on the thought of one steady divine purpose ever directing
+the movements of the divine hand.
+
+That is the negation of the godless theory that the affairs of men are
+merely the work of men, or are merely the result of impersonal causes.
+The world is not a jungle where any or every plant springs of itself,
+but it is cultivated ground which has an Owner who looks after it.
+
+It is the affirmation that God's action is regulated by a purpose which
+is intelligent, unchanging, all-embracing to us because revealed.
+
+II. That steady purpose is man's highest good.
+
+The end of all the farmer's care is the ripening of the seed. God's
+purpose is our moral, intellectual, and spiritual perfecting.
+
+Neither His own 'glory' nor man's 'happiness,' which are taken by
+different schools of thought to be the divine aim in creation and
+providence, is an object worthy of Him or adequate to explain the facts
+of every man's experience, unless both are regarded as needing man's
+perfecting, for their attainment. God's glory is to make men godlike.
+Man's happiness cannot be secured without His holiness.
+
+God has larger and nobler designs for us than merely to make us happy.
+
+'This is the will of God concerning you, even your sanctification.'
+
+Nothing short of that end would be worthy of God, or would explain His
+methods.
+
+III. That purpose needs great variety of processes.
+
+This is true about nations and about individuals.
+
+Different stages of growth need different treatment.
+
+The parable names three operations:--
+
+Ploughing, which is preparation;
+
+Sowing, or casting in germinating principles;
+
+Threshing, which is effected by tribulation, a word which means driving
+a 'tribulum' or threshing-sedge over ears of grain.
+
+So sorrow is indispensable for our perfecting.
+
+By it earthly affections are winnowed away, and our dependence on God
+increased. A certain refinement of spirit results, like the pallor on
+the face of a chronic invalid, which has a delicate beauty unattainted
+by ruddy health. A capacity for sympathy, too, is often the result of
+one's own trials. Rightly borne, they tend to bend or break the will,
+and they teach how great it is to suffer and be strong.
+
+But sorrow is not enough; joy is indispensable too. The crop is threshed
+in tribulation, but is grown mostly in sunshine. Calm, uneventful hours,
+continuous possession of blessings, have a ministry not less than
+afflictions have. The corn in the furrow, waving in the western wind,
+and with golden sunlight among its golden stems, is preparing for the
+loaf no less than when bound in bundles and lying on the
+threshing-floor, or cut and bruised by sharp teeth of dray or heavy
+hoofs of oxen, or blows of swinging flails.
+
+So do not suppose that sorrow is the only instrument for perfecting
+character, and see that you do not miss the sanctifying and ripening
+effect of your joyous hours.
+
+Again, different types of character require different modes of
+treatment. In the parable, 'the fitches' are sown in one fashion, and
+'the cummin' in another the 'wheat' and 'barley' in still another; and
+similar variety marks the methods of separating the grain from the husk,
+one kind of crop being threshed another having a wheel turned upon it.
+Thus each of us gets the kind of joys and pains that will have most
+effect on us. God knows where is the tenderest spot, and makes no
+mistakes in His dealing. He sends us 'afflictions sorted, sorrows of all
+sizes.'
+
+Let us see that we trust to His loving and wise adaptation of our trials
+to our temperaments and needs. Let us see that we never let clouds
+obscure the clearness of our perception, or, failing perception, the
+serenity of our trust, that all things work together, and all work for
+our highest good--our being made like our Lord. We should less often
+complain of the mysteries of Providence if we had learned the meaning of
+Isaiah's parable.
+
+IV. All the processes end in garnering the grain.
+
+There is a barn or storehouse for the ripened and threshed crops. The
+farmer's toil and careful processes would be absurd and unintelligible
+if, after them all, the crop, so sedulously ripened and cultivated and
+cleansed, was left to rot where it fell. And no less certainly does the
+discipline of this life cry aloud for heaven and a conscious personal
+future life, if it is not to be all set down as grim irony or utterly
+absurd. There must be a heaven if we are not to be put to intellectual
+bewilderment.
+
+What was needed for growth here drops away there, as blossoms fall when
+their work is done. Sunshine and rain are no more necessary when the
+fields are cleared and the barn-yard is filled. Much in our nature, in
+our earthly condition, in God's varying processes, will drop away. When
+school-time is done the rod is burned. But nothing will perish that can
+contribute to our perfecting.
+
+So let us ask Him to purge us with His fan in His hand now, lest we
+should be found at last fruitless cumberers of the ground or chaff which
+is rootless, and fit only to be swept out of the threshing-floor.
+
+
+
+
+'QUIETNESS AND CONFIDENCE'
+
+'In returning and rest shall ye be saved; in quietness and confidence
+shall be your strength.'--ISAIAH xxx. 15.
+
+
+ISRAEL always felt the difficulty of sustaining itself on the height of
+dependence on the unseen, spiritual power of God, and was ever
+oscillating between alliances with the Northern and Southern powers,
+linking itself with Assyria against Egypt, or with Egypt against
+Assyria. The effect was that whichever was victorious it suffered; it
+was the battleground for both, it was the prize of each in turn. The
+prophet's warnings were political wisdom as truly as religious.
+
+Here Judah is exhorted to forsake the entangling dependence on Egypt,
+and to trust wholly to God. They had gone away from Him in their fears.
+They must come back by their faith. To them the great lesson was trust
+in God. Through them to us the same lesson is read. The principle is far
+wider than this one case. It is the one rule of life for us all.
+
+The two clauses of the text convey substantially the same idea. They are
+in inverted parallelism. 'Returning and rest' correspond to 'quietness
+and confidence,' so as that 'rest' answers to 'quietness' and
+'returning' to 'confidence.' In the former clause we have the action
+towards God and then its consequence. In the latter we have the
+consequence and then the action.
+
+I. The returning.
+
+Men depart from God by speculative thought or by anxious care, or by
+sin.
+
+To 'return' is just to trust.
+
+The parallel helps us here--'returning' is parallel with 'confidence.'
+This confidence is to be exercised especially in relation to one's own
+path in life and the outward trials and difficulties which we meet, but
+its sphere extends far beyond these. It is a disposition of mind which
+covers all things. The attitude of trust, the sense of dependence, the
+assurance of God's help and love are in all life the secrets of peace
+and power.
+
+Am I sinful? then trust. Am I bewildered and ignorant? then trust. Am I
+anxious and harassed? then trust.
+
+Note the thought, that we come back to God by simple confidence, not by
+preparing ourselves, not by our expiation, but only by trusting in Him.
+
+Of course the temptations to the opposite attitude are many and great.
+
+Note, too, that every want of confidence is a departure from God. We go
+away from Him not only by open sin, not only by denial of Him, but by
+forget-fulness, by want of faith.
+
+The _ground_ of this confidence is laid in our knowledge of Him,
+especially in our knowledge of Jesus Christ.
+
+The _exercise_ of this confidence is treated as voluntary. Every man is
+responsible for his faith.
+
+The _elements_ of this confidence are, as regards ourselves, our sense
+of want in all its various aspects; and, as regards Him, our assurance
+of His love, of His nearness to help.
+
+II. Confiding nearness to God brings quiet rest.
+
+'Rest' and 'being quiet' are treated here partly as consequences of
+faith, partly as duties which we are bound to strive to achieve.
+
+1. See how confidence in God stills and quiets the soul.
+
+The very exercise of communion with Him brings peace and rest, inasmuch
+as all things are then possessed which we can desire. There is a still
+fruition which nothing can equal and nothing destroy.
+
+Trust in God brings rest from our own evil consciences.
+
+It brings rest from our own plans and purposes.
+
+Trust gives insight into the meaning of all this else unintelligible
+world.
+
+It brings the calming and subduing of desires, which in their eagerness
+torture, in their fruition trouble, and in their disappointment madden.
+
+It brings the gathering in of ourselves from all the disturbing
+diffusion of ourselves through earthly trifles.
+
+2. Notice what this rest is not.
+
+It does not mean the absence of causes of disturbance.
+
+It does not mean the abnegation of forethought.
+
+It does not mean an indolent passiveness.
+
+3. Notice the duty of being thus quiet and resting.
+
+How much we fail in this respect.
+
+We have faith, but there seems some obstruction which stops it from
+flowing refreshingly through our lives.
+
+We are bound to seek for its increased continuity and power in our
+hearts and lives.
+
+III. Confidence and rest in God bring safety and strength.
+
+That is true in the lowest sense of 'saved,' and not less true in the
+highest. The condition of all our salvation from temporal as well as
+spiritual evils lies thus in the same thing--that we trust God.
+
+No harm comes to us when we trust, because then God is with us, and
+works for us, and cares for us. So all departments of life are bound
+together by the one law. Trust is the condition of being 'saved.'
+
+And not only so, but also trust is strength. God works _for_ us; yes,
+but better than that, God works _in_ us and fits _us_ to work.
+
+What powers we might be in the world! Trust should make us strong. To
+have confidence in God should bring us power to which all other power is
+as nothing. He who can feel that his foot is on the rock, how firm he
+should stand!
+
+Best gives strength. The rest of faith doubles our forces. To be freed
+from anxious care makes a man much more likely to act vigorously and to
+judge wisely.
+
+Stillness of soul, born of communion with God, makes us strong.
+
+Stillness of soul, born of deliverance from our fears, makes us strong.
+
+Here then is a golden chain--or shall we rather say a live wire?--
+whereof one end is bound to the Throne and the other encircles our poor
+hearts. Trust, so shall we be at rest and safe. Being at rest and safe,
+we shall be strong. If we link ourselves with God by faith, God will
+flash into us His mysterious energy, and His strength will be made
+perfect in our weakness.
+
+
+
+
+GOD'S WAITING AND MAN'S
+
+'And therefore will the Lord wait, that He may be gracious unto you, and
+therefore will He be exalted, that He may have mercy upon you: for the
+Lord is a God of judgment: blessed are they that wait for Him.'--ISAIAH
+xxx. 18.
+
+
+God's waiting and man's--bold and beautiful, that He and we should be
+represented as sharing the same attitude.
+
+I. God's waiting,
+
+1. The first thought is--why should He wait--why does He not act at
+once? Because something in us hinders. We cannot enter into spiritual
+blessings till we are made capable of them by faith. It would not be for
+our good to receive some temporal blessings till sorrow has done its
+work on us. The great thought here is that God has a right time for
+help. He is 'a God of judgment,' _i.e._. discerns our moral condition
+and shapes His dealings thereby. He never gives the wrong medicine.
+
+2. His waiting is full of work to fit us to receive His grace. It is not
+a mere passive standing by, till the fit conditions are seen in us; but
+He 'is exalted' while He waits, _i.e._. lifted up in the manifestation
+of His might, and by His energy in preparing us for the gifts that He
+has prepared for us. 'He that hath wrought us for the self-same thing is
+God.' He who prepares a place for us is preparing us for the place. He
+who has grace which He is ready to give us here, is making us ready for
+His grace. The meaning of all God's work on us is to form a character
+fit to possess His highest gifts.
+
+3. His waiting is very patient. The divine husbandman 'waiteth for the
+precious fruit of the earth, being patient over it.' How wonderful that
+in a very real sense He attends on our pleasure, as it were, and lets us
+determine His time to work.
+
+4. That waiting is full of divine desire to help. It is not the waiting
+of indifference, which says: 'If you will have it--well and good. If
+not, it does not matter to Me.' But 'more than they that watch for the
+morning,' God waits 'that He may be gracious unto you.'
+
+II. Man's waiting.
+
+Our attitude is to be in some real sense analogous to His.
+
+Its main elements are firm anticipation, patient expectation, steadfast
+desire, self-discipline to fit us for the influx of God's grace.
+
+We are not to prescribe 'times and seasons which the Father hath put in
+His own power.' The clock of Eternity ticks more slowly than our short-
+pendulumed timepieces. 'If the vision tarry, wait for it.' We may well
+wait for God when we know that He waits for us, and that, for the most
+part, when He sees that we are waiting, He knows that His time is come.
+
+But it is to be noted that the waiting desire to which He responds is
+directed to something better and greater than any gifts from Him, even
+to Himself, for it is they who 'wait for _Him_,' not only for His
+benefits apart from Himself, however precious these may be, who are
+blessed.
+
+The blessedness of such waiting, how it calms the heart, brings into
+constant touch with God, detaches from the fever and the fret which
+kill, opens our eyes to mark the meanings of our life's history, and
+makes the divine gifts infinitely more precious when they do come.
+
+After all, the time of waiting is at the longest very short. And when
+the perfect fruition is come, and we enter into the great spaces of
+Eternity, it will seem as an handbreadth.
+
+ 'Take it on trust a little while,
+ Thou soon shalt read the mystery right
+ In the full sunshine of His smile.'
+
+
+
+
+THREE PICTURES OF ONE REALITY
+
+'As birds flying, so will the Lord of hosts defend Jerusalem; defending
+also He will deliver it; and passing over He will preserve it'--ISAIAH
+xxxi. 5.
+
+
+The immediate occasion of this very remarkable promise is, of course,
+the peril in which Jerusalem was placed by Sennacherib's invasion; and
+the fulfilment of the promise was the destruction of his army before its
+gates. But the promise here, like all God's promises, is eternal in
+substance, and applies to a community only because it applies to each
+member of that community. Jerusalem was saved, and that meant that every
+house in Jerusalem was saved, and every man in it the separate object of
+the divine protection So that all the histories of Scripture, and all
+the histories of men in the world, are but transitory illustrations of
+perennial principles, and every atom of the consolation and triumph of
+this verse comes to each of us, as truly as it did to the men that with
+tremulous heart began to take cheer, as they listened to Isaiah. There
+is a wonderful saying in one of the other prophets which carries that
+lesson, where, bringing down the story of Jacob's struggle with the
+angel of Peniel to the encouragement of the existing generation, he
+says,' He spake to _us_.' They were hundreds of years after the
+patriarch, and yet had fallen heirs to all that God had ever said to him
+So, from that point of view, I am not spiritualising, or forcing the
+meaning of these words, when I bring them direct into the lives of each
+one of ourselves.
+
+I. And, first, I would note the very striking and beautiful pictures
+that are given in these verses.
+
+There are three of them, on each of which I must touch briefly. 'As
+birds flying, so will the Lord of hosts defend Jerusalem.' The form of
+the words in the original shows that it is the mother-bird that is
+thought about. And the picture rises at once of her fluttering over the
+nest, where the callow chickens are, unable to fly and to help
+themselves. It is a kind of echo of the grand metaphor in the song that
+is attributed to Moses, which speaks of the eagle fluttering over her
+nest, and taking care of her young. Jerusalem was as a nest on which,
+for long centuries, that infinite divine love had brooded. It was but a
+poor brood that had been hatched out, but yet 'as birds flying' He had
+watched over the city. Can you not almost see the mother-bird, made bold
+by maternal love, swooping down upon the intruder that sought to rob the
+nest, and spreading her broad pinion over the callow fledglings that lie
+below? That is what God does with us. As I said, it is a poor brood that
+is hatched out. That does not matter; still the Love bends down and
+helps. Nobody but a prophet could have ventured on such a metaphor as
+that, and nobody but Jesus Christ would have ventured to mend it and
+say, 'As a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings,' when there are
+hawks in the sky. So He, in all the past ages, was the One that 'as
+birds flying ... defended' His people, and would have gathered them
+under His wings, only they would not.
+
+Now, beautiful as this metaphor is, as it stands, it seems to me, like
+some brilliant piece of colouring, to derive additional beauty from its
+connection with the background upon which it stands out. For just a
+verse before the prophet has given another emblem of what God is and
+does, and if you will carry with you all those thoughts of tenderness
+and maternal care and solicitude, and then connect them with that verse,
+I think the thought of His tenderness will start up into new beauty. For
+here is what precedes the text: 'Like as a lion, and the young lion
+roaring on his prey when a multitude of shepherds is called forth
+against him, he will not be afraid of their voice, nor bow himself for
+the noise of them. So shall the Lord of hosts come down to fight for
+Mount Zion.' Look at these two pictures side by side, on the one hand
+the lion, with his paw on his prey, and the angry growl that answers
+when the shepherds vainly try to drag it away from him. That is God. Ay!
+but that is only an aspect of God. 'As birds flying, so the Lord will
+defend Jerusalem.' We have to take that into account too. This
+generation is very fond of talking about God's love; does it believe in
+God's wrath? It is very fond of speaking about the gentleness of Jesus;
+has it pondered that tremendous phrase, 'the wrath of the Lamb'? The
+lion that growls, and the mother-bird that hovers--God is like them
+both. That is the first picture that is here.
+
+The second one is not so obvious to English readers, but it is equally
+striking, though I do not mean to dwell upon it. The word that is
+translated in our text twice, 'defend' and 'defending'--'So will the
+Lord of hosts defend Jerusalem, and defending will deliver'--means,
+literally, 'shielding.' Thus we have the same general idea as that in
+the previous metaphor of the mother-bird hovering above the nest: God is
+like a shield held over us, and so flinging off front the broad and
+burnished surface of the Almighty buckler, all the darts that any foe
+can launch against as. 'Our God is a Sun and Shield.' I need not enlarge
+on this familiar metaphor.
+
+But the third picture I wish to point to in more detail: 'Passing over,
+He will deliver.' Now, the word that is there rendered 'passing over,'
+is almost a technical word in the Old Testament, because it is that
+employed in reference to the Passover. And so you see the swiftness of
+genius with which the prophet changes his whole scene. We had the nest
+and the mother-bird, we had the battlefield and the shield; now we are
+swept away back to that night when the Destroying Angel stalked through
+the land, and 'passed over' the doors on which the blood had been
+sprinkled. And thus this God, who in one aspect may be likened to the
+mother-bird hovering with her little breast full of tenderness, and made
+brave by maternal love conquering natural timidity, and in another
+aspect may be likened to the broad shield behind which a man stands
+safe, may also be likened to that Destroying Angel that went through
+Egypt, and smote wherever there were not the tokens of the blood on the
+lintels, and 'passed over' wherever there were. Of course, the original
+fulfilment of this third picture is the historical case of the army of
+Sennacherib; outside the walls, widespread desolation; inside the walls,
+an untroubled night of peace. That night in Egypt is paralleled, in the
+old Jewish hymn that is still sung at the Passover, with the other night
+when Sennacherib's men were slain; and the parallel is based on our
+text. So, then, here is another illustration of what I started with
+saying, that the past events of Scripture are transient expressions of
+perennial principles and tendencies. For the Passover night was not to
+be to the contemporaries of the prophet an event receding ever further
+into the dim distance, but it was a present event, and to be reproduced
+in that catastrophe when 'in the morning when they arose, they were all
+dead corpses.' And the event is being repeated to-day, and will be for
+each of us, if we will.
+
+So, then, there are these three pictures--the Nest and the Mother-bird,
+the Battlefield and the Shield, Egypt and the Destroying Angel.
+
+II. We note the reality meant by these pictures.
+
+They mean the absolute promise from God of protection for His people
+from _every_ evil. We are not to cut it down, not to say that it applies
+absolutely in regard to the spiritual world, but that it does not apply
+in regard to temporal things. Yes, it does entirely, only you have to
+rise to the height of God's conception of what is good and what is evil
+in regard to outward things, before you understand how completely, and
+without qualification or deduction, this promise is fulfilled to every
+man that puts his trust in Him. Of course, I do not need to remind you,
+for your own lives will do so sufficiently, that this hovering
+protector, this strong Shield, this Destroying Angel that passes by our
+houses if the blood is on the threshold, does not guarantee us any
+exemption from the common 'ills that flesh is heir to.' We all know that
+well enough. But what does it guarantee? That all the poison shall be
+wiped off the arrow, that all the evil shall be taken out of the evil,
+that it will change its character, that if we observe the conditions,
+the sharpest sorrow will come to us with this written on it by the
+Father's hand, 'With My love to My child'; that pain will be discipline,
+and discipline will be blessed. Ah! dear friends! I am sure there are
+many of us that can set to our seals that God is true in this matter,
+and that we have found that His rod does blossom, and that our sorest
+sorrows have been our greatest mercies, drawing us nearer to Him;
+'Defending He will deliver, and passing over He will preserve.'
+
+III. And now let me remind you of the way by which we can make the
+reality of these pictures ours.
+
+You know that all the promises and prophecies of the Old Testament are
+conditional, and that there are many of them that were never fulfilled,
+and were spoken in order that they might not be fulfilled, if only the
+people took warning. I wish folk would carry a little more consciously
+in their minds that principle in interpreting them all, and in asking
+about their fulfilment. Not only in regard to these ancient events, but
+in regard to our individual experience, God's promises and threatenings
+are conditional.
+
+Take that first metaphor of the hovering mother-bird. Listen to this
+expansion of it in one of the psalms: 'He shall cover thee with His
+feathers, and under His wings shalt thou trust.' The word for _trust_
+here means to 'fly into a refuge.' Can you not see the picture? A little
+brood round the parent bird, frightened by some beast of prey, or
+hovering hawk in the sky, and fluttering under its wings, and all safe
+and huddled together there close against the warm breast, and in amongst
+the downy feathers. 'Under His wings shalt thou trust.' Put thou thy
+trust in God, and God is to thee the hovering bird, the broad shield,
+the Angel that 'passes over.'
+
+Take the other picture of the Passover night. Only by our individual
+faith in Jesus Christ as our individual Saviour can we put the blood on
+our door-posts so that the Destroying Angel shall pass by. So, if we
+would have the sweetness of such words as these fulfilled in our daily
+lives, however disturbed and troubled and sorrowful and solitary they
+may be, the first condition is that under His wings shall we flee for
+refuge, and we do so by trust in Him.
+
+But having thus fled thither, we must continue there, if we would
+continue under His protection. Such continuance of safety because of
+continuous faith is possible only by continued communion. Remember our
+Lord's expansion of the metaphor in His lament: 'How often would I have
+gathered thy children together as a hen gathereth her chickens under her
+wings, and ye would not.' We can resist the drawing. We can get away
+from the shelter of the wing. We can lift up our wills against Him. And
+what becomes of the chicken that does _not_ run to the mother's pinions
+when the hawk is hovering? That is what becomes of the man that stops
+outside the refuge in Christ, or that by failure of his faith departs
+from that refuge. 'Ye would not; therefore your house is left unto you
+desolate.' That house, in the Jerusalem which God 'defends,' is _not_
+defended.
+
+Another condition of divine protection is obedience. We need not expect
+that God will take care of us, and preserve us, when we did not ask His
+leave to get into the dangerous place that we find ourselves in. Many of
+us do the converse of what the Apostle condemns, we begin 'in the
+flesh,' and think we shall end 'in the Spirit'; which being translated
+is, we do not ask God's leave to do certain things, to enter into
+certain engagements or arrangements with other people, and the like, and
+then we expect God to come and help us in or out of them. That is by no
+means an uncommon form of delusion. You remember what Jesus Christ said
+when the Devil tried to entice Him to do a thing of that sort, by
+quoting Scripture to Him--'He shall give His angels charge concerning
+Thee, to keep Thee in all Thy ways. Cast Thyself down. Trust to the
+promise as a kind of parachute to keep Thee from falling bruised on the
+stones of the Temple-court.' Christ's answer was: 'Thou shalt not tempt
+the Lord thy God.' You will not get God's protection in ways of your own
+choosing.
+
+And so, brethren, 'all things work together for good to them that love,'
+to them that trust, to them that keep close, to them that obey. And for
+such the old faithful promise will be faithful and new once more,
+'Because He hath set His love upon Me, therefore will I deliver
+Him'--that will be the summing up of our lives; 'and I will set Him on
+high because He hath known My Name,' that will be the meaning of our
+deaths.
+
+
+
+
+THE LORD'S FURNACE
+
+'The Lord, whose fire is in Zion, and His furnace in Jerusalem.'--
+ISAIAH xxxi. 9.
+
+
+This very remarkable characterisation of God stands here as a kind of
+seal, set upon the preceding prophecy. It is the reason why that will
+certainly be fulfilled. And what precedes is mainly a promise of a
+deliverance for Israel, which was to be a destruction for Israel's
+enemies. It is put in very graphic and remarkable metaphors: 'Like as a
+lion roareth on his prey when a multitude of shepherds is called forth
+against him, he will not be afraid of their voice, nor abase himself for
+the noise of them: so shall the Lord of hosts come down to fight for
+Mount Zion.' The enemies of Israel are picturesquely and poetically
+represented as a crowd of shepherds vainly trying to scare a lion by
+their shouts. He stands undaunted, with his strong paw on his prey, and
+the boldest of them durst not venture to drag it from beneath his claws.
+So, says Isaiah, with singularly daring imagery, God will put all His
+strength into keeping fast hold of Israel, and no one can pluck His
+people from His hands.
+
+Then, with a sudden and striking change of metaphor, the prophet passes
+from a picture of the extreme of fierceness to one of the extreme of
+tenderness. 'As birds flying'--mother birds fluttering over their
+nests--'so will the Lord of hosts defend Jerusalem,' hovering over it
+and going from side to side to defend with His broad pinions, 'passing
+over, He will preserve it.' These figures are next translated into the
+plain promise of utter discomfiture and destruction, panic and flight as
+the portion of the enemies of Israel, and the whole has this broad seal
+set to it, that He who promises is 'the Lord, whose fire is in Zion, and
+His furnace in Jerusalem.'
+
+We shall not understand these great words if we regard them as only a
+revelation of destructive and terrible power. They are that indeed, but
+they are far more than that. It is the very beauty and completeness of
+this emblem that has a double aspect, and is no less rich in joy and
+blessing than pregnant with warning and terror. As Isaiah says in
+another place, Jerusalem is 'Ariel,' which probably means 'the hearth of
+God.' His presence in the city is as a fire for the comfort and defence
+of the happy inhabitants, and at the same time for the destruction of
+all evil and enemies. Far more truly than He dwelt in the city of David
+does God dwell in the Church, and His presence is its security. What,
+then, of instruction and hope may we gather from this wonderful emblem?
+
+I. In the Church, God is present as a great reservoir of fervid love.
+
+Every language has taken fire as the symbol of love and emotion. We
+speak so naturally of warm love, fervent feeling, glowing earnestness,
+ardent enthusiasm and the like, that we are scarcely aware of using
+figurative language. We do not usually ascribe emotion to God, but
+surely the deepest and most sacred of the senses in which it is true
+that fire is His emblem, is that He is love. His fire is in Zion. He
+dwells in His Church, a storehouse of blazing love, heated seventy times
+seven hotter than any creatural love, and pouring out its ardours for
+the quickening and gladdening of all who walk in the light of that fire,
+and thaw their coldness at its blaze.
+
+Then, if so, how comes it that so many Christian Churches are ice-
+houses instead of furnaces? How comes it that they who profess to live
+in the Zion where this fire flames are themselves so cold? If God's
+blazing furnace is in Jerusalem, it should send the thermometer up in
+all the houses of the city. But what a strange contradiction it is for
+men to be in God's Church, the very focus and centre of His burning
+love, and themselves to be almost down below zero in their temperature!
+The Christian Church ought to be all aflame in all its members, with the
+fire of love kindled and alight from God Himself. Every community of
+Christian people ought to radiate warmth and light which it has absorbed
+from its present God. Our love ought to answer His, and, being caught
+and kindled from that mighty fire, should throw back to its source some
+of the heat received, in fervours of reflected love, and should pour the
+rest beneficently on all around. Love to God and love to man are
+regarded in Christian morals as beams of the same fire, only travelling
+in different directions. But what a miserable contrast to such an ideal
+the reality in so many of our churches is! A fiery furnace with its
+doors hung with icicles is no greater a contradiction and anomaly than a
+Christian Church or a single soul, which professes to have been touched
+by the infinite loving kindness of God, and yet lives as cold and
+unmoved as we do. The 'Lord's fire is in Zion.' Are there any tokens of
+that fire amongst us, in our own hearts and in our collective
+temperature as Christian Churches?
+
+There is no religion worth calling so which has not warmth in it. We
+hear a great deal from people against whom I do not wish to say a word,
+about the danger of an 'emotional Christianity.' Agreed, if by that they
+mean a Christianity which has no foundation for its emotion in principle
+and intelligence; but not agreed if they mean to recommend a
+Christianity which professes to accept truths that might kindle a soul
+beneath the ribs of death and make the dumb sing, and yet is never moved
+one hair's-breadth from its quiet phlegmaticism. There is no religion
+without emotion. Of course it must be intelligent emotion, built upon
+the acceptance of divine truth, and regulated and guided by that, and so
+consolidated into principle, and it must be emotion which works for its
+living, and impels to Christian conduct. These two provisoes being
+attended to, then we can safely say that warmth is the test of life, and
+the readings of the thermometer, which measure the fervour, measure also
+the reality of our religion. A cold Christian is a contradiction in
+terms. If the adjective is certainly applicable, I am afraid the
+applicability of the noun is extremely doubtful. If there is no fire,
+what is there? Cold is death.
+
+We want no flimsy, transitory, noisy, ignorant, hysterical agitation.
+Smoke is not fire. If the temperature were higher, and the fire more
+wisely fed, there would not be any. But we do want a more obvious and
+powerful effect of their solemn, glorious, and heart-melting beliefs on
+the affections and emotions of professing Christians, and that they may
+be more mightily moved by love, to all heroisms and service and
+enthusiasms and to consecration which shall in some measure answer to
+the glowing heart of that fire of God which flames in Zion.
+
+II. God's revelation of Himself, and presence in His Church, are an
+instrument of cleansing.
+
+Fire purifies. In our great cities now there are 'disinfecting ovens,'
+where infected articles are taken, and exposed to a high temperature
+which kills the germs of disease, so that tainted things come out sweet
+and clean. That is what God's furnace in Zion is meant to do for us. The
+true way of purifying is by fire. To purify by water, as John the
+Baptist saw and said, is but a poor, cold way of getting outward
+cleanliness. Water cleanses the surface, and becomes dirty in the
+process. Fire cleanses within and throughout, and is not tainted
+thereby. You plunge some foul thing into the flame, and, as you look,
+the specks and spots melt out of it. Raise the temperature, and you kill
+the poison germs. That is the way that God cleanses His people; not by
+external application, but by getting up the heat. The fire of His love,
+the fire of His spirit, is, as St. Bernard says, a blessed fire, which
+'consumes indeed, but does not hurt; which sweetly burns and blessedly
+lays waste, and so puts forth the force and fire against our vices, as
+to display the operation of the anointing oil upon our souls.' The
+Hebrew captives were flung into the fiery furnace. What did it burn?
+Only their bonds. They themselves lived and rejoiced in the intense
+heat. So, if we have any real possession of the divine flame, it will
+burn off our wrists the bands and chains of our old vices, and we shall
+stand pure and clean, emancipated by the fire which will consume only
+our sins, and be for our true selves as our native home, where we walk
+at liberty and expatiate in the genial warmth. That is the blessed and
+effectual way of purifying, which slays only the death that we carry
+about with us in our sin, and makes us the more truly living for its
+death. Cleansing is only possible if we are immersed in the Holy Ghost
+and in fire, as some piece of foul clay, plunged into the furnace, has
+all the stains melted out of it. For all sinful souls seeking after
+cleansing, and finding that the 'damned spot' will not 'out' for all
+their washing, it is surely good news and tidings of great joy that the
+Lord has His fire in Zion, and that its purifying power will burn out
+all their sin.
+
+III. Further, there is suggested another thought: that God, in His great
+revelation of Himself, by which He dwells in His Church, is a power of
+transformation.
+
+Fire turns all which it seizes into fire. 'Behold how much wood is
+kindled by how small a fire' (R.V.). The heap of green wood with the sap
+in it needs but a tiny light pushed into the middle, and soon it is all
+ablaze, transformed into ruddy brightness, and leaping heavenwards.
+However heavy, wet, and obstinate may be the fuel, the fire can change
+it into aspiring and brilliant flame.
+
+And so God, coming to us in His 'Spirit of burning,' turns us into His
+own likeness, and makes us possessors of some spark of Himself.
+Therefore it is a great promise, 'He shall baptize you in the Holy
+Ghost, and in fire.' He shall plunge you into the life-giving furnace,
+and so 'make His ministers like a flame of fire,' like the Lord whom
+they serve. The seraphim who stand round the throne are 'burning'
+spirits, and the purity which shines, the love which glows, the swift
+life which flames in them, are all derived from that unkindled and all-
+animating Fire who is their and our God. The transformation of all the
+dwellers in Zion into miniature likenesses of this fire is the very
+highest hope that springs from the solemn and blessed truth that the
+Lord has His fire in Zion, and His furnace in Jerusalem.
+
+IV. But, further, this figure teaches that the same divine fire may
+become destructive.
+
+The emblem of fire suggests a double operation, and the very felicity of
+it as an emblem is that it has these two sides, and with equal
+naturalness may stand for a power which quickens, and for one which
+destroys. The difference in the effects springs not from differences in
+the cause, but in the objects with which the fire plays. The same God is
+the fire of life, the fire of love, of purifying and transformation and
+glad energy to whosoever will put his trust in Him, and a fire of
+destruction and anger unto whosoever resists Him. The alternative stands
+before every soul of man, to be quickened by fire or consumed by it. We
+may make the furnace of God our blessedness and the reservoir of a far
+more joyful and noble life than ever we could have lived in our
+coldness; or we may make it terror and destruction. There lie the two
+possibilities before every one of us. We cannot stand apart from Him; we
+have relations with Him, whether we will or no; He is something to us.
+He is, and must be for all, a flaming fire. We can settle whether it
+shall be a fire which is life-giving unto life, or a fire which is
+death-giving unto death.
+
+Here are two buildings: the one the life of the man that lives apart
+from God, and therefore has built only with wood, hay, and stubble; the
+other the life of the man that lives with God and for Him, and so has
+built with gold, silver, and precious stones. The day and the fire come;
+and the fates of these two are opposite effects of the same cause. The
+licking tongues surround the wretched hut, built of combustibles, and up
+go wood and hay and stubble, in a smoking flare, and disappear. The
+flames play round the gold and silver and precious stones, and every
+leap of their light is answered by some facet of the gems that flash in
+their brilliancy, and give back the radiance.
+
+You can settle which of these two is to be your fate. 'The Lord's fire
+is in Zion, and His furnace in Jerusalem.' To those who, by faith in
+that dear Lord who came to cast fire on earth,' have opened their
+hearts, to the entrance of that searching, cleansing flame, and who
+therefore burn with kindred and answering fervours, it is joy to know
+that their 'God is a consuming fire,' for therein lies their hope of
+daily purifying and ultimate assimilation. To those, on the other hand,
+who have closed their hearts to the warmth of His redeeming love in
+Christ, and the quickening of His baptism by fire, what can the
+knowledge be but terror, what can contact with God in judgment be but
+destruction? 'The day cometh, it burneth as a furnace; and all the
+proud, and all that work wickedness, shall be as stubble, and the day
+that cometh shall burn them up.' What will that day do for you?
+
+
+
+
+THE HIDING-PLACE
+
+'And a man shall be as an hiding place from the wind, and a covert from
+the tempest; as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a great
+rock in a weary land.'--ISAIAH xxxii. 2.
+
+
+We may well say, Of whom speaketh the prophet this? Here are distinctly
+attributed to one of ourselves, if we take the words in their simplicity
+and fulness, functions and powers which universal experience has taught
+us not to look for in humanity. And there have been a great many
+attempts--as it seems to me, altogether futile and baseless ones--to
+break the force of these words as a distinct prophecy of Jesus Christ.
+Surely the language is far too wide to have application to any real or
+ideal Jewish monarch, except one whose kingdom is an everlasting
+kingdom? Surely the experience of a hundred centuries might teach men
+that there is _one_ man, and one alone, who is the refuge from all
+dangers, the fruition of all desires, the rest and refreshment in all
+toils.
+
+And I, for my part, have no hesitation in saying that the only reference
+of these words which gives full value to their wealth of blessing, is to
+regard them as a prophecy of _the_ man--Christ Jesus; hiding in whom we
+are safe, 'coming' to whom we 'never thirst,' guarded and blest by whom
+no weariness can befall us, and dwelling in whom this weary world shall
+be full of refreshment and peace!
+
+I do not need to point out the exquisite beauty of the imagery or the
+pathos and peace that breathe in the majestic rhythm of the words. There
+is something more than poetical beauty or rhetorical amplification of a
+single thought in those three clauses. The 'hiding-place' and 'covert'
+refer to one class of wants; the 'rivers of water in a dry place' to yet
+another; and 'the shadow of a great rock in a weary land' to yet a
+third. And, though they are tinged and dyed in Eastern imagery, the
+realities of life in Western lands, and in all ages, give them a deeper
+beauty than that of lovely imagery, and are the true keys to
+understanding their meaning. We shall, perhaps, best grasp the whole
+depth of that meaning according to the Messianic reference which we give
+to the text, if we consider the sad and solemn conception of man's life
+that underlies it; the enigmatical and obstinate hope which it holds out
+in the teeth of all experience--'A _man_ shall be a refuge'; and the
+solution of the riddle in the man Christ Jesus.
+
+I. First, there underlies this prophecy a very sad but a very true
+conception of human life.
+
+The three classes of promises have correlative with them three phases of
+man's condition, three diverse aspects of his need and misery. The
+'covert' and the 'hiding-place' imply tempest, storm, and danger; the
+'river of water' implies drought and thirst; 'the shadow of a great
+rock' implies lassitude and languor, fatigue and weariness. The view of
+life that arises from the combination of these three bears upon its
+front the signature of truth in the very fact that it is a sad view.
+
+For, I suppose, notwithstanding all that we may say concerning the
+beauty and the blessedness scattered broadcast round about us;
+notwithstanding that we believe, and hold as for our lives the happy
+'faith that all which we behold is full of blessing,' it needs but a
+very short experience of this life, and but a superficial examination of
+our own histories and our own hearts, in order to come to the conclusion
+that the world is full of strange and terrible sadness, that every life
+has dark tracts and long stretches of sombre tint, and that no
+representation is true to fact which dips its pencil only in light and
+flings no shadows on the canvas. There is no depth in a Chinese picture,
+because there is no shade. It is the wrinkles and marks of tear and wear
+that make the expression in a _man's_ portrait. 'Life's sternest painter
+"is" its best.' The gloomy thoughts which are charged against Scripture
+are the true thoughts about man and the world as man has made it. Not,
+indeed, that life needs to be so, but that by reason of our own evil and
+departure from God there have come in as a disturbing element the
+retributive consequences of our own godlessness, and these have made
+danger where else were safety, thirst where else were rivers of water,
+and weariness and lassitude where else were strength and bounding hope.
+
+So then, look for a moment at these three points that come out of my
+text, in order to lay the foundation for subsequent considerations.
+
+We live a life defenceless and exposed to many a storm and tempest. I
+need but remind you of the adverse circumstances--the wild winds that go
+sweeping across the flat level, the biting blasts that come down from
+the snow-clad mountains of destiny that lie round the low plain upon
+which we live. I need but remind you of the dangers that are lodged for
+our spiritual life in the temptations to evil that are round us. I need
+but remind you of that creeping and clinging consciousness of being
+exposed to a divinely commissioned retribution and punishment, which
+perverts the Name that ought to be the basis of all our blessedness into
+a Name unwelcome and terrible, because threatening judgment. I need but
+remind you how men's sins have made it needful that when the mighty God,
+even the Lord, appears before them, 'it shall be very tempestuous round
+about him.' Men fear and ought to fear 'the blast of the breath of His
+nostrils,' which must burn up all that is evil. And I need but remind
+you of that last wild wind of Death that whirls the sin-faded leaves
+into dark corners where they lie and rot.
+
+My brother, you have not lived thus long without learning how
+defenceless you are against the storm of adverse circumstances. You have
+not lived thus long without learning that though, blessed be God! there
+do come in all our lives long periods of halcyon rest, when 'birds of
+calm sit brooding on the charmed wave,' and the heavens above are clear
+as sapphire, and the sea around is transparent as opal--yet the little
+cloud, no bigger than a man's hand, may rise on the horizon, and may
+thicken and blacken and grow greater and nearer till all the sky is
+dark, and burst in lightning and rain and fierceness of wind, till
+'through the torn sail the wild tempest is streaming,' and the white
+crests of the waves are like the mane of Death's pale horse leaping upon
+the broken ship. We have all learnt in how profound a sense, by reason
+of outward adverse circumstances and inward temptations, by reason of
+the fears of a Justice which we know is throned at the centre of the
+creation, by reason of a death which to us is a terror, and by reason of
+that universal fear of 'after death the judgment,' storm and tempest
+swoop upon our paths. God made the sunshine, and we have made it a
+storm. God made life blessed and full of safety and peace, and we have
+wrenched ourselves from Him and stand defenceless amidst its dangers.
+
+Then, there is another aspect and conception of life which underlies
+these words of my text. The image of the desert was before the prophet's
+rapt vision. He saw the sand whirled into mad dancing columns before the
+blast which swept across the unsheltered flat, with nothing, for a day's
+march, to check its force. But the wilderness is not only shelterless,
+it is waterless too--a place in which wild and ravening thirst finds no
+refreshing draughts, and the tongue cleaves to the blackening gums.
+
+'Rivers of water in a dry place'; and what is the prose fact of that?
+That you and I live in the midst of a world which has no correspondence
+with, nor power of satisfying, our truest and deepest selves--that we
+bear about with us a whole set of longings and needs and weaknesses and
+strengths and capacities, all of which, like the climbing tendrils of
+some creeping plant, go feeling and putting out their green fingers to
+lay hold of some prop and stay--that man is so made that for his rest
+and blessedness he must have an external object round which his spirit
+may cling, on which his desires may fasten and rest, by which his heart
+may be blessed, which shall be authority for his will, peace for his
+fears, sprinkling and cleansing for his conscience, light for his
+understanding, shall be in complete correspondence with his inward
+nature--be water for his thirst, and bread for his hunger.
+
+And as thus, on the very nature which each of us carries, there is
+stamped the signature of dependence, and the necessity of finding an
+external object on which to rest; and as, further, men will not be
+tutored even by their own miseries or by the voice of their own wants,
+and ever confound their wishes with their wants and their whims with
+their needs, therefore it comes to pass that the appetite which was only
+meant to direct us to God, and to be as a wholesome hunger in order to
+secure our partaking with relish and delight of the divine food that is
+provided for it, becomes unsatisfied, a torture, and unslaked, a
+ravening madness; and men's needs become men's misery; and men's hunger
+becomes men's famine; and men's thirst becomes men's death. We do dwell
+in a dry land where no water is.
+
+All about us there are these creatures of God, bright and blessed and
+beautiful, fit for their functions and meant to minister to our
+gladness. They are meant to be held in subordination. It is not meant
+that we should find in them the food for our souls. Wealth and honour
+and wisdom and love and gratified ambition and successful purpose, and
+whatsoever other good things a man may gather about him and achieve--he
+may have them all, and yet in spite of them all there will be a great
+aching, longing vacuity in his soul. His true and inmost being will be
+groping through the darkness, like a plant growing in a cellar, for the
+light which alone can tinge its pale petals and swell its shrivelling
+blossoms to ripeness and fruit.
+
+A dry place, as well as a dangerous place--have not you found it so? I
+believe that every soul of man has, if he will be honest with himself,
+and that there is not one among us who would not, if he were to look
+into the deepest facts and real governing experience of his life,
+confess--I thirst: 'my soul thirsteth.' And oh, brethren, why not go on
+with the quotation, and make that which is else a pain, a condition of
+blessedness? Why not recognise the meaning of all this restless
+disquiet, and say 'My soul thirsteth for God, for the living God'?
+
+And then there is the other idea also underlying these words, yet
+another phase of this sad life of ours--not only danger and drought, but
+also weariness and languor. The desert stretches before us again, where
+there is no shelter from the blast and no trickling stream amid the
+yellowing sand; where the fierce ball above beats down cruelly, and its
+hot rays are flung up cruelly into our faces, and the glare blinds us,
+and the stifling heat wearies us, and work is a torture and motion is
+misery, and we long for nothing so much as to be quiet and to hide our
+heads in some shade.
+
+I was reading recently one of our last books of travel in the wilderness
+of the Exodus, in which the writer told how, after toiling for hours
+under a scorching sun, over the hot, white, marly flat, seeing nothing
+but a beetle or two on the way, and finding no shelter anywhere from the
+pitiless beating of the sunshine, the weary travellers came at last to a
+little Retem bush only a few feet high, and flung themselves down and
+tried to hide, at least, their heads, from those 'sunbeams like swords,'
+even beneath its ragged shade. And my text tells of a great rock, with
+blue dimness in its shadow, with haply a fern or two in the moist places
+of its crevices, where there is rest, and a man can lie down and be
+cool, while all outside is burning sun, and burning sand, and dancing
+mirage.
+
+Oh! the weariness felt by us all, of plod, plod, plodding across the
+sand! That fatal monotony into which every man's life stiffens, as far
+as outward circumstances, outward joys and pleasures go! the depressing
+influence of custom which takes the edge off all gladness and adds a
+burden to every duty! the weariness of all that tugging up the hill, of
+all that collar-work which we have to do! Who is there that has not his
+mood, and that by no means the least worthy and man-like of his moods,
+wherein he feels not, perhaps, that all is vanity, but--'how infinitely
+wearisome it all is.'
+
+And so every race of man that ever has lived has managed out of two
+miseries to make a kind of shadowy gladness; and, knowing the weariness
+of life and the blackness of death, has somewhat lightened the latter by
+throwing upon it the thought of the former, and has said, 'Well, at any
+rate, if the grave be narrow and dark, and if outside "the warm
+precincts of the cheerful day" there be that ambiguous night, at least
+it is the place for sleep; and, if we cannot be sure of anything more,
+we shall rest then, at any rate.' So the hope of 'long disquiet merged
+in rest' becomes almost bright, and man's weariness finds most pathetic
+expression in his thinking of the grave as a bed where he can stretch
+himself and be still. Life is hard, life is dry, life is dangerous.
+
+II. But another thought suggested by these words is--The Mysterious Hope
+which shines through them.
+
+One of ourselves shall deliver us from all this evil in life. '_A man_
+shall be a refuge, rivers of water, the shadow of a great rock.' Such an
+expectation seems to be right in the teeth of all experience and far too
+high-pitched ever to be fulfilled. It appears to demand in him who
+should bring it to pass powers which are more than human, and which must
+in some inexplicable way be wide as the range of humanity and enduring
+as the succession of the ages.
+
+It is worth while to realise to ourselves these two points which seem to
+make such words as these of our text a blank impossibility. Experience
+contradicts them, and common-sense demands for their fulfilment an
+apparently impossible human character.
+
+All experience seems to teach--does it not?--that no human arm or heart
+can be to another soul what these words promise, and what we need. And
+yet the men who have been disappointed and disenchanted a thousand times
+do still look among their fellows for what their fellows, too, are
+looking for, and none have ever found. Have _we_ found what we seek
+among men? Have we ever known amongst the dearest that we have clung to,
+one arm that was strong enough to keep us in all danger? Has there ever
+been a human love to which we can run with the security that _there_ is
+a strong tower where no evil can touch us? There have been many delights
+in all our lives mediated and ministered to us by those that we loved.
+They have taught us, and helped us, and strengthened us in a thousand
+ways. We have received from them draughts of wisdom, of love, of joy, of
+guidance, of impulse, of comfort, which have been, as water in the
+desert is, more precious than gold. Our fellow-travellers have shared
+their store with us, 'letting down their pitchers upon their hand,' and
+giving us drink; but has the draught ever slaked the thirst? They carry
+but a pitcher, and a pitcher is not a fountain. Have there been any in
+all the round of those that we have loved and trusted, to whom we have
+trusted absolutely, without having been disappointed? They, like us, are
+hemmed in by human limitations. They each bear a burdened and thirsty
+spirit, itself needing such supplies. And to the truest, happiest, most
+soul-sufficing companionship, there comes at last that dread hour which
+ends all sweet commerce of giving and receiving, and makes the rest of
+life, for some of us, one monotonous ashen-grey wilderness where no
+water is. These things make it impossible for us to find anywhere
+amongst men our refuge and our fruition.
+
+And yet how strange, how pathetic, is the fact that after all
+disappointments, men still obstinately continue to look among their
+fellows for guidance and for light, for consolation, for defence, and
+for strength! After a thousand failures they still hope. Does not the
+search at once confess that hitherto they have not found, else why be
+seeking still?--and that they yet believe they will yet find, else why
+not cease the vain quest? And surely He who made us, made us not in
+vain, nor cursed us with immortal hopes which are only persistent lies.
+Surely there is some living Person who will vindicate these unquenchable
+hopes of humanity, and receive and requite our love and trust, and
+satisfy our longings, and explain the riddle of our lives. If there be
+not, nor ever has been, nor ever can be a man who shall satisfy us with
+his love, and defend us with his power, and be our all-sufficient
+satisfaction and our rest in weariness, then much of man's noblest
+nature is a mistake, and many of his purest and profoundest hopes are an
+illusion, a mockery, and a snare. The obstinate hope that, within the
+limits of humanity, we shall find what we need is a mystery, except on
+one hypothesis, that it, too, belongs to 'the unconscious prophecies'
+that God has lodged in all men's hearts.
+
+Nor need I remind you, I suppose, how such functions as those of which
+my text speaks not only seem to be contradicted by all experience, but
+manifestly and obviously to transcend the possibilities of human nature.
+_A man_ to defend me; and he himself--does _he_ need no defence? A man
+to supply my wants; and is his spirit, then, other than mine, that it
+can become the all-sufficient fulness for my emptiness? He that can do
+this for one spirit must be greater than the spirit for which he doeth
+it. He that can do it for the whole race of man, through all ages, in
+all circumstances, down to the end of time, in every latitude, under
+every condition of civilisation--who must _he_ be who, for the whole
+world, evermore and always, is their defence, their gladness, their
+shelter, and their rest?
+
+The function requires a divine power, and the application of the power
+requires a human hand. It is not enough that I should be pointed to a
+far-off heaven, where there dwells an infinite loving God--I believe
+that we need more than that. We need both of the truths: 'God is my
+refuge and my strength,' and 'A man shall be a hiding-place from the
+wind, and a covert from the tempest.'
+
+III. That brings me to the last point to be noticed, namely:--The
+solution of the mystery in the person of Jesus Christ.
+
+That which seemed impossible is real. The forebodings of humanity have
+not fathomed the powers of Divine Love. There _is_ a man, our brother,
+bone of our bone, and flesh of our flesh, who can be to single souls the
+adequate object of their perfect trust, the abiding home of their
+deepest love, the unfailing supply for their profoundest wants. There
+_is_ one man to whom it is wise and blessed to look as the exclusive
+source of all our peace, the absolute ruler of all our lives. There _is_
+a man in whom we find all that we have vainly sought in men. There _is_
+a man, who can be to all ages and to the whole race their refuge, their
+satisfaction, their rest. 'It behoved Him to be made in all points like
+unto His brethren,' that His succour might be ever near, and His
+sympathy sure. The man Christ Jesus who, being man, is God manifest in
+the flesh, exercises in one and the same act the offices of divine pity
+and human compassion, of divine and human guardianship, of divine and
+human love.
+
+ 'And so the Word had breath, and wrought
+ With human hands the creed of creeds
+ In loveliness of perfect deeds,
+ More strong than all poetic thought.'
+
+The dreams of weary hearts that have longed for an impossible perfection
+are all below the reality. The fact surpasses all expectation. It is
+more than all prophecies, it is more than all hopes, it is more than all
+praise. It is God's unspeakable gift. Well might an angel voice proclaim
+the mystery of love, 'Unto you is _born_ a Saviour, which is Christ the
+Lord.' The ancient promise of our text is history now. A man has been
+and is all these things for us.
+
+A refuge and a hiding-place from every storm--adverse circumstances
+sweep upon us, and His mighty hand is put down there as a buckler,
+behind which we may hide and be safe. Temptations to evil storm upon us,
+but if we are enclosed within Him they never touch us. The fears of our
+own hearts swirl like a river in flood against the walls of our fortress
+home, and we can laugh at them, for it is founded upon a rock! The day
+of judgment rises before us solemn and certain, and we can await it
+without fear, and approach it with calm joy. I call upon no mountains
+and hills to cover me.
+
+'Rock of ages, cleft for me, Let me hide myself in Thee.'
+
+'Rivers of water in a dry place,'--hungry and thirsty, my soul fainted
+within me. I longed for light, and behold darkness. I longed for help,
+and there was none that could come close to my spirit to succour and to
+give me drink in the desert. My conscience cried in all its wounds for
+cleansing and stanching, and no comforter nor any balm was there. My
+heart, weary of limited loves and mortal affections, howsoever sweet and
+precious, yearned and bled for one to rest upon all-sufficient and
+eternal. I thirsted with a thirst that was more than desire, that was
+pain, and was coming to be death, and I heard a voice which said, 'If
+any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink.'
+
+'The shadow of a great rock in a weary land,'--and my heart was weary by
+reason of the greatness of the way, and duties and tasks seemed toils
+and burdens, and I was ready to say, 'Wherefore has Thou made me and all
+men in vain? Surely all this is vanity and vexation of spirit,' and I
+heard One that laid His hand upon me and said, 'Come unto Me, and I will
+give thee rest.' I come to Thee, O Christ, faint and perishing,
+defenceless and needy, with many a sin and many a fear; to Thee I turn
+for Thou hast died for me, and for me thou dost live. Be Thou my shelter
+and strong tower. Give me to drink of living water. Let me rest in Thee
+while in this weary land, and let Thy sweet love, my Brother and my
+Lord, be mine all on earth and the heaven of my heaven!
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO DWELL IN THE FIRE OF GOD
+
+'Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? who among us shall
+dwell with everlasting burnings? 15. He that walketh righteously, and
+speaketh uprightly; he that despiseth the gain of oppressions, that
+shaketh his hands from holding of bribes, that stoppeth his ears from
+hearing of blood, and shutteth his eyes from seeing evil.'--ISAIAH
+xxxiii. 14, 15.
+
+'He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God'--1 JOHN iv. 16.
+
+
+I have put these two verses together because, striking as is at first
+sight the contrast in their tone, they refer to the same subject, and
+they substantially preach the same truth. A hasty reader, who is more
+influenced by sound than by sense, is apt to suppose that the solemn
+expressions in my first text, 'the devouring fire' and' everlasting
+burnings,' mean _hell_. They mean _God_, as is quite obvious from the
+context. The man who is to 'dwell in the devouring fire' is the _good_
+man. He that is able to abide 'the everlasting burnings' is 'the man
+that walketh righteously and speaketh uprightly,' that 'despiseth the
+gain of oppression, that shaketh his hands from holding of bribes, that
+stoppeth his ears from hearing of blood, and shutteth his eyes from
+seeing evil.' The prophet has been calling all men, far and near, to
+behold a great act of divine judgment in which God has been manifested
+in flaming glory, consuming evil; now he represents the 'sinners in
+Zion,' the unworthy members of the nation, as seized with sudden terror,
+and anxiously asking this question, which in effect means: 'Who among us
+can abide peacefully, joyfully, fed and brightened, not consumed and
+annihilated, by that flashing brightness and purity?' The prophet's
+answer is the answer of common-sense--like draws to like. A holy God
+must have holy companions.
+
+But that is not all. The fire of God is the fire of love as well as the
+fire of purity; a fire that blesses and quickens, as well as a fire that
+destroys and consumes. So the Apostle John comes with his answer, not
+contradicting the other one, but deepening it, expanding it, letting us
+see the foundations of it, and proclaiming that as a holy God must be
+surrounded by holy hearts, which will open themselves to the flame as
+flowers to the sunshine, so a loving God must be clustered about by
+loving hearts, who alone can enter into deep and true friendship with
+Him.
+
+The two answers, then, of these texts are one at bottom; and when Isaiah
+asks, 'Who shall dwell with the everlasting fire?'--the perpetual fire,
+burning and unconsumed, of that divine righteousness--the deepest
+answer, which is no stern requirement but a merciful promise, is John's
+answer, 'He that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God.'
+
+The simplest way, I think, of bringing out the force of the words before
+us will be just to take these three points which I have already
+suggested: the world's question, the partial answer of the prophet, the
+complete answer of the Apostle.
+
+I. The World's Question.
+
+I need only remind you how frequently in the Old Testament the emblem of
+fire is employed to express the divine nature. In many places, though by
+no means in all, the prominent idea in the emblem is that of the purity
+of the divine nature, which flashes and flames as against all which is
+evil and sinful. So we read in one grand passage in this book of Isaiah,
+'the Light of Israel shall become a fire'; as if the lambent beauty of
+the highest manifestation of God gathered itself together, intensified
+itself, was forced back upon itself, and from merciful, illuminating
+light turned itself into destructive and consuming fire. And we read,
+you may remember, too, in the description of the symbolical
+manifestation of the divine nature which accompanied the giving of the
+Law on Sinai, that 'the glory of the Lord was like devouring fire on the
+top of the mountain,' and yet into that blaze and brightness the
+Lawgiver went, and lived and moved in it.
+
+There is, then, in the divine nature a side of antagonism and opposition
+to evil, which flames against it, and labours to consume it. I would
+speak with all respect for the motives of many men in this day who dread
+to entertain the idea of the divine wrath against evil, lest they should
+in any manner trench upon the purity and perfectness of the divine love.
+I respect and sympathise with the motive altogether; and I neither
+respect nor sympathise with the many ferocious pictures of that which is
+called the wrath of God against sin, which much so-called orthodox
+teaching has indulged in. But if you will only remove from that word
+'anger' the mere human associations which cleave to it, of passion on
+the one hand, and of a wish to hurt its object on the other, then you
+cannot, I think, deny to the divine nature the possession of such
+passionless and unmalignant wrath, without striking a fatal blow at the
+perfect purity of God. A God that does not hate evil, that does not
+flame out against it, using all the energies of His being to destroy it,
+is a God to whose character there cleaves a fatal suspicion of
+indifference to good, of moral apathy. If I have not a God to trust in
+that hates evil because He loveth righteousness, then 'the pillared
+firmament itself were rottenness, and earth's base built on stubble';
+nor were there any hope that this damnable thing that is killing and
+sucking the life-blood out of our spirits should ever be destroyed and
+cast aside. Oh! it is short-sighted wisdom, and it is cruel kindness, to
+tamper with the thought of the wrath of God, the 'everlasting burnings'
+of that eternally pure nature wherewith it wages war against all sin.
+
+But then, let us remember that, on the other side, the fire which is the
+destructive fire of perfect purity is also the fire that quickens and
+blesses. God is love, says John, and love is fire, too. We speak of 'the
+flame of love,' of 'warm affections,' and the like. The symbol of fire
+does not mean destructive energy only. And these two are one. God's
+wrath is a form of God's love; God hates because He loves.
+
+And the 'wrath' and the 'love' differ much more in the difference of the
+eyes that look, than they do in themselves. Here are two bits of glass;
+one of them sifts out and shows all the fiery-red rays, the other all
+the yellow. It is the one same pure, white beam that passes through them
+both, but one is only capable of receiving the fiery-red beams of the
+wrath, and the other is capable of receiving the golden light of the
+love. Let us take heed lest, by destroying the wrath, we maim the love;
+and let us take heed lest, by exaggerating the wrath, we empty the love
+of its sweetness and its preciousness; and let us accept the teaching
+that these are one, and that the deepest of all the things that the
+world can know about God lies in that double saying, which does not
+contradict its second half by its first, but completes its first by its
+second--God is Righteousness, God is Love.
+
+Well, then, that being so, the question rises to every mind of ordinary
+thoughtfulness: 'Who among us shall dwell with the devouring fire? who
+among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?' A God fighting against
+evil; can you and I hope to hold familiar fellowship with Him? A God
+fighting against evil; if He rises up to exercise His judging and His
+punishing energies, can we meet Him? 'Can thy heart endure and thy hands
+be strong, in the day that I shall deal with thee?' is the question that
+comes to each of us if we are reasonable people. I do not dwell upon it;
+but I ask you to take it, and answer it for yourselves.
+
+To 'dwell with everlasting burnings' means two things. First, it means
+to hold familiar intercourse and communion with God. The question which
+presents itself to thoughtful minds is--What sort of man must I be if I
+am to dwell near God? The lowliest bush may be lit by the divine fire
+and not be consumed by it; and the poorest heart may be all aflame with
+an indwelling God, if only it yield itself to Him, and long for His
+likeness. Electricity only flames into consuming fire when its swift
+passage is resisted. The question for us all is--How can I receive this
+holy fire into my bosom, and not be burned? Is any communion possible,
+and if it is, on what conditions? These are the questions which the
+heart of man is really asking, though it knows not the meaning of its
+own unrest.
+
+'To dwell with everlasting burnings' means, secondly, to bear the action
+of the fire--the judgment of the present and the judgment of the future.
+The question for each of us is--How can we face that judicial and
+punitive action of that Divine Providence which works even here, and how
+can we face the judicial and punitive action in the future?
+
+I suppose you all believe, or at least say that you believe, that there
+is such a future judgment. Have you ever asked yourselves the question,
+and rested not until you got a reasonable answer to it, on which, like a
+man leaning on a pillar, you can lean the whole weight of your
+expectations--How am I to come into the presence of that devouring fire?
+Have you any fireproof dress that will enable you to go into the furnace
+like the Hebrew youths, and walk up and down in the midst of it, well
+and at liberty? Have you? 'Who shall dwell amidst the everlasting
+fires?'
+
+That question has stirred sometimes, I know, in the consciences of every
+man and woman that is listening to me. Some of you have tampered with it
+and tried to throttle it, or laughed at it and shuffled it out of your
+mind by the engrossments of business, and tried to get rid of it in all
+sorts of ways: and here it has met you again to-day. Let us have it
+settled, in the name of common-sense (to invoke nothing higher), once
+for all, upon reasonable principles that will stand; and do you see that
+you settle it to-day.
+
+II. And now, look next at the prophet's answer.
+
+It is simple. He says that if a man is to hold fellowship with, or to
+face the judgment of, the pure and righteous God, the plainest dictate
+of reason and common-sense is that he himself must be pure and righteous
+to match. The details into which hid answer to the question runs out are
+all very homely, prosaic, pedestrian kind of virtues, nothing at all out
+of the way, nothing that people would call splendid or heroic. Here they
+are:--'He that walks righteously,'--a short injunction, easily spoken,
+but how hard!--'and speaketh uprightly, he that despiseth the gain of
+oppression, that shaketh his hands from holding of bribes, that stoppeth
+his ears from hearing of blood, that shutteth his eyes from seeing
+evil.' Righteous action, righteous speech, inward hatred of possessions
+gotten at my neighbour's cost, and a vehement resistance to all the
+seductions of sense, shutting one's hands, stopping one's ears,
+fastening one's eyes up tight so that he may not handle, nor hear, nor
+see the evil--there is the outline of a trite, everyday sort of morality
+which is to mark the man who, as Isaiah says, can 'dwell amongst the
+everlasting fires.'
+
+Now, if at your leisure you will turn to Psalms xv. and xxiv., you will
+find there two other versions of the same questions and the same answer,
+both of which were obviously in our prophet's mind when he spoke. In the
+one you have the question put: 'Who shall abide in Thy tabernacle?' In
+the other you have the same question put: 'Who shall ascend into the
+hill of the Lord?' And both these two psalms answer the question and
+sketch the outline (and it is only an outline) of a righteous man, from
+the Old Testament point of view, substantially in the same fashion that
+Isaiah does here.
+
+I do not need to remark upon the altogether unscientific and non-
+exhaustive nature of the description of righteousness that is set forth
+here. There are a great many virtues, plain and obvious, that are left
+out of the picture. But I ask you to notice one very special defect, as
+it might seem. There is not the slightest reference to anything that we
+call religion. It is all purely pedestrian, worldly morality; do
+righteous things; do not tell lies; do not cheat your neighbour; stop
+your ears if people say foul things in your hearing; shut your eyes if
+evil comes before you. These are the kind of duties enjoined, and these
+only. The answer of my text moves altogether on the surface, dealing
+only with conduct, not with character, and dealing with conduct only in
+reference to this world. There is not a word about the inner nature, not
+a word about the inner relation of a man to God. It is the minimum of
+possible qualifications for dwelling with God.
+
+Well, now, do you achieve that minimum? Suppose we waive for the moment
+all reference to God; suppose we waive for the moment all reference to
+motive and inward nature; suppose we keep ourselves only on the outside
+of things, and ask what sort of _conduct_ a man must have that is able
+to walk with God? We have heard the answer.
+
+Now, then, is that _me_? Is this sketch here, admittedly imperfect, a
+mere black-and-white swift outline, not intended to be shaded or
+coloured, or brought up to the round; is this mere outline of what a
+good man ought to be, at all like me? Yes or no? I think we must all say
+No to the question, and acknowledge our failure to attain to this homely
+ideal of conduct. The requirement pared down to its lowest possible
+degree, and kept as superficial as ever you can keep it, is still miles
+above me, and all I have to say when I listen to such words is, 'God be
+merciful to me a sinner.'
+
+My dear friends, take this one thought away with you:--the requirements
+of the most moderate conscience are such as no man among us is able to
+comply with. And what then? Am I to be shut up to despair? am I to say:
+Then nobody can dwell within that bright flame? Am I to say: Then when
+God meets man, man must crumble away into nothing and disappear? Am I to
+say, for myself: Then, alas for me! when I stand at His judgment bar?
+
+III. Let us take the Apostle's answer.
+
+God is love, and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God.' Now, to
+begin with, let us distinctly understand that the New Testament answer,
+represented by John's great words, entirely endorses Isaiah's; and that
+the difference between the two is not that the Old Testament, as
+represented by psalmist and prophet, said, 'You must be righteous in
+order to dwell with God,' and that the New Testament says, 'You need not
+be.' Not at all! John is just as vehement in saying that nothing but
+purity can bind a man in thoroughly friendly and familiar conjunction
+with God as David or Isaiah was. He insists as much as anybody can
+insist upon this great principle, that if we are to dwell with God we
+must be like God, and that we are like God when we are like Him in
+righteousness and love.
+
+'He that saith he hath fellowship with Him, and walketh in darkness, is
+a liar!' That is John's short way of gathering it all up. Righteousness
+is as essential in the gospel scheme for all communion and fellowship
+with God as ever it was declared to be by the most rigid of legalists;
+and if any of you have the notion that Christianity has any other terms
+to lay down than the old terms--that righteousness is essential to
+communion--you do not understand Christianity. If any of you are
+building upon the notion that a man can come into loving and familiar
+friendship with God as long as he loves and cleaves to any sin, you have
+got hold of a delusion that will wreck your souls yet,--is, indeed,
+harming, wrecking them now, and will finally destroy them if you do not
+got rid of it. Let us always remember that the declaration of my first
+text lies at the very foundation of the declaration of my second.
+
+What, then, is the difference between them? Why, for one thing it is
+this--ISAIAH tells us that we must he righteous, John tells us how we
+may be. The one says, 'There are the conditions,' the other says, 'Here
+are the means by which you can have the conditions.' Love is the
+productive germ of all righteousness; it is the fulfilling of the law.
+Get that into your hearts, and all these relative and personal duties
+will come. If the deepest, inmost life is right, all the surface of life
+will come right. Conduct will follow character, character will follow
+love.
+
+The efforts of men to make themselves pure, and so to come into the
+position of holding fellowship with God, are like the wise efforts of
+children in their gardens. They stick in their little bits of rootless
+flowers, and they water them; but, being rootless, the flowers are all
+withered to-morrow and flung over the hedge the day after. But if we
+have the love of God in our hearts, we have not rootless flowers, but
+the seed which will spring up and bear fruit of holiness.
+
+But that is not all. Isaiah says 'Righteousness,' John says 'Love,'
+which makes righteousness. And then he tells us how we may get love,
+having first told us how we may get righteousness: 'We love Him because
+He first loved us.' It is just as impossible for a man to work himself
+into loving God as it is for a man to work himself into righteous
+actions. There is no difference in the degree of impossibility in the
+two cases. But what we can do is, we can go and gaze at the thing that
+kindles the love; we can contemplate the Cross on which the great Lover
+of our souls died, and thereby we can come to love Him. John's answer
+goes down to the depths, for his notion of love is the response of the
+believing soul to the love of God which was manifested on the Cross of
+Calvary. To have righteousness we must have love; to have love we must
+look to the love that God has to us; to look rightly to the love that
+God has to us we must have faith. Now you have gone down to the very
+bottom of the matter. Faith is the first step of the ladder, and the
+second step is love and the third step is righteousness.
+
+And so the New Testament, in its highest and most blessed declarations,
+rests itself firmly upon these rigid requirements of the old law. You
+and I, dear brethren, have but one way by which we can walk in the midst
+of that fire, rejoicing and unconsumed, namely that we shall know and
+believe the love which God hath to us, love Him back again 'with pure
+hearts fervently,' and in the might of that receptive faith and
+productive love, become like Him in holiness, and ourselves be 'baptized
+with the Holy Ghost and with fire.' Thus, fire-born and fiery, we shall
+dwell as in our native home, in God Himself.
+
+
+
+
+THE FORTRESS OF THE FAITHFUL
+
+'He shall dwell on high: his place of defence shall be the munitions of
+rocks; bread shall be given him; his waters shall be sure.'--ISAIAH
+xxxiii. 16.
+
+
+This glowing promise becomes even more striking if we mark its
+connection with the solemn question in the previous context. 'Who among
+us shall dwell with the devouring fire?' is the prophet's question; 'who
+among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?' That question really
+means, Who is capable 'of communion with God'? The prophet sketches the
+outline of the character in the subsequent verses, and then recurring to
+his metaphor of a habitation, and yet with a most lovely and significant
+modification, he says, 'he'--the man that he has been sketching--'shall
+dwell,' not 'with the everlasting burnings,' but 'on high; his place of
+defence shall be the munitions of rocks,' like some little hill, fort,
+or city, perched upon a mountain, and having within it ample provision
+and an unfailing spring of water. 'His bread shall, be given him, his
+water shall be sure.' To dwell with 'the devouring fire' is to 'dwell on
+high,' to be safe and satisfied. So then, whilst the words before us
+have, of course, direct and immediate reference to the Assyrian
+invasion, and promise, in a literal sense, security and exemption from
+its evils to the righteous in Israel, they widen and deepen into a
+picturesque, but not less real, statement of what comes into the
+religious life, by communion with God. There are three things:
+elevation, security, satisfaction.
+
+'He shall dwell on high.'
+
+In the East, and in all unsettled countries, you will find that the
+sites of the cities are on the hilltops, for a very plain reason, and
+that is the fact that underlies the prophet's representation. To hold
+fellowship with God, to live in union with Him, to have His thoughts for
+my thoughts, and His love wrapping my heart, and His will enshrined in
+my will; to carry Him about with me into all the pettinesses of daily
+life, and, amidst the whirlpool of duties and changing circumstances, to
+sit in the centre, as it were the eye of the whirlpool where there is a
+dead calm, _that_ lifts a man on high. Communion with God secures
+elevation of spirit, raising us clean above the flat that lies beneath.
+There are many ways by which men seek for lofty thoughts, and a general
+elevation above the carking cares and multiplied minutenesses of this
+poor, mortal, transient life; but while books and great thoughts, and
+the converse of the wise, and art, and music, and all these other
+elevating influences have a real place and a blessed efficiency in
+ennobling life, there is not one of them, nor all of them put together,
+that will give to the human spirit that strange and beautiful elevation
+above the world and the flesh and the devil, which simple communion with
+God will give. I have seen many a poor man who knew nothing about the
+lofty visions that shape and lift humanity, who had no side of him
+responsive to aesthetics or art or music, who was no thinker, no
+student, who never had spoken to anybody above the rank of a poor
+labouring man, and to whom all the wisdom of the nations was a closed
+chamber, who yet in his life, ay! and on his face, bore marks of a
+spirit elevated into a serene region where there was no tumult, and
+where nothing unclean or vicious could live. A few of the select spirits
+of the race may painfully climb on high by thought and effort. Get God
+into your hearts, and it will be like filling the round of a silken
+balloon with light air; you will soar instead of climbing, and 'dwell on
+high.' When you are up there, the things below that look largest will
+dwindle and 'show,' as Shakespeare has it, 'scarce so gross as beetles,'
+looked at from the height, and the noises will sink to a scarcely
+audible murmur, and you will be able to see the lie of the country, and,
+as it says in the context, 'your eyes shall behold the land that is very
+far off.' Yes! the hilltop is the place for wide views, and for
+understanding the course of the serpentine river, and it is the place to
+discover how small are the mightiest things at the foot, and how little
+a way towards the sun the noises of human praise or censure can ever
+travel. 'He shall dwell on high,' and he will see a long way off, and
+understand the relative magnitude of things, and the strife of tongues
+will have ceased for him.
+
+And more than that is implied in the promise. If we dwell on high, we
+shall come down with all the more force on what lies below. There is no
+greater caricature and misconception of Christianity than that which
+talks as if the spirit that lived in daily communion with God, high
+above the world, was remote from the world. Why, how do they make
+electricity nowadays? By the fall of water from a height, and the higher
+the level from which it descends, the mightier the force which it
+generates in the descent. So nobody will tell on the world like the man
+who lives above it. The height from which a weight rushes down measures
+the force of its dint where it falls, and of the energy with which it
+comes. 'He shall dwell on high'; and only the man that stands above the
+world is able to influence it.
+
+Again, here is another blessing of the Christian life, put in a
+picturesque form: 'His defence shall be munitions of rocks.' That is a
+promise of security from assailants, which in its essence is true
+always, though its truth may seem doubtful to the superficial estimate
+of sense. The experience of the South African war showed how impregnable
+'the munitions of rocks' were. The Boers lay safe behind them, and our
+soldiers might fire lyddite at them all day and never touch them. So,
+the man who lives in communion with God has between him and all evil the
+Rock of Ages, and he lies at the back of it, quiet and safe, whatever
+foe may rage on the other side of it.
+
+Now, of course, the prophet meant to tell his countrymen that, in the
+theocracy of which they were parts, righteousness and nothing else was
+the national security, and if a man or a nation lived in communion with
+God, it bore a charmed life. That is a great deal more true, in regard
+to externals, in the miraculous 'dispensation,' as it is called, of the
+Old Testament than it is now, and we are not to take over these promises
+in their gross literal form into the Christian era, as if they were
+unconditional and absolutely to be fulfilled. But at the same time, if
+you reflect how many of our troubles do come to us mainly because we
+break our communion with God, I think we shall see that this old word
+has still an application to our daily lives and outward circumstances.
+Deduct from any man's life all the discomfort and trouble and calamity
+which have come down upon him because he was not in touch with God, and
+there will not be very much left. Yet there will be some, and the
+deepest and sorest of all our sorrows are not to be interpreted as
+occasioned by defects in our dwelling in God. Then has my text no
+application to them? Yes, because what still remains of earthly cares
+and sorrows and evils would, in communion with God, change its
+character. The rind is the same; but all the interior contents have
+been, as children will do with a fruit, scooped out, and another kind of
+thing has been put inside, so that though the outward appearance is the
+same, what is at the heart of it is utterly different. It is no longer
+some coarse, palate-biting, common vegetable, but a sweet confection,
+made by God's own hands, and put into the gourd, which has been hollowed
+out and emptied of its evil. That is, perhaps, a very violent figure,
+but take a plain case as illustration. Suppose two men, each of them
+going to his wife's funeral. The two hearses pass inside the cemetery
+gates, one after the other. Outwardly the two afflictions are the same,
+but the one man says, 'The Lord gave and the Lord hath taken away'; the
+other man says, 'They have taken away my gods, and what shall I do
+more?' _Are_ the two things the same? 'He shall dwell on high, his place
+of defence shall be the munitions of rocks,' and if we do hide ourselves
+in the cleft, then no evil shall befall us, nor any plague come nigh our
+dwelling.
+
+But there is another truth contained in this great promise, viz., that
+in regard to all the real evils which beset men, and these are all
+summed up in the one, the temptation to do wrong, their arrows will be
+blunted, and their force be broken, if we keep our minds in touch with
+God through humble communion and lowly obedience. Dear brethren, the way
+by which we can conquer temptations around, and silence inclinations
+within which riotously seek to yield to the temptations is, I believe,
+far more by cultivating a consciousness of communion with God, than by
+specific efforts directed to the overcoming of a given and particular
+temptation. Keep inside the fortress, and no bullet will come near you.
+Array yourselves in the most elaborate precautions and step out from its
+shadow, and every bullet will strike and wound. Let me keep up my
+fellowship with God, and I may laugh at temptation. Security depends on
+continual communion with God by faith, love, aspiration, and obedience.
+
+Now, I need not say more than a word about the last element in these
+promises, the satisfaction of desires. 'His bread shall be given him,
+and his water shall be sure.' In ancient warfare sieges were usually
+blockades; and strong fortresses were reduced by famine much more
+frequently than by assault. Mafeking and Ladysmith and Port Arthur were
+in most danger from that cause. The promise here assures us that we
+shall have all supplies in our abode, if God is our abode. Wherever he
+who dwells in God goes, he carries with him his provisions, and he does
+not need elaborate arrangements of pipes or reservoirs, because there is
+a fountain in the courtyard that the enemy cannot get at. They may stop
+the springs throughout the land, they may cut off all water supplies, so
+that 'there shall be no fruit in the vine, and the labour of the olive
+shall fail,' but they cannot touch the fountain. 'His water shall be
+sure,' and he can say, 'In the days of famine I shall be satisfied.'
+
+God is and gives all that we need for sustenance, for growth, for
+refreshment, for satisfaction of our desires. Keep near Him, and you
+will find in the heart of the devouring fire a shelter, and you will
+have all that you want for life here. My text will be true about us, in
+the measure in which we do thus dwell, and if we thus dwell here, and so
+dwell on high, with the munitions of rocks for our fortress, and 'the
+bread of God that came down from heaven' for our food, and the water of
+life for our refreshment, then, when there is no longer any need of
+places for defence, the other saying will be true, 'They shall hunger no
+more, neither thirst any more, for the Lamb which is in the midst of the
+throne shall feed them ... and shall lead them to living fountains of
+waters, and God, the Lord, shall wipe away all tears from their eyes.'
+
+
+
+
+THE RIVERS OF GOD
+
+'But there the glorious Lord will be unto us a place of broad rivers and
+streams; wherein shall go no galley with oars, neither shall gallant
+ship pass thereby.'--ISAIAH xxxiii. 21.
+
+
+One great peculiarity of Jerusalem, which distinguishes it from almost
+all other historical cities, is that it has no river. Babylon was on the
+Euphrates, Nineveh on the Tigris, Thebes on the Nile, Rome on the Tiber;
+but Jerusalem had nothing but a fountain or two, and a well or two, and
+a little trickle and an intermittent stream. The water supply to-day is,
+and always has been, a great difficulty, and an insuperable barrier to
+the city's ever having a great population.
+
+That deficiency throws a great deal of beautiful light on more than one
+passage in the Old Testament. For instance, this same prophet contrasts
+the living stream, the waters of Siloam, as an emblem of the gentle sway
+of the divine King of Israel, with 'the river, strong and mighty,' which
+was the symbol of Assyria; and a psalm that we all know well, sings,
+'There is a river, the streams whereof make glad the city of God,'--a
+triumphant exclamation which is robbed of half its force, unless we
+remember that the literal Jerusalem had no river at all. The vision of
+living waters flowing from the Temple which Ezekiel saw is a variation
+of the same theme, and suggests that in the Messianic days the
+deficiency shall be made good, and a mysterious stream shall spring up
+from behind, and flow out from beneath, the temple doors, and then with
+rapid increase and depth and width, but with no tributaries coming into
+it, shall run fertilising and life-giving everywhere, till it pours
+itself into the noisome waters of the sullen sea of death and heals even
+them.
+
+The same general representation is contained in the words before us.
+Isaiah's great vision is not, as I take it, of a future, but of what the
+Jerusalem of his day might he to the Israelite if he would live by
+faith. The mighty Lord, 'the glorious Lord,' shall Himself 'be a place
+of broad rivers and streams.'
+
+I. First, then, this remarkable promise suggests to me how in God there
+is the supply of all deficiencies.
+
+The city was perched on its barren, hot rock, with scarcely a drop of
+water, and its inhabitants must often have been tempted to wish that
+there had been running down the sun-bleached bed of the Kedron a
+flashing stream, such as laved the rock-cut temples and tombs of Thebes.
+Isaiah says, in effect, 'You cannot see it, but if you will trust
+yourselves to God, there will be such a river.'
+
+In like manner every defect in our circumstances, everything lacking in
+our lives--and we all have something which does not correspond with, or
+which falls beneath, our wishes and apparent needs--everything which
+seems to hamper us in some aspects, and to sadden us in others, may be
+compensated and made up if we will hold fast by God; and although to
+outward sense we dwell 'in a dry and barren land where no water is,' the
+eye of faith will see, flashing and flowing all around, the rejoicing
+waters of the divine presence, and they will mirror the sky, and the
+reflections will teach us that there is a heaven above us.
+
+If there is in any life a gap, that is a prophecy that God will fill it.
+If there is anything in your circumstances in regard to which you often
+feel sadly, and are sometimes tempted to feel bitterly, how much
+stronger and more fully equipped you would be, if it were otherwise, be
+sure that in God there is that which can supply the want, and that the
+consciousness of the want is a merciful summons to seek its supply from
+and in Him. If there is a breach in the encircling wall of your
+defences, God has made it in order that He Himself, and not an enemy,
+may enter your lives and hearts. 'In the year that King Uzziah died, I
+saw the Lord sitting on a throne,' and it did not matter though that
+mortal king was dead, for the true King was thereby revealed as living
+for ever, just as when the summer foliage, fluttering and green, drops
+from the tree, the sturdy stem and the strong branches are made the more
+visible. Our felt deficiencies are doors by which God may come in. Do
+you sometimes feel as if you would be better if you had easier worldly
+circumstances? Is your health precarious and feeble? Have you to walk a
+solitary path through this world, and does your heart often ache for
+companionship? You can have all your heart's desire fulfilled in deepest
+reality in God, in the same way that that riverless city had Jehovah for
+'a place of broad rivers and streams.'
+
+II. Take another side of the same thought. Here is a revelation of God
+and His sweet presence as our true defence.
+
+The river that lay between some strong city and the advancing enemy was
+its strongest fortification when the bridge of boats was taken away. One
+of the ancient cities to which I have referred is described by one of
+the prophets as being held as within the coils of a serpent, by which he
+means the various bendings and twistings of the Euphrates, which
+encompassed Babylon, and made it so hard to be conquered. The primitive
+city of Paris owed its safety in the wild old times when it was founded,
+to its being on an island. Venice has lived through many centuries,
+because it is girded about by its lagoons. England is what it is,
+largely because of 'the streak of silver sea.' So God's city has a broad
+moat all round it. The prophet goes on to explain the force of his bold
+figure in regard to the safety promised by it, when he says: 'Wherein
+shall go no galley with oars, neither shall gallant ship pass thereby.'
+Not a keel of the enemy shall dare to cut its waters, nor break their
+surface with the wet plash of invading oars. And so, if we will only
+knit ourselves with God by simple trust and continual communion, it is
+the plainest prose fact that nothing will harm us, and no foe will ever
+get near enough to us to shoot his arrows against us.
+
+That is a truth for faith, and not for sense. Many a man, truly
+compassed about by God, has to go through fiery trial and sorrow and
+affliction. But I venture to appeal to every heart that has known grief
+most acutely, protractedly, and frequently, and has borne it in the
+faith of God, and with submission to Him; and I know that they who are
+the 'experts,' and who alone have the right to speak with authority on
+the subject, will confirm the statement that I make, that sorrows
+recognised as sent from God are the truest blessings of our lives. No
+real evil befalls us, because, according to the old superstition that
+money bewitched was cleansed if it was handed across running water, our
+sorrows only reach us across the river that defends.
+
+Isaiah is full of symbols of various kinds for the impregnability of
+Zion. Sometimes, as in my text, he falls back upon the thought of the
+bright waters of the moat on which no enemy can venture to sail.
+Sometimes he draws his metaphor from the element opposed to water, and
+speaks of a wall of fire round about us. But the simple reality that
+lies below all the poetry is, that trust in God brings His presence
+around me, and that makes it impossible that any evil should befall me,
+and certain that whatever does befall me is His messenger, His loving
+messenger, for my good. If we believed that, and lived on the belief,
+the whole world would be different.
+
+III. Take, again, another aspect of this same thought, which suggests to
+us God's presence as our true refreshment and satisfaction.
+
+The waterless city depended on cisterns, and they were often broken, and
+were always more or less foul, and sometimes the water fell very low in
+them. Isaiah says to us: Even when you are living in external
+circumstances like that:
+
+ 'When all created streams are dry,
+ Thy fulness is the same.'
+
+The fountain of living waters--if we may slightly vary the metaphor of
+my text--never sinks one hair's-breadth in its crystal basin, however
+many thirsty lips may be glued to its edge, and however large may be
+their draughts from it. This metaphor, turned to the purpose of
+suggesting how in God every part of our nature finds its appropriate
+nourishment and refreshment which it does not find anywhere besides, has
+become one of the commonplaces of the pulpit. Would it were the
+commonplace of our lives! It is easy to talk about Him as being the
+fountain of living waters; it is easy to quote and to admire the words
+which the Master spoke to the Samaritan woman when He said, 'I would
+have given thee living water,' and 'the water which I give will be a
+fountain springing up into everlasting life.' We repeat or learn such
+sayings, and then what do we do? We go away and try to slake our thirst
+at broken cisterns, and every draught which we take is like the salt
+water from which a shipwrecked-boat's crew in its madness will sometimes
+not be able to refrain, each drop increasing the raging thirst and
+hastening the impending death.
+
+If we believed that God was the broad river from which we could draw and
+draw, and drink and drink, for ever and ever, should we be clinging with
+such desperate tenacity, as most of us exhibit, to earthly goods? Should
+we whimper with such childish regrets, as most of us nourish, when these
+goods are diminished or withdrawn? Should we live as we constantly do,
+day in and day out, seldom applying ourselves to the one source of
+strength and peace and refreshment, and trying, like fools, to find what
+apart from Him the world can never give? The rivers in northern Tartary
+all lose themselves in the sand. Not one of them has volume or force
+enough to get to the sea. And the rivers from which we try to drink are
+sand-choked long before our thirst is slaked. So, if we are wise, we
+shall take Isaiah's hint, and go where the water flows abundantly, and
+flows for ever.
+
+IV. There is a last point that I would also suggest, namely, the
+manifold variety in the results of God's presence.
+
+It shapes itself into many forms, according to our different needs. 'The
+glorious Lord shall be a place of broad rivers.' Yes; but notice the
+next words--'and streams.' Now, the word which is there translated
+'streams' means little channels for irrigation and other purposes, by
+which the water of some great river is led off into the melon patches,
+and gardens, and plantations, and houses of the inhabitants. So we have
+not only the picture of the broad river in its unity, but also that of
+the thousand little rivulets in their multiplicity, and in their
+direction to each man's plot of ground. It is the same idea that is in
+the psalm which I have already quoted: 'There is a river, _the streams_
+whereof make glad the city of our God.' You can divide the river up into
+very tiny trickles, according to the moment's small wants. If you make
+but a narrow channel, you will get but a shallow streamlet; and if you
+make your channel broad and deep, you will get much of Him.
+
+It is of no profit that we live on the river's bank if we let its waters
+go rolling and flashing past our door, or our gardens, or our lips.
+Unless you have a sluice, by which you can take them off into your own
+territory, and keep the shining blessing to be the source of fertility
+in your own garden, and of coolness and refreshment to your own thirst,
+your garden will be parched, and your lips will crack. There is a 'broad
+river,' and there are also 'streams'; which, being brought down to its
+simplest expression, just comes to this--that we may and must make God
+our very own property. It is useless to say '_our_ God,' 'the God of
+Israel,' 'the God of the Church,' 'the Great Creator,' 'the Universal
+Father,' and so on, unless we say '_my_ God and _my_ Saviour,' '_my_
+Refuge and _my_ Strength.' How much of the river have you dipped up in
+your own vessel? How much of it have you taken with which to water your
+own vineyard and refresh your own souls?
+
+The time comes when Isaiah's prophecy shall be perfectly fulfilled,
+according to the great words in the closing hook of Scripture, about the
+river of the water of life proceeding out of the Throne of God and of
+the Lamb. But, till that time comes, we do not need to wander thirsty in
+a desert; but all round us we may hear the mighty waters rolling
+everywhere, and drink deep draughts of delight and supply for all our
+needs, from the very presence of God Himself.
+
+
+
+
+JUDGE, LAWGIVER, KING
+
+'For the Lord is our judge, the Lord is our lawgiver, the Lord is our
+King; He will save us.'--ISAIAH xxxiii. 22.
+
+
+There is reference here to the three forms of government in Israel: by
+Moses, by Judges, by Kings. In all, Israel was a Theocracy. Isaiah looks
+beyond the human representative to the true divine Reality.
+
+I. A truth for us, in both its more specific and its more general forms.
+
+(a) Specific. Christ is all these three for us--Authority; His will law;
+Defender.
+
+(b) More general. Everything that human beings are to us, they are by
+derivation from Him--and He sums in Himself all forms of good and
+blessing. Every name among men for any kind of helper belongs to Him.
+All tender, helpful relationships are but 'broken lights of Thee.'
+
+II. A lesson hard to learn and to remember.
+
+One knows not whether it is harder for faith to look beyond the visible
+helpers or delights to the Unseen Real One, or to look through tears,
+when these are gone, and to see Him clearly filling an otherwise empty
+field of vision. When we have a palpable prop to lean on, it is
+difficult to be clearly aware that, unless the palpable support were
+held up by the Unseen, it could not be a prop, and to lean on it would
+be like resting one's weight on a staff stuck in yielding mud. But it is
+no less difficult to tell our hearts that we have all that we ever had,
+when what we had leaned on for many happy days and found to hold us up
+is stricken from beneath us. Present, the seen lawgiver, judge, or king
+stays the eyes that should travel past him to God Himself; removed, his
+absence makes a great emptiness, in whose vacuity it is difficult for
+faith to discern the real presence of Him who is all that the departed
+seemed to be. The painted glass stays the eye; shattered, it lets in
+only the sight of a void and far-off sky.
+
+Israel could not breathe freely in the rarefied air on the heights of a
+theocracy, and demanded a visible king. It had its desire, and as a
+consequence, 'leanness in its soul.' Christendom has found it as
+difficult to do without visible embodiments of authority, law, defence,
+and hence many evils and corruptions in the institutions and practices
+of organised Christianity.
+
+III. A conviction which makes strong and blessed.
+
+To have dominant in our minds, and operative through our lives, the
+settled conviction that God in Christ is for us judge, lawgiver, and
+king, and that the purpose of all these offices or relationships is that
+'He will save us' is the secret of tranquillity, the fountain of
+courage, the talisman which makes life all different and us who live in
+it different. Fear cannot survive where that conviction rules and
+fortifies a heart. We shall not be slavish adherents of men if we are
+accustomed to take our orders from our Lawgiver. Earthly prizes or
+dignities will not dazzle eyes that have seen the King in His beauty. We
+shall pay little heed to men's judgments if there flames ever before
+conscience the thought, 'He that judgeth me is the Lord.' 'He will save
+us'; who can destroy what His hand is stretched out to preserve? 'If God
+is for us, who is against us? It is God that justifieth; who is He that
+condemneth?'
+
+
+
+
+MIRACLES OF HEALING
+
+'Then the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf
+shall be unstopped. Then shall the lame man leap as an hart, and the
+tongue of the dumb sing.'--ISAIAH xxxv. 5,6.
+
+
+'Then'--when? The previous verse answers, 'Behold, your God will come,
+He will come and save you.' And what or when is that 'coming'? A glance
+at the place which this grand hymn occupies in the series of Isaiah's
+prophecies answers that question. It stands at the close of the first
+part of these, and is the limit of the prophet's vision. He has been
+setting forth the Lord's judgments upon all heathen, and His deliverance
+of Israel from its oppressors; and the 'coming' is His manifestation for
+that double purpose. Before its flashing brightness, barrenness is
+changed into verdure, diseases that lame men's powers vanish, the dry
+and thirsty land gleams with the shining light of sudden streams. Across
+the wilderness stretches a broad path, raised high above the bewildering
+monotony of pathless sand, too plain to be missed, too lofty for wild
+beasts' suppleness to spring upon it: along it troop with song and
+gladness the returning exiles, with hope in their hearts as they journey
+to Zion, where they find a joyful home undimmed by sorrow, and in which
+sighing and sorrow are heard and felt no more.
+
+Now this is poetry, no doubt; the golden light of imagination suffuses
+it all, but it is poetry with a solid meaning in it. It is not a mere
+play of fancy exalting the 'coming of the Lord' by heaping together all
+images that suggest the vanishing of evil and the coming of good. If
+there is a basis of facts in it, what are they? What is the period of
+that emphatic 'then' at the beginning of our text? The return of the
+Jews from exile? Yes, certainly; but some greater event shines through
+the words. Some future restoration of that undying race to their own
+land? Yes, possibly, again we answer, but that does not exhaust the
+prophecy. The great coming of God to save in the gift of His Son? Yes,
+that in an eminent degree. The second coming of Christ? Yes, that too.
+All the events in which God has come for men's deliverance are shadowed
+here; for in them all, the same principles are at work, and in all,
+similar effects have followed. But mainly the mission and work of Jesus
+Christ is pointed at here--whether in its first stage of Incarnation and
+Passion, or in its second stage of Coming in glory, 'the second time
+without sin, unto salvation.'
+
+And the bodily diseases here enumerated are symbols, just as Christ's
+miracles were symbolical, just as every language has used the body as a
+parable of the soul, and has felt that there is such a harmony between
+them that the outward and visible does correspond to and shadow the
+inward and spiritual.
+
+I think, then, that we may fairly take these four promises as bringing
+out very distinctly the main characteristics of the blessed effects of
+Christ's work in the world. The great subject of these words is the
+power of Christ in restoring to men the spiritual capacities which are
+all but destroyed. We have here three classes of bodily infirmities
+represented as cured at the date of that blessed 'Then.' Blindness and
+deafness are defects in perception, and stand for incapacities affecting
+the powers of knowledge. Lameness affects powers of motion, and stands
+for incapacity of activity. Dumbness prevents speech, and stands for
+incapacity of utterance.
+
+I. Christ as the restorer of the powers of knowing.
+
+Bodily diseases are taken to symbolise spiritual infirmities.
+
+Mark the peculiarities of Scripture anthropology as brought out in this
+view of humanity:---
+
+Its gloomy views of man's actual condition.
+
+Its emphatic declaration that that condition is abnormal.
+
+Its confidence of effecting a cure.
+
+Its transcendentally glorious conception of what man may become.
+
+Men are blind and deaf; that is to say, their powers of perception are
+destroyed by reason of disease. What a picture! The great spiritual
+realities are all unseen, as Elisha's young servant was blind to the
+fiery chariots that girdled the prophet. Men are blind to the starry
+truths that shine as silver in the firmament. They are deaf to the Voice
+which is gone out to the ends of the earth, and yet they have eyes and
+ears, conscience, intuitions. They possess organs, but these are
+powerless.
+
+And while the blindness is primarily in regard to spiritual and
+religious truths, it is not confined to these, but wherever spiritual
+blindness has fallen, the whole of a man's knowledge will suffer. There
+will be blindness to the highest philosophy, to the true basis and
+motive of morals, to true psychology, to the noblest poetry. All will be
+of the earth, earthy. You cannot strike religion out of men's thoughts,
+as you might take a stone out of a wall and leave the wall standing; you
+take out foundation and mortar, and make a ruinous heap.
+
+I know, of course, that there may be much mental activity without any
+perception of spiritual realities, but all knowledge which is not purely
+mathematical or physical suffers by the absence of such perception. All
+this blindness is caused by sin.
+
+Christ is the giver of spiritual sight. He restores the faculty by
+taking away the hindrance to its exercise. Further, He gives sight
+because He gives light.
+
+But turn to facts of experience, and consider the mental apathy of
+heathenism as contrasted with the energy of mind within the limits of
+Christendom. Greece, of course, is a brilliant exception, but even there
+(1) what of the conceptions of God? (2) what of the effect of the wise
+on the mass of the nation? Think of the languid intellectual life of the
+East. Think of the energy of thought which has been working within the
+limits of Christianity. Think of Christian theology compared with the
+mythologies of idolatry. And the contrast holds not only in the
+religious field but all over the field of thought.
+
+There is no such sure way of diffusing a culture which will refine and
+strengthen all the powers of mind as to diffuse the knowledge of Jesus,
+and to make men love Him. In His light they will see light.
+
+To know Him and to keep company with Him is 'a liberal education,' as is
+seen in many a lowly life, all uninfluenced by what is called learning,
+but enriched with the finest flowers of 'culture,' and having gathered
+them all in Christ's garden.
+
+Christ is the true light; in Him do we see. Without Him, what is all
+other knowledge? He is central to all, like genial heat about the roots
+of a plant. There is other knowledge than that of sense; and for the
+highest of all our knowledge we depend on Him who is the Word. In that
+region we can neither observe nor experiment. In that region facts must
+be brought by some other means than we can command, and we can but draw
+more or less accurate deductions from them. Logic without revelation is
+like a spinning-machine without any cotton, busy drawing out nothing.
+Here we have to listen. 'The entrance of Thy words giveth light.' Your
+God shall come and save you; then, by that divine coming and saving,
+'the eyes of the blind shall be opened, and the ears of the deaf shall
+be unstopped.'
+
+II. Christ as the Restorer of the Powers of Action.
+
+Again turn to heathenism, see the apathetic indolence, the unprogressive
+torpor, 'Better fifty years of Europe than a cycle of Cathay.' Sin lames
+for service of God; it leaves the lower nature free to act, and that
+freedom paralyses all noble activity.
+
+Christianity brings the Energising of the Soul--
+
+(a) By its reference of everything to God--our powers and our
+circumstances and our activities.
+
+(b) By its prominence given to Retribution. It speaks not merely of
+_vita brevis_--but of _vita brevis_ and an Eternity which grows out of
+it.
+
+(c) By its great motive for work--love.
+
+(d) By the freedom It brings from the weight that paralysed.
+
+It takes away sin. Lifting that dreary load from our backs, it makes us
+joyful, strong, and agile.
+
+The true view of Christianity is not, as some of its friends, and some
+of its foes, mistakenly concur in supposing, that it weakens interest
+in, and energy on, the Present, but that it heightens the power of
+action. A life plunged in that jar of oxygen will glow with redoubled
+brilliance.
+
+III. Christ as the Restorer of Powers of Utterance.
+
+The silence that broods over the world. It is dumb for all holy,
+thankful words; with no voice to sing, no utterance of joyful praise.
+
+Think of the effect of Christianity on human speech, giving it new
+themes, refining words and crowding them with new meanings. Translate
+the Bible into any language, and that language is elevated and enriched.
+
+Think of the effect on human praise. That great treasure of Christian
+poetry.
+
+Think of the effect on human gladness. Christ fills the heart with such
+reasons for praise, and makes life one song of joy.
+
+Thus Christ is the Healer.
+
+To men seeking for knowledge, He offers a higher gift--healing. And as
+for true knowledge and culture, in Christ, and in Christ alone, will you
+find it.
+
+Let your culture be rooted in Him. Let your Religion influence all your
+nature.
+
+The effects of Christianity are its best evidence. What else does the
+like of that which it does? Let Jannes and Jambres 'do the same with
+their enchantments.' We may answer the question, 'Art Thou He that
+should come?' as Christ did, 'The blind receive their sight, and the
+lame walk; the lepers are cleansed, and the deaf hear.'
+
+The perfect Restoration will be in heaven. Then, indeed, when our souls
+are freed from mortal grossness, and the thin veils of sense are rent
+and we behold Him as He is, then when they rest not day nor night, but
+with ever renewed strength run to His commandments, then when He has put
+into their lips a new song--'then shall the eyes of the blind be opened,
+and the ears of the deaf be unstopped; then shall the lame man leap as
+an hart, and the tongue of the dumb sing.'
+
+
+
+
+MIRAGE OR LAKE
+
+'For in the wilderness shall waters break out, and streams in the
+desert. And the glowing sand shall become a pool, and the thirsty ground
+springs of water.' ISAIAH xxxv. 6, 7.
+
+
+What a picture is painted in these verses! The dreary wilderness
+stretches before us, monotonous, treeless, in some parts bearing a
+scanty vegetation which flourishes in early spring and dies before
+fierce summer heats, but for the most part utterly desolate, the sand
+blinding the eyes, the ground cracked and gaping as if athirst for the
+rain that will not fall; over it the tantalising mirage dancing in
+mockery, and amid the hot sand the yelp of the jackals. What does this
+dead land want? One thing alone--water. Could that be poured upon it,
+all would be changed; nothing else will do any good. And it comes.
+Suddenly it bursts from the sand, and streams bring life along the
+desert. It gathers into placid lakes, with their whispering reeds and
+nodding rushes, and the thick cool grass round their margins. The foul
+beasts that wandered through dry places seeking rest are drowned out. So
+full of blessed change will be the coming of the Lord, of which all this
+context speaks. Mark that this burst of waters is when 'the Lord shall
+come,' and that it is the reason for the restoration of lost powers in
+men, and especially for a chorus of praise from dumb lips. This, then,
+is the central blessing. It is not merely a joyful transformation, but
+it is the reason for a yet more joyful transformation (chap. xliv. 3).
+Recall Christ's words to the Samaritan woman and in the Temple on the
+great day of the Feast.
+
+Then this is pre-eminently a description of the work of Christ.
+
+I. Christ brings the Supernatural Communication of a New Life.
+
+We may fairly regard this metaphor as setting forth the very deepest
+characteristic of the gospel. Consider man's need, as typified in the
+image of the desert. Mark that the supply for that need must come from
+without; that coming from without, it must be lodged in the heart of the
+race; that the supernatural communication of a new life and power is the
+very essence of the work of Christ; that such a communication is the
+only thing adequate to produce these wondrous effects.
+
+II. This new life slakes men's thirst.
+
+The pangs and tortures of the waterless wilderness. The thirst of human
+souls; they long, whether they know it or not, for--
+
+ Truth for Understanding.
+ Love for Heart.
+ Basis and Guidance for Will and Effort.
+ Cleansing for Conscience.
+ Adequate objects for their powers.
+
+They need that all these should be in One.
+
+The gnawing pain of our thirst is not a myth; it is the secret of man's
+restlessness. We are ever on the march, not only because change is the
+law of the world, nor only because effort and progress are the law for
+civilised men, but because, like caravans in the desert, we have to
+search for water.
+
+In Christ it is slaked; all is found there.
+
+III. The Communication of this New Life turns Illusions into Realities.
+
+'The mirage shall become a pool.' Life without Christ is but a long
+illusion. 'Sin makes a mock of fools.' How seldom are hopes fulfilled,
+and how still less frequently are they, when fulfilled, as good as we
+painted them! The prismatic splendours of the rain bow, which gleam
+before us and which we toil to catch, are but grey rain-drops when
+caught. Joys attract and, attained, have incompleteness and a tang of
+bitterness. The fish is never so heavy when landed on the sward as it
+felt when struggling on our hook. 'All is vanity'--yes, if creatures and
+things temporal are pursued as our good. But nothing is vanity, if we
+have the life in us which Jesus comes to give. His Gospel gives solid,
+unmingled joys, sure promises which are greater when fulfilled than when
+longed for, certain hopes whose most brilliant colours are duller than
+those of the realities. The half has not been told of the 'things which
+God hath prepared for them that love Him.'
+
+Sure Promises.
+
+A certain Hope.
+
+IV. This New Life gives Fruitfulness. It stimulates all our nature. A
+godless life is in a very tragic sense barren, and a wilderness. There
+is in it nothing really worth doing, nor anything that will last. Christ
+gives Power, Motive, Pattern, and makes a life of holy activity
+possible. The works done by men apart from Him are, if measured by the
+whole relations and capacities of the doers, unfruitful works, however
+they may seem laden with ruddy clusters. It is only lives into which
+that river of God which is full of water flows that bring forth fruit,
+and whose fruit remains. The desert irrigated becomes a garden of the
+Lord.
+
+Note, too, how this river drowns out wild beasts. The true way of
+conquering evil is to turn the river into it. Cultivate, and weeds die.
+The expulsive power of a new affection is the most potent instrument for
+perfecting character.
+
+What is the use of water if we do not drink? We may perish with thirst
+even on the river's bank. 'If any man thirst, let him come to Me and
+drink.'
+
+
+
+
+THE KING'S HIGHWAY
+
+'And an highway shall be there, and a way, and it shall be called the
+way of holiness; the unclean shall not pass over it; but it shall be for
+those: the wayfaring men, though fools, shall not err therein. No lion
+shall be there, nor any ravenous beast shall go up thereon, it shall not
+be found there; but the redeemed shall walk there.'--ISAIAH xxxv. 8, 9.
+
+
+We can fancy what it is to be lost in a forest where a traveller may
+ride round in a circle, thinking he is advancing, till he dies. But it
+is as easy to be lost in a wilderness, where there is nothing to see, as
+in a wood where one can see nothing. And there is something even more
+ghastly in being lost below the broad heavens in the open face of day
+than 'in the close covert of innumerous boughs.' The monotonous swells
+of the sand-heaps, the weary expanse stretching right away to the
+horizon, no land-marks but the bleaching bones of former victims, the
+gigantic sameness, the useless light streaming down, and in the centre
+one tiny, black speck toiling vainly, rushing madly hither and
+thither--a lost man--till he desperately flings himself down and lets
+death bury him, that is the one picture suggested by the text. The other
+is of that same wilderness, but across it a mighty king has flung up a
+broad, lofty embankment, a highway raised above the sands, cutting
+across them so conspicuously that even an idiot could not help seeing
+it, so high above the land around that the lion's spring falls far
+beneath it, and the supple tiger skulks baffled at its base. It is like
+one of those roads which the terrible energy of conquering Rome carried
+straight as an arrow from the milestone in the Forum over mountains,
+across rivers and deserts, morasses and forests, to flash along them the
+lightning of her legions, and over whose solid blocks we travel to-day
+in many a land.
+
+The prophet has seen in his vision the blind and deaf cured, the
+capacities of human nature destroyed by sin restored. He has told us
+that this miraculous change has come from the opening of a spring of new
+life in the midst of man's thirsty desert, and now he gets before us, in
+yet another image, another aspect of the glorious change which is to
+follow that coming of the Lord to save, which filled the farthest
+horizon of his vision. The desert shall have a plain path on which those
+diseased men who have been healed journey. Life shall no longer be
+trackless, but God will, by His coming, prepare paths that we should
+walk in them; and as He has given the lame man power to walk, so will he
+also provide the way by which His happy pilgrims will journey to their
+home.
+
+I. The pathless wandering of godless lives.
+
+The old, old comparison of life to a journey is very natural and very
+pathetic. It expresses life's ceaseless change; every day carries us
+into a new scene, every day the bends of the road shut out some happy
+valley where we fain would have rested, every day brings new faces, new
+associations, new difficulties, and even if the same recur, yet it is
+with such changes that they are substantially new, and of each day's
+march it is true, even when life is most monotonous, that 'ye have not
+passed this way heretofore.' It expresses life's ceaseless effort and
+constant plodding. To-day's march does not secure to-morrow's rest, but,
+however footsore and weary, we have to move on, like some child dragged
+along by a careless nurse. It expresses the awful crumbling away of life
+beneath us. The road has an end, and each step takes us nearer to it.
+The numbers that face us on the milestones slowly and surely decrease;
+we pass the last and on we go, tramp, tramp, and we cannot stop till we
+reach the narrow chamber, cold and dark, where, at any rate, we have got
+the long march over.
+
+But to many men, the journey of life is one which has no definite
+direction deliberately chosen, which has no all-inclusive aim, which has
+no steady progress. There may be much running hither and thither, but it
+is as aimless as the marchings of a fly upon a window, as busy and yet
+as uncertain as that of the ants who bustle about on an ant-hill.
+
+Now that is the idea, which our text implies, of all the activity of a
+godless life, that it is not a steady advance to a chosen goal, but a
+rushing up and down in a trackless desert, with many immense exertions
+all thrown away. Then, in contrast, it puts this great thought: that God
+has come to us and made for us a path for our feet.
+
+II. The highway that God casts up.
+
+Of course that coming we take to be Christ's coming, and we have just to
+consider the manner in which His coming fulfils this great promise, and
+has made in the trackless wilderness a way for us to walk in.
+
+1. Christ gives us a Definite Aim for Life. I know, of course, that men
+may have this apart from Him, definite enough in all conscience. But
+such aims are unworthy of men's whole capacities. Not one of them is fit
+to be made the exclusive, all-embracing purpose of a life, and, taken
+together, they are so multifarious that in their diversity they come to
+be equal to none. How many we have all had! Most of us are like men who
+zig-zag about, chasing after butterflies! Nor are any such aims certain
+to be reached during life, and they all are certain to be lost at death.
+
+Godless men are enticed on like some dumb creature lured to slaughter-
+house by a bunch of fodder--once inside, down comes the pole-axe.
+
+But Christ gives us a definite aim which is worthy of a man, which
+includes all others; which binds this life and the next into one.
+
+2. Christ gives us distinct knowledge of whither we should go. It is not
+enough to give general directions; we need to know what our next step is
+to be. It is of no avail that we see the shining turrets far off on the
+hill, if all the valleys between are unknown and trackless. Well: we
+have Him to point us our course. He is the exemplar--the true ideal of
+human nature. Hour by hour His pattern fits to our lives. True, we shall
+often be in perplexity, but that perplexity will clear itself by patient
+thought, by holding our wills in suspense till He speaks, and by an
+honest wish to go right. There will no longer be doubt as to what is our
+law, though there may be as to the application of it. We are not to be
+guided by men's maxims, nor by the standards and patterns round us, but
+by Him.
+
+3. Christ gives means by which we can reach the aim. He does so by
+supplying a stimulus to our activity, in the motive of His love; by the
+removal of the hindrances arising from sin, through His redeeming work;
+by the gifts of new life from His Spirit.
+
+'The labour of the foolish wearieth every one of them, because he
+knoweth not how to go to the city.' But he that follows Jesus treads the
+right way to the city of habitation.
+
+4. Christ goes with us. The obscure words, 'It shall be for those' are
+by some rendered, 'He shall be with them,' and we may take them so, as
+referring to the presence with His happy pilgrims of the Lord Himself.
+Perhaps Isaiah may have been casting back a thought to the desert march,
+where the pillar led the host. But at all events we have the same
+companion to 'talk with us by the way,' and make 'our hearts burn within
+us,' as had the two disconsolate pedestrians on the road to Emmaus. It
+is Jesus who goes before us, whether He leads us to green pastures and
+waters of quietness or through valleys of the shadow of death, and we
+can be smitten by no evil, since He is with us.
+
+III. The travellers upon God's highway.
+
+Two conditions are laid down in the text. One is negative-the unclean
+can find no footing there. It is 'the way of holiness,' not only because
+holiness is in some sense the goal to which it leads, but still more,
+because only holy feet can tread it, holy at least in the travellers'
+aspiration and inward consecration, though still needing to be washed
+daily. One is positive--it is 'the simple' who shall not err therein.
+They who distrust themselves and their own skill to find or force a path
+through life's jungle, and trust themselves to higher guidance, are they
+whose feet will be kept in the way.
+
+No lion or ravenous beast can spring or creep up thereon. Simple keeping
+on Christ's highway elevates us above temptations and evils of all
+sorts, whether nightly prowlers or daylight foes.
+
+This generation is boasting or complaining that old landmarks are
+blotted out, ancient paths broken, footmarks obliterated, stars hid, and
+mist shrouding the desert. But Christ still guides, and His promise
+still holds good: 'He that followeth Me shall not walk in the darkness,
+but shall have the light of life.' The alternative for each 'traveller
+between life and death' is to tread in His footsteps or to 'wander in
+the wilderness in a solitary way, hungry and thirsty,' with fainting
+soul. Let us make the ancient prayer ours: 'See if there be any wicked
+way in me, and lead me in the way everlasting.'
+
+
+
+
+WHAT LIFE'S JOURNEY MAY BE
+
+'The redeemed shall walk there: And the ransomed of the Lord shall
+return, and come to Zion with songs and everlasting joy upon their
+heads: they shall obtain joy and gladness, and sorrow and sighing shall
+flee away.'--ISAIAH XXXV 9,10.
+
+
+We have here the closing words of Isaiah's prophecy. It has been
+steadily rising, and now it has reached the summit. Men restored to all
+their powers, a supernatural communication of a new life, a pathway for
+our journey--these have been the visions of the preceding verses, and
+now the prophet sees the happy pilgrims flocking along the raised way,
+and hears some faint strains of their glad music, and he marks them,
+rank after rank, entering the city of their solemnities, and through the
+gates can behold them invested with joy and gladness, while sorrow and
+sighing, like some night-loving birds shrinking from the blaze of that
+better sun which lights the city, spread their black wings and flee
+away.
+
+The noble rhythm of our English version rises here to a strain of
+pathetic music, the very cadence of which stirs thoughts that lie too
+deep for tears, and one shrinks from taking these lofty words of
+immortal hope--which life's sorrows have interpreted, I trust, for many
+of us--as the text of a sermon. But I would fain try whether some of
+their gracious sweetness and power may not survive even our rude
+handling of them.
+
+The prophet here is not only speaking of the literal return of his
+brethren from captivity. The place which this prophecy holds at the very
+close of the book, the noble loftiness of the language, the entire
+absence of any details or specific allusions which compel reference to
+the Captivity, would be sufficient of themselves to make us suspect that
+there was very much more here. The structure of prophecy is
+misunderstood unless it be recognised that all the history of Israel was
+itself a prediction, a great supernatural system of types and shadows,
+and that all the interventions of the divine hand are one in principle,
+and all foretell the great intervention of redeeming love, in the person
+of Jesus Christ. Nor need that be unlikely in the eyes of any who
+believe that Christ's coming is the centre of the world's history, and
+that there is in prophecy a supernatural element. We are not reading our
+own fancies into Scripture; we are not using, in allowable freedom,
+words which had another meaning altogether, to adorn our own theology,
+but we are apprehending the innermost meaning of prophecy, when we see
+in it Christ and His salvation (1 Peter i. 10).
+
+We have then here a picture of what Christ does for us weary journeyers
+on life's road,
+
+I. Who are the travellers?
+
+'Redeemed,' 'ransomed of the Lord.' Israel had in its past history one
+great act, under the imagery of which all future deliverances were
+prophesied. The events of the Exodus were the great storehouse from
+which prophets drew the clothing of their brightest hopes; and that is a
+lesson for us of how to use the history of God's past deliverances. They
+believed that each transitory act was a revelation of an unchanging
+purpose and an unexhausted power, and that it would be repeated over and
+over again. Experience supplied the material out of which Hope wove its
+fairest webs, but Faith drove the shuttle. Here the names which describe
+the pilgrims come from the old story. They are slaves, purchased or
+otherwise set free from captivity by a divine act. The epithets are
+transferred to the New Testament, and become the standing designation
+for those who have been delivered by Christ.
+
+That designation, 'ransomed of the Lord,' opens out into the great
+evangelical thoughts which are the very life-blood of vital
+Christianity.
+
+Emancipation from bondage is the first thing that we all need. 'He that
+committeth sin is the slave of sin.' An iron yoke presses on every neck.
+
+The needed emancipation can only be obtained by a ransom price. The
+question of to whom the ransom is paid is not in the horizon of prophet
+or apostle or of Jesus Himself, in using this metaphor. What is strongly
+in their minds is that a great surrender must be greatly made by the
+Emancipator.
+
+Jesus conceived of Himself as giving 'His life a ransom for the many.'
+
+The emancipation must be a divine act. It surpasses any created power.
+
+There can be no happy pilgrims unless they are first set free.
+
+II. The end of the journey.
+
+'They shall come to Zion.' It is one great distinctive characteristic
+and blessedness of the Christian conception of the future that it takes
+away from it all the chilling sense of strangeness, arising from
+ignorance and lack of experience, and invests it with the attraction of
+being the mother-city of us all. So the pilgrims are not travelling a
+dreary road into the common darkness, but are like colonists who visit
+England for the first time, and are full of happy anticipations of
+'going home,' though they have never seen its shores.
+
+That conception of the future perfect state as a 'city' includes the
+ideas of happy social life, of a settled polity, of stability and
+security. The travellers who were often solitary on the march will all
+be together there. The nomads, who had to leave their camping-place each
+morning and let the fire that cheered them in the night die down into a
+little ring of grey ashes, will 'go no more out,' but yet make endless
+progress within the gates. The defenceless travellers, who were fain to
+make the best 'laager' they could, and keep vigilant watch for human and
+bestial enemies crouching beyond the ring of light from the camp-fires,
+are safe at last, and they that swallowed them up shall be far away.
+
+Contrast the future outlook of the noblest minds in heathenism with the
+calm certainty which the gospel has put within the reach of the
+simplest! 'Blessed are your eyes, for they see.'
+
+III. The joy of the road.
+
+The pilgrims do not plod wearily in silence, but, like the tribes going
+up to the feasts, burst out often, as they journey, into song. They are
+like Jehoshaphat's soldiers, who marched to the fight with the singers
+in the van chanting 'Give thanks unto the Lord, for His mercy endureth
+for ever.' The Christian life should be a joyful life, ever echoing with
+the 'high praises of God.' However difficult the march, there is good
+reason for song, and it helps to overcome the difficulties. 'A merry
+heart goes all the day, a sad heart tires in a mile.' Why should the
+ransomed pilgrims sing? For present blessings, for deliverance from the
+burden of self and sin, for communion with God, for light shed on the
+meaning of life, and for the sure anticipation of future bliss.
+
+'Everlasting joy on their heads.' Other joys are transitory. It is not
+only 'we poets' who 'in our youth begin with gladness,' whereof 'cometh
+in the end despondency and madness'; but, in a measure, these are the
+outlines of the sequence in all godless lives. The world's festal
+wreathes wilt and wither in the hot fumes of the banqueting house, and
+'the crown of pride shall be trodden under foot.' But joy of Christ's
+giving 'shall remain,' and even before we sit at the feast, we may have
+our brows wreathed with a garland 'that fadeth not away.'
+
+IV. The perfecting of joy at last.
+
+'They shall obtain joy and gladness': but had they not had it on their
+heads as they marched? Yes; but at last they have it in perfect measure
+and manner. The flame that burned but dimly in the heavy air of earth
+flashes up into new brightness in the purer atmosphere of the city.
+
+And one part of its perfecting is the removal of all its opposites.
+Sorrow ends when sin and the discipline that sin needs have ended. 'The
+inhabitant shall not say: I am sick; the people that dwell therein shall
+be forgiven their iniquity.' Sighing ends when weariness, loss, physical
+pain, and all the other ills that flesh is heir to have ceased to vex
+and weigh upon the spirit. Life purges the dross of imperfection from
+character. Death purges the alloy of sorrow and sighing from joy, and
+leaves the perfected spirit possessor of the pure gold of perfect and
+eternal gladness.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRIUMPH OF FAITH
+
+'And Hezekiah received the letter from the hand of the messengers, and
+read it: and Hezekiah went up unto the house of the Lord, and spread it
+before the Lord. 15. And Hezekiah prayed unto the Lord, saying, 16. O
+Lord of hosts, God of Israel, that dwellest between the cherubims, Thou
+art the God, even Thou alone, of all the kingdoms of the earth: Thou
+hast made heaven and earth. 17. Incline Thine ear, O Lord, and hear;
+open Thine eyes, O Lord, and see: and hear all the words of Sennacherib,
+which hath sent to reproach the living God. 18. Of a truth, Lord, the
+kings of Assyria have laid waste all the nations, and their countries,
+19. And have cast their gods into the fire: for they were no gods, but
+the work of men's hands, wood and stone: therefore they have destroyed
+them. 20. Now therefore, O Lord our God, save us from his hand, that all
+the kingdoms of the earth may know that Thou art the Lord, even Thou
+only. 21. Then Isaiah the son of Amoz sent unto Hezekiah, saying. Thus
+saith the Lord God of Israel, Whereas thou hast prayed to Me against
+Sennacherib king of Assyria.... 33. Therefore thus saith the Lord
+concerning the king of Assyria, He shall not come into this city, nor
+shoot an arrow there, nor come before it with shields, nor cast a bank
+against it. 34. By the way that he came, by the same shall he return,
+and shall not come into this city, saith the Lord. 35. For I will defend
+this city to save it for mine own sake, and for my servant David's sake.
+36. Then the angel of the Lord went forth, and smote in the camp of the
+Assyrians a hundred and fourscore and five thousand: and when they arose
+early in the morning, behold, they were all dead corpses. 37. So
+Sennacherib king of Assyria departed, and went and returned, and dwelt
+at Nineveh. 38. And it came to pass, as he was worshipping in the house
+of Nisroch his god, that Adrammelech and Sharezer his sons smote him
+with the sword; and they escaped into the land of Armenia: and
+Esarhaddon his you reigned in his stead.'--ISAIAH xxxvii. 14-21, 33-38.
+
+
+Is trust in Jehovah folly or wisdom? That was the question raised by
+Sennacherib's invasion. A glance at the preceding chapters will show how
+the high military official, 'the rabshakeh,' or chief of the officers,
+shaped all his insolent and yet skilful mixture of threats and promises
+so as to demonstrate the vanity of trust in Egypt or in Jehovah, or in
+any but 'the great king.' Isaiah had been labouring to lift his
+countrymen to the height of reliance on Jehovah alone, and now the
+crucial test of the truth of his contention had come. On the one hand
+were Sennacherib and his host, flushed with victory, and sure of
+crushing this puny kinglet Hezekiah and his obstinate little city,
+perched on its rock. On the other was nothing but a prophet's word.
+Where is the stronger force? And does political prudence dictate
+reliance on the Unseen or on the visible? The moment is the crisis of
+Isaiah's work, and this narrative has been placed, with true insight
+into its importance, at the close of the first half of this book.
+
+To grasp the significance of the text the preceding events have to be
+remembered. Hezekiah's kingdom had been overrun, and tribute exacted
+from him. The rabshakeh had been sent from the main body of the Assyrian
+army, which was down at Lachish in the Philistine low country on the
+road to Egypt, in order to try to secure Jerusalem by promises and
+threats, since it was too important a post to leave in the rear, if
+Egypt was to be invaded. That attempt having failed, and the Egyptian
+forces being in motion, this new effort was made to induce Hezekiah to
+surrender. A letter was sent, whether accompanied by any considerable
+armed force or no does not appear. At this point the narrative begins.
+It may be best studied as an illustration of the trial of faith, its
+refuge, its pleading, and its deliverance.
+
+I. Note the trial of faith. Rabshakeh had derided the obstinate
+confidence in Jehovah, which kept these starving men on the walls grimly
+silent in spite of his coaxing. The letter of Sennacherib harps on the
+same string. It is written in a tone of assumed friendly remonstrance,
+and lays out with speciousness the apparent grounds for calling trust in
+Jehovah absurdity. There are no threats in it. It is all an appeal to
+common sense and political prudence. It marshals undeniable facts.
+Experience has shown the irresistible power of Assyria. There have been
+plenty of other little nations which have trusted in their local
+deities, and what has become of them? Barbarous names are flourished in
+Hezekiah's face, and their wasted dominions are pointed to as warnings
+against his committing a parallel folly. There is nothing in the letter
+which might not have been said by a friend, and nothing which was not
+said by the Jews who had lost their faith in their God. It was but the
+putting into plain words of what 'common-sense' and faint faith had
+often whispered to Hezekiah. The very absence of temper or demand in the
+letter gives it an aspect of that 'sweet reasonableness' so dear to
+sense-bound souls.
+
+_Mutatis mutandis_, the letter may stand for a specimen of the arguments
+which worldly prudence brings to shake faith, in all ages. We, too, are
+assailed by much that sounds most forcible from the point of view of
+mere earthly calculation. Sennacherib does not lie in boasting of his
+victories. He and his shoals of soldiers are very real and potent. It
+does seem madness for one little kingdom to stand out, and all the more
+so because its king is cooped up in his city, as the cuneiform
+inscription proudly tells, 'like a bird in a cage,' and all the rest of
+his land is in the conqueror's grip. They who look only at the things
+seen cannot but think the men of faith mad. They who look at the things
+unseen cannot but know that the men of sense are fools. The latter
+elaborately prove that the former are impotent, but they have left out
+one factor in their calculations, and that is God. One man and God at
+his back are stronger than Sennacherib and all his mercenaries.
+
+II. Note the refuge of tempted faith. What was Hezekiah to do with the
+crafty missive? It was hoped that he would listen to reason, and come
+down from his perch. But he neither yielded nor took counsel with his
+servants, but, like a devout man, went into the house of the Lord, and
+spread the letter before the Lord. It would have gone hard with him if
+he had not been to the house of the Lord many a time before. It is not
+easy to find our way thither for the first time, when our eyes are
+blinded by tears or our way darkened by calamities. But faith
+instinctively turns to God when anything goes wrong, because it has been
+accustomed to turn to Him when all was right, according to the world's
+estimate of right and wrong. Whither should the burdened heart betake
+itself but to Him who daily bears our burdens? The impulse to tell God
+all troubles is as truly a mark of the faithful soul as the impulse to
+tell everything to the beloved is the life-breath of love.
+
+The act of spreading the letter before the Lord is an eloquent symbol,
+which some prosaic and learned commentators have been dull enough to
+call gross, and to compare to Buddhist praying-mills! Its meaning is
+expressed in the prayer which follows. It is faith's appeal to His
+knowledge. It is faith's casting of its burden on the Lord. Our faith is
+of little power to bless, unless it impels us to take God into
+confidence in regard to everything which troubles us. If the letter is
+not grave enough to be spread before _Him_, it is too small to annoy
+_us_. If we truly live in fellowship with God, we shall find ourselves
+in His house, with the cause of our trouble in our hands, before we have
+time to think. Instinct acts more quickly than reason, and, if our faith
+be vital, it will not need to be argued into speaking to God of all that
+weighs upon us.
+
+III. Note the pleading of faith. Hezekiah's address to God is no mere
+formal recapitulation of divine names, but is the effort of faith to
+grasp firmly the truths which the enemy denies, and on which it builds.
+So considered, the accumulation of titles in verse 16 is very
+instructive, and shows how a trustful soul puts forth the energy of its
+faith in summoning to mind the great aspects of the divine name as
+bulwarks against suggested fears, and bases of supplication. Hezekiah
+appeals to 'the God of Hosts,' the Ruler of all the embattled forces of
+the universe, as well as of the armies of angels. What is Sennacherib's
+array compared with these? He appeals to the 'God of Israel,' as
+pleading the ancient relationship, which binds the unchangeable Guardian
+of the people to be still what He has been, and casts the responsibility
+of Israel's preservation upon Him. He appeals to Him 'who sits between
+the cherubim,' as thence defending and filling the threatened city. He
+grasps the thought that Jehovah is 'God alone' with a vividness which is
+partly due no doubt to Isaiah's teaching, but is also the indignant
+recoil of faith from the assumption of the letter, that Jehovah was but
+as the beaten deities of Gozan and the rest. Faith clings the more
+tenaciously to truths denied, as a dog will hold on to the stick that
+one tries to pull from it.
+
+Thus, having heartened himself and pled with God by all these names,
+Hezekiah comes to his petition. It is but translating into words the
+symbol of spreading the letter before God. He asks God to behold and to
+hear the defiant words. Prayer tells God what it knows that He knows
+already, for it relieves the burdened heart to tell Him. It asks Him to
+see and hear what it knows that He does see and hear. But the prayer is
+not for mere observance followed by no divine act, but for taking
+knowledge as the precursor of the appropriate help. Of such seeing and
+hearing by God, believing prayer is the appointed condition. 'Your
+Father knoweth what things ye have need of, before ye ask Him'; but that
+is not a reason for silence, but for supplication.
+
+Hezekiah rightly regarded Sennacherib's words as meant to reproach the
+living God, for the point of the letter was to dissuade from trust in
+Him, as no more powerful than the petty deities of already conquered
+cities. The prayer, therefore, pleads that God would take care of His
+own honour, and by delivering Jerusalem, show His sole sovereignty. It
+is a high and wonderful level for faith to reach, when it regards
+personal deliverance mainly in its aspect as vindicating God and
+warranting faith. We may too easily conclude that God's honour is
+involved in our deliverance, and it is well to be on our guard against
+that.
+
+But it is possible to die to self so fully as to feel that our cause is
+His, because His is so entirely ours; and then we may come to that
+heroic faith which seeks even personal good more for God's sake than for
+our own. It was noble that this man should have no word to say about
+self but 'Save us, that all the kingdoms of the earth may know that Thou
+art God alone.' Like him, we may each feel that our defence is more
+God's affair than ours, in proportion as we feel we are His rather than
+our own. That siege of Jerusalem was indeed as a duel between faith and
+unbelief on the one hand, and between Jehovah and the gods who were 'no
+gods' on the other. Sennacherib's letter was a defiant challenge to
+Jehovah to do His best for this people, and when faith repeated in
+prayer the insolence of unbelief only one result was possible. It came.
+
+IV. Note the deliverance of faith. Isaiah's grand prophecy tempts us to
+linger over its many beauties and magnificent roll of triumphant scorn,
+but it falls outside our purpose. As for the catastrophe, it should be
+noted that its place and time are not definitely stated, and that
+probably the notion that the Assyrian army was annihilated before
+Jerusalem is a mistake. Sennacherib and his troops were at Libnah, on
+their way to meet the Egyptian forces. If there were any of them before
+Jerusalem, they would at most be a small detachment, sufficient to
+invest it. Probably the course of events was that, at some time not
+specified, soon after the dismissal of the messengers who brought the
+letter, the awful destruction fell, and that, when the news of the
+disaster reached the detachment at Jerusalem, as the psalm which throbs
+with the echoes of the triumph says, 'They were troubled, and hasted
+away.'
+
+How complete was the crushing blow the lame record of this campaign in
+the inscriptions shows, in which the failure of the attempt to capture
+the city is covered up by vapouring about tribute and the like. If it
+had not failed, however, the success would certainly have been told, as
+all similar cases are told, with abundant boasting. The other fact is
+also to be remembered, that Sennacherib tried no more conclusions with
+Jerusalem and Jehovah, and though he lived for some twenty years
+afterwards, never again ventured on to the soil where that mighty God
+fought for His people.
+
+The appended notice of Sennacherib's death has been added by some
+narrator, since it probably occurred after Isaiah's martyrdom. 'All they
+that take the sword shall perish with the sword.' Such a career as his
+could not but give taste for violence and bloodshed, and dimmish regard
+for human life. Retribution comes slowly, for twenty years intervened
+between the catastrophe to the army and the murder of the king. Its
+penalties increase as its fall delays; for first came the blotting out
+of the army, and then, when that had no effect, at last the sword in his
+own heart. 'He that being often reproved hardeneth his neck shall
+suddenly be destroyed, and that without remedy.'
+
+But the great lesson of that death is the same as that of the other
+king's deliverance. Hezekiah 'went unto the house of the Lord,' and
+found Him a very present help in trouble. Sennacherib was slain in the
+house of his god. The two pictures of the worshippers and their fates
+are symbolic of the meaning of the whole story. Sennacherib had dared
+Jehovah to try His strength against him and his deities. The challenge
+was accepted, and that bloody corpse before the idol that could not help
+preaches a ghastly sermon on the text, 'They that make them are like
+unto them; so is every one that trusteth in them. O Israel, trust thou
+in the Lord: He is their help and their shield.'
+
+
+
+
+WHERE TO CARRY TROUBLES
+
+And Hezekiah received the letter from the hand of the messengers, and
+read it: and Hezekiah went up unto the house of the Lord, and spread it
+before the Lord.'--ISAIAH xxxvii. 14.
+
+
+When Hezekiah heard the threatenings of Sennacherib's servants, he rent
+his clothes and went into the house of the Lord, and sent to Isaiah
+entreating his prayers. When he received the menacing letter, his faith
+was greater, having been heartened by Isaiah's assurances. So he then
+himself appealed to Jehovah, spreading the letter before Him, and
+himself prayed God to guard His own honour, and answer the challenge
+flung down by the insolent Assyrian. It is noble when faith increases as
+dangers increase.
+
+I. We have here an example of what to do with troubles and difficulties.
+
+We are to lay them out before God, as we can do by praying about them.
+Hezekiah's trouble was great. His kingdom could be crushed like an
+eggshell by the grasp of Sennacherib's hand. But little troubles as well
+as great ones are best dealt with by being 'spread before the Lord.'
+Whatever is important enough to disturb me is important enough for me to
+speak to God about it. Whether the poison inflaming our blood be from a
+gnat's bite, or a cobra's sting, the best antidote is--pray about it.
+
+How much more real and fervid our prayers would be, if we habitually
+turned all our affairs into materials for petition! That is a very empty
+dispute as to whether we ought to pray for deliverance from outward
+sorrows. If we are living in touch with God, we cannot but take Him into
+our confidence, if we may so say, as to everything that affects us. And
+we should as soon think of hiding any matter from our dearest on earth
+as from our Friend in heaven. 'In _everything_, by prayer and
+supplication' is the commandment, and will be the instinct of the devout
+heart.
+
+Note Hezekiah's assurance that God cares about him.
+
+Note his clear perception that God is his only help.
+
+Note his identification of his own deliverance with God's honour. We
+cannot identify our welfare, or deliverance in small matters, with God's
+fair fame, in such a fashion. But we ought to be quite sure that He will
+not let us sink or perish, and will never desert us. And we can be quite
+sure that, if we identify ourselves and our work with Him, He will
+identify Himself with us and it. His treatment of His servants will tell
+the world (and not one world only) what He is, how faithful, how loving,
+how strong.
+
+II. We have here an example of how God answers His servants' prayers.
+
+It was 'by terrible things in righteousness' that Hezekiah's answer
+came. His prayer was at one end of the chain, and at the other was a
+camp full of corpses. One poor man's cry can set in motion tremendous
+powers, as a low whisper can start an avalanche. That magnificent
+theophany in Psalm xviii., with all its majesty and terror of flashing
+lightnings and a rocking earth, was brought about by nothing more than
+'In my distress I called upon the Lord,' and its purpose was nothing
+more than to draw the suppliant out of many waters and deliver him from
+his strong enemy.
+
+That army swept off the earth may teach us how much God will do for a
+praying child of His. His people's deliverance is cheaply purchased at
+such a price. 'He reproved kings for their sake.'
+
+One man with God beside him is stronger than all the world. As the
+psalmist learned in his hour of peril, 'Thou, Lord, makest me to dwell
+in safety, thou alone!'
+
+
+
+
+GREAT VOICES FROM HEAVEN
+
+'Comfort ye, comfort ye my people, saith your God. 2. Speak ye
+comfortably to Jerusalem, and cry unto her, that her warfare is
+accomplished, that her iniquity is pardoned: for she hath received of
+the Lord's hand double for all her sins. 3. The voice of him that crieth
+in the wilderness, Prepare ye the way of the Lord, make straight in the
+desert a highway for our God. 4. Every valley shall be exalted, and
+every mountain and hill shall be made low: and the crooked shall be made
+straight, and the rough places plain: 5. And the glory of the Lord shall
+be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together: for the mouth of the
+Lord hath spoken it. 6. The voice said, Cry. And he said, What shall I
+cry? All flesh is grass, and all the goodliness thereof is as the flower
+of the field: 7. The grass withereth, the flower fadeth: because the
+spirit of the Lord bloweth upon it: surely the people is grass. 8. The
+grass withereth, the flower fadeth: but the word of our God shall stand
+for ever. 9. 0 Zion, that bringest good tidings, get thee up into the
+high mountain; O Jerusalem, that bringest good tidings, lift up thy
+voice with strength; lift it up, be not afraid: say unto the cities of
+Judah, Behold your God! 10. Behold, the Lord God will come with strong
+hand, and His arm shall rule for Him: behold, His reward is with Him,
+and His work before Him.'--ISAIAH xi. 1-10.
+
+
+How majestically this second part of the Book of Isaiah opens with these
+mysterious voices! Other prophecies are wont to begin with symbolic
+visions, but here the ear takes the place of the eye; and instead of
+forms and flashing lights, which need to be translated, the prophet
+hears words, the impressiveness of which is heightened by the absence of
+any designation of the speakers. This much is clear, that the first
+words are God's, addressed to the prophets. They are the keynote of the
+whole. Israel is comforted in the assurance that her trial is ended and
+her sin purged. Then there is silence, broken by a voice to which no
+personality is attached, the herald and forerunner of the coming King
+and God. When the echoes of it have died away, another is heard,
+commanding yet another unnamed to 'cry,' and, in response to the
+latter's asking what is to be the burden of his message, bidding him
+peal out the frailty of man and the eternal vigour of the word of the
+Lord, which assures its own fulfilment.
+
+Then comes a longer pause. The way has been prepared, the coming God has
+come; He has set up His throne in the restored Jerusalem, and His glory
+is seen upon her. So there rings out from unnamed lips the stirring
+command to the city, thus visited by the indwelling God, to proclaim the
+glad tidings with a voice, the strength of which shall correspond to
+their gladness and certainty. This rapid glance at the structure of the
+whole naturally suggests the fourfold division to which we shall adhere.
+
+I. God speaks and bids His servants speak (vs. 1, 2), That is a
+wonderfully tender word with which the silence and sadness of exile are
+broken. The inmost meaning of God's voice is ever comfort. What a world
+of yearning love there is, too, in the two little words 'my' and 'your'!
+The exiles are still His; He who has hidden His face from them so long
+is still theirs. And what was true of them is true of us; for sin may
+separate us from God, but it does not separate Him from us, and He still
+seeks to make us recognise the imperishable bond, which itself is the
+ground of both our comfort and of His will that we should be comforted.
+
+As the very first words go deep into the meaning of all God's voices,
+and unveil the permanence of His relation of love even to sinful and
+punished men, so the next disclose the tender manner of His approach to
+us, and prescribe the tone for all His true servants: 'Speak ye to the
+heart of Jerusalem,' with loving words, which may win her love; for is
+she not the bride of Jehovah, fallen though she be? And is not humanity
+the beloved of Jesus, in whom God's heart is unveiled that our hearts
+may be won? How shall human voices be softened to tenderness worthy of
+the message which they carry? Only by dwelling near enough to Him to
+catch the echoes, and copy the modulations, of His voice, as some birds
+are taught sweeter notes than their own. The prophet's charge is laid
+upon all who would speak of Christ to men. Speak to the heart, not only
+to the head or to the conscience. God beseeches in the person of His
+'ambassadors.' The substance of the message may well find its way to the
+heart; for it is the assurance that the long, hard service of the
+appointed term of exile is past, that the sin which brought it about is
+forgiven, and, more wonderful and gracious still, that God's mercy
+reckons that the ills which followed on faithlessness have more than
+expiated it. We need not seek for any other explanation of these
+startling words than the exuberance of the divine pity, which 'doth not
+willingly afflict.'
+
+Of course, the captivity is in the foreground of the prophet's vision;
+but the wider sense of the prophecy embraces the worse captivity of sin
+under which we all groan, and the divine voice bids His prophets
+proclaim that Jehovah comes, to set us all free, to end the weary
+bondage, and to exact no more punishment for sins.
+
+II. The forerunner speaks. There is something very impressive in the
+abrupt bursting in of this second voice, all unnamed. It is the
+reverberation, as it were, of the former, giving the preparation on the
+side of man for the coming of Jehovah. Israel in bondage in Egypt had
+been delivered by Jehovah marching through the wilderness, a wilderness
+stretched between Babylon and Jerusalem; these supply the scenery, so to
+speak; but the scenery is symbolic, and the call is really one to
+prepare the way of the Lord in the wilderness of human sin, by raising
+up the cast-down by reason of transgressions or sorrows, to subdue lofty
+thoughts and self-sufficiency by humble self-abnegation, to make the
+'crooked things' or 'rugged things' straight or smooth, and the rough
+ground where heights were tumbled on heights a deep valley, by forsaking
+evil.
+
+The moral preparation, not the physical, is meant. It was fitting that
+the road for such a coming should be prepared. But the coming was not so
+contingent on the preparation that the 'glory of the Lord' would not 'be
+revealed' unless men made a highway for Him. True, that the revelation
+of His glory to the individual soul must be preceded by such a
+preparation; but that raising of abjectness and levelling of loftiness
+needs some perception of Him ere it can be done by man. Christ must come
+to the heart before the heart can be prepared for His coming. John the
+Baptist came crying in the wilderness, but his fiery message did little
+to cast up a highway for the footsteps of the King. John's immovable
+humility pierced to the very heart of the prophecy when he answered the
+question 'Who art thou?' with 'I am a voice. The voice was unnamed; why,
+what does it matter who I am?'
+
+The substance and the range of the coming manifestation are next
+defined. It is to be the revelation of 'the glory of the Lord,' and to
+be for all mankind, not for Israel only. That lowly life and that
+shameful death were a strange revelation of God's glory. If _they_
+revealed it, then it cannot consist in power or any of the majestic
+'attributes,' but in love, pity, and long-suffering. Love is the
+divinest thing in God. The guarantee for all lies simply here, that God
+has spoken it. It is because the unnamed herald's ear has heard the
+divine voice uttering the gracious assurances of verse 1, that _his_
+voice is lifted up in the commands and assurances of verse 4. Absolute
+faith in God's utterances, however they seem to transcend experience, is
+wisdom and duty.
+
+III. Yet another voice, whether sounding from heaven or earth is as
+uncertain as is the person to whom it is addressed, authoritatively
+commands a third to 'cry,' and, on being asked what is to be the burden
+of the call, answers. This new herald is to proclaim man's frailty and
+the immortal vigour of God's word, which secures the fulfilment of His
+promises. Is it the questioning voice, or the commanding one, which
+says, 'All flesh is grass,... the people is grass'? If the former, it is
+the utterance of hopelessness, all but refusing the commission. But,
+dramatic as that construction is, it seems better to regard the whole as
+the answer to the question, 'What shall I cry?' The repetition of the
+theme of man's frailty is not unnatural, and gives emphasis to the
+contrast of the unchangeable stability of God's word. An hour of the
+deadly hot wind will scorch the pastures, and all the petals of the
+flowers among the herbage will fall. So everything lovely, bright, and
+vigorous in humanity wilts and dies. One thing alone remains fresh from
+age to age,--the uttered will of Jehovah. His breath kills and makes
+alive. It withers the creatural, and it speaks the undying word.
+
+This message is to follow those others which tell of God's merciful
+promises, that trembling hearts may not falter when they see all created
+stays sharing the common lot, but may rest assured that God's promises
+are as good as God's facts, and so may hope when all things visible
+would preach despair. It was given to hearten confidence in the prophecy
+of a future revelation of the glory of God. It remains with us to
+hearten confidence in a past revelation, which will stand unshaken,
+whatever forces war against it. Its foes and its friends are alike
+short-lived as the summer's grass. The defences of the one and the
+attacks of the other are being antiquated while being spoken; but the
+bare word of God, the record of the incarnate Word, who is the true
+revelation of the glory of God, will stand for ever,--'And this is the
+Word which by the gospel is preached to you.'
+
+IV. The prophet seems to be the speaker in verses 9-11, or perhaps the
+same anonymous voice which already commanded the previous message
+summons Jerusalem to become the ambassadress of her God. The coming of
+the Lord is conceived as having taken place, and He is enthroned in
+Zion. The construction which takes Jerusalem or Zion (the double name so
+characteristic of the second part of Isaiah) to be the recipient of the
+good tidings is much less natural than that which regards her as their
+bearer.
+
+The word rendered 'tellest good tidings' is a feminine form, and falls
+in with the usual personification of a city as a woman. She, long laid
+in ruins, the Niobe of nations, the sad and desolate widow, is bid to
+bear to her daughter cities the glad tidings, that God is in her of a
+truth. It is exactly the same thought as 'Cry out and shout, thou
+inhabitant of Zion: for great is the Holy One of Israel in the midst of
+thee.' The prophecy refers to the Church. It sets forth her highest
+office as being the proclamation of her indwelling King. The possession
+of Christ makes the Church the evangelist for the world; for it gives
+the capacity and the impulse as well as the obligation to speak the glad
+tidings. Every Christian has this command binding on him by the fact of
+his having Christ.
+
+The command sets forth the bold clearness which should mark the herald's
+call. Naturally, any one with a message to peal out to a crowd would
+seek some vantage-ground, from which his words might fly the farther. If
+we have a message to deliver, let us seek the best place from which to
+deliver it. 'Lift up thy voice with strength.' No whisper will do. Bated
+breath is no fit vehicle for God's gospel. There are too many of God's
+heralds who are always apologising for their message, and seeking to
+reconcile it with popular opinions. We are all apt to speak truth less
+confidently because it is denied; but, while it is needful to speak with
+all gentleness and in meekness to them that oppose, it is cowardly, as
+well as impolitic, to let one tremor be heard in our tones though a
+world should deny our message.
+
+The command tells the substance of the Church's message. Its essence is
+the proclamation of the manifested God. To gaze on Jesus is to behold
+God. That God is made known in the twin glories of power and gentleness.
+He comes 'as a strong one.' His dominion rests on His own power, and on
+no human allies. His reign is retributive, and that not merely as
+penally recompensing evil, but as rewarding the faith and hope of those
+who waited for Him.
+
+But beyond the limits of our text, in verse 11, we have the necessary
+completion of the manifestation, in the lovely figure of the Shepherd
+carrying the lambs in His arms, and gently leading the flock of
+returning exiles. The strength of Jesus is His lowliness; and His mighty
+arm is used, not to wield an iron sceptre, but to gather us to His bosom
+and guide us in His ways. The paradox of the gospel, which points to a
+poor, weak man dying in the dark on a cross and says, 'Behold the great
+Power of God!' is anticipated in this prophecy. The triumphant paradox
+of the Apostle is shadowed here: 'We preach Christ crucified, ... the
+power of God, and the wisdom of God.'
+
+
+
+
+O THOU THAT BRINGEST GOOD TIDINGS
+
+'O Zion, that bringest good tidings, get thee up into the high mountain:
+O Jerusalem, that bringest good tidings, lift up thy voice with
+strength; lift it up, be not afraid; say unto the cities of Judah,
+Behold your God!'--ISAIAH xl. 9.
+
+
+There is something very grand in these august and mysterious voices
+which call one to another in the opening verses of this chapter. First,
+the purged ear of the prophet hears the divine command to him and to his
+brethren--Comfort Jerusalem with the message of the God who comes for
+her deliverance. Then afar off another voice is heard, the herald and
+forerunner of the approaching Deity; and when thus the foundation has
+been laid, yet another takes up the speech, and 'The voice said, Cry,'
+and the anonymous recipient of the command asks with what message he
+shall be entrusted, and the answer is the signature and pledge of the
+divine fulfilment of the word thus spoken. And then there comes, as I
+take it, a pause of silence, within which the great Epiphany and
+manifestation takes place, and the coming God comes, enters into the
+rebuilded city, and there shines in His beauty; and then breaks forth
+the rapturous commandment of my text to the resuscitated city, to tell
+to all her daughters of Judah the glad tidings of a present God.
+
+I need not, I suppose, spend your time in vindicating the translation of
+our Bible as against one which has been made very familiar by being
+wedded to Handel's music, and has commended itself to many, according to
+which Zion is rather the recipient than the herald of the tidings, 'O
+thou that tellest good tidings to Jerusalem, lift up thy voice with
+strength,' and so on.
+
+And I suppose I need not either spend any time in vindicating the
+transference of the text to the Gentile Church, beyond the simple remark
+that, whatever be the date of this second portion of Isaiah's prophecy,
+its standpoint is the time of the Captivity, when Jerusalem lay
+desolate, burned with fire, and all their pleasant things were laid
+waste, so that the city here addressed is the new form of the ancient
+Zion, which had risen from her ashes, and had a better tidings of glad
+significance to impart to all the nations. And so, dear brethren,
+looking at the words from that point of view, I think that they may very
+fairly yield to us two or three very old-fashioned and well-worn
+thoughts, which may yet be stimulating and encouraging to us. I take
+them as simply as possible, just as they run here in this text, which
+brings out very strikingly and beautifully, first, the function of the
+Evangelist Zion; secondly, the manner of her message; and lastly, its
+contents.
+
+I. Look with me at the thoughts that cluster round the name, 'O Zion,
+that bringest glad tidings.'
+
+It is almost a definition of the Church; at any rate, it is a
+description of her by her most characteristic office and function, that
+which marks and separates her from all associations and societies of
+men. This is her highest office; this is the reason of her being; this
+is her noblest dignity. All mystical powers have been claimed for her,
+men have been bidden to submit their judgment and manhood to her
+authority; but her true dignity is that she bears a gospel in her hand,
+and that grace is poured into her lips. Fond and sense-bound regrets
+have been sighed forth that her miracle-working gifts have faded away;
+but so long as her voice can quicken dead souls, and make the tongue of
+the dumb to speak, her noblest energies remain unimpaired, and so we may
+think of her as most exalted and dignified in that her Master addresses
+her, 'O Zion, that bringest good tidings.'
+
+Now, if I was right in my preliminary remark, to the effect that, prior
+to my text, we are to suppose the manifestation and approach of the
+Divine Deliverer, then I think it is quite clear that what constitutes
+Zion the messenger of good tidings is the presence in her of the living
+God. Translate that into New Testament language, and it just comes to
+this: that what constitutes the Church the evangelist for the world is
+the simple possession of Christ or of the Gospel. That thought branches
+into some considerations on which we may touch.
+
+The first of them is this: Whoever has Christ has the power to impart
+Him. All believers are preachers, or meant to be so, by virtue of the
+possession of that Divine Christ for your own. We Nonconformists are
+ready enough to proclaim the universal priesthood of all believers when
+we are opposing ecclesiastical assumption; are we as ready to take it
+for the law of our own lives, and to say, 'Yes, priests by the
+imposition of a mightier hand, and ministers of Christ by the possession
+of Christ, and therefore bound and able to impart Him to all around'? He
+has given us His love, and He thereby has made us fit to impart Him.
+Zion only needed to receive its God, in order thereby to possess the
+power to say unto all the cities of Judah, 'Behold your God.' It does
+not take much genius, it does not take much culture, it does not need
+any prolonged training, for a man who has Christ to say, 'Behold, I have
+Him.' The very first Christian sermon that was ever preached was a very
+short one, and a very effectual one, for it converted the whole
+congregation, and it was this: 'We have found the Messiah.' That was
+all--the utterance of individual possession and personal experience--and
+it 'brought him to Jesus.'
+
+Take another point. The possession of Christ for ourselves imposes upon
+us the obligation to impart Him. All property in this world is trust
+property, and everything that a man has that can help or bless the moral
+or spiritual or intellectual condition of his fellows, he is thereby
+under solemn obligation to impart. There is an obligation arising from
+the bands that knit us to one another, so that no man can possess his
+good alone without being untrue to what we call nowadays the solidarity
+of humanity. You have, you say, the bread of life: very well, what would
+you think of a man in a famine who, when women were boiling their
+children, and men were fighting with the swine on the dunghill for
+garbage, was content to eat his morsel alone, and leave others to perish
+by starvation? You possess, you say, the healing for all the diseases of
+humanity: very well, what would you think of a man who, in a pestilence,
+was contented with swallowing his own specific, and leaving others to
+die and to rot in the street? If you have the Christ, you have Him that
+you may impart Him. 'He that withholdeth bread, the people shall curse
+him'; of how much deeper malediction from despairing lips will they be
+thought worthy who call themselves the followers of Him that gave His
+life to be the bread of the world, and yet withhold it from famishing
+souls?
+
+And it is an obligation that arises, too, from the very purposes of our
+calling. What are Christian men and women saved for? For their own
+blessedness? Yes, and no. No creature in God's great universe but is
+great enough to be a worthy end of the divine action; the happiness of
+the humblest and most insignificant moves His mighty hand. Ay, but no
+creature in God's universe so great as that he is a worthy end of the
+divine action, if he is going to keep all the divine gifts in himself.
+We are all brought into the light that we may impart light.
+
+ 'Heaven doth with us as we with torches do;
+ Not light them for themselves; for if our virtues
+ Did not go forth of us, 'twere all alike
+ As if we had them not. Spirits are not finely touch'd
+ But to fine issues.'
+
+II. And now turn to the second thought which I desire to draw from these
+words. We have here, in a very picturesque and vivid form, the setting
+forth of the manner in which the Evangelist Zion is to proclaim her
+message.
+
+The fair-featured herald is bidden to get up into the high mountain--
+perhaps a mere picturesque detail, perhaps some reference to the local
+position of the city set upon a hill--like the priests on Ebal and
+Gerizim, or Alpine shepherds, calling to each other across the valleys,
+to secure some vantage-ground, and next, to let her voice roll out
+across the glen. No faltering whisper will do, but a voice that compels
+audience, that can be heard above the tumult and afar off, and confident
+and loud and clear, because courageous and without dread. 'Lift up thy
+voice with strength.' Yes, but a timid heart will make a tremulous
+voice, and fear and doubt will whisper a message when courage will ring
+it out. 'Be not afraid' is the foundation of the clearness and the
+loudness with which the word is to be uttered.
+
+That thought opens itself out into these two others, on each of which I
+say a word or two. Our message is to be given with a courage and a force
+that are worthy of it; 'Be not afraid.' That is a lesson for this day,
+my brethren. There are plenty of causes of fear round about us if, like
+poor Peter on the water, we look at the waves instead of at the Master.
+There are the great forces of evil that are always arrayed against
+Christ. There is the thoroughgoing and formidable rejection of all that
+is dearest to us, which is creeping like poison through cultivated
+society at home; there is the manifest disproportion between our
+resources and the task that we have set ourselves to. 'They need not
+depart; give ye them to eat,' said the Master. What! five thousand
+people need not depart, and only this scanty provision of loaves and
+fishes! Yes; the Master's hand can multiply it. There is the
+consciousness of our own weakness; there is the apparent slow progress
+of the Gospel in the world. All these things come surging in upon us
+when our spirits are low and our faith weak; and yet the message comes
+to us, 'Be not afraid.' I venture to break that injunction up into two
+or three exhortations, which I cast into the shape of exhortations, not
+from any assumption of superiority, but for the sake of point and force.
+
+First of all, I would say, let us cherish a firm, soul-absorbing
+confidence in the power and truth of the message we have to carry. I do
+not speak now of the intellectual discipline which may be required from
+each of us to meet the difficulties of this day--that is outside of my
+present subject; but there is a moral discipline quite as important as
+the intellectual. There cannot be any question, I suppose, to any one
+who looks round about, and notices the tendencies of his own mind, but
+that all we Christian people, in our various circles and organisations,
+are under a very great temptation to a very perceptible lowering of our
+key in the presence of widespread doubt. We are tempted to fancy that a
+truth is less certain because it is denied; that because a has attacked
+this thing, and b's clever book has unsettled that thing, and c's
+researches seem to cast a great deal of doubt upon that other thing,
+therefore we are to surrender them all, and talk about them as if they
+were doubtful problems or hypotheses rather than sure verities of our
+faith. And there are some of us, I venture to say, who are in danger of
+another temptation, and that is of getting a little ashamed and becoming
+afraid to say 'Yes, I stand by that great truth, God in Christ
+reconciling the world to Himself,' for fear of being thought to
+be--well, 'narrow' is the favourite word, 'old-fashioned,' or 'holders
+of a creed outworn,' 'in antagonism with the spirit of the age,' and so
+on, and so on. Brethren, I am not the man, I hope, to preach an
+unreasonable attitude of antagonism; I am not the man to ask anybody to
+exaggerate his beliefs because somebody else denies them, but I do
+believe that among us all, and especially among young men, there is the
+temptation just to be a little bit afraid, and not to let the voice ring
+out with that clear certitude which becomes the messenger of the Cross.
+Try by mental discipline to find intellectual standing-ground that will
+be firm below your feet, and then remember that that is not all, but
+that moral discipline is wanted also that I may open my mouth boldly, as
+I ought to speak.'
+
+And then, if I might venture to dwell for a moment or two further upon
+this class of consideration, I would say, Do not let us make too much of
+the enemy. There is no need why we should take them at their own
+appraisement. Men are always tempted to think that no generation ever
+had such a fight as their own generation. They have said that ever since
+there was a Christian Church. But the true, healthy way of looking at
+the adversary--and by that I mean all the various forms of difficulty
+which beset us in our evangelistic work, difficulties in the
+mission-field, difficulties in the state of things here round us--the
+true, healthy way of looking at them all, is to look at them as the
+brave Apostle Paul did, when he said, 'I am going to stop at Ephesus
+till Pentecost, for there is a great and effectual door opened to me.'
+And how did he know that? He tells us in the next clause, 'There are
+many adversaries.' Where there are many adversaries, there is an
+effectual door, if you and I are bold and big enough to go in and
+occupy.
+
+And then I would venture to say, still further, let us remember the
+victories of the past. Let us make personal experience of the overcoming
+powers that are stored and hidden in Christ's Gospel. And, above all,
+let us remember who fights with us. Jesus Christ and one man are always
+the majority. There is an old story, which you may remember, about the
+Conqueror of Rome, who dashed his sword into the scales when the ransom
+was being weighed; and Christ flings His sharp sword with the two edges
+into the scales when we are weighing resources, and the other kicks the
+beam. There are enemies, plenty of them, all round about. Yes, and the
+spreading forth of their wings fills the breadth of the land. Be it so.
+But notwithstanding the irruption of the barbarous and cruel hosts, it
+is 'Thy land, O Emanuel!' And in His time He will sweep them before His
+presence, as the north wind drives the locusts into the hindermost sea.
+I do not know if any of you remember an ancient Christian legend, and I
+do not know whether it is a legend or a truth--it does not matter, it
+will serve for our purpose all the same either way--how when the Emperor
+Julian, surnamed the Apostate, once taunted a humble Christian man with
+the question, 'What is the carpenter's son doing now?' and the answer
+was, 'Hewing wood for the emperor's funeral pile,' and not very long
+after there came the fatal field on which, according to ancient
+tradition, he died with the words on his lips, 'Thou hast conquered,
+Galilean. As in Carlyle's grand translation of Luther's Hymn of the
+Reformation--
+
+ 'Of our own strength we nothing can,
+ Full soon were we downridden;
+ But for us fights the proper Man,
+ Whom God Himself hath bidden.
+ Ask ye, who is the same?
+ Christ Jesus is His name,
+ The Lord Sabaoth's Son.
+ He and none other one
+ Shall conquer in this battle.'
+
+'Lift up thy voice with strength; lift it up, be not afraid.'
+
+III. I come to the last thought that emerges from these words, and that
+is the substance and contents of the Evangelist Zion's message: 'Say
+unto the cities of Judah, behold your God!'
+
+They were to be pointed to a great historical act, in which God had
+manifested and made Himself visible to men; and the words of my text
+are, not only an exclamation, but they are an entreaty, and the message
+was to be given to these little daughter cities of Judah as representing
+all of those for whom the deliverance had been wrought--all which things
+are paralleled in the message that is committed to our hand.
+
+For, first of all, we all have given to us the charge of pointing men to
+the great historical fact wherein God is visible to men, and so crying,
+'Behold your God!' God cannot be revealed by word, God cannot be
+revealed by thought. There is no way open to Him to make Himself known
+to His creatures except the way by which men make themselves known to
+one another; that is, by their deeds; and so, high above all
+speculation, high above all abstraction, nearer to us than all thought
+stands the historical fact in which God shows Himself to the world, and
+that is the person and work of Jesus Christ, 'the brightness of His
+glory and the express image of His person,' in whom the abysses of the
+divine nature are opened, and through whom all the certitude of divine
+light that human eyes can receive pours itself in genial and yet
+intensest radiance upon the world. How beautiful in that connection the
+verses following my text are I need only indicate in a word as I pass,
+'Behold, the Lord God will come with strong hand,' and yet, 'behold, He
+shall feed His flock like a shepherd.' And so in Christ is the power of
+God, for I take it that He is the arm of the Lord; and in Christ is the
+gentleness of God; and whilst men grope in the darkness, our business is
+to point to the living, dying Son, and to say, 'There you have the
+complete, the ultimate revelation of the unseen God.'
+
+And do not let us forget that the burning centre of all that brightness
+is the Cross, that ever-wondrous paradox; that the depth of humiliation
+is the height of glorifying; that Christ's Cross is the throne of the
+manifested divine power quite as much as it is the seat of the
+manifested divine love, and that when He is hanging there in His
+weakness and mortal agony, the words are yet true--strange, paradoxical,
+blessedly true--'He that hath seen Me hath seen the Father.' And when we
+say, pointing to His Cross and Him there, His brow paled with dying, and
+His soul faint with loss--when we say, 'Behold the Lamb!' we are also
+and therein saying, 'Behold your God!'
+
+And therefore, with what of gentleness, with what of tenderness, with
+what of patient entreaty as well as strength and confidence, the word
+that speaks of a strength manifested in weakness, and a God made visible
+in Christ, should be spoken, it needs not here to enlarge upon--only
+take that one last thought that I suggested, that this message comes to
+all those for whom God has appeared, and for whom the deliverance has
+been wrought. We each have the right, and we each have the charge, to go
+to every man and say, 'Behold your God!' and the hearts of men will leap
+up to meet the message. For, though overlaid by sin, perverted often
+into its own opposite by fear, misinterpreted and misunderstood by the
+very men that bear it, there yet lies deep in every heart the aching
+thirst for the living God, and we have the word that alone can meet that
+thirst. All around us men are saying--'In all the fields of science and
+of nature, in human history and in the spirit of men, I find no God,'
+and are falling back into that dreary negation, 'Behold, we know not
+anything!' And some of them, orphaned in their agony, are crying, though
+it be often in contemptuous tones that almost sound as if they meant the
+opposite, 'Oh, that I knew where I might find Him!' We have a word that
+can meet that. For cultivated Europe it has come to this--Christ or
+nothing; either He has shown us the Father, or there is no knowledge of
+Him possible. We do not need to dread the alternative; we can face it,
+and overcome it. And in far-off lands men are groping in twilight
+uncertainty, worshipping, with a nameless horror at their hearts, gods
+capricious, gods cruel, gods terrible--tamely believing in gods far-off
+and mysterious, cowering before gods careless and heartless, degrading
+their manhood by imitating gods foul and bestial, and yet all the while
+dimly feeling, 'Surely, surely there is somewhere a good and a fair
+Being, that has an eye to see my sorrows, and a heart to pity them; an
+ear to hear my prayer, and a hand to stretch out.' We have a word that
+can meet that. Let that word ring out, brother, as far as your influence
+can reach. Set the trumpet to thy mouth, and say, 'Behold your God!' and
+be sure that from the uttermost parts of the earth we shall hear the
+choral songs of many voices answering, 'Lo! this is our God, we have
+waited for Him, and He will save us! This is our God; we will be glad
+and rejoice in His salvation!'
+
+
+
+
+'HAVE YE NOT? HAST THOU NOT?'
+
+'Have ye not known, have ye not heard? hath it not been told yon from
+the beginning? have ye not understood from the foundations of the
+earth?... Hast thou not known? hast thou not heard?'--ISAIAH xl. 21 and
+28.
+
+
+The recurrence of the same form of interrogation in these two verses is
+remarkable. In the first case the plural is used, in the second the
+singular, and we may reasonably conclude that as Israel is addressed in
+the latter, the nations outside the sphere illumined by Revelation are
+appealed to in the former. The context of the two passages confirms this
+reference, for the witness of Creation and History is summoned in the
+former section, and that of God's inward dealings with trustful souls is
+brought out in the latter.
+
+I. What Nature and History tell men about God.
+
+Observe that emphatic '_told you_'; then the witness here appealed to is
+truly a Revelation, though a silent one. 'There is no speech nor
+language,' yet 'their line is gone out through all the earth, and their
+words to the ends of the world.'
+
+The general idea of the divine nature, as revealed 'from the beginning'
+and 'from the foundation of the earth,' is that of Majesty transcending
+all comparison.
+
+The contrast is drawn between Him and men, in the magnificent image of
+Him as throned above 'the circle of the earth,' and so far above that
+all the busy tribes of men 'are as grasshoppers,' their restless
+activity but aimless leaping, and 'the tumult of the peoples' only as a
+meaningless chirping.
+
+God's creative and sustaining power is further set forth by that great
+image of His 'stretching out the heavens as a curtain, and spreading
+them out as a tent to dwell in.' As easily as travellers set up their
+tents when the day's march is done, did He stretch the great expanse
+above the low earth; and all its depths and spaces are, in comparison
+with Him, thin, transient, and as easily rolled up and put aside as the
+stuff that makes a nomad's home for a night. Nor are the two implied
+thoughts that 'the heavens' are a veil screening Him from men even while
+they tell of Him to men, and that they are His lofty dwelling-place, to
+be left out of view.
+
+But in verse 26 we have a more specific and grander exhibition of God's
+relation to the Universe. The stars, in number numberless, are conceived
+of as a great army drilled and directed by Him. And that metaphor,
+familiar to us as it is, and condensed into the divine title so frequent
+in this prophetic book, is pregnant with great truths.
+
+It speaks of God as the Imperator, the Commander, exercising supreme
+authority by 'the word of His power,' and of creation as obedient
+thereto. 'For ever, O Lord, Thy word is settled in the heavens.' The
+Commander needs but to speak, and so mystic is the power of His uttered
+will, that effects on the material universe follow that altogether
+immaterial energy.
+
+It speaks of the harmony and order of the whole Creation. 'By number'
+and 'by name' He sways and ranks them. 'All things work together.' They
+are an ordered whole--a kosmos, not a chaos. Modern science is slowly
+establishing by experiment the truth which is enshrined in that old
+name, 'the Lord of hosts,' that all things in the physical universe are
+a unity.
+
+It speaks of the perfectness of God's knowledge of each item in the
+mighty whole. 'He calleth them all by name.' Thereby are expressed
+authority, ownership, particular knowledge of, and relation to, each
+individual of the overwhelming aggregate. God knows all, because He
+knows each.
+
+It speaks of the inexhaustible energy of His sustaining power, and the
+consequent strength of His creatures. 'Preservation is a continued
+creation.' The prophet saw much deeper than the mechanical view of the
+creative act. To him God was, to use more modern language, 'immanent' as
+well as 'transcendent.' True, He 'sits above the circle of the earth,'
+but as truly He is working on His creatures, and it is by His
+communicated strength that they are strong. If any being--star, or
+insect--were separated utterly from Him, it would crumble into
+nothingness.
+
+But the appeal to Creation is singularly interrupted by an appeal to
+History. The prophet drops from the serene expanse of the silent yet
+eloquent heavens to the stormy scenes of changing dynasties and
+revolutions of earth's kingdoms. How calm the one, how tumultuous the
+other! How the one witnesses to Him by its apparently unchanging
+continuance! how the other witnesses by its swift mutations! In the one,
+He is revealed as Preserver; in the other, the most clear demonstration
+of His power is given in His destroying of rebel kingdoms. But in these
+acts by which ancient and firmly rooted dynasties are rooted up or
+withered as by the simoom, He reveals a side of His nature to which the
+calm heavens bore no witness. He is the moral Governor of the world,
+'The history of the world is the judgment of the world,' and when hoary
+iniquities are smitten to death, 'the Holy One' is revealed as the
+righteous Judge. And the conjoint witness of creation and of history
+attests that none can be 'likened' to Him.
+
+II. What Revelation tells Israel about God.
+
+It is noteworthy that in the section of which our first text is the
+centre, there is no mention of the divine Name, and even the well-known
+title, 'the Holy One of Israel,' is truncated, so as to leave out
+reference to the people of Revelation; whereas in this section He is not
+only designated as God and Creator, but as Jehovah, the God who has made
+a covenant with Israel, and made known His will and to some extent His
+nature. The distinct climax in the divine Names itself implies a nobler
+relation to men, and a clearer revelation than was declared in the
+former part of this prophecy. It is the fitting preparation for the
+loftier and infinitely more tender and touching aspect of the divine
+nature which shines with lambent, inviting lustre within the sphere of
+Revelation.
+
+The distinctive glory of the long process of God's self-manifestation to
+Israel is that, while it emphasises all that nature and history affirm
+of Him, it sets Him forth as restoring the weak, as well as sustaining
+the strong. The sad contrast between the untroubled and unwearied
+strength of the calm heavens and the soon-exhausted strength of
+struggling and often beaten men strikes the poet prophet's sensitive
+soul. He did not know, what modern astronomy teaches us, that change,
+convulsions, ruin, are not confined to earth, but that stars as well as
+men faint and fail, dwindle and die. The scriptural view of Nature is
+not that of the scientist, but that of the poet and of the devout man.
+It lies quite apart from the scientific attitude, and has as good a
+right to exist as it has. The contrast of heaven and earth is for the
+prophet the contrast of strength with weakness, of joyful harmony with
+moral disorder, of punctual, entire obedience with rebellion and the
+clash of multitudes of anarchic self-willed men.
+
+But there is a sadder contrast still--namely, that between God and the
+wretched weaklings that men have made of themselves. 'He fainteth not,
+neither is weary.' Strange anomaly that in His universe there should be
+the faint and 'them that have no might'! The only explanation of such an
+exception to the order of Creation is that men have broken loose from
+Creation's dependence on God, and that therefore the inflow of
+sustaining strength has been checked. In other words, man's weakness
+comes from man's sin.
+
+Hence to restore strength to those whose power has been drained away by
+sin is God's divinest work. It is more to restore than to sustain. It
+takes less energy to keep a weight stationary at a height than to roll
+it up again if it falls to the bottom. Since sin is the cause of our
+weakness, the first step to deliver from the weakness is to deliver from
+the sin. If we are ever to be restored, hearts, consciences, averted
+wills must be dealt with--and but One Hand can deal with these.
+
+And not only does God outdo all His mightiest works in the work of
+restoring strength to the faint, but He crowns that restoration by
+making the restored weakling like Himself. 'He fainteth not, neither is
+weary.' They, too, 'shall ran and not be weary, they shall walk and not
+faint.' In the long drawn out grind of monotonous marching along the
+common path of daily small duties and uneventful life, they shall not
+faint; in the rare occasional spurts, occurring in every man's
+experience, when extraordinary tax is laid on heart and limbs, they
+shall not be weary. And they will be able both to walk and to run,
+because they soar on wings as eagles. And they do all because they wait
+on the Lord. Communion with Him buoys us above this low earth, and bears
+us up into the heavenly places, and, living there, we shall be fit for
+the slow hours of commonplace plodding and for the crowded moments of
+great crises.
+
+
+
+
+UNFAILING STABS AND FAINTING MEN
+
+'...For that He is strong in power; not one faileth.... He giveth power
+to the faint; and to them that have no might He increaseth strength.'--
+ISAIAH xl. 26 and 29.
+
+
+These two verses set forth two widely different operations of the divine
+power as exercised in two sadly different fields, the starry heavens and
+this weary world. They are interlocked, as it were, by the recurrence in
+the latter of the emphatic words of the former. The one verse says, 'He
+is strong in power'; the other, 'He giveth power.' In the former verse,
+'the greatness of His might' sustains the stars; in the latter verse, a
+still diviner operation is set forth in that 'to them that have no might
+He increaseth strength.' Thus there are three contrasts suggested: that
+between unfailing stars, and men that faint; that between the unwearied
+God and wearied men; and that between the sustaining power that is
+exercised in the heavens and the restoring power that is manifested on
+earth.
+
+There is another interlocking between the latter of these two texts and
+its context, which is indicated by a similar recurrence of epithets. In
+my second text we read of the 'faint,' and in the verse that follows it,
+again we find the expressions 'faint' and 'weary,' while in the verse
+before my text we read that 'the Lord fainteth not, neither is weary.'
+So again the contrast between Him and us is set forth, but, in the verse
+that closes the chapter, we read how that contrast merges into likeness,
+inasmuch as the unfainting and unwearied God makes even the men that
+wait upon Him unwearied and unfainting. Here, then, we have lessons that
+we may well ponder.
+
+Note, first--
+
+I. That sad contrast.
+
+The prophet in the former of these verses seems to be expanding the
+thoughts that lie in the name, 'the Lord of hosts,' in so far as that
+name expresses the divine relation to the starry universe. The image
+that underlies both it and the words of the text is that of a captain
+who commands his soldiers, and they obey. Discipline and plan array them
+in their ranks; they are not a mob, but an army. The voice that reads
+the roll-call summons one after another to his place, and, punctually
+obedient, there they stand, ready for any evolution that may be
+prescribed. The plain prose of which is, that night by night above the
+horizon rise the bright orbs, and roll on their path obedient to the
+Sovereign will; 'because He is strong in might not one' is lacking.
+Astronomers have taught us, what the prophet did not know, that even in
+the apparently serene spaces there are collisions and catastrophes, and
+that stars may dwindle and dim, and finally go out. But while Scripture
+deals with creation neither from the scientific nor from the aesthetic
+point of view, it leaves room for both of these--for all that the poet's
+imagination can see or say, for all that the scientist's investigation
+can discover, it sees that beneath the beauty is the Fountain of all
+loveliness, beneath and behind the 'number' of the numberless stars
+works the infinite will of God. Surely an intelligible creation must
+have an intelligent source. Surely a universe in which Mind can
+apprehend order and number must have a Mind at the back of it.
+Wordsworth has nobly said of Duty what we may more truly say of God:
+'Thou dost preserve the stars from wrong, And the most ancient heavens
+through Thee are fresh and strong.' 'For that He is great in might, not
+one faileth.' Scripture bids us think of God, not as a creative energy
+that set the universe in motion, and leaves it to roll or spin, but as
+of a Divine Presence--to use a word which can only be in a very modified
+sense applied to that mysterious, intelligent Entity--operating in, and
+being the sustaining Cause of, all that is. This Divine Presence stamps
+its signature on the unfailing strength of these bright creatures above.
+
+But in our second text we drop from the illumination of the heavens to
+the shadowed plain of this low earth. It is as if a man, looking up into
+the violet sky, with all its shining orbs, should then turn to some
+reeking alley, with its tumult and its squalor. Just because man is
+greater than the stars, man 'fails,' whilst they shine on unwearied. For
+what the prophet has in view as the clinging curse that cleaves to our
+greatness, is not merely the bodily fatigue which is necessarily
+involved in the very fact of bodily existence, since energy cannot be
+put forth without waste and weariness, but it is far more the weary
+heart, the heart that is weary of itself, the heart that is weary of
+toil, the heart that is weary of the momentary crises that demand
+effort, and wearier still of the effortless monotony of our daily lives;
+the heart that all of us carry, and which to all of us sometimes
+whispers, with a dark and gloomy voice which we cannot contradict,
+'Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.' I was going to say, happy are you
+if you do not know that weariness, but I check myself and say, tenfold
+more miserable are you if you have never been sober and wise enough to
+have felt the weariness and weight of all this unintelligible world, and
+of your own sorry selves.
+
+For it is ever to be remembered that the faintness and the ebbing away
+of might, which is the truly tragic thing in humanity, does not depend
+upon physical constitution, but upon separation from the Source of all
+strength, breaking the union between ourselves and God. If a star could
+shake off its dependence, and shut out the influx of the sustaining
+power that by continual creation preserves it, it would die into
+darkness, or crumble into dust. It cannot, and we cannot, in so far as
+our physical being is concerned, but we can shake ourselves free from
+God, in so far as the life of the spirit is concerned, and the godless
+spirit bears the Cain-curse of restlessness and weariness ever upon it.
+So the contrast between the unfailing strengths that ever shine down
+upon us from the heavens, and the weariness of body and of mind
+afflicting the sleeping millions on whom they shine, is tragical indeed.
+But far more tragical is the contrast, of which the other is but an
+indication because it is a consequence, the contrast between the
+punctual obedience with which these hosts, summoned by the great
+Commander, appear and take their places, and the self-will which turns a
+man into a 'wandering star unto whom is reserved the blackness of
+darkness for ever.' Above is peace and order, because above is the
+supremacy of an uncontested will. Below is tumult and weariness, because
+when God says 'Thou shalt,' men respond, 'I will not.'
+
+Secondly, my text suggests to us--
+
+II. Another sad contrast, melting into a blessed likeness.
+
+'He fainteth not, neither is weary.' 'He giveth power to the faint.'
+'Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall
+utterly fail,' but waiting on God the curse removes, and faintness and
+weariness cease, and the humble man becomes in some measure participant
+of, and conformed to, that life which knows no exhausting, operates
+unspent, burns with an undying flame, works and never wearies. We may
+take to ourselves all the peace and strength that come from that
+transcendent hope, whilst we are still subject, as of course we must be,
+to the limitations imposed on spirits fettered, as well as housed, in
+body. Whilst toil leaves as its consequence fatigue, and as our days
+increase our strength wanes; whilst physical weariness remains
+unaffected, there may pour into our spirits the influx of divine power,
+by which they will remain fresh and strong through advancing years and
+heavy tasks and stiff battles. Is it not something to believe it
+possible that
+
+ 'In old age, when others fade,
+ _We_ fruit still forth shall bring'
+
+Is it not something to know it as a possibility that we may have that
+within us which has no tendency to decay, which neither perishes with
+the using nor is exhausted by exercise, which grows the more the longer
+we live, which has in it the pledge of immortality, because it has in it
+the impossibility of exhaustion? Thus to all of us who know how weary
+life sometimes is, thus to those of us who in the flush of our youth are
+deceived into thinking that the vigorous limbs will always be vigorous,
+and the clear eyesight will always be keen, and to those of us who, in
+the long weary levels of middle life, where there are few changes, are
+worn out by the eventless recurrence, day after day, of duties that have
+become burdensome, because they are so small, and to those of us who are
+learning by experience how inevitably early strength utterly fails; to
+us all surely it comes us a gospel, 'They that wait on the Lord shall
+renew their strength; they shall run and not be weary, they shall walk
+and not faint.' It is true; and each of us may set to our seals, if we
+will, that the promise is faithful and sure.
+
+Is that not a higher exercise of power than to 'preserve the stars from
+wrong'? Is not the strength that restores mightier than the strength
+that sustains? Is not the hand that, put beneath the falling body, stops
+its plunge, and lifts it whence it fell, displaying a greater
+manifestation of strength, than the hand that held it unfailing at the
+height? The mighty miracle of the calm, steadfast heavens, with no
+vacant spaces where yesterday a star blazed, is less than the miracle of
+that restoring energy which, coming to men separated from the Fountain
+of power, re-establishes the connection between them, and out of the
+fainting creature makes one that is neither faint nor weary for ever.
+God is greater, in the miracle that He works upon you and me, poor
+strengthless souls, than when He rolls the stars along. Redemption is
+more than Creation, and to the hosts of 'the principalities and powers
+in heavenly places, is made known,' by the Church, 'of restored and
+redeemed souls, the manifold wisdom of God.'
+
+What are the consequences that the prophet traces to this restoring
+power? 'They shall mount up with wings as eagles.' Power to soar, to
+lift our heavy selves from earth, and to reach the heavenly places where
+we shall commune with God, that is the greatest of all gifts to
+strengthened spirits. And it is the foundation of all the others, for it
+is only they who know how to soar that can creep, and it is only they
+who have renewed their strength hour by hour, by communion with the
+Source of all energy and might, who when they 'drop with quivering
+wings, composed and still,' down to the low earth, there live unwearied
+and unfainting.
+
+'They shall run and not be weary.' Crises come--moments when
+circumstances demand from us more than ordinary energy and swifter rate
+of progress. We have often, in the course of our years, to make short
+spurts of unusual effort. 'They shall run and not be weary. They shall
+walk.' The bulk of our lives is a slow jog-trot, and it is harder to
+keep elasticity, buoyancy, freshness of spirit, in the eventless mill-
+horse round of our trivial lives than it is in the rarer bursts.
+Excitement helps us in the one; nothing but dogged principle, and close
+communion with God, 'mounting on wings as eagles,' will help us in the
+other. But we may have Him with us in all the arid and featureless
+levels across which we have to plod, as well as in the height to which
+we sometimes have to struggle upwards, or in the depths into which we
+have sometimes to plunge. If we have the life of Christ within us, then
+neither the one nor the other will exhaust our energy or darken our
+spirits.
+
+Lastly, one word as to--
+
+III. The way by which these contrasts can be reconciled, and this
+likeness secured.
+
+'They that wait upon the Lord'--that is the whole secret. What does
+waiting on the Lord include? Let me put it in three brief exhortations.
+Keep near Him; keep still; expect. If I stray away from Him, I cannot
+expect His power to come to me. If I fling myself about, in vain
+impatience, struggling, resisting providences, shirking duties,
+perturbing my soul, I cannot expect that the peace which brings
+strength, or the strength which brings peace, will come to me. It must
+be a windless sea that mirrors the sunshine and the blue, and the
+troubled heart has not God's strength in it. If I do not expect to get
+anything from Him, He will not give me anything; not because He will
+not, but because He cannot. Take the old Psalmist's words, 'I have
+quieted myself as a weaned child,' and nestle on the great bosom, and
+its warmth, its fragrance, its serenity will be granted to you. Keep
+hold of God's hand in expectation, in submission, in close union, and
+the contact will communicate something of His own power. 'In quietness
+and in confidence shall be your strength.' The bitter contrasts may all
+be harmonised, and the miraculous assimilation of humanity to divinity
+may, in growing measure according to our faith, be realised in us. And
+though we must still bear the limitations of our present corporeal
+condition, and though life's tasks must still oftentimes be felt by us
+as toils, and life's burdens as too burdensome for our feeble shoulders,
+yet we shall be held up. 'As thy day so shall thy strength be,' and at
+last, when we mount up further than eagle's wings have ever soared, and
+look down upon the stars that are 'rolled together as a scroll,' we
+shall through eternal ages 'run and not be weary' and 'walk and not
+faint.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SECRET OF IMMORTAL YOUTH
+
+'Even the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall
+utterly fall. But they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their
+strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run and
+not be weary; and they shall walk and not faint.'--ISAIAH xl. 30, 31.
+
+
+I remember a sunset at sea, where the bosom of each wavelet that fronted
+the west was aglow with fiery gold, and the back of each turned eastward
+was cold green; so that, looking on the one hand all was glory, and on
+the other all was sober melancholy. So differently does life look to you
+young people and to us older ones. Every man must buy his own experience
+for himself, and no preaching nor talking will ever make you see life as
+we see it. It is neither possible nor desirable that you should; but it
+is both possible and most desirable that you should open your eyes to
+plain, grave facts, which do not at all depend on our way of looking at
+things, and that if they be ascertainable, as they are, you should let
+them shape your lives.
+
+Here are a couple of facts in my text which I ask you to look steadily
+in the face, and to take account of them, because, if you do so now, it
+may save you an immense deal of disappointment and sorrow in the days
+that are to come. You have the priceless prerogative still in your hands
+of determining what that future is to be; but you will never use that
+power rightly if you are guided by illusions, or if, unguided by
+anything but inclination, you let things drift, and do as you like.
+
+So, then, my object is simply to deal with these two forecasts which my
+text presents; the one a dreary certainty of weariness and decay, the
+other a blessed possibility of inexhaustible and incorruptible strength
+and youth, and on the contrast to build as earnest an appeal to you as I
+can make.
+
+I. Now, then, look at the first fact here, that of the dreary certainty
+of weariness and decay.
+
+I do not need to spend much time in talking about that. It is one of the
+commonplaces which are so familiar that they have lost all power of
+impression, and can only be rescued from their trivial insignificance by
+being brought into immediate connection with our own experience. If,
+instead of the toothless generality, 'the youths shall faint and be
+weary,' I could get you young people to say, '_I--I_ shall faint and be
+weary, and, as sure as I am living, I shall lose what makes to me the
+very joy of life at this moment,' I should not have preached in vain.
+
+Of course the words of my text point to the plain fact that all created
+and physical life, by the very law of its being, in the act of living
+tends to death; and by the very operation of its strength tends to
+exhaustion. There are three stages in every creature's life--that of
+growth, that of equilibrium, that of decay. You are in the first. If you
+live, it is as certain as fate that you will come to the second and the
+third. _Your_ 'eyes will grow dim,' _your_ 'natural force' will be
+'abated,' _your_ body will become a burden, _your_ years that are full
+of buoyancy will be changed for years of heaviness and weariness,
+strength will decay, 'and the young men'--that is _you_--'shall utterly
+fall.'
+
+And the text points also to another fact, that, long before your natural
+life shall have begun to tend towards decay, hard work and occasional
+sorrows and responsibilities and burdens of all sorts will very often
+make you wearied and ready to faint. In your early days you dream of
+life as a kind of enchanted garden, full of all manner of delights; and
+you stand at the threshold with eager eyes and outstretched hands. Ah!
+dear young friend, long before you have traversed the length of one of
+its walks, you will often have been sick and tired of the whole thing,
+and weary of what is laid upon you.
+
+My text points to another fact, as certain as gravitation, that the
+faintness and weariness and decay of the bodily strength will be
+accompanied with a parallel change in your feelings. We are drawn onward
+by hopes, and when we get them fulfilled we find that they are
+disappointing. Custom, which weighs upon us 'heavy as frost, and deep
+almost as life,' takes the edge off everything that is delightsome,
+though it does not so completely take away the pain of things that are
+burdensome and painful. Men travel from a tinted morning into the sober
+light of common day, and with failing faculties and shattered illusions
+and dissipated hopes, and powers bending under the long monotony of
+middle life, most of them live. Now all that is the veriest threadbare
+morality, and I dare say while I have been speaking, some of you have
+been thinking that I am repeating platitudes that every old woman could
+preach. So I am. That is to say, I am trying to put into feeble words
+the universal human experience. That is your experience, and what I want
+to get you to think about now is that, as sure as you are living and
+rejoicing in your youth and strength, this is the fate that is awaiting
+you--'the youths shall faint and be weary, and shall utterly fall.'
+
+Well, then, one question: Do you not think that, if that is so, it would
+be as well to face it? Do you not think that a wise man would take
+account of all the elements in forecasting his life and would shape his
+conduct accordingly? If there be something certain to come, it is a very
+questionable piece of wisdom to make that the thing which we are most
+unwilling to think about. I do not want to be a kill-joy; I do not want
+to take anything out of the happy buoyancy of youth. I would say, as
+even that cynical, bitter Ecclesiastes says, 'Rejoice, O young man, in
+thy youth; and let thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth.' By
+all means; only take all the facts into account, and if you have joys
+which shrivel up at the touch of this thought, then the sooner you get
+rid of such joys the better. If your gladness depends upon your forcibly
+shutting your eyes to what is inevitably certain to come about, do you
+not think that you are living in a fool's paradise that you had better
+get out of as soon as possible? There is the fact. Will you be a wise
+and brave man and front it, and settle how you are going to deal with
+it, or will you let it hang there on your horizon, a thunder-cloud that
+you do not like to look at, and that you are all the more unwilling to
+entertain the thought of, because you are so sure that it will burst in
+storm? Lay this, then, to heart, though it is a dreary certainty, that
+weariness and decay are sure to be your fate.
+
+II. Now turn, in the next place, to the blessed opposite possibility of
+inexhaustible and immortal strength. 'They that wait upon the Lord shall
+renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they
+shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.' The life of
+nature tends inevitably downward, but there may be another life within
+the life of nature, which shall have the opposite motion, and tend as
+certainly upwards. 'The youths shall faint and be weary'--whether they
+be Christians or not, the law of decay and fatigue will act upon them;
+but there may be that within each of us, if we will, which shall resist
+that law, and have no proclivity whatsoever to extinction in its blaze,
+to death in its life, to weariness in its effort, and shall be
+replenished and not exhausted by expenditure. 'They that wait upon the
+Lord shall renew their strength,' and, in all forms of motion possible
+to a creature they shall expatiate and never tire. So let us look on
+this blessed possibility a little more closely.
+
+Note, then, how to get at it. 'They that wait upon the Lord' is Old
+Testament dialect for what in New Testament phraseology is meant by
+'Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ.' For the notion expressed here by
+'waiting' is that of expectant dependence, and the New Testament 'faith'
+is the very same in its attitude of expectant dependence, while the
+object of the Old Testament 'waiting,' Jehovah, is identical with the
+object of the New Testament faith, which fastens on God manifest in the
+flesh, the Man Jesus Christ.
+
+Therefore, I am not diverting the language of my text from its true
+meaning, but simply opening its depth, when I say that the condition of
+the inflow of this unwearied and immortal life into our poor, fainting,
+dying humanity is simply the trust in Jesus Christ the Redeemer of our
+souls. True, the revelation has advanced; the contents of that which we
+grasp are more developed and articulate, blessed be God! True, we know
+more about Jehovah, when we see Him in Jesus Christ, than Isaiah did.
+True, we have to trust in Him as dying on the Cross for our salvation
+and as the pattern and example in His humanity of all nobleness and
+beauty of life for young or old, but the Christ is the 'same yesterday,
+and to-day, and for ever.' And the faith that knit the furthest back of
+the saints of old to the Jehovah, whom they dimly knew, is in essence
+identical with the faith that binds my poor sinful heart to the Christ
+that died and that lives for my redemption and salvation. So, dear
+brethren, here is the simple old message for each of you, young or old.
+No matter where we stand on the course of life, there may come into our
+hearts a Divine Indweller, who laughs at weariness and knows nothing of
+decay; and He will come if, as sinful men, we turn ourselves to that
+dear Lord, who fainted and was weary many a time in His humanity, and
+who now lives, the 'strong Son of God, immortal love,' to make us
+partakers in His immortality and His strength. The way, then, by which
+we get this divine gift is by faith in Jesus Christ, which is the
+expansion, as it was the root, of trust in Jehovah.
+
+Further, what is this strength that we thus get, if we will, by faith?
+It is the true entrance into our souls of a divine life. God in His Son
+will come to us, according to His own gracious and profound promise: 'If
+any man open the door I will enter in.' He will come into our hearts and
+abide there. He will give to us a life derived from, and therefore,
+kindred with, His own. And in that connection it is very striking to
+notice how the prophet, in the context, reiterates these two words,
+_'fainteth_ not, neither is _weary._' He begins by speaking of 'God, the
+Lord, the Creator of the ends of the earth, who fainteth not, neither is
+weary.' He passes on to speak of His gift of power to the faint. He
+returns to the contrast between the Creator's incorruptible strength and
+the fleeting power of the strongest and youngest. And then he crowns all
+with the thought that the same characteristics will mark them in whom
+the unwearied God dwells, as mark Him. We too, like Him, if we have
+Christ in our hearts by faith, will share, in some fashion and degree,
+in His wondrous prerogative of unwearied strength.
+
+So, brethren, here is the promise. God will give Himself to you, and in
+the very heart of your decaying nature will plant the seed of an
+immortal being which shall, like His own, shake off fatigue from the
+limbs, and never tend to dissolution or an end. The life of nature dies
+by living; the life of grace, which may belong to us all, lives by
+living, and lives evermore thereby. And so that life is continuous and
+progressive, with no tendency to decay, nor term to its being. 'The path
+of the just is as the shining light that shineth more and more,' until
+it riseth to the zenith of the noontide of the day. Each of you, looking
+forward to the certain ebbing away of creatural power, to the certain
+changes that will pass upon you, may say, 'I know that I shall have to
+leave behind me my present youthful strength, my unworn freshness, my
+buoyancy, my confidence, my wonder, my hope; but I shall carry my
+Christ; and in Him I shall possess the secret of an immortal youth.'
+
+The oldest angels are the youngest. The longer men live in fellowship
+with Christ, the stronger do they grow. And though our lives, whether we
+are Christians or no, are necessarily subject to the common laws of
+mortality, we may carry all that is worth preserving of the earliest
+stages into the latest; and when grey hairs are upon us, and we are
+living next door to our graves, we may still have the enthusiasm, the
+energy, and above all, the boundless hopefulness that made the gladness
+and the spring of our long-buried youth. 'They shall still bring forth
+fruit in old age.' 'The youths shall faint and be weary, but they that
+wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength.'
+
+There is one more point to touch, and then I have done, and that is the
+manner in which this immortal strength is exercised. The latter clauses
+of my text give us, so to speak, three forms of motion. 'They shall
+mount up with wings as eagles.' Some good commentators find in this a
+parallel to the words in the 103rd Psalm, 'My youth is renewed like the
+eagle's,' and propose to translate it in this fashion, 'They shall cast
+their plumage like the eagle.' But it seems much more in accordance with
+the context and the language to adopt substantially the reading of our
+English version here, or to make the slight change, 'They shall lift up
+their wings as the eagle,' implying, of course, the steady upward flight
+towards the light of heaven.
+
+So, then, there are three forms of unwearied strength lying ready for
+you, young men and women, to take for your very own if you like:
+strength to soar, strength to run, strength to walk.
+
+There is strength to soar. Old men generally shed their wings, and can
+only manage to crawl. They have done with romance. Enthusiasms are dead.
+Sometimes they cynically smile at their own past selves and their
+dreams. And it is a bad sign when an old man does that. But for the most
+part they are content, unless they have got Christ in their hearts, to
+keep along the low levels, and their soaring days are done. But if you
+and I have Jesus Christ for the life of our spirits, as certainly as
+fire sends its shooting tongues upwards, so certainly shall we rise
+above the sorrows and sins and cares of this 'dim spot which men call
+earth,' and find an ampler field for buoyant motion high up in communion
+with God. Strength to soar means the gracious power of bringing all
+heaven into our grasp, and setting our affections on things above. As
+the night falls, and joys become fewer and life sterner, and hopes
+become rarer and more doubtful, it is something to feel that, however
+straitened may be the ground below, there is plenty of room above, and
+that, though we are strangers upon earth, we can lift our thoughts
+yonder. If there be darkness here, still we can 'outsoar the shadow of
+our night,' and live close to the sun in fellowship with God. Dear
+brethren, life on earth were too wretched unless it were possible to
+'mount up with wings as eagles.'
+
+Again, you may have strength to run--that is to say, there is power
+waiting for you for all the great crises of your lives which call for
+special, though it may be brief, exertion. Such crises will come to each
+of you, in sorrow, work, difficulty, hard conflicts. Moments will be
+sprung upon you without warning, in which you will feel that years hang
+on the issue of an instant. Great tasks will be clashed down before you
+unexpectedly which will demand the gathering together of all your power.
+And there is only one way to be ready for such times as these, and that
+is to live waiting on the Lord, near Christ, with Him in your hearts,
+and then nothing will come that will be too hard for you. However rough
+the road, and however severe the struggle, and however swift the pace,
+you will be able to keep it up. Though it may be with panting lungs and
+a throbbing heart, and dim eyes and quivering muscles, yet if you wait
+on the Lord you will run and not be weary. You will be masters of the
+crises.
+
+Strength to walk may be yours--that is to say, patient power for
+persistent pursuit of weary, monotonous duty. That is the hardest, and
+so it is named last. Many a man finds it easy, under the pressure of
+strong excitement, and for a moment or two, to keep up a swift pace, who
+finds it very difficult to keep steadily at unexciting work. And yet
+there is nothing to be done except by doggedly plodding along the dusty
+road of trivial duties, unhelped by excitement and unwearied by
+monotony. Only one thing will conquer the disgust at the wearisome round
+of mill-horse tasks which, sooner or later, seizes all godless men, and
+that is to bring the great principles of the gospel to bear on them, and
+to do them in the might and for the sake of the dear Lord. 'They shall
+run and not be weary, they shall walk' along life's common way in
+cheerful godliness, 'and they shall not faint.'
+
+Dear friends, life to us all is, and must be, full of sorrow and of
+effort. Constant work and frequent sorrows wear us all out, and bring us
+many a time to the verge of fainting. I beseech you to begin right, and
+not to add to the other occasions for weariness that of having to
+retrace, with remorseful heart and ashamed feet, the paths of evil on
+which you have run. Begin right, which is to say, begin with Christ and
+take Him for inspiration, for pattern, for guide, for companion. 'Run
+with patience the race set before you, looking unto Jesus the author of
+your faith, lest ye be wearied and faint in your minds.'
+
+And if you have Him in your hearts, then, however your creatural power
+may grow weary, yet because He is with you, 'your shoes shall be iron
+and brass, and as your days so shall your strength be,' and you may lift
+up in your turn the glad, triumphant acknowledgment: 'For this cause we
+faint not, but though our outward man perish, our inward man is renewed
+day by day.'
+
+God bless you all and make that your experience!
+
+
+
+
+CHRIST THE ARRESTER OF INCIPIENT EVIL AND THE NOURISHER OF INCIPIENT
+GOOD
+
+'A bruised reed shall He not break, and the smoking flax shall He not
+quench.... He shall not fail nor be discouraged.'--ISAIAH xlii. 3, 4.
+
+
+The two metaphors which we have in the former part of these words are
+not altogether parallel. 'A bruised reed' has suffered an injury which,
+however, is neither complete nor irreparable. 'Smoking flax,' on the
+other hand--by which, of course, is meant flax used as a wick in an
+old-fashioned oil lamp--is partially lit. In the one a process has been
+begun which, if continued, ends in destruction; in the other, a process
+has been begun which, if continued, ends in a bright flame. So the one
+metaphor may refer to the beginnings of evil which may still be averted,
+and the other the beginnings of incipient and incomplete good. If we
+keep this distinction in mind, the words of our text gain wonderfully in
+comprehensiveness.
+
+Then again, it is to be noticed that in the last words of our text,
+which are separated from the former by a clause which we omit, we have
+an echo of these metaphors. The word translated 'fail' is the same as
+that rendered in the previous verse 'smoking,' or 'dimly burning'; and
+the word 'discouraged' is the same as that rendered in the previous
+verse 'bruised.' So then, this 'Servant of the Lord,' who is not to
+break the bruised reed nor quench the smoking flax, is fitted for His
+work, because He Himself has no share in the evils which He would heal,
+and none in the weaknesses which He would strengthen. His perfect
+manhood knows no flaws nor bruises; His complete goodness is capable of
+and needs no increase. Neither outward force nor inward weakness can
+hinder His power to heal and bless; therefore His work can never cease
+till it has attained its ultimate purpose. 'He shall not fail nor be
+discouraged'; shall neither be broken by outward violence, nor shall the
+flame of His fading energy burn faint until He hath 'set judgment in the
+earth,' and crowned His purposes with complete success.
+
+We have, then, here set before us three significant representations of
+the servant of the Lord, which may well commend Him to our confidence
+and our love. I shall not spend any time in answering the question: Of
+whom speaketh the prophet this? The answer is plain for us. He speaks of
+the personal Servant of the Lord, and the personal Servant of the Lord
+is Jesus Christ our Saviour. I ask you then to come with me while I
+deal, as simply as may be, with these three ideas that lie before us in
+this great prophecy.
+
+I. Consider then, first, the representation of the Servant of the Lord
+as the arrester of incipient ruin.
+
+'He shall not break the bruised reed.' Here is the picture--a slender
+bulrush, growing by the margin of some tarn or pond; its sides crushed
+and dented in by some outward power, a gust of wind, a sudden blow, the
+foot of a passing animal. The head is hanging by a thread, but it is not
+yet snapped or broken off from the stem.
+
+But, blessed be God! there emerges from the metaphor not only the solemn
+thought of the bruises by sin that all men bear, but the other blessed
+one, that there is no man so bruised as that he is broken; none so
+injured as that restoration is impossible, no depravity so total but
+that it may be healed, none so far off but that he may be brought nigh.
+On no man has sin fastened its venomous claws so deeply but that these
+may be wrenched away. In none of us has the virus so gone through our
+veins but that it is capable of being expelled. The reeds are all
+bruised, the reeds are none of them broken. And so my text comes with
+its great triumphant hopefulness, and gathers into one mass as capable
+of restoration the most abject, the most worthless, the most ignorant,
+the most sensuous, the most godless, the most Christ-hating of the race.
+Jesus looks on all the tremendous bulk of a world's sins with the
+confidence that He can move that mountain and cast it into the depths of
+the sea.
+
+There is a man in Paris that says he has found a cure for that horrible
+disease of hydrophobia, and who therefore regards the poor sufferers of
+whom others despair as not beyond the reach of hope. Christ looks upon a
+world of men smitten with madness, and in whose breasts awful poison is
+working, with the calm confidence that He carries in His hand an elixir,
+one drop of which inoculated into the veins of the furious patient will
+save him from death, and make him whole. 'The blood of Jesus Christ
+cleanseth from all sin.' 'He will not break,' and that means He will
+restore, 'the bruised reed.' There are no hopeless outcasts. None of you
+are beyond the reach of a Saviour's love, a Saviour's blood, a Saviour's
+healing.
+
+But then the words in my text may be taken in a somewhat narrower sense,
+applying more particularly to a class. In accordance with other
+metaphors of Scripture, we may think of 'the bruised reed' as expressive
+of the condition of men whose hearts have been crushed by the
+consciousness of their sins. 'The broken and the contrite heart,'
+bruised and pulverised, as it were, by a sense of evil, may be typified
+for us by this bruised reed. And then from the words of my text there
+emerges the great and blessed hope that such a heart, wholesomely
+removed from its self-complacent fancy of soundness, shall certainly be
+healed and bound up by His tender hand. Did you ever see a gardener
+dealing with some plant, a spray of which may have been wounded? How
+delicately and tenderly the big, clumsy hand busies itself about the
+tiny spray, and by stays and bandages brings it into an erect position,
+and then gives it water and loving care. Just so does Jesus Christ deal
+with the conscious and sensitive heart of a man who has begun to find
+out how bad he is, and has been driven away from all his foolish
+confidence. Christ comes to such an one and restores him, and just
+because he is crushed deals with him gently, pouring in His consolation.
+Wheresoever there is a touch of penitence, there is present a restoring
+Christ.
+
+And the words may be looked at from yet another point of view. We may
+think of them as representing to us the merciful dealing of the Master
+with the spirits which are beaten and bruised, sore and wounded, by
+sorrows and calamities; to whom the Christ comes in all the tenderness
+of His gentleness, and lays a hand upon them--the only hand in all the
+universe that can touch a bleeding heart without hurting it.
+
+Brother and sister suffering from any sorrow, and bleeding from any
+wound, there is a balm and a physician. There is one hand that will
+never be laid with blundering kindness or with harshness upon our sore
+hearts, but whose touch will be healing, and whose presence will be
+peace.
+
+The Christ who knows our sins and sorrows will not break the bruised
+reed. The whole race of man may be represented in that parable that came
+from His own lips, as fallen among thieves that have robbed him and
+wounded him and left him bruised, but, blessed be God! only 'half dead';
+sorely wounded, indeed, but not so sorely but that he may be restored.
+And there comes One with the wine and the oil, and pours them into the
+wounds. 'The bruised reed shall He not break.'
+
+II. Now, in the next place, look at the completing thought that is here,
+in the second clause, which represents Christ as the fosterer of
+incipient and imperfect good.
+
+'The dimly-burning wick He shall not quench.' A process, as I have said,
+is begun in the smoking flax, which only needs to be carried on to lead
+to a brilliant flame. That represents for us not the beginnings of a not
+irreparable evil, but the commencement of very dim and imperfect good.
+Now, then, who are represented by this 'smoking flax'? You will not
+misunderstand me, nor think that I am contradicting what I have already
+been saying, if I claim for this second metaphor as wide a universality
+as the former, and say that in all men, just because the process of evil
+and the wounds from it are not so deep and complete as that restoration
+is impossible, therefore is there something in their nature which
+corresponds to this dim flame that needs to be fostered in order to
+blaze brightly abroad. There is no man out of hell but has in him
+something that needs but to be brought to sovereign power in his life in
+order to make him a light in the world. You have consciences at the
+least; you have convictions, you know you have, which if you followed
+them out would make Christians of you straight away. You have
+aspirations after good, desires, some of you, after purity and nobleness
+of living, which only need to be raised to the height and the dominance
+in your lives which they ought to possess, in order to revolutionise
+your whole course. There is a spark in every man which, fanned and cared
+for, will change him from darkness into light. Fanned and cared for it
+needs to be, and fanned and cared for it can only be by a divine power
+coming down upon it from without. This second metaphor of my text, as
+truly as the other, belongs to every soul of man upon the earth. He from
+whom all sparks and light have died out is not a man but a devil. And
+for all of us the exhortation comes: 'Thou hast a voice within
+testifying to God and to duty'; listen to it and care for it.
+
+Then again, dear brethren, in a narrower way, the words may be applied
+to a class. There are some of us who have in us a little spark, as we
+believe, of a divine life, the faint beginnings of a Christian
+character. We call ourselves Christ's disciples. We are; but oh! how
+dimly the flax burns. They say that where there is smoke there is fire.
+There is a great deal more smoke than fire in the most of Christian
+people in this generation, and if it were not for such thoughts as this
+of my text about that dear Christ who will not lay a hasty hand upon
+some little tremulous spark, and by one rash movement extinguish it for
+ever, there would be but small hope for a great many of us.
+
+Whether, then, the dimly-burning wick be taken to symbolise the
+lingering remains of a better nature which still abides with all sinful
+men, yet capable of redemption, or whether it be taken to mean the low
+and imperfect and inconsistent and feeble Christianity of us professing
+Christians, the words of my text are equally blessed and equally true.
+Christ will neither despise, nor so bring down His hand upon it as to
+extinguish, the feeblest spark. Look at His life on earth, think how He
+bore with those blundering, foolish, selfish disciples of His; how
+patient the divine Teacher was with their slow learning of His meaning
+and catching of His character. Remember how, when a man came to Him with
+a very imperfect goodness, the Evangelist tells us that Jesus, beholding
+him, loved him. And take out of these blessed stories this great hope,
+that howsoever small men 'despise the day of small things,' the Greatest
+does not; and howsoever men may say 'Such a little spark can never be
+kindled into flame, the fire is out, you may as well let it alone,' He
+never says that, but by patient teaching and fostering and continual
+care and wise treatment will nourish and nurture it until it leaps into
+a blaze.
+
+How do you make 'smoking flax' burn? You give it oil, you give it air,
+and you take away the charred portions. And Christ will give you, in
+your feebleness, the oil of His Spirit, that you may burn brightly as
+one of the candlesticks in His Temple; and He will let air in, and
+sometimes take away the charred portions by the wise discipline of
+sorrow and trial, in order that the smoking flax may become a shining
+light. But by whatsoever means He may work, be sure of this, that He
+will neither despise nor neglect the feeblest inclination of good after
+Him, but will nourish it to perfection and to beauty.
+
+The reason why so many Christian men's Christian light is so fuliginous
+and dim is just that they keep away from Jesus Christ. 'Abide in Me and
+I in you.' 'As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide
+in the vine, no more can ye, except ye abide in Me.' How can the Temple
+lamps burn bright unless the Priest of the Temple tends them? Keep near
+Him that His hand may nourish your smoking dimness into a pure flame,
+leaping heavenward and illuminating your lives.
+
+III. And now, lastly, we have here the representation of the servant of
+the Lord's exemption from human evil and weakness, as the foundation of
+His restoring and fostering work.
+
+'He shall not burn dimly nor be broken till He hath set judgment in the
+earth.' There are no bruises in this reed; that is to say, Christ's
+manhood is free from all scars and wounds of evil or of sin. There is no
+dimness in this light, that is to say, Christ's character is perfect,
+His goodness needs no increase. There is no trace of effort in His
+holiness, no growth manifest in His God-likeness, from the beginning to
+the end. There is no outward violence that can be brought to bear upon
+Him that will stay Him in His purpose. There is no inward failure of
+strength in Him that may lead us to fear that His work shall not be
+completed. And because of these things, because of His perfect exemption
+from human infirmity, because in Him was no sin. He is manifested to
+take away our sins. Because in Him there was goodness incapable of
+increase, being perfect from the beginning, therefore He is manifested
+to make us participants of His own unalterable and infinite goodness and
+purity. Because no outward violence, no inward weakness, can ever stay
+His course, nor make Him abandon His purpose, therefore His gospel looks
+upon the world with boundless hopefulness, with calm triumph; will not
+hear of there being any outcast and irreclaimable classes; declares it
+to be a blasphemy against God and Christ to say that any men or any
+nations are incapable of receiving the gospel and of being redeemed by
+it, and comes with supreme love and a calm consciousness of infinite
+power to you, my brother, in your deepest darkness, in your moods most
+removed from God and purity, and insures you that it will heal you, and
+will raise all that in you is feeble to its own strength. Every man may
+pray to that strong Christ who fails not nor is discouraged--
+
+ 'What in me is dark
+ Illumine; what is low, raise and support,'
+
+in the confidence that He will hear and answer. If you do that you will
+not do it in vain, but His gentle hand laid upon you will heal the
+bruises that sin has made. Out of your weakness, as of 'a reed shaken
+with the wind,' the Restorer will make a pillar of marble in the Temple
+of His God. And out of your smoking dimness and wavering light, a spark
+at the best, almost buried in the thick smoke that accompanies it, the
+fostering Christ will make a brightness which shall flame as the perfect
+light that 'shineth more and more unto the noontide of the day.'
+
+
+
+
+THE BLIND MAN'S GUIDE
+
+'I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not; I will lead them in
+paths that they have not known: I will make darkness light before them,
+and crooked things straight. These things will I do unto them, and not
+forsake them.'--ISAIAH xiii. 16.
+
+
+The grand stormy verses before these words, with all their dread array
+of natural convulsions, have one object--the tender guidance promised in
+the text. So we have the combination of terror and love, the blending in
+the divine government of terrible judgments and most gentle guidance.
+The words apply, of course, primarily to the redemption of Israel; but
+through them shines a picture of the greater redemption of humanity.
+
+1. The blind travellers. They are blind, and their road is unknown to
+them. It is a symbol of our condition and of our paths in life. Our
+limited foresight cannot discern certainly even the next moment. It is
+always the unexpected that happens. We cannot tell what lies behind the
+next bend in the road, and there are so many bends; and behind one of
+them, we cannot tell whether it may be the next, sits 'the Shadow feared
+of man.' Life is like the course of the Congo, which makes so mighty a
+bend northward that, till it had been followed from source to mouth, no
+one could have supposed that it was to enter the ocean far away to the
+west. Not only God's mercies, but our paths, are 'new every morning.'
+Experience, like conscience, sheds light mainly on what lies behind, and
+scarcely 'doth attain to something of prophetic strain.'
+
+2. The Leader. How tenderly God makes Himself the leader of the blind
+pilgrims! It does not matter about being blind, if we put our hands in
+His. Then He will 'be to us instead of eyes.' Jesus took the blind man
+by the hand.
+
+So here is the promise of guidance by Providence, Word, Spirit. And here
+is the condition of receiving it, namely, our conscious blindness and
+realisation of the complexities of life, leading to putting ourselves
+into His hands in docile faith.
+
+3. The gradual light. Darkness is made light. We receive the knowledge
+of each step, when it needs to be taken; the light shines only on the
+next; we are like men in a fog, who are able only to see a yard ahead.
+
+4. The clearing away of hindrances. 'Crooked things straight.' A careful
+guide lifts stones out of a blind man's way. How far is this true? There
+will be plenty of crooked things left crooked, but still so many
+straightened as to make our road passable.
+
+5. The perpetual Presence. If God is with me, then all these blessings
+will surely be mine. He will be with me if I keep myself with Him. It is
+His felt presence that gives me light on the road, and levels and
+straightens out the crookedest and roughest path.
+
+
+
+
+THY NAME: MY NAME
+
+'I have called thee by thy name.'--ISAIAH xliii. 1.
+
+'Every one that is called by My name.'--ISAIAH xliii. 7.
+
+
+Great stress is laid on names in Scripture. These two parallel and
+antithetic clauses bring out striking complementary relations between
+God and the collective Israel. But they are as applicable to each
+individual member of the true Israel of God.
+
+I. What does God's calling a man by his name imply?
+
+1. Intimate knowledge.
+
+Adam naming the creatures.
+
+Christ naming His disciples.
+
+2. Loving friendship.
+
+Moses, 'I know thee by name, and thou hast found grace in my sight.'
+
+3. Designation and adaptation to work.
+
+Bezaleel--Exodus xxxi. 2; Cyrus--ISAIAH xlv. 3; Servant of the Lord--
+ISAIAH xlix. 1.
+
+II. What does God's calling a man by His name imply?
+
+1. God's possession of him. That possession by God involves God's
+protection and man's safety. He does not hold His property slackly.
+'None shall pluck them out of My Father's hand.'
+
+2. Kindred. The man bears the family name. He is adopted into the
+household. The sonship of the receiver of the new name is dimly
+shadowed.
+
+3. Likeness.
+
+The Biblical meaning of 'name' is 'character manifested.'
+
+Nomen and omen coincide.
+
+We must bring into connection with the texts the prominence given in the
+Apocalypse to analogous promises.
+
+'I will write on him the name of My God.' That means a fuller disclosing
+of God's character, and a clear impress of that character on perfected
+men 'His name shall be in their foreheads.'
+
+
+
+
+JACOB--ISRAEL--JESHURUN
+
+'Yet now hear, O Jacob My servant; and Israel, whom I have chosen....
+Fear not, O Jacob, My servant; and thou, Jeshurun, whom I have chosen.
+--ISAIAH xliv. 1, 2.
+
+
+You observe that there are here three different names applied to the
+Jewish nation. Two of them, namely Jacob and Israel, were borne by their
+great ancestor, and by him transmitted to his descendants. The third was
+never borne by him, and is applied to the people only here and in the
+Book of Deuteronomy.
+
+The occurrence of all three here is very remarkable, and the order in
+which they stand is not accidental. The prophet begins with the name
+that belonged to the patriarch by birth; the name of nature, which
+contained some indications of character. He passes on to the name which
+commemorated the mysterious conflict where, as a prince, Jacob had power
+with God and prevailed. He ends with the name Jeshurun, of which the
+meaning is 'the righteous one,' and which was bestowed upon the people
+as a reminder of what they ought to be.
+
+Now, as I take it, the occurrence of these names here, and their
+sequence, may teach us some very important lessons; and it is simply to
+these lessons, and not at all to the context, that I ask your attention.
+
+I. I take, then, these three names in their order as teaching us, first,
+the path of transformation.
+
+Every 'Jacob' may become a 'righteous one,' if he will tread Jacob's
+road. We start with that first name of nature which, according to Esau's
+bitter etymology of it, meant 'a supplanter'--not without some
+suggestions of craft and treachery in it. It is descriptive of the
+natural disposition of the patriarch, which was by no means attractive.
+Cool, calculating, subtle, with a very keen eye to his own interests,
+and not at all scrupulous as to the means by which he secured them, he
+had no generous impulses, and few unselfish affections. He told lies to
+his poor old blind father, he cheated his brother, he met the shiftiness
+of Laban with equal shiftiness. It was 'diamond cut diamond' all
+through. He tried to make a bargain with God Himself at Bethel, and to
+lay down conditions on which he would bring Him the tenth of his
+substance. And all through his earlier career he does not look like the
+stuff of which heroes and saints are made.
+
+But in the mid-path of his life there came that hour of deep dejection
+and helplessness, when, driven out of all dependence on self, and
+feeling round in his agony for something to lay hold upon, there came
+into his nightly solitude a vision of God. In conscious weakness, and in
+the confidence of self-despair, he wrestled with the mysterious Visitant
+in the only fashion in which He can be wrestled with. 'He wept and made
+supplication to Him,' as one of the prophets puts it, and so he bore
+away the threefold gift--blessing from those mighty lips whose blessing
+is the communication, and not only the invocation, of mercy, a deeper
+knowledge of that divine and mysterious Name, and for himself a new
+name.
+
+That new name implied a new direction given to his character.
+
+Hitherto he had wrestled with men whom he would supplant, for his own
+advantage, by craft and subtlety; henceforward he strove with God for
+higher blessings, which, in striving, he won. All the rest of his life
+was on a loftier plane. Old ambitions were dead within him, and though
+the last of these names in our text was never actually borne by him, he
+began to deserve it, and grew steadily in nobleness and beauty of
+character until the end, when he sang his swan-song and lay down to die,
+with thanksgiving for the past and glowing prophecies for the future,
+pouring from his trembling lips.
+
+And now, brethren, that is the outline of the only way in which, from
+out of the evil and the sinfulness of our natural disposition, any of us
+can be raised to the loftiness and purity of a righteous life. There
+must be a Peniel between the two halves of the character, if there is to
+be transformation.
+
+Have you ever been beaten out of all your confidence, and ground down
+into the dust of self-disgust and self-abandonment? Have you ever felt,
+'there is nothing in me or about me that I can cling to or rely upon'?
+Have you ever in the thickest of that darkness had, gleaming in upon
+your solitude, the vision of His face, whose face we see in Jesus
+Christ? Have you ever grasped Him who is infinitely willing to be held
+by the weakest hand, and who never 'makes as though He would go
+further,' except in order to induce us to say, with deeper earnestness
+of desire, 'Abide with us, for it is dark'? And have you ever, in
+fellowship with Him thus, found pouring into your enlightened mind a
+deeper reading of the meaning of His character and a fuller conception
+of the mystery of His love? And have you ever--certainly you have if
+these things have preceded it, certainly you have not if they have not
+--have you ever thereby been borne up on to a higher level of feeling
+and life, and been aware of new impulses, hopes, joys, new directions
+and new capacities budding and blossoming in your spirit?
+
+Brethren! there is only one way by which, out of the mire and clay of
+earth, there can be formed a fair image of holiness, and that is, that
+Jacob's experience, in deeper, more inward, more wonderful form, should
+be repeated in each one of us; and that thus, penitent and yet hopeful,
+we should behold the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ, and draw
+from Him our righteousness. That is the path of transformation. The road
+passes through Peniel, and Jacob must become Israel before he is
+Jeshurun. He must hold communion with God in Christ before he is clothed
+with righteousness.
+
+How different that path is from the road which men are apt to take in
+working out their own self-improvement! How many forms of religion, and
+how many toiling souls put the cart before the horse, and in effect just
+reverse the process, and say practically--'first make yourselves
+righteous, and then you will have communion with God'! That is an
+endless and a hopeless task. I have no doubt that some of you have
+spent--and I would not say wasted, but it has been almost so--years of
+life, not without many an honest effort, in the task of self-
+improvement, and are very much where you were long ago. Why have you
+failed? Because you have never been to Peniel. You have never seen the
+face of God in Christ, You have not received from Him the blessing, even
+righteousness, from the God of your salvation.
+
+Dear friends, give up treading that endless, weary path of vain effort;
+and learn--oh! learn--that the righteousness which makes a soul pure and
+beautiful must come as a gift from God, and is given only in Jesus
+Christ.
+
+This sequence too, I think, may very fairly be used to teach us the
+lesson that there is no kind of character so debased but that it may
+partake of the purifying and ennobling influence. All the Jacobs may be
+turned into righteous ones, however crafty, however subtle, however
+selfish, however worldly they are. Christianity looks at no man and
+says, 'That is too bad a case for me to deal with.' It will undertake
+any and every case, and whoever will take its medicines can be cured 'of
+whatsoever disease he had.'
+
+To all of us, no matter what our past may have been, this blessed
+message comes: 'There is hope for thee, if thou wilt use these means.'
+Only remember, the road from the depths of evil to the heights of purity
+always lies through Peniel. You must have power with God and draw a
+blessing from Him, and hold communion with Him, before you can become
+righteous.
+
+How do they print photographs? By taking sensitive paper, and laying it,
+in touch with the negative, in the sun. Lay your spirits on Christ, and
+keep them still, touching Him, in the light of God, and that will turn
+you into His likeness. That, and nothing else will do it.
+
+II. And now there is a second lesson from the occurrence of these three
+names, viz., here we may find expressed the law for the Christian life.
+
+There are some religious people that seem to think that it is enough if
+only they can say; 'Well! I have been to Jesus Christ and I have got my
+past sins forgiven; I have been on the mountain and have held communion
+with God; I do know what it is to have fellowship with Him, in many an
+hour of devout communion.' and who are in much danger of treating the
+further stage of simple, practical righteousness as of secondary
+importance. Now the order of these names here points the lesson that the
+apex of the pyramid, the goal of the whole course, is--Righteousness.
+The object for which the whole majestic structure of Revelation has been
+builded up, is simply to make good men and women. God does not tell us
+His Name merely in order that we may know His Name, but in order that,
+knowing it, we may be smitten with the love of it, and so may come into
+the likeness of it. There is no religious truth which is given men for
+the sake of clearing their understandings and enlightening their minds
+only. We get the truth to enlighten our minds and to clear our
+understandings in order that thereby, as becomes reasonable men with
+heads on our shoulders, we may let our principles guide our conduct.
+Conduct is the end of principle, and all Revelation is given to us in
+order that we may be pure and good men and women.
+
+For the same end all God's mercy of forgiveness and deliverance from
+guilt and punishment in Jesus Christ is given to you, not merely in
+order that you may escape the penalties of your evil, but in order that,
+being pardoned, you may in glad thankfulness be lifted up into an
+enthusiasm of service which will make you eager to serve Him and long to
+be like Him. He sets you free from guilt, from punishment, and His
+wrath, in order that by the golden cord of love you may be fastened to
+Him in thankful obedience. God's purpose in redemption is that 'we,
+being delivered out of the hand of our enemies should serve Him without
+fear, in holiness and righteousness before Him all our days.'
+
+And in like manner, righteousness, by which, in the present connection,
+we mean simply the doing of the things, and the being the character,
+which a conscience enlightened by the law of God dictates to us to be
+and to do--righteousness is the intention and the aim of all religious
+emotion and feeling. It is all very well to have the joy of fellowship
+with God in our inmost soul, but there is a type of Christianity which
+is a great deal stronger on the side of devout emotion than on the side
+of transparent godliness; and although it becomes no man to say what
+Jesus Christ could say to those whose religion is mainly emotional,
+'Hypocrites!' it is the part of every honest preacher to warn all that
+listen to him that there does lie a danger, a very real danger, very
+close to some of us, to substitute devout emotion for plain, practical
+goodness, and to be a great deal nearer God in the words of our prayers
+than we are in the current and set of our daily lives. Take, then, these
+three names of my text as flashing into force and emphasis the
+exhortation that the crown of all religion is righteousness, and as
+preaching, in antique guise, the same lesson that the very Apostle of
+affectionate contemplation uttered with such earnestness:--'Little
+children! let no man deceive you. He that doeth righteousness is
+righteous, even as He is righteous.' An ounce of practical godliness is
+worth a pound of fine feeling and a ton of correct orthodoxy. Remember
+what the Master said, and take the lesson in the measure in which you
+need it: 'Many will say to Me in that day, Lord, Lord, have we not
+prophesied in Thy name, and in Thy name have cast out devils, and in Thy
+name done many wonderful works? And then will I profess unto them, I
+never knew you, depart from Me.' And the proof that I never knew you,
+nor you Me, is: 'Ye that work iniquity.'
+
+III. Then there is another lesson still which I draw from these words,
+viz. the merciful judgment which God makes of the character of them that
+love Him.
+
+Jeshurun means 'the righteous one.' How far beneath the ideal of the
+name these Jewish people fell we all know, and yet the name is applied
+to them. Although the realisation of the ideal has been so imperfect,
+the ideal is not destroyed. Although they have done so many sins, yet He
+calls them by His name of 'righteous.' And so we Christian people find
+that the New Testament calls us 'saints.' That name is not applied to
+some select and lofty specimens of Christianity, but to all Christians,
+however imperfect their present life and character may be. Then people
+sneer and say, 'Ah! a strange kind of saints these Christians are! Do
+you think that a man can condone practical immorality by saying that he
+is trusting in Jesus Christ? The Church's "saint" seems to mean less
+than the world's "man of honour."' God forbid that it should be fancied
+that Christian sainthood is more tolerant of evil than worldly morality,
+or has any fantastic standard of goodness which makes up for departures
+from the plain rule of right by prayers and raptures. But surely there
+may be a principle of action deep down at the bottom of a heart, very
+feeble in its present exercise and manifestation, which yet is the true
+man, and is destined to conquer the whole nature which now wars against
+it. Here, for instance, is a tiny spark, and there is a huge pile of
+damp, green wood. Yes; and the little spark will turn all the wood into
+flame, if you give it time and fair play. The leaven may be hid in an
+immensely greater mass of meal, but it, and not the three measures of
+flour, is the active principle. And if there is in a man, overlaid by
+ever so many absurdities, and contradictions, and inconsistencies, a
+little seed of faith in Jesus Christ, there will be in him
+proportionately a little particle of a divine life which is omnipotent,
+which is immortal, which will conquer and transform all the rest into
+its own likeness; and He who sees not as men see, beholds the inmost
+tendencies and desires of the nature, as well as the facts of the life,
+and discerning the inmost and true self of His children, and knowing
+that it will conquer, calls us 'righteous ones,' even while the outward
+life has not yet been brought into harmony with the new man, created in
+righteousness after God's image.
+
+All wrong-doing is inconsistent with Christianity, but, thank God, it is
+not for us to say that _any_ wrong-doing is incompatible with it; and
+therefore, for ourselves there is hope, and for our estimate of one
+another there ought to be charity, and for all Christian people there is
+the lesson--live up to your name. _Noblesse oblige!_ Fulfil your ideal.
+Be what God calls you, and 'press toward the mark for the prize.'
+
+If one had time to deal with it, there is another lesson naturally
+suggested by these names, but I only put it in a sentence and leave it;
+and that is the union between the founder of the nation and the nation.
+The name of the patriarch passes to his descendants, the nation is
+called after him that begat it. In some sense it prolongs his life and
+spirit and character upon the earth. That is the old-world way of
+looking at the solidarity of a nation. There is a New Testament fact
+which goes even deeper than that. The names which Christ bears are given
+to Christ's followers. Is He a King, is He a Priest? He 'makes us kings
+and priests.' Is He anointed the Messiah? God 'hath anointed us in Him.'
+Is He the Light of the World?
+
+'Ye are the lights of the world.' His life passeth into all that love
+Him in the measure of their trust and love. We are one with Jesus if we
+rest upon Him; one in life, one in character, approximating by slow
+degrees, but surely, to His likeness; and blessed be His name! one in
+destiny. Then, my friend, if you will only keep near that Lord, trust
+Him, live in the light of His face, go to Him in your weakness, in your
+despair, in your self-abandonment; wrestle with Him, with the
+supplication and the tears that He delights to receive, then you will be
+knit to Him in a union so real and deep that all which is His shall be
+yours, His life shall be the life of your spirit, His power the strength
+of your life, His dominion the foundation of your dignity as a prince
+with God, His all-prevailing priesthood the security that your prayer
+shall have power, and the spotless robe of His righteousness the fine
+linen, clean and white, in which arrayed, you shall be found of Him, and
+in Him at last, in peace, 'not having your own righteousness, but that
+which is through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God
+by faith.'
+
+
+
+
+FEEDING ON ASHES
+
+'He feedeth on ashes: a deceived heart hath turned him aside, that he
+cannot deliver his soul, nor say, Is there not a lie in my right
+hand?'--ISAIAH xliv. 20.
+
+
+The prophet has been pouring fierce scorn on idolaters. They make, he
+says, the gods they worship. They take a tree and saw it up: one log
+serves for a fire to cook their food, and with compass and pencil and
+plane they carve the figure of a man, and then they bow down to it and
+say, 'Deliver me, for thou art my god!' He sums up the whole in this
+sentence of my text, in which the tone changes from bitter irony to
+astonished pity. Now, if this were the time and the place, one would
+like to expand and illustrate the deep thoughts in these words in
+reference to idolatry; thoughts which go dead in the teeth of a great
+deal that is now supposed to be scientifically established, but which
+may be none the more true for all that. He asserts that idolatry is
+empty, a feeding on ashes. He declares, in opposition to modern ideas,
+that the low, gross forms of polytheism and idol-worship are a departure
+from a previous higher stage, whereas to-day we are told by a hundred
+voices that all religion begins at the bottom, and slowly struggles up
+to the top. Isaiah says the very opposite. The pure form is the
+primitive; the secondary form is the gross, which is a corruption. They
+tell us too, nowadays, that all religion pursues a process of evolution,
+and gradually clears itself of its more imperfect and carnal elements.
+Isaiah says, 'he cannot deliver his soul'; and no religion ever worked
+itself up, unless under the impulse of a revelation from without. That
+is Isaiah's philosophy of idolatry, and I expect it will be accepted as
+the true one some day.
+
+But my text has a wider bearing. It not only describes, in pathetic
+language, the condition of the idolater, but it is true about all lives,
+which are really idolatrous in so far as they make anything else than
+God their aim and their joy. Every word of this text applies to such
+lives--that is to say, to the lives of a good many people listening to
+me now. And I would fain try to lay the truths here on some hearts. Let
+me just take them as they lie in the words before me.
+
+I. A life that substantially ignores God is empty of all true
+satisfaction.
+
+'He feedeth on ashes'! Very little imagination will realise the force of
+that picture. The gritty cinders will irritate the lips and tongue, will
+dry up the moisture of the mouth, will interfere with the breathing, and
+there will be no nourishment in a sackful of them.
+
+Dear brethren, the underlying truth is this--God is the only food of a
+man's soul. You pick up the skeleton of a bird upon a moor; and if you
+know anything about osteology--the science of bones--you will see, in
+the very make of its breast-bone and its wing-bones, the declaration
+that its destiny was to soar into the blue. You pick up the skeleton of
+a fish lying on the beach, and you will see in its very form and
+characteristics that its destiny is to expatiate in the depths of the
+sea. And, written on you, as distinctly as flight on the bird, or
+swimming on the fish, is this, that you are meant, by your very make, to
+soar up into the heights of the glory of God, and to plunge deep into
+the abysses of His infinite love and wisdom. Man is made for God. 'Whose
+image and superscription hath it?' said Christ. The coin belongs to the
+king whose head and titles are displayed upon it; and on your heart,
+friend, though a usurper has tried to recoin the piece, and put his own
+foul image on the top of the original one, is stamped deep that you
+belong to the King of kings, to God Himself.
+
+For what does our heart want? A perfect, changeless, all-powerful love.
+And what does our mind want? Reliable, guiding, inexhaustible, and yet
+accessible truth. And what does our will want? Commandments which have
+an authoritative ring in their very utterance, and which will serve for
+infallible guides for our lives. And what do our weak, sinful natures
+want? Something that shall free our consciences, and shall deliver us
+from the burden of our transgressions, and shall calm our fears, and
+shall quicken and warrant our lofty hopes. And what do men whose destiny
+is to live for ever want but something that shall go with them through
+all changes of condition, and, like a light in the midst of the darkest
+tunnel, shall burn in the passage between this and the other world, and
+shall never be taken away from them? We want a Person to be everything
+to us. No accumulation of things will satisfy a man. And we want all our
+treasures to be in one Person, and we need that that Person shall live
+as long as we live, and as long as we need shall be sufficient to supply
+us. And all this is only the spelling in many letters of the one
+name--God. That is what we want, that, and nothing less.
+
+Then the next step that I suggest to you is, that where a man will take
+God for the food of his spirit, and turn love and mind and will and
+conscience and practical life to Him, seeing Him in everything, and
+seeing all things in Him; saturating, as it were, the universe with the
+thought of God, and recreating his own spirit with communion of
+friendship to Him; to that man lower goods do first disclose their real
+sweetness, their most poignant delight, and their most solid
+satisfaction. To say of a world where God has set us, that it is all
+'vanity and vexation of spirit,' goes in flat contradiction to what He
+said when, creation finished, He looked upon His world, and proclaimed
+to the waiting seraphim around that 'it was very good.' There is a view
+of the world which calls itself pious, but is really an insult to God;
+and the irreligious pessimism that is fashionable nowadays, as if human
+life were a great mistake, and everything were mean and poor and
+insufficient, is contrary to the facts and to the consciousness of every
+man. But if you make things first which were meant to be second, then
+you make what was meant to be food 'ashes.' They are all good in their
+place. Wealth is good; wisdom is good; success is good; love is good.
+And all these things may be enjoyed without God, and will each of them
+yield their proportional satisfaction to the part of our nature to which
+they belong. But if you put them first you degrade them; a change passes
+over them at once. A long row of cyphers means nothing; put a
+significant digit in front of it, and it means millions. Take away the
+digit, and it goes back to nothing again. The world, and all its fading
+sweets, if you put God in the forefront of it, and begin the series with
+Him, is sweet, though it may be fleeting, and is meant to be felt by us
+as such. But if you take away Him, it is a row of cyphers signifying
+nothing, and able to contribute nothing to the real, deepest necessities
+of the human soul. And so the old question comes--'Why do ye spend your
+money for that which is not bread?' It is bread, if only you will
+remember first that God is the food of your souls. But if you try to
+nourish yourselves on it alone, then, as I said, a sackful of such ashes
+will not stay your appetite. Oh! brethren, God has not so blundered in
+making the world that He has surrounded us with things that are all
+lies, but He has so made it that whosoever flies in the face of the
+gracious commandment which is also an invitation, 'Seek ye first the
+Kingdom of God and His righteousness,' has not only no security that the
+'other things' shall 'be added unto him,' but has the certainty that
+though they were added to him, in degree beyond his dreams and highest
+hopes, they would avail nothing to satisfy the hunger of his heart. As
+George Herbert puts it--
+
+ Shadows well mounted, dreams in a career,
+ Embroidered lies, nothing between two dishes,
+ These are the pleasures here.'
+
+'He feedeth on ashes,' because he does not take God for the food of his
+soul.
+
+II. So, secondly, notice that a life which thus ignores God is
+tragically unaware of its own emptiness.
+
+'A deceived heart hath turned him aside.' That explains how the man
+comes to fancy that ashes are food. His whole nature is perverted, his
+vision distorted, his power of judgment marred. He is given over to
+hallucinations and illusions and dreams.
+
+That explains, too, why men persist in this feeding on ashes after all
+experience. There is no fact stranger or more tragical in our histories
+than that we do not learn by a thousand failures that the world will not
+avail to make us restful and blessed. You will see a dog chasing a
+sparrow,--it has chased hundreds before and never caught one. Yet, when
+the bird rises from the ground, away it goes after it once more, with
+eager yelp and rush, to renew the old experience. Ah! that is like what
+a great many of you are doing, and you have not the same excuse that the
+dog has. You have been trying all your lives--and some of you have grey
+hairs on your heads--to slake your thirst by dipping leaky buckets into
+empty wells, and you are at it yet. As some one says, 'experience throws
+a light on the wave behind us,' but it does very little to fling a light
+on the sea before us. Experience confirms my text, for I venture to put
+it to the experience of every man--how many moments of complete
+satisfaction and rest can you summon up in your memory as having been
+yours in the past? 'He that loveth silver shall not be satisfied with
+silver, nor he that loveth abundance with increase.' Appetite always
+grows faster than supply. And so, though we have tried them in vain so
+often, we turn again to the old discredited sources, and fancy we shall
+do better this time. Is it not strange? Is there any explanation of it,
+other than that of my text? 'A deceived heart hath turned him aside.'
+
+And that deceived heart, stronger than experience, is also stronger than
+conscience. Do you not know that you ought to be Christians? Do you not
+know that it is both wrong and foolish of you to ignore God? Do you not
+know that you will have to answer for it? Have you not had moments of
+illumination when there has risen up before you the whole vanity of your
+past lives, and when you have felt 'I have played the fool, and erred
+exceedingly'? And yet, what has come of it all with some of you? Why,
+what comes of it with the drunkard in the Book of Proverbs, who, as soon
+as he has got over the bruises and the sickness of his last debauch,
+says, 'I will seek it yet again.' 'A deceived heart hath turned him
+aside.'
+
+And how is it that this hallucination that you have fed full and been
+satisfied, when all the while your hunger has not been appeased, can
+continue to act on us? For the very plain reason that every one of us
+has in himself a higher and a lower self, a set of desires for the
+grosser, more earthly, and, using the word in its proper sense, worldly
+sort--that is to say, directed towards material things, and a higher set
+which look right up to God if they were allowed fair play. And of these
+two sets--which really are one at bottom, if a man would only see
+it--the lower gets the upper hand, and suppresses the higher and the
+nobler. And so in many a man and woman the longing for God is crushed
+out by the grosser delights of sense.
+
+One sometimes hears of cowardly, unmanly sailors, who in shipwreck push
+the women and children aside, and struggle to the boats. And there are
+in all of us groups of sturdy mendicants, so to speak, who elbow their
+way to the front, and will have their wants satisfied. What becomes of
+the gentler group that stand behind, unnoticed and silent? It is an
+awful thing when men and women do, as so many of us do, pervert the
+tastes that are meant to lead them to God, in order to stifle the
+consciousness that they need a God at all. There are tribes of low
+savages who are known as 'clay-eaters.' That is what a great many of us
+are; we feed upon the serpent's meat, the dust of the earth, and let all
+the higher heavenly food, which addresses itself first to loftier
+desires, but also satisfies these lower ones, stand unnoticed, unsought
+for, unpartaken of. Dear friends, do not be befooled by that treacherous
+heart of yours, but let the deepest voices in your soul be heard.
+Understand, I beseech you, that their cry is for no created person or
+thing, and that only God Himself can satisfy them.
+
+III. And now, lastly, notice that a life thus ignoring God needs a power
+from without to set it free.
+
+'He cannot deliver his soul.' Can you? Do you think you can break the
+habits of a lifetime? Do you think that, left to yourself, you would
+ever have any inclination to break them? Certainly, left to yourselves,
+you will never have the power. These long indulged appetites of ours
+grow with indulgence; and that which first was light as a cobweb, and
+soft as a silken bracelet, becomes heavier and solider until it is an
+iron fetter upon the limb, which no man can break. There is nothing more
+awful in life than the influence of habit, so unthinkingly acquired, so
+inexorably certain, so limiting our possibilities and enclosing us in
+its grip.
+
+Dear brethren, there is something more wanted than yourselves to break
+this chain. You have tried, I have no doubt, in the course of your
+lives, more and more resolutely, to cure yourselves of some more or less
+unworthy habits. They may be but mere slight tricks of attitude or
+intonation, or movement. Has your success been such as to encourage you
+to think that you can revolutionise your lives, and dethrone the despots
+that have ruled over you in the past? I leave the question to
+yourselves. To me it seems that the world of men is certain to go on
+ignoring God, and seeking its delight only in the world of creatures,
+unless there comes in an outside power into the heart of the world and
+revolutionises all things.
+
+It is that power that I have to preach, the Christ who is the 'Bread of
+God that came down from Heaven,' who can lift up any soul from the most
+obstinate and long-continued grovelling amongst the transitory things of
+this limited world, and the superficial delights of sense and a
+gratified bodily life; who can bring the forgiveness which is essential,
+the deliverance from the power of evil which is not less essential, and
+who can fill our hearts with Himself the food of the world. He comes to
+each of us; He comes to you, with the old unanswerable question upon His
+lips, 'Why do you spend your money for that which is not bread, and your
+labour for that which satisfieth not?' It is unanswerable, for you can
+give no reason sufficient for such madness. All that you could say, and
+you durst not say it to Him, is, 'a deceived heart hath turned me
+aside.' He comes with the old gracious word upon His lips, 'Take! eat!
+this is My body which is broken for you.' He offers us Himself. He can
+stay all the hungers of all mankind. He can feed your heart with love,
+your mind with truth which is Himself, your will with His sweet
+commands.
+
+As of old He made the thousands sit down upon the grass, and they did
+all eat and were filled, so He stands before the world to-day and says,
+'I am the Bread of Life; He that cometh to Me shall never hunger.' And
+if you will only come to Him--that is to say, will trust yourselves
+altogether to the merits of His sacrifice, and the might of His
+indwelling Spirit--He will take away all the taste for the leeks and
+onions and garlic, and will give you the appetite for heavenly food. He
+will spread for you a table in the wilderness, and what would else be
+ashes will become sweet, wholesome, and nourishing. Nor will He cease
+there, for in His own good time He will call us to the banqueting house
+above, where He will make us to sit down to meat, and come forth Himself
+and serve us. Here, hunger often brings pain, and eating is followed by
+repletion. But there, appetite and satisfaction will produce each other
+perpetually, and the blessed ones who then hunger will not hunger so as
+to feel faintness or emptiness, nor be so filled as to cease to desire
+larger portions of the Bread of God. I beseech you, cry, 'Lord, ever
+more give us this bread!'
+
+
+
+
+WRITING BLOTTED OUT AND MIST MELTED
+
+'I have blotted out, as a thick cloud, thy transgressions, and, as a
+cloud, thy sins.'--ISAIAH xliv. 22.
+
+
+Isaiah has often and well been called the Evangelical Prophet. Many
+parts of this second half of his prophecies referring to the Messiah
+read like history rather than prediction. But it is not only from the
+clearness with which the great figure of the future king of Israel
+stands out on his page that he deserves that title. Other thoughts
+belonging to the very substance of the gospel appear in him with a
+vividness and a frequency which well warrants its application to him. He
+speaks much of the characteristically Christian conceptions of sin,
+forgiveness, and redemption. The whole of the latter parts of this book
+are laden with that burden. They are gathered up in the extraordinarily
+pregnant and blessed words of my text, in which metaphors are blended
+with much disregard to oratorical propriety, in order to bring out the
+whole fulness of the prophet's meaning. 'I have blotted out'--that
+suggests a book. 'I have blotted out as a cloud'--that suggests the
+thinning away of morning mists. The prophet blends the two thoughts
+together, and on that great revelation of a forgiveness granted before
+it has been asked, and given, not only to one penitent soul wailing out
+like the abased king of Israel in his deep contrition, 'according to the
+multitude of Thy tender mercies blot out my transgressions,' but
+promised to a whole people, is rested the great invitation, 'Return unto
+Me, for I have redeemed thee.'
+
+Let me try and bring out, as simply and earnestly as I can, the great
+teaching that is condensed into these words.
+
+I. Observe here the penetrating glance into the very essential
+characteristics of all sin.
+
+There are two words, as you see, employed in my text, 'transgressions'
+and 'sins.' They apply to the same kind of actions, but they look at
+them from different angles and points of view. They are partially
+synonymous, but they cover very various conceptions, and if we take note
+of the original significations of the two words, we get two very
+important and often forgotten thoughts.
+
+For that expression rendered in my text, and rendered correctly enough
+--transgressions--means at bottom, 'rebellion,' the rising up of a
+disobedient will, not only against a law, but against a lawgiver. There
+we have a deepening of that solemn fact of a man's wrongdoing, which
+brings it into immediate connection with God, and marks its foulness by
+reason of that connection.
+
+Ah! brethren, it makes all the difference to a man's notions of right
+and wrong, whether he stops on the surface or goes down to the depths;
+whether he says to himself, 'The thing is a vice; it is wrong; it is
+contrary to what I ought to be'; or whether he gets down to the darker,
+deeper, and truer thought, and says, 'The damnable thing about every
+little evil that I do is this, that in it _I_--poor puny I--perk myself
+up against God, and say to Him, "Thou wilt; wilt thou? _I_ shall not!"'
+Sin is rebellion.
+
+And so what becomes of the hazy distinction between great sins and
+little ones? An overt act of rebellion is of the same gravity,
+whatsoever may be its form. The man that lifts his sword against the
+sovereign, and the man behind him that holds his horse, are equally
+criminal. And when once you let in the notion that in all our actions we
+have to do with a Person, to whom we are bound to be obedient, then the
+distinction which sophisticates so many people's consciences, and does
+such infinite harm in so many lives, between great and small
+transgressions, disappears altogether. Sin is rebellion.
+
+Then the other word of my text is equally profound and significant. For
+it, literally taken, means--as the words for 'sin' do in other languages
+besides the Hebrew--missing a mark. Every wrong thing that any man does
+is beside the mark, at which he, by virtue of his manhood, and his very
+make and nature, ought to aim. It is beside the mark in another sense
+than that. As some one says, 'A rogue is a roundabout fool.' No man ever
+secures that, and only that, which he aims at by any departure from the
+straight path of imperative duty. For if he gets some vulgar and
+transient titillation of appetite, or satisfaction of desire, he gets
+along with it something that takes all the gilt off the gingerbread, and
+all the sweetness out of the satisfaction. So that it is always a
+blunder to be bad, and every arrow that is drawn by a sinful hand misses
+the target to which all our arrows should be pointed, and misses even
+the poor mark that we think we are aiming at. Take these two thoughts
+with you--I will not dwell on them, but I desire to lay them upon all
+your hearts--all evil is sin, and every sin is rebellion against God,
+and a blunder in regard to myself.
+
+II. And now I come to the second point of our text, and ask you to note
+the permanent record which every sin leaves.
+
+I explained in the earlier part of my remarks that we have a case here
+of the thing that horrifies rhetoricians, but does not matter a bit to a
+prophet, the blending or confusing of two metaphors. The first of
+them--'I have blotted out'--suggests a piece of writing, a book, or
+manuscript of some sort. And the plain English of what lies behind that
+metaphor is this solemn thought, which I would might blaze before each
+of us, in all our lives, that God's calm and all-comprehensive knowledge
+and remembrance takes and keeps filed, and ready for reference, the
+whole story of our whole acts. There _is_ a book. It is a violent
+metaphor, no doubt, but there is a solemn truth underlying it which we
+are too apt to forget. The world is groaning nowadays with two-volume
+memoirs of men that nobody wants to know anything more about. But every
+man is ever writing his autobiography with invisible but indelible ink.
+You have seen those old-fashioned 'manifold writers' in your places of
+business, and the construction of them is this: a flimsy sheet of tissue
+paper, a bit of black to be put in below it, and then another sheet on
+the other side; and the pen that writes on the flimsy top surface makes
+an impression that is carried through the black to the sheet below, and
+there is a duplicate which the writer keeps. You and I, upon the
+flimsinesses of this fleeting--sometimes, we think, futile--life, are
+penning what is neither flimsy nor futile, which goes through the opaque
+dark, and is reproduced and docketed yonder. That is what we are doing
+every day and every minute, writing, writing, writing our own biography.
+And who is going to read it? Well, God does read it now, and you will
+have to read it out one day, and how will you like that?
+
+This metaphor will bear a little further expansion. Scripture tells us,
+and conscience tells us, what manner of manuscript it is that we are
+each so busy adding line upon line to. It is a ledger; it is an
+indictment. Our own handwriting puts down in the ledger our own debts,
+and we cannot deny our own handwriting when we are confronted with it.
+It is an indictment, and our own hand draws it, and we have to plead
+'guilty,' or 'not guilty,' to it. Which, being translated into plain
+fact, is this--that there goes with all our deeds some sense and reality
+of responsibility for them, and that all our rebellions against God, and
+our blunders against self, be they great or small, carry with them a
+sense of guilt and a reality of guilt whether we have the sense of it or
+not. God has a judgment at this moment about every man and woman, based
+upon the facts of the unfinished biography which they are writing.
+
+Mystical and awful, yet blessed and elevating, is the thought that
+nothing--_nothing,_ ever dies; and that what was, is now, and always
+will be.
+
+Amongst the specimens from the coal measures in a museum you will find
+slabs upon which the tiniest fronds of ferns that grew nobody knows how
+many millenniums since are preserved for ever. Our lives, when the blow
+of the last hammer lays them open, will, in like manner, bear the
+impress of the minutest filament of every deed that we have ever done.
+
+But my metaphor will bear yet further expansion, for this
+autobiographical record which we are busy preparing, which is at once
+ledger and indictment, is to be read out one day. There is a great scene
+in the last book of Scripture, the whole solemn significance of which, I
+suppose, we shall not understand till we have learned it by experience,
+but the truth of which we have sufficient premonitions to assure us of,
+which declares that at a given time, on the confines of Eternity, the
+Great White Throne is to be set, and the books are to be opened, and the
+dead are judged 'out of the books,' which, the seer goes on to explain,
+is 'according to their works.' The story of Esther tells us how the
+sleepless monarch in the night-watches sent for the records of the
+kingdom and had them read to him. The King who never slumbers nor
+sleeps, in that dawning of heaven's eternal morning, will have the books
+opened before Him, and my deeds will be read out. He and I will hear
+them, whether any else may hear or no. That is my second lesson.
+
+III. The third is, that we have here suggested the darkening power of
+sin.
+
+The prophet, as I said, mixes metaphors. 'I have blotted out as a cloud
+thy transgressions.' He uses two words for 'cloud' here; both of them
+mean substantially the same thing, and both suggest the same idea. When
+cloud fills the sky it darkens the earth, and shuts out the sunshine and
+the blue, it closes the petals of the little flowers, it hushes the
+songs of the birds. Sin makes for the sinning man 'an under-roof of
+doleful grey,' which shuts out all the glories above. Put that metaphor
+into plain English, and it is just this, 'Your sins have separated
+between you and your God, and your iniquities have hid His face from you
+that He will not hear.' It is impossible for a man that has his heart
+all stiffened by the rebellion of his will against God's, or all
+seething with unrestrained passions, or perturbed with worldly longings
+and desires, to enter into calm fellowship with God or to keep the
+thought of God clear before his mind. For we know Him, not by sense nor
+by reason, but by sympathy and by feeling. And whatsoever comes in to
+disturb a man's purity, comes in to hinder his vision of God. 'Blessed
+are the pure in heart, for they'--and they only--'shall see God.'
+Whenever from the undrained swamps of my own passions and sensualities,
+or from the as malarious though loftier grounds of my own self-regard,
+be I student or thinker, or moral man, there rise up these light mists,
+they will fill the sky and hide the sun. On a winter's night you will
+see the Pleiades, or other bright constellations, varying in brilliancy
+from moment to moment as some invisible cloud-wrack floats across the
+heavens. So, brother, every evil thing that we do rises up and gets
+diffused through our atmosphere, and blots out from our vision the face
+of God Himself, the blessed Son.
+
+Not only by reason of dimming and darkening my thoughts of Him is my sin
+rightly compared to an obscuring cloud; but the comparison also holds
+good because, just as the blanket of a wet mist swathing the wintry
+fields prevents the sunshine from falling upon them in blessing, so the
+accumulated effect of my evil doings and evil designings and thinkings
+and willings comes between me and all spiritual blessings which God can
+bestow, so that the very light of light, the highest blessings that He
+yearns to give, and we faint for want of possessing, are impossible even
+to His love to communicate until the cloud is swept away. So my sin
+darkens my soul, and separates me from the light of life.
+
+But the metaphor carries with it, too, a suggestion of the limitations
+of the power of sin. For when the cloud is thickest and most obscuring
+it only hugs the earth, and rises but a little way Into the heavens; and
+far above it the blue is as blue, and the sunshine as bright, as if
+there were no mist or fog in the lower regions. Therefore, let us
+remember that, while the cloud must veil us from the light, the light is
+above it, and 'every cloud that veileth love' may some day be thinned
+away by the love it veils.
+
+IV. That brings me to the last word of my text,--viz. the prophet's
+teaching as to the removal of the sin.
+
+We have to carry both the metaphors together with us here. 'I have
+blotted out'--that is, as erasing from a book. 'I have blotted out as a
+cloud'--that is, the thinning away of the mist. The blurred and stained
+page can be cancelled. Chemicals will take the ink out. 'The blood of
+Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin'; and it, passed over all that foul
+record, makes it pure and clean. 'What I have written, I have written,'
+said Pilate in his obstinacy. 'What I have written, I have written,'
+wails many a man in the sense of the irrevocableness of his past.
+Brother! be not afraid. Christ can take away all that stained record,
+and give you back the page ready to receive holier words.
+
+The cloud is thinned away. What thins the cloud? As I have said, the
+light which the cloud obscures, shining on the upper surface of it,
+dissipates it layer by layer till it gets down at last to the lowermost,
+and then rends a gap in it, and sends the shaft of the sunbeam through
+on to the green earth. And that is only a highly imaginative way of
+saying that it is the love against which we transgress that thins away
+the cloud of transgression, and at last, as the placid moon, by simply
+shining silently on, will sweep the whole sky clear of its clouds,
+dissipates them all, and leaves the calm blue. God forgives. The ledger
+account--if I may use so grossly commercial a figure--is settled in
+full; the indictment is endorsed, 'acquitted.' He remembers the sins
+only to breathe into the child's heart the assurance of pardon, and no
+obstacle rises by reason of forgiven transgression between the sinning
+man and the reconciled God.
+
+Now, all this preaching of Isaiah's is enlarged and confirmed, and to
+some extent the _rationale_ of it is set before us in the great Gospel
+truth of forgiveness through the blood of Jesus Christ. Unless we know
+that truth, we may well stand amazed and questioning as to whether a
+righteous God, administering a rigorous universe, can ever pardon sin.
+And unless we know that by the Spirit of Jesus Christ, granted to our
+spirits, our whole nature may be remade and moulded, we might well be
+tempted to say, Ah! the Ethiopian cannot change his skin nor the leopard
+his spots. But Jesus Christ can change more than skin, even the heart
+and spirit, the inmost depths of the nature.
+
+Now, brother, my text speaks of this great blotting out as a past fact.
+It is so in the divine mind with regard to each of us, because Christ's
+great work has made reconciliation and atonement for all the sins of all
+the world. And on the fact that it is past is based the exhortation,
+'Return unto Me, for I have redeemed thee.' God does not say, 'Come back
+and I will forgive'; He does not say, 'Return and I will blot out'; but
+He says, 'Return, for I _have_ blotted out.' Though accomplished, the
+forgiveness has to be appropriated by individual faith. The sins of the
+world have been borne, and borne away, by the Lamb of God, but your sins
+are not borne away unless your hand is laid on this head.
+
+If it is, then you do not need to say, 'What I have written is written,
+and it cannot be blotted out.' But as in the old days a monk would take
+some manuscript upon which filthy stories about heathen gods and foolish
+fables were written, and erase these to write the legends of saints, or
+perhaps the words of the Gospels themselves; so on our hearts, which
+have been scribbled all over with obscenities and follies, He will write
+His new best name of Love, and we may be epistles of Christ, written
+with the Spirit of the living God.
+
+
+
+
+HIDDEN AND REVEALED
+
+'Verily thou art a God that hidest Thyself, O God of Israel, the
+Saviour.... I have not spoken in secret, in a dark place of the earth; I
+said not unto the seed of Jacob, Seek ye Me in vain: I the Lord speak
+righteousness, I declare things that are right.'--ISAIAH xlv, 15,19.
+
+
+The former of these verses expresses the thoughts of the prophet in
+contemplating the close of a great work of God's power which issues in
+the heathen's coming to Israel and acknowledging God. He adores the
+depth of the divine counsels which, by devious ways and after long ages,
+have led to this bright result. And as he thinks of all the long-
+stretching preparations, all the apparently hostile forces which have
+been truly subsidiary, all the generations during which these Egyptian
+and Ethiopian tribes have been the enemies and oppressors of that Israel
+whom they at last acknowledge for the dwelling-place of God, and enemies
+of that Jehovah before whom they finally bow down, he feels that he has
+no measuring-line to fathom the divine purposes, and bows his face to
+the ground in reverent contemplation with that word upon his lips:
+'Verily Thou art a God that hidest Thyself, O God of Israel, the
+Saviour.' It is a parallel to the apostolic words, 'O the depths of the
+riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God. How unsearchable are His
+judgments, and His ways past finding out.'
+
+But such thoughts are but a half truth, and may very easily become in
+men's minds a whole error, and therefore they are followed by a
+marvellous section in which the Lord Himself speaks, and of which the
+whole burden is--the clearness and fulness with which God makes Himself
+known to men. True it is that there are depths inaccessible in the
+divine nature. True it is that there are mysteries unrevealed in the
+method of the divine procedure, and especially in that of the relation
+of heathen tribes to His gospel and His love. True it is that there are
+mysteries opened in the very word of His grace. But notwithstanding all
+this--it is also true that He makes Himself known to us all, that He
+declares righteousness, that He calls us to seek Him, and that He wills
+to be found and known by us.
+
+The collocation of these two passages may be taken, then, as
+representing the two phases of the Divine Manifestation, the obscurity
+which must ever be associated with all our finite knowledge of God, and
+the clear sunlight in which blazes all that we need to know of Him.
+
+I. After all revelation, God is hidden.
+
+There is revelation of His Name in all His works. His action must be all
+self-manifestation. But after all it is obscure and hidden.
+
+1. Nature hides while it reveals.
+
+Nature's revelation is unobtrusive.
+
+God is concealed behind second causes.
+
+God is concealed behind regular modes of working (laws).
+
+Nature's revelation is partial, disclosing only a fragment of the name.
+
+Nature's revelation is ambiguous. Dark shadows of death and pain in the
+sensitive world, of ruin and convulsions, of shivered stars, seem to
+contradict the faith that all is very good; so that it has been possible
+for men to drop their plummet in the deep and say, 'I find no God,' and
+for others to fall into Manichaeism or some form or other of dualism.
+
+2. Providence hides while it reveals.
+
+That is the sphere in which men are most familiar with the idea of
+mystery.
+
+There is much of which we do not see the issue. The process is not
+completed, and so the end is not visible.
+
+Even when we believe that 'to Him' and 'for good' are 'all things,' we
+cannot tell how all will come circling round. We are like men looking
+only at one small segment of an ellipse which is very eccentric.
+
+There is much of which we do not see the consistency with the divine
+character.
+
+We are confronted with stumbling-blocks in the allotment of earthly
+conditions; in the long ages and many tribes which are without knowledge
+of God; in the sore sorrows, national and individual.
+
+We can array a formidable host. But it is to be remembered that
+revelation actually increases these. It is just because we know so much
+of God that we feel them so keenly. I suppose the mysteries of the
+divine government trouble others outside the sphere of revelation but
+little. The darkness is made visible by the light.
+
+3. Even in 'grace' God is hidden while revealed.
+
+The Infinite and Eternal cannot be grasped by man.
+
+The conception of infinity and eternity is given us by revelation, but
+it is not comprehended so that its contents are fully known. The words
+are known, but their full meaning is not, and no revelation can make
+them, known to finite intelligences.
+
+God dwells in light inaccessible, which is darkness.
+
+Revelation opens abysses down which we cannot look. It raises and leaves
+unsettled as many questions as it solves.
+
+The telescope resolves many nebulae, but only to bring more unresolvable
+ones into the field of vision.
+
+Now all this is but one side of the truth. There is a tendency in some
+minds to underrate what is plain because all is not plain. For some
+minds the obscure has a fascination, apart altogether from its nature,
+just because it is obscure. It is a noble emulation to press forward and
+'still to be closing up what we know not with what we know.' But neither
+in science nor in religion shall we make progress if we do not take heed
+of the opposing errors of thinking that all is seen, and of thinking
+that what we have is valueless because there are gaps in it. The
+constellations are none the less bright nor immortal fires, though there
+be waste places in heaven where nothing but opaque blackness is seen. In
+these days it is especially needful to insist both on the incompleteness
+of all our religious knowledge, and to say that--
+
+II. Notwithstanding all obscurity, God has amply revealed Himself.
+
+Though God hides Himself, still there comes from heaven the voice--'I
+have not spoken in secret,' Now these words contain these thoughts--
+
+1. That whatever darkness there may be, there is none due to the manner
+of the revelation.
+
+God has not spoken in secret, in a corner. There are no arbitrary
+difficulties made or unnecessary darkness left in His revelation. _We_
+have no right to say that He has left difficulties to test our faith.
+_He_ Himself has never said so. He deals with us in good faith, doing
+all that can be done to enlighten, regard being had to still loftier
+considerations, to the freedom of the human will, to the laws which He
+has Himself imposed on our nature, and the purposes for which we are
+here. It is very important to grasp this. We have been told as much as
+_can_ be told. Contrast with such a revelation the cave-muttered oracles
+of heathenism and their paltering double sense. Be sure that when God
+speaks, He speaks clearly and to all, and that in Christianity there is
+no esoteric teaching for a few initiated only, while the multitude are
+put off with shows.
+
+2. That whatever obscurity there may be, there is none which hides the
+divine invitation or Him from those who obey it.
+
+'I have never said ... seek ye Me in vain.' Much is obscure if
+speculative completeness is looked for, but the moral relations of God
+and man are not obscure.
+
+All which the heart needs is made known. His revelation is clearly His
+seeking us, and His revelation is His gracious call to us to seek Him.
+He is ever found by those who seek. They have not to press through
+obscurities to find Him, but the desire to possess must precede
+possession in spiritual matters. He is no hidden God, lurking in
+obscurity and only to be found by painful search. They who 'seek' Him
+know where to find Him, and seek because they know.
+
+3. That whatever may be obscure, the Revelation of righteousness is
+clear.
+
+We have to face speculative difficulties in plenty, but the great fact
+remains that in Revelation steady light is focussed on the moral
+qualities of the divine Nature and especially on His righteousness.
+
+And the revelation of the divine righteousness reaches its greatest
+brightness, as that of all the divine Nature does, in the Person and
+work of Jesus. Very significantly the idea of God's righteousness is
+fully developed in the immediately subsequent context. There we find
+that attribute linked in close and harmonious conjunction with what
+shallower thought is apt to regard as being in antagonism to it. He
+declares Himself to be 'a just (righteous) God and a Saviour.' So then,
+if we would rightly conceive of His righteousness, we must give it a
+wider extension than that of retributive justice or cold, inflexible
+aloofness from sinners. It impels God to be man's saviour. And with
+similar enlarging of popular conceptions there follows: 'In the Lord is
+righteousness and strength,' and therefore, 'In the Lord shall all the
+seed of Israel be justified (declared and made righteous) and shall
+glory'--then, the divine Righteousness is communicative.
+
+All these thoughts, germinal in the prophet's words, are set in fullest
+light, and certified by the most heart-moving facts, in the Person and
+work of Jesus Christ. He 'declares at this time His righteousness, that
+He might Himself be righteous and the maker righteous of them that have
+faith in Jesus.' Whatever is dark, this is clear, that 'Jehovah our
+Righteousness' has come to us in His Son, in whom seeking Him we shall
+never seek in vain, but 'be found in Him, not having a righteousness of
+our own, even that which is of the law, but that which is through faith
+in Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith.'
+
+If the great purpose of revelation is to make us know that God loves us,
+and has given us His Son that in Him we may know Him and possess His
+Righteousness, difficulties and obscurities in its form or in its
+substance take a very different aspect. What need we more than that
+knowledge and possession? Be not robbed of them.
+
+Many things are not written in the book of the divine Revelation,
+whether it be that of Nature, of human history, or of our own spirits,
+or even of the Gospel, but these are written that we may believe that
+Jesus is the Son of God, and believing, may have life in His name.
+
+
+
+
+A RIGHTEOUSNESS NEAR AND A SWIFT SALVATION
+
+'Hearken unto Me, ye stout-hearted, that are far from righteousness: I
+bring near My righteousness; it shall not be far off, and My salvation
+shall not tarry.'--ISAIAH xlvi. 12,13.
+
+
+God has promised that He will dwell with him that is humble and of a
+contrite heart. Jesus has shed the oil of His benediction on the poor in
+spirit. It is the men who form the exact antithesis to these characters
+who are addressed here. The 'stout-hearted' are those who, being
+untouched in conscience and ignorant of their sin, are self-reliant and
+almost defiant before God. That temper is branded here, though, of
+course, there is a sense in which a stout heart is a priceless
+possession, but that sort of stoutness of heart is best secured by the
+contrite of heart. Those who are far from righteousness are those who
+are not only sinful in act, but do not desire to be otherwise, having no
+approximation or drawing towards a nobler life, by aspiration or effort.
+
+To such men God speaks, as in the tone of a royal proclamation; and what
+should we expect to hear pealing from His lips? Words of rebuke,
+warning, condemnation? No; His voice is gentle and wooing, and does not
+threaten blows, but proffers blessings: 'I will bring near My
+righteousness. It shall not be far off,' though the stout-hearted maybe
+'far from' it. Here we have a divine proclamation of a divine Love that
+will not let us away from its presence; of a divine Work for us that is
+finished without us; of an all-sufficient Gift to us.
+
+I. A divine proclamation of a divine Love that will not let us away from
+its presence.
+
+There is a great contest between God and man: man seeking to withdraw
+from God, and God following in patient, persistent love.
+
+1. In general terms God keeps near us, however far away we go from Him.
+
+Think of our forgetfulness of Him and His continual thought of us. Think
+of our alienated hearts and His unchanging love.
+
+We cannot turn away His care, we cannot exhaust His compassion, we
+cannot alienate His heart. All men everywhere are objects of these, as
+in every corner of the world the sky is overhead, and all lands have
+sunshine.
+
+What a picture of divine patience and placability that truth points for
+us! It shows the Father coming after His prodigal son, and so surpasses
+even the pearl of the parables.
+
+2. The special reference to Christ's work.
+
+That work is the exhibition in manhood and to men of a perfect
+righteousness.
+
+It is the implanting in the corrupt world of a new beginning. It is the
+clothing us with Christ's righteousness, for which we are forgiven and
+in which we are sanctified.
+
+So Christ's work is God's coming to bring near His righteousness, and
+now 'it is nigh thee in thy mouth and in thy heart.'
+
+II. A divine proclamation of a divine Work which is finished without us.
+
+The divine righteousness and its consequence are here represented as
+being brought near while men are still 'stout-hearted.' We must feel the
+emphasis laid on '_I_ will bring near _My_ righteousness,' and the
+impression of merciful speed given by 'My salvation shall not tarry.'
+The whole suggests such thoughts as these:--
+
+The divine love is not drawn out by anything in us, but pours out on us,
+even while we are far off and indifferent to it. His bringing near of
+righteousness, and setting His salvation to run very swiftly side by
+side with it, originates in Himself. It is the self-impelled and self-
+fed flow of a fountain, and we need no pump or machinery to draw it
+forth.
+
+The divine work is accomplished without man's co-operation.
+
+'It is finished,' was Christ's dying cry. But what is finished?--
+Bringing the righteousness near. What still remains to be done?--Making
+it mine. And that is accomplished by faith.
+
+It is mine if by faith I claim it as mine, and knit myself with Him who
+is righteousness and salvation for every man that they may be accessible
+to and possessed by any man.
+
+A man may be far from righteousness though it is near him and all around
+him. Like Gideon's fleece, he may be dry when all is wet, or like some
+rock in a field, barren and sullen, while all around the corn is waving.
+
+III. The proclamation of an all-sufficient Gift.
+
+Righteousness, salvation, glory, are here brought together in
+significant sequence. They are but several names for the same divine
+gift, looked at from different angles. A diamond flashes varying
+prismatic hues from its different facets.
+
+That encyclopaedical gift, which in regard to man considered as sinful
+brings pardon and a new nature 'in righteousness and holiness of truth,'
+brings deliverance from peril and from every form of evil and death, to
+him considered as exposed to consequences of sin both physical and
+moral, and a true though limited participation in the divine glory, even
+now, with the hope of entering into the blaze of it hereafter, to him as
+considered as made in the divine image and having lost it.
+
+And all this wonderful triple hope, rapturous and impossible as it seems
+when we think of man as he is, and of each of ourselves as we each feel
+ourselves to be, is for us a sober certainty and a fact sufficiently
+accomplished, to give firm ground for our largest expectations if we
+hold fast by Jesus who brings that all-sufficient gift of God within
+reach of each of us. The divine patience and love follow us in all our
+wild wanderings, praying us 'with much entreaty that we should receive
+the gift.' Jesus, who is God's righteousness and love incarnate,
+beseeches us to take Him, and in Him righteousness, salvation, and
+glory.
+
+
+
+
+A RIVER OF PEACE AND WAVES OF RIGHTEOUSNESS
+
+'Oh that thou hadst hearkened to My commandments! then had thy peace
+been as a river, and thy righteousness as the waves of the sea.'--
+ISAIAH xlviii. 18.
+
+
+I. The Wonderful Thought of God here.
+
+This is an exclamation of disappointment; of thwarted love. The good
+which He purposed has been missed by man's fault, and He regards the
+faulty Israel with sorrow and pity as a would-be benefactor balked of a
+kind intention might do. O Jerusalem! 'how often would I have gathered
+thee.' 'If thou hadst known ... the things that belong unto thy peace!'
+
+II. Man's opposition to God's loving purpose for us.
+
+To have hearkened to His commandments would have enabled Him to let His
+kindness have its way.
+
+It is not only our act contrary to God's Law, but the source of that act
+in our antagonistic will, which fatally bars out the possibility of
+God's intended good from us. It is 'not hearkening' which is the root of
+not doing.
+
+That possibility of lifting up our puny wills against the all-
+sovereign, Infinite Will is the mystery of mysteries.
+
+The fact that the mysterious possibility becomes an actuality in us is
+still more mysterious. If we could solve those two mysteries, we should
+be far on the way to solve all the mysteries of man's relation to God,
+and God's to man.
+
+A will absolutely submitted to Him is His great ideal of human nature.
+And that ideal we all can thwart, and alas, alas! we all do. It is the
+deepest mystery; it is the blackest sin; it is the intensest folly.
+
+Sin is negative as well as positive. Not to hearken is as bad as to act
+in dead opposition to.
+
+III. The lost good.
+
+The great purpose of the divine Commandment is to show us, for our own
+sakes, the path that leads to all blessedness.
+
+Peace and Righteousness, or, in more modern words, all well-being and
+all goodness, are the sure results of taking God's expressed Will as the
+guide of life.
+
+These two are inseparable. Indeed they are one and the same fact of
+human experience, looked at from two points of view.
+
+The force of the metaphor in both clauses is substantially the same. It
+suggests in both--Abundance--Continuity--Uninterrupted Succession. But
+regarded separately each has its own fair promise. 'As a river'--
+flowing softly, not stagnant--that suggests the calm and gentle flow of
+a placid and untroubled stream refreshing and fertilising. 'As waves of
+the sea,' these suggest greater force than 'river.' The image speaks of
+a righteousness massive and having power and a resistless swing in it.
+It is the more striking because the waves of the sea are the ordinary
+emblem of rebellious power. But here they stand as emblem of the
+strength of a submissive, not of a rebellious, will. In that obedience
+human nature rises to a higher type of strength than it ever attains
+while in opposition to the Source of all strength.
+
+Contrast--'Whose waters cast up mire and dirt.'
+
+IV. The lost good regained.
+
+God has yet a method to accomplish His loving desire. Even those who
+have not hearkened may receive through Christ the good which they have
+sinned away. In Him is peace; in Him is Righteousness, which comes from
+faith. 'Hear, and your soul shall live.'
+
+
+
+
+EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE
+
+
+ALEXANDER MACLAREN, D. D., Litt. D.
+
+ISAIAH AND JEREMIAH
+
+Isaiah, Chaps. XLIX to End. Jeremiah.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+
+FEEDING IN THE WAYS (Isaiah xlix. 9)
+
+THE MOUNTAIN ROAD (Isaiah xlix. 11)
+
+THE WRITING ON GOD'S HANDS (Isaiah xlix. 16)
+
+THE SERVANT'S WORDS TO THE WEARY (Isaiah l. 4)
+
+THE SERVANT'S OBEDIENCE (Isaiah l. 5)
+
+THE SERVANT'S VOLUNTARY SUFFERINGS (Isaiah l. 6)
+
+THE SERVANT'S INFLEXIBLE RESOLVE (Isaiah l. 7)
+
+THE SERVANT'S TRIUMPH (Isaiah l. 8, 9)
+
+A CALL TO FAITH (Isaiah l. 10)
+
+DYING FIRES (Isaiah l. 11)
+
+THE AWAKENING OF ZION (Isaiah lii. 1)
+
+A PARADOX OF SELLING AND BUYING (Isaiah lii. 3)
+
+CLEAN CARRIERS (Isaiah lii. 11)
+
+MARCHING ORDERS (Isaiah lii. 11, 12)
+
+THE ARM OF THE LORD (Isaiah liii. 1)
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--I. (Isaiah liii. 2,3)
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--II. (Isaiah liii. 4-6)
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--III. (Isaiah liii. 7-9)
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--IV. (Isaiah liii. 10)
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--V. (Isaiah liii. 11)
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--VI. (Isaiah liii. 12)
+
+THE PASSING AND THE PERMANENT (Isaiah liv. 10)
+
+THE CALL TO THE THIRSTY (Isaiah lv. 1-13)
+
+THE GREAT PROCLAMATION (Isaiah lv. 1)
+
+GOD'S WAYS AND MAN'S (Isaiah lv. 8, 9)
+
+CAN WE MAKE SURE OF TO-MORROW? (Isaiah lvi. 12)
+
+FLIMSY GARMENTS (Isaiah lix. 6; Rev. iii. 18)
+
+THE SUNLIT CHURCH (Isaiah lx. 1-3)
+
+WALLS AND GATES (Isaiah lx. 18)
+
+THE JOY-BRINGER (Isaiah lxi. 3)
+
+THE HEAVENLY WORKERS AND THE EARTHLY WATCHERS (Isaiah lxii. 1, 6, 7)
+
+MIGHTY TO SAVE (Isaiah lxiii. 1)
+
+THE WINEPRESS AND ITS TREADER (Isaiah lxiii. 2, 3)
+
+THE SYMPATHY OF GOD (Isaiah lxiii. 9)
+
+HOW TO MEET GOD (Isaiah lxiv. 5)
+
+'THE GOD OF THE AMEN' (Isaiah lxv. 16)
+
+
+THE BOOK OF JEREMIAH
+
+GOD'S LAWSUIT (Jer. ii. 9)
+
+STIFF-NECKED IDOLATERS AND PLIABLE CHRISTIANS (Jer. ii. 11)
+
+FOUNTAIN AND CISTERNS (Jer. ii. 13)
+
+FORSAKING JEHOVAH (Jer. ii. 19)
+
+A COLLOQUY BETWEEN A PENITENT AND GOD (Jer. iii. 21, 22)
+
+A QUESTION FOR THE BEGINNING (Jer. v. 31)
+
+POSSESSING AND POSSESSED (Jer. x. 16, R.V.)
+
+CALMS AND CRISES (Jer. xii. 5, R.V.)
+
+AN IMPOSSIBILITY MADE POSSIBLE (Jer. xiii. 23; 2 Cor. v. 17; Rev. xxi.
+5)
+
+TRIUMPHANT PRAYER (Jer. xiv. 7-9)
+
+SIN'S WRITING AND ITS ERASURE (Jer. xvii, 1; 2 Cor. iii. 3; Col. ii. 14)
+
+THE HEATH IN THE DESERT AND THE TREE BY THE RIVER (Jer. xvii. 6, 8)
+
+A SOUL GAZING ON GOD (Jer. xvii. 12)
+
+TWO LISTS OF NAMES (Jer. xvii. 13; Luke x. 20)
+
+YOKES OF WOOD AND OF IRON (Jer. xxviii. 13)
+
+WHAT THE STABLE CREATION TEACHES (Jer. xxxi. 36)
+
+WHAT THE IMMENSE CREATION TEACHES (Jer. xxxi. 37)
+
+A THREEFOLD DISEASE AND A TWOFOLD CURE (Jer. xxxiii. 8)
+
+THE RECHABITES (Jer. xxxv. 16)
+
+JEREMIAH'S ROLL BURNED AND REPRODUCED (Jer. xxxvi. 32)
+
+ZEDEKIAH (Jer. xxxvii. 1)
+
+THE WORLD'S WAGES TO A PROPHET (Jer. xxxvii. 11-21)
+
+THE LAST AGONY (Jer. xxxix. 1-10)
+
+EBEDMELECH THE ETHIOPIAN (Jer. xxxix. 18)
+
+GOD'S PATIENT PLEADINGS (Jer. xliv. 4)
+
+THE SWORD OF THE LORD (Jer. xlvii. 6, 7)
+
+THE KINSMAN-REDEEMER (Jer. 1. 34)
+
+'As SODOM' (Jer. lii. 1-11)
+
+
+
+
+FEEDING IN THE WAYS
+
+'They shall feed in the ways, and their pastures shall be in all high
+places.' ISAIAH xlix. 9.
+
+
+This is part of the prophet's glowing description of the return of the
+Captives, under the figure of a flock fed by a strong shepherd. We have
+often seen, I suppose, a flock of sheep driven along a road, some of
+them hastily trying to snatch a mouthful from the dusty grass by the
+wayside. Little can they get there; they have to wait until they reach
+some green pasture in which they can be folded. This flock shall 'feed
+in the ways'; as they go they will find nourishment. That is not all;
+the top of the mountains is not the place where grass grows. _There_ are
+bare, savage cliffs, from which every particle of soil has been washed
+by furious torrents, or the scanty vegetation has been burnt up by the
+fierce 'sunbeams like swords.' There the wild deer and the ravens live,
+the sheep feed down in the valleys. But '_their_ pasture shall be in all
+high places.' The literal rendering is even more emphatic: 'Their
+pasture shall be in all _bare heights_,' where a sudden verdure springs
+to feed them according to their need. Whilst, then, this prophecy is
+originally intended simply to suggest the abundant supplies that were to
+be provided for the band of exiles as they came back from Babylon, there
+lie in it great and blessed principles which belong to the Christian
+pilgrimage, and the flock that follows Christ.
+
+They who follow Him, says my text, to begin with, shall find in the
+dusty paths of common life, and in all the smallnesses and distractions
+of daily duty, nourishment for their spirits. Do you remember what Jesus
+said? 'My meat is to do the will of Him that sent Me, and to finish His
+work.' We, too, may have the same meat to eat which the world knows not
+of, and He will give that hidden manna to the combatant as well as 'to
+him that overcometh.' In the measure in which 'we follow the Lamb
+whithersoever He goeth,' in that measure do we find--like the stores of
+provisions that Arctic explorers come upon, _cached_ for them--food in
+the wilderness, and nourishment for our highest life in our common work.
+That is a great promise, and it is a great duty.
+
+It is a promise the fulfilment of which is plainly guaranteed by the
+very nature of the case. Religion is meant to direct conduct, and the
+smallest affairs of life are to come under its imperial control, and the
+only way by which a man can get any good out of his Christianity is by
+living it. It is when he sets to work on the principles of the Gospel
+that the Gospel proves itself to be a reality in his blessed experience.
+It is when he does the smallest duties from the great motives that these
+great motives are strengthened by exercise, as every motive is. If you
+wish to weaken the influence of any principle upon you, do not work it
+out, and it will wither and die. If a man would grasp the fulness of
+spiritual sustenance which lies in the Gospel of Jesus Christ, let him
+go to work on the basis of the Gospel, and he 'shall feed in the ways,'
+and common duties will minister strength to him instead of taking
+strength from him. We can make the smallest daily incidents subserve our
+growth and our spiritual strength, because, if we thus do them, they
+will bring to us attestations of the reality of the faith by which we
+act on them. For convincing a man that a lifebuoy is reliable there is
+nothing like having had experience of its power to hold his head above
+the waves when he has been cast into them. _Live_ your Christianity, and
+it will attest itself. There will come, besides that, the blessed memory
+of past times in which we trusted in the Lord and were lightened, we
+obeyed God and found His promises true, we risked all for God and found
+that we had all more abundantly. It is only an active Christian life
+that is a nourished and growing Christian life.
+
+The food which God gives us is not only to be taken by faith, but it has
+to be made ours more abundantly by work. Saint Augustine said in another
+connection, 'Believe, and thou hast eaten.' Yes, that is blessedly true,
+but it needs to be supplemented by 'they shall feed _in the ways_,' and
+their work will bring them nourishment.
+
+But this is a great duty as well as a great promise. How many of us
+Christian people have but little experience of getting nearer to God
+because of our daily occupations? To by far the larger number of us, in
+by far the greater space of time in our lives, our daily work is a
+distraction, and tends to obscure the face of God to us and to shut us
+out from many of the storehouses of sustenance by which a quiet,
+contemplative faith is refreshed. Therefore we need times of special
+prayer and remoteness from daily work; and there will be very little
+realisation of the nourishing power of common duties unless there is
+familiar to us also the entrance into the 'secret place of the Most
+High,' where He feeds His children on the bread of life.
+
+We must not neglect either of these two ways by which our souls are fed,
+and we must ever remember that the reason why so many Christian people
+cannot set to their seal that this promise is true, lies mainly in this,
+that the ways on which they go are either not the ways that the Shepherd
+has walked in before them, or that they are trodden in forgetfulness of
+Him and without looking to His guidance. The work that is to minister to
+the Christian life must be work conformed to the Christian ideal, and if
+we fling ourselves into our secular business, as it is called--if you go
+to your counting-houses and shops, and I go to my desk and books, and
+forget the Shepherd--then there is no grass by the wayside for such
+sheep. But if we subject our wills to Him, and if in all that we do we
+are trying to refer to Him and are working in dependence on Him, and for
+Him, then the poorest work, the meanest, the most entirely secular, will
+be a source of Christian nourishment and blessing. We have to settle for
+ourselves whether we shall be distracted, torn asunder by pressure of
+cares and responsibilities and activities, or whether, far below the
+agitated surface which is ruffled by the winds, and borne along by the
+tidal wave, there will be a great central depth, still but not
+stagnant--whether we shall be fed, or starved in our Christian life, by
+the pressure of our worldly tasks. The choice is before us. 'They shall
+feed in the ways,' if the ways are Christ's ways, and He is at every
+step their Shepherd.
+
+Further, my text suggests that for those who follow the Lamb there shall
+be greenness and pasture on the bare heights. Strip that part of our
+text of its metaphor, and it just comes to the blessed old thought,
+which I hope many of us have known to be a true one, that the times of
+sorrow are the times when a Christian may have the most of the presence
+and strength of God. 'In the days of famine they shall be satisfied,'
+and up among the most barren cliffs, where there is not a bite for any
+four-footed creature, they shall find springing grass and watered
+pastures. Our prophet puts the same thought, under a kindred though
+somewhat different metaphor, in another place in this book, where he
+says, 'I will open rivers in high places.' That is clean contrary to
+nature. The rivers do not run on the mountain-tops, but down in the low
+ground. But for us, as the darkness thickens, the pillar may glow the
+brighter; as the gloom increases, the glory may grow; the less of
+nutriment or refreshment earth affords, the more abundantly does God
+spread His stores before us, if we are wise enough to take them. It is
+an experience, I suppose, common to all devout men, that their times of
+most rapid growth were their times of trouble. In nature winter stops
+all vegetable life. In grace the growing time is the winter. They tell
+us that up in the Arctic regions the reindeer will scratch away the
+snow, and get at the succulent moss that lies beneath it. When that
+Shepherd, Who Himself has known sorrows, leads us up into those barren
+regions of perpetual cold and snow, He teaches us, too, how to brush it
+away, and find what we need buried and kept safe and warm beneath the
+white shroud. It is the prerogative of the Christian soul not to be
+without trouble, but to turn the trouble into nourishment, and to feed
+on the barest heights.
+
+May I turn these latter words of our text a somewhat different way,
+attaching to them a meaning which does not belong to them, but by way of
+accommodation? If Christian people want to have the bread of God
+abundantly, they must climb. It is to those who live on the heights that
+provision comes according to their need. If you would have your
+Christian life starved, go down into the fertile valleys. Remember
+Abraham and Lot, and the choice which each made. The one said: 'I want
+cattle and wealth, and I am going down to Sodom. Never mind about the
+vices of the inhabitants. There is money to be made there.' Abraham
+said: 'I am going to stay up here on the heights, the breezy, barren
+heights,' and God stayed beside him. If we go down we starve our souls.
+If we desire them to be fat and flourishing, nourished with the hidden
+manna, then we must go up. 'Their pasture shall be in all high places.'
+
+Before I finish, let me remind you of the application of the words of my
+text, which we owe to the New Testament. The context runs, as you will
+remember, 'they shall not hunger nor thirst, neither shall the heat nor
+the sun smite them. For He that hath mercy on them shall lead them, even
+by the springs of water shall He guide them.' And you remember the
+beautiful variation and deepening of this promise in that great saying
+which the Seer in the Apocalypse gives us, when he speaks of those 'who
+follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth,' and are led 'by living
+fountains of water,' where 'God shall wipe away all tears from their
+eyes.' So we are entitled to believe that on the loftiest heights, far
+above this valley of weeping, there shall be immortal food, and that on
+the high places of the mountains of God there shall be pasture that
+never withers. The prophet Ezekiel has a similar variation of my text,
+and transfers it from the captives on their march homewards, to the
+happy pilgrims who have reached home, when he says: 'I will bring them
+unto their own land, and feed them upon the mountains of Israel'--when
+they have reached them at last after the weary march--' I will feed them
+in a good pasture, and upon the mountains of Israel shall their fold be;
+there shall they lie in a good fold, and in a fat pasture shall they
+feed upon the mountains of Israel.'
+
+
+
+
+THE MOUNTAIN ROAD
+
+'And I will make all My mountains a way, and My highways shall be
+exalted.'--ISAIAH xlix. 11.
+
+
+This grand prophecy is far too wide to be exhausted by the return of the
+exiles. There gleamed through it the wider redemption and the true
+return of the real captives. The previous promises all find their
+fulfilment in the experiences of the soul on its journey back to God.
+Here we have two characteristics of that journey.
+
+I. The Path through the mountains.
+
+'_My_ mountains.' That is the claim that all the world is His; and also
+the revelation that He is the Lord of Providence. He makes our difficult
+and steep places. Submission comes with that thought, and even 'for the
+strength of the hills we bless Thee.' There are mountains which are not
+His but ours, artificial difficulties of our own creating.
+
+1. Our way does lie over the mountains. There are difficulties. The
+Christian course is like a Roman road which never turned aside, but went
+straight up and on. So much the better. A keener air blows, bracing and
+health-giving, up there. Mosquitoes and malaria keep to the lower
+levels.
+
+2. There is always a path over the mountains. Some way opens when we get
+close up, like a path through heather, which is not seen till reached.
+We walk by faith. We foolishly forebode and fancy that we cannot live if
+something happens, but there is no _cul de sac_ in our paths if God's
+mountain-way is our way, nor does the faint track ever die out if our
+faith is keen-sighted and docile.
+
+II. The Pasture on the mountains--lit. 'bare heights.'
+
+Pastures in the East are down in bottoms, not, like ours, upon the
+hills. But this flock finds supplies on the barren hill-tops.
+
+Sustenance in Sorrow and Loss.
+
+1. Promise that whatever be our trials and losses we shall be taken care
+of. Not, perhaps, as we should have liked, nor as abundantly fed as down
+in the valleys, but still not left to starve. No carcases strewed on the
+bleakest bit of road as one sees dead camels by the side of the tracks
+in the desert.
+
+2. Promise of sustenance of a higher kind even in sorrow. The Alpine
+flora is specially beautiful, though minute. The blessings of
+affliction; the more intimate knowledge of His love, submission of will.
+'Out of the eater came forth meat.'
+
+'Passing through the valley of weeping they make it a well'; the tears
+shed in times of rightly borne sorrow are gathered into a reservoir from
+which refreshment, patience, trust and strength may be drawn in later
+days.
+
+But the perfect fulfilment of the promise lies beyond this life. 'On the
+high mountains of Israel shall their fold be,' and they who have found
+pasture on the barren heights of earthly sorrow shall 'summer high in
+bliss upon the hills of God,' and shall at once both lie 'for ever in a
+good fold,' and 'follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth,' and find
+fountains of living water bursting forth for ever on these fertile
+heights.
+
+
+
+
+THE WRITING ON GOD'S HANDS
+
+'Behold! I have graven thee upon the palms of My hands; thy walls are
+continually before Me.'--ISAIAH xlix. 16.
+
+
+In the preceding context we have the infinitely tender and beautiful
+words: 'Zion hath said, The Lord hath forsaken me. Can a woman forget
+her sucking child? ... yea, they may forget, yet will I not forget
+thee.' There is more than a mother's love in the Father's heart. But
+wonderful in their revelation of God, and mighty to strengthen, calm,
+and comfort, as these transcendent words are, those of my text, which
+follow them, do not fall beneath their loftiness. They are a singularly
+bold metaphor, drawn from the strange and half-savage custom, which
+lingers still among sailors and others, of having beloved names or other
+tokens of affection and remembrance indelibly inscribed on parts of the
+body. Sometimes worshippers had the marks of the god thus set on their
+flesh; here God writes on His hands the name of the city of His
+worshippers. And it is not its name only, but its very likeness that He
+stamps there, that He may ever look on it, as those who love bear with
+them a picture of one dear face. The prophecy goes on: 'Thy walls are
+continually before Me,' but in the prophet's time the walls were in
+ruins, and yet they are present to the divine mind.
+
+I. Now, the first thought suggested by these great words is that here we
+have set forth for our strength and peace a divine remembrance, tender
+as--yea, more tender than--a mother's.
+
+When Israel came out of Egypt, the Passover was instituted as 'a
+memorial unto all generations,' or, as the same idea is otherwise
+expressed, 'it shall be for a sign unto thee upon thine hand.' Here God
+represents Himself as doing for Israel what He had bid Israel do for
+Him. They were, as it were, to write the supreme act of deliverance in
+the Exodus upon their hands, that it might never be forgotten. He writes
+Zion on His hands for the same purpose.
+
+Now, of course, the text does not primarily refer to individuals, but to
+the community, whether Zion is understood, as the prophet understood the
+name, to be ancient Israel, or as the Christian Church. But the
+recognition of that fact should not be allowed to rob us of the
+preciousness of this text in its bearing on the individual. For God
+remembers the community, not as an abstraction or a generalised
+expression, but as the aggregate of all the individuals composing it. We
+lose sight of the particulars when we generalise. We cannot see the
+trees for the wood. We think of 'the Church,' and do not think of the
+thousands of men and women who make it up. We cannot discern the
+separate stars in the galaxy. But God's eye resolves what to us is a
+nebula, and to Him every single glittering point of light hangs rounded
+and separate in the heaven. Therefore this assurance of our text is to
+be taken by every single soul that loves God, and trusts Him through
+Jesus Christ, as belonging to it, as though there were not another
+creature on earth but itself.
+
+ 'The sun whose beams most glorious are,
+ Disdaineth no beholder.'
+
+Its light floods the world, yet seems to go straight into the eyeball
+of every man that looks at it. And such is the divine love and
+remembrance. There is no jostling nor confusion in the wide space of
+the heart of God. They that go before shall not hinder them that come
+after. The hungry crowd sat down in companies on the green grass, and
+the first fifty, no doubt, were envied by the last of the hundred
+fifties that made up the five thousand, and wondered whether the five
+loaves and the two small fishes could go round, but the last fed full
+as did the first. The great promise of our text belongs to me and thee,
+and therefore belongs to us all.
+
+That remembrance which each man may take for himself--and we are poor
+Christians if we do not live in its light--is infinitely tender. The
+echo of the music of the previous words still haunts the verse, and the
+remembrance promised in it is touched with more than a mother's love.
+'I am poor and needy,' says the Psalmist, 'yet the Lord thinketh upon
+me.' He might have said, 'I am poor and needy, therefore the Lord
+thinketh upon me.' That remembrance is in full activity when things are
+darkest with us. Israel said, 'My Lord hath forgotten me,' because at
+the point of view taken in the second half of Isaiah, it was captive in
+a far-off land. You and I sometimes are brought into circumstances in
+which we are ready to think 'God has, somehow or other, left me, has
+forgotten me.' Never! never! However mirk the night, however apparently
+solitary the way, however mysterious and insoluble the difficulties of
+our position, let us fall back on this, that the captive Israel was
+remembered by God, and let us be sure that no circumstances of our
+lives are so dark or mysterious as to warrant the faintest shadow of
+suspicion creeping over the brightness of our confidence in this great
+promise. His divine remembrance of each of His servants is certain.
+
+But do not let us forget that it was a very sinful Zion that God thus
+remembered. It was because the nation had transgressed that they were
+captives, but their very captivity was a proof that they were not
+forgotten. The loving divine remembrance had to smite in order to prove
+that it was active. Let us neither be puzzled by our sorrows nor made
+less confident when we think of our sins. For there is no sin that is
+strong enough to chill the divine love, or to erase us from the divine
+remembrance. 'Captive Israel! captive because sinful, I have graven
+_thee_ on the palms of My hands.'
+
+II. A second thought here is that the divine remembrance guides the
+divine action.
+
+The palm of the hand is the seat of strength, the instrument of work;
+and so, if Zion's name is written there, that means not only
+remembrance, but remembrance which is at the helm, as it were, which is
+moulding and directing all the work that is done by the hand that bears
+the name inscribed upon it. The thought is identical with the one which
+is suggested by part of the High Priest's official dress, although
+there the thought has a different application. He bore the names of the
+twelve tribes graven upon his shoulder, the seat of power, and upon his
+breastplate that lay above the heart, the home of love. God holds out
+the mighty Hand which works all things, and says to His children:
+'Look, you are graven there'--at the very fountain-head, as it were, of
+the divine activity. Which, being turned into plain English, is just
+this, that for His Church as a whole, He does move amidst the affairs
+of nations. You remember the grand words of one of the Psalms,--'He
+reproved kings for their sakes, saying, Touch not Mine anointed, and do
+My prophets no harm.' It is no fanatical reading of the history of
+earthly politics and kingdoms, if we recognise that one of the most
+prominent reasons for the divine activities in moulding the kingdoms,
+setting up and casting down, is the advancement of the kingdom of
+heaven and the building of the City of God. 'I have graven thee on the
+palms of My hands'--and when the hands go to work, it is for the Zion
+whose likeness they bear.
+
+But the same truth applies to us individually. 'All things work
+together'; they would not do so, unless there was one dominant Will
+which turned the chaos into a cosmos. 'All things work,' that is very
+plain. The tremendous activities round us both in Nature and in history
+are clear to us all. But if all things and events are co-operant,
+working into each other, and for one end, like the wheels of a well-
+constructed engine, then there must be an Engineer, and they work
+together because He is directing them. Thus, because my name is graven
+on the palms of the mighty Hand that doeth all things, therefore 'all
+things work together for my good.' If we could but carry that quiet
+conviction into all the mysteries, as they sometimes seem to be, of our
+daily lives, and interpret everything in the light of that great
+thought, how different all our days would be! How far above the petty
+anxieties and cares and troubles that gnaw away so much of our strength
+and joy; how serene, peaceful, lofty, submissive, would be our lives,
+and how in the darkest darkness there would be a great light, not only
+of hope for a distant future, but of confident assurance for the
+present. 'I have graven thee on the palms of My hands '--do Thou, then,
+as Thou wilt with me.
+
+III. A last thought here is that the divine remembrance works all
+things, to realise a great ideal end, as yet unreached.
+
+'Thy walls are continually before Me.' When this prophecy was uttered
+the Israelites were in captivity, and the city was a wilderness, 'the
+holy and beautiful House'--as this very book says--'where the fathers
+praised Thee was burned with fire,' the walls were broken down, rubbish
+and solitude were there. Yet on the palms of God's hands were inscribed
+the walls which were nowhere else! They were 'before Him,' though
+Jerusalem was a ruin. What does that mean? It means that that divine
+remembrance sees 'things that are not, as though they were.' In the
+midst of the imperfect reality of the present condition of the Church
+as a whole, and of us, its actual components, it sees the ideal, the
+perfect vision of the perfect future, and 'all the wonder that shall
+be.' Zion may be desolate, but 'before Him' stands what will one day
+stand on the earth before all men, 'the new Jerusalem, coming down from
+heaven,' having walls great and high, and its foundations garnished
+with all manner of precious stones. 'Thy walls are before Me,' though
+the ruins are there before men.
+
+So, brethren, the most radiant optimism is the only fitting attitude
+for Christian people in looking into the future, either of the Church
+as a whole, or of themselves as individual members of it. God's hand is
+working for Zion and for me. It is guided by love that does not lose
+the individual in the mass, nor ever forgets any of its children, and
+it works towards the attainment of unattained perfection. 'This Man'
+does not 'begin to build and' prove 'not able to finish.'
+
+So let us be sure that, if only we keep ourselves in the love, and
+continue in the grace of God, He will not slack nor stay His hand on
+which Zion is graven, until it has 'perfected that which concerneth
+us,' and fulfilled to each of us that 'which He has spoken to us of.'
+
+I said at the beginning of these remarks that God did what He bids us
+do. God bids us do what He does. His name should be on our hands; that
+is to say, memory of Him, love of Him, regard to Him, confidence in Him
+should mould and guide all our activity, and the aim that we shall be
+builded up for a habitation of God through the Spirit should be the
+conscious aim of our lives, as it is the aim which He has in view in
+all His dealings with us. Our names on His hand; His name on our hands;
+so shall we be blessed.
+
+
+
+
+THE SERVANT'S WORDS TO THE WEARY
+
+'The Lord God hath given me the tongue of them that are taught, that I
+should know how to sustain with words him that is weary; he wakeneth
+morning by morning, he wakeneth mine ear to hear as they that are
+taught.'--ISAIAH l. 4.
+
+
+In chapter xlix. 1-6, the beginning of the continuous section of which
+these verses are part, a transition is made from Israel as collectively
+the ideal servant of the Lord, to a personal Servant, whose office it
+is 'to bring Jacob again to Him.' We see the ideal in the very act of
+passing to its highest form, and that in which it is finally fulfilled
+in history, namely, by the person Jesus. That Jesus was 'Thy Holy
+Servant' was the earliest gospel preached by Peter and John before
+people and rulers. It is not the most vital conception of our Lord's
+nature and work. The prophet does not here pierce to the core, as in his
+fifty-third chapter with its vision of the Suffering Servant, but this
+is prelude to that, and the office assigned here to the Servant cannot
+be fully discharged without that ascribed to Him there, as the prophet
+begins to discern almost immediately. The text gives us a striking view
+of the purpose of Messiah's mission and of His training and preparation
+for it.
+
+I. The purpose of Christ's mission.
+
+There is a remarkable contrast between the stately prelude to the
+section of the prophecy in chapter xlix., and the ideal in this text.
+There the Servant calls the isles and the distant peoples to listen, and
+declares that His mouth is 'like a sharp sword'; here all that is keen
+and smiting in His word has softened into gentle whispers of comfort to
+sustain the weary.
+
+A mission addressed to 'the weary' is addressed to every man, for who is
+not 'weighed upon with sore distress,' or loaded with the burden and the
+weight of tasks beyond his power or distasteful to his inclinations, or
+monotonous to nausea, or prolonged to exhaustion, or toiled at with
+little hope and less interest? Who is not weary of himself and of his
+load? What but universal weariness does the universal secret desire for
+rest betray? We are all 'pilgrims weary of time,' and some of us are
+weary of even prosperity, and some of us are worn out with work, and
+some of us buffeted to all but exhaustion by sorrow, and all of us long
+for rest, though many of us do not know where to look for it.
+
+Jesus may have had this word in mind, when He called to Him all them
+'that labour and are heavy laden.' At all events, the prophet's ideal
+and the evangelists' story accurately correspond. Christ's words have
+other characteristics, but are eminently words that sustain the weary
+and comfort the down-hearted. Who can ever calculate the new strength
+poured by them into fainting hearts and languid hands, the all but dead
+hopes that they have reanimated, the sorrows they have comforted, the
+wounds they have stanched?
+
+What a lesson here as to the noblest use of high endowments! What a
+contrast to the use that so many of those to whom God has given 'the
+tongue of them that are taught' make of their great gifts! Literature
+yields but few examples of great writers who have faithfully employed
+their powers for that purpose, which seems so humble and is so lofty,
+the help of the weary, the comfort of the sad. Many pages in famous
+books would be cancelled if all that had been written without
+consideration for these classes were obliterated, as it will be one day.
+
+But Christ not only speaks by outward words, but has other ways of
+lodging sustenance and comfort in souls than by vocables audible to the
+ear or visible to the eye on the page. 'The words that I speak unto you,
+they are spirit and they are life.' He spoke by His deeds on earth, and
+in one and the same set of facts, He 'began to do and to teach,' the
+doing being named first. He 'now speaketh from Heaven' by many an inward
+whisper, by the communication of His own Spirit, on Whom this very
+office of ministering sustenance and comfort is laid, and whose very
+name of the Comforter means One who by his being with a man strengthens
+him.
+
+II. The training and preparation of the Messiah for His mission.
+
+The Messiah is here represented as having the tongue of 'them that are
+taught,' and as having it, because morning by morning He has been
+wakened to hear God's lessons. He is thus God's scholar--a thought of
+which an unreflecting orthodoxy has been shy, but which it is necessary
+to admit unhesitatingly and ungrudgingly, if we would not reduce the
+manhood of Jesus to a mere phantasm. He Himself has said, 'As the Father
+taught Me, I speak these things.' With emphatic repetition, He was
+continually making that assertion, as, for instance, 'I have not spoken
+of Myself, but the Father which sent Me, He gave Me a commandment what I
+should say, and what I should speak ... the things therefore which I
+speak, even as the Father hath said unto Me, so I speak.'
+
+The Gospels tell us of the prayers of Jesus, and of rare occasions in
+which a voice from heaven spoke to Him. But while these are palpable
+instances of His communion with God, and precious tokens of His true
+brotherhood with us in the indispensable characteristics of the life of
+faith, they are but the salient points on which the light falls, and
+behind them, all unknown by us, stretches an unbroken chain of like acts
+of fellowship. In that subordination as of a scholar to teacher, both
+His divine and His human nature concurred, the former in filial
+submission, the latter in continual, truly human derivation and
+reception. The man Jesus was taught and, like the boy Jesus, 'increased
+in wisdom.'
+
+But while He learned as truly as we learn from God, and exercised the
+same communion with the Father, the same submission to Him, which other
+men have to exercise, and called 'us brethren, saying, I will put my
+trust in Him,' the difference in degree between His close fellowship
+with God the Father, and our broken and always partial fellowship,
+between His completeness of reception of God's words and our imperfect
+comprehension, between His perfect reproduction of the words He had
+heard and our faint, and often mistaken echo of them, is so immense as
+to amount to a difference in kind. His unity of will and being with the
+Father ensured that all His words were God's. 'Never man spake like this
+man.' The man who speaks to us once for all God's words must be more
+than man. Other men, the highest, give us fragments of that mighty
+voice; Jesus speaks its whole message, and nothing but its message. Of
+that perfect reproduction He is calmly conscious, and claims to give it,
+in words which are at once lowly and instinct with more than human
+authority: 'All things that I have heard of My Father I have made known
+unto you.' Who besides Him dare make such a claim? Who besides Him could
+make it without being met by incredulous scorn? His utterance of the
+Father's words was unmarred by defect on the one hand, and by additions
+on the other. It was like pure water which tastes of no soil. His soul
+was like an open vessel plunged in a stream, filled by the flow and
+giving forth again its whole contents.
+
+That divine communication to Jesus was no mere impartation of
+abstractions or 'truths,' still less of the poor words of man's speech,
+but was the flowing into His spirit of the living Father by whom He
+lived. And it was unbroken. 'Morning by morning' it was going on. The
+line was continuous, whereas for the rest of us, at the best, it is a
+series of points more or less contiguous, but with dark spaces between.
+'God giveth not the Spirit by measure unto Him.'
+
+So, then, let us hold fast by Him, the Son in whom God has spoken to us,
+and to all voices without and within that would woo us to listen, let us
+answer with the only wise answer: 'To whom shall we go? Thou hast the
+words of eternal life.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SERVANT'S OBEDIENCE
+
+'I was not rebellious, neither turned away back'--ISAIAH l. 5.
+
+
+I. The secret of Christ's life, filial obedience.
+
+The fact is attested by Scripture. By His own words: 'My meat is to do
+the will of My Father'; 'For thus it becometh us to fulfil all
+righteousness'; 'I came down from heaven not to do My own will.' By His
+servant's words: 'Obedient unto death'; 'Made under the law'; 'He
+learned obedience by the things which He suffered.' It is involved in
+the belief of His righteous manhood. It is essential to true manhood.
+The highest ideal for humanity is conscious dependence on God, and the
+very definition of righteousness is conscious conformity to the Will of
+God. If Christ had done the noblest acts and yet had not always had this
+sense of being a servant, He would not have been pure and holy.
+
+It is not inconsistent with His true Divinity. We stand afar off, but we
+can see this much.
+
+The completeness of that obedience. It was continuous and it was entire.
+
+The living heart of it: 'I delight to do Thy Will.' The Father's Will
+was not a force without, but Christ's whole being was conformed to it,
+and it was shrined within His heart and had become His choice and
+delight.
+
+The expressions of His obedience were His perfect fulfilment of the
+divine commands, and His perfect endurance of the divine appointments.
+
+Thus God's Will was the keynote, to which Christ's will struck the full
+chord.
+
+II. The yet deeper mysteries which that perfect obedience discloses.
+
+1. A sinless human life must be more than human. The contrast with all
+which we have known--the impossibility of retaining belief in the
+perfect obedience of Jesus unless we have underlying it the belief in
+His divinity. 'There is none good but one, that is God.'
+
+2. The sinless human life suffers not for itself but for us. The
+combination of holiness and sorrow leads on to the mystery of atonement.
+The sinlessness is indispensable to the doctrine of His sacrificial
+death.
+
+III. The glorious gifts which flow from that perfect obedience.
+
+1. It gives us a living law to obey.
+
+2. It gives us a transforming power to receive.
+
+3. It gives us a perfect righteousness to trust to.
+
+This perfect obedience may be ours. Being ours, our lives will be
+strong, free, peaceful.
+
+That obedience becomes ours by faith, which leads to love, and love to
+the glad obedience of sons.
+
+THE SERVANT'S VOLUNTARY SUFFERINGS
+
+'I gave My back to the smiters, and My cheeks to them that plucked off
+the hair: I hid not My face from shame and spitting.'--ISAIAH l. 6.
+
+Such words are not to be dealt with coldly. Unless they be grasped by
+the heart they are not grasped at all. We do not think of analysing in
+the presence of a great sorrow. There can be no greater dishonour to the
+name of Christ than an unemotional consideration of His sufferings for
+us. The hindrances to a due consideration of these are manifold; some
+arising from intellectual, and some from moral, causes. Most men have
+difficulty in vivifying any historical event so as to feel its reality.
+There is no nobler use of the historical imagination than to direct it
+to that great life and death on which the salvation of the world
+depends.
+
+The prophet here has advanced from the first general conception of the
+Servant of the Lord as recipient of divine commission, and submissive to
+the divine voice, to thoughts of the sufferings which He would meet with
+on His path, and of how He bore them.
+
+I. The sufferings of the Servant.
+
+The minute particularity is very noteworthy, scourging, plucking the
+beard, shame, all sorts of taunts and buffets on the face, and the last
+indignity of spitting. Clearly, then, He is not only to suffer
+persecution, but is to be treated with insult and to endure that strange
+blending, so often seen, of grim infernal laughter with grim infernal
+fury, the hyena's laugh and its ferocity. Wherever it occurs, it implies
+not only fell hate and cruelty, but also contempt and a horrible delight
+in triumphing over an enemy. It is found in all corrupt periods, and
+especially in religious persecutions. Here it implies the rejection of
+the Servant.
+
+The prophecy was literally fulfilled, but not in all its traits. This
+may give a hint as to the general interpretation of prophecy and may
+teach that external fulfilment only points to a deeper correspondence.
+The most salient instance is in Jesus' entrance into Jerusalem riding on
+an ass, which was but a finger-post to guide men's thoughts to His
+fulfilling the ideal of the Messianic King. And yet, the minute
+correspondences are worth noticing. What a strange, solemn glimpse they
+give into that awful divine omniscience, and into the mystery of the
+play of the vilest passions as being yet under control in their
+extremest rage!
+
+We must note the remarkable prominence in the narratives of the Passion,
+of signs of contempt and mockery; Judas' kiss, the purple robe, the
+crown of thorns, 'wagging their heads,' 'let be, let Elias come,' etc.
+
+Think of the exquisite pain of this to Christ. That He was sinless and
+full of love made it all the worse to bear. Not the physical pain, but
+the consciousness that He was encompassed by such an atmosphere of evil,
+was the sharpest pang. We should think with reverent sympathy of His
+perfect discernment of the sinful malignant hearts from which the
+sufferings came, of His pained and rejected love thrown back on itself,
+of His clear sight of what their heartless infliction of tortures would
+end in for the inflicters, of His true human feeling which shrank from
+being the object of contempt and execration.
+
+II. His patient submission.
+
+'I gave,'--purely voluntary. That word originally expressed the patient
+submission with which He endured at the moment, when the lash scored His
+back, but it may be widened out to express Christ's perfect
+voluntariness in all His passion. At any moment He could have abandoned
+His work if His filial obedience and His love to men had let Him do so.
+His would-be captors fell to the ground before one momentary flash of
+His majesty, and they could have laid no hand on Him, if His will had
+not consented to His capture. Fra Angelico has grasped the thought which
+the prophet here uttered, and which the evangelists emphasise, that all
+His suffering was voluntary, and that His love to us restrained His
+power, and led Him to the slaughter, silent as a sheep before her
+shearers. For he has pourtrayed the majestic figure seated in passive
+endurance, with eyes blindfolded but yet wide open behind the bandage,
+all-seeing, wistful, sad, and patient, while around are fragments of
+rods, and smiting hands, and a cruel face blowing spittle on the
+unshrinking cheeks. He seems to be saying: 'These things hast thou done,
+and I kept silence.' 'Thou couldest have no power at all against Me
+unless it were given thee.'
+
+III. His submission to suffering in obedience to the Father's Will.
+
+The context connects His opened ear and His not being rebellious with
+His giving His back to the smiters. That involves the idea that these
+indignities and insults were part of the divine counsel in reference to
+Him. That same combination of ideas is strongly presented in the early
+addresses of Peter, recorded in the first chapters of Acts, of which
+this is a specimen: 'Him, being delivered by the determinate counsel and
+foreknowledge of God, ye with wicked hands have crucified and slain.'
+The full significance of Christ's passion as that of the atoning
+sacrifice was not yet clear to the apostle, any more than the Servant's
+sufferings were to the prophet, but both prophet and apostle were
+carried on by fuller experience and reflection on what they already saw
+clearly, to discern the inwardness and depth of these. The one soon came
+to see that 'by His stripes we are healed,' and the other finally wrote:
+'Who His own self bare our sins in His own body on the tree.' And
+whoever deeply ponders the startling fact that 'it pleased the Lord to
+bruise Him,' sinless and ever obedient as He was, will be borne, sooner
+or later, into the full sunlight of the blessed belief that when Jesus
+suffered and died, 'He died for all.' His sufferings were those of a
+martyr for truth, who is willing to die rather than cease to witness for
+it; but they were more. They were the sufferings of a lover of mankind
+who will face the extremest wrong that can be inflicted, rather than
+abandon His mission; but they were more. They were not merely the
+penalty which He had to pay for faithfulness to His work; they were
+themselves the crown and climax of His work. The Son of Man came,
+indeed, 'not to be ministered to but to minister,' but that, taken
+alone, is but a maimed view of what He came for, and we must
+whole-heartedly go on to say as He said, 'and to give His life a ransom
+for many,' if we would know the whole truth as to the sufferings of
+Jesus.
+
+Again, since Christ suffers according to the will of God, it is clear
+that all representations of the scope of His atoning death, which
+represent it as moving the will of the Father to love and pardon, are
+travesties of the truth and turn cause into effect. God does not love,
+because Jesus died, but Jesus died because God loved.
+
+Further, it is to be noted that His sufferings are the great means by
+which He sustains the weary. The word to which His ears were opened,
+morning by morning, was the word to which He was docile when He gave His
+back to the smiters. It is His passion, regarded as the sacrifice for a
+world's sin, from which flow the most powerful stimulants to service and
+tonics for weary souls, the tenderest comfortings for sorrow. He
+sustains and comforts by the example of His life, but far more, and more
+sweetly, more mightily, by that which flows to us through His death. His
+sufferings are powerful to sustain, when thought of as our example, but
+they are a tenfold stronger source of patience and strength, when laid
+on our hearts as the price of our redemption. The Cross is, in all
+senses of the expression, the tree of life.
+
+Wonder, reverence, love, gratitude, should well forth from our hearts,
+when we think of these cruel sufferings, but the deepest fountains in
+them will not be unsealed, unless we see in the suffering Servant the
+atoning Son.
+
+
+
+
+THE SERVANT'S INFLEXIBLE RESOLVE
+
+'For the Lord God will help Me; therefore shall I not be confounded:
+therefore have I set My face like a flint.'--ISAIAH l. 7.
+
+
+What a striking contrast between the tone of these words and of the
+preceding! There all is gentleness, docility, still communion,
+submission, patient endurance. Here all is energy and determination,
+resistance and martial vigour. It is like the contrast between a priest
+and a warrior. And that gentleness is the parent of this boldness. The
+same Will which is all submission to God is all resistance in the face
+of hostile men. The utmost lowliness and the most resolved resistance to
+opposing forces are found in that prophetic image of the Servant of the
+Lord--even as they are found in the highest degree and most perfectly in
+Jesus Christ.
+
+The sequence in this context is worth noting. We had first Christ's
+communion with God and communications from the Father; then the perfect
+submission of His Will; then that submission expressed in His voluntary
+sufferings; and now we have His immovable steadfastness of resistance to
+the temptation, which lay in these sufferings, to depart from His
+attitude of submission, and to abandon His work.
+
+The former verse led us up to the verge of the great mystery of His
+sacrificial death. This gives us a glimpse into the depths of His human
+life, and shows Him to us as our example in all holy heroism.
+
+I. The need which Christ felt to exercise firm resistance.
+
+The words of the text are found almost reproduced in Jeremiah i. and
+Ezekiel iii. All prophets and servants of God have had thus to resist,
+and it would be superfluous to show how resistance to opposing
+influences is the condition of all noble life and of all true service.
+
+But was it so with Him? The more accurate translation of the second
+clause of our text is to be noticed: 'Therefore I will not suffer Myself
+to be overcome by the shame.'
+
+Then the shame had in it some tendency to divert Him from His course.
+Christ's humanity felt natural human shrinking from pain and suffering.
+It shrank from the contempt and mockery of those around Him, and did so
+with especial sensitiveness because of His pure and sinless nature, His
+yearning sympathy, the atmosphere of love in which He dwelt, His clear
+sight of the sin, and His prevision of the consequent sorrow. If so, His
+sufferings did appeal to His human nature and constituted a temptation.
+
+At the beginning the Tempter addressed himself to natural desires to
+procure physical gratification (bread), and to the equally natural
+desire to avoid suffering and pain, and to secure His kingdom by an
+easier method ('All these will I give Thee, if--').
+
+And the latter temptation attended Him all through His life, and was
+most insistent at its close. The shadow of the cross stretched along His
+path from its beginning. But it is to be remembered that he had not the
+same need of _self_-control which we have, in that His Will was not
+reluctant, and that no rebellious desires had escaped from its control
+and needed to be reduced to submission. 'I was not rebellious.' 'The
+spirit is willing but the flesh is weak' was true in the fullest extent
+only of Him. So the context gives us His perfect submission of will, and
+yet the need to harden His face toward externals from which,
+instinctively and without breach of filial obedience, His sensitive
+nature recoiled. The reality of the temptation, the limits of its reach,
+His consciousness of it, and His immovable obedience and resistance, are
+all expressed in the deep and wonderful words, 'If it be possible, let
+this cup pass from Me, nevertheless not as I will, but as Thou wilt.'
+
+II. The perfect inflexible resolve.
+
+'Face like a flint' seems to be quoted in Luke ix. 51; 'Steadily set His
+face.' The whole story of the Gospels gives the one impression of a life
+steadfast in its great resolve. There are no traces of His ever
+faltering in His purpose, none of His ever suffering Himself to be
+diverted from it, no parentheses and no digressions. There are no
+blunders either. But what a contrast in this respect to all other lives!
+Mark's Gospel, which is eminently the gospel of the Servant, is full of
+energy and of this inflexible resolve, which speak in such sayings as 'I
+must be about My Father's business'; 'I must work the works of My Father
+while it is day.' That last journey, during which He 'steadfastly set
+His face to go to Jerusalem,' is but a type of the whole. Christ's life
+was a continuous or rather a continually repeated effort.
+
+This inflexible resolve is associated in Him with characteristics not
+usually allied with it. The gentleness of Christ is so obvious in His
+character that little needs to be said to point it out. To the influence
+of His character more than to any other cause may be traced the change
+in the perspective, so to speak, of Virtue, which characterises modern
+notions of perfection as contrasted with antique ones. Contrast the
+Greek and Roman type with the mediaeval ascetic, or with the
+philanthropic type of modern times. Carlyle's ideal is retrograde and an
+anachronism. Women and patient sufferers find example in Him. But we
+have in Jesus Christ, too, the highest example of all the stronger and
+robuster virtues, the more distinctly heroic, masculine; and that not
+merely passive firmness of endurance such as an American Indian will
+show in torments, but active firmness which presses on to its goal, and,
+immovably resolute, will not be diverted by anything. In Him we see a
+resolved Will and a gentle loving Heart in perfect accord. That is a
+wonderful combination. We often find that such firmness is developed at
+the expense of indifference to other people. It is like a war chariot,
+or artillery train, that goes crashing across the field, though it be
+over shrieking men and broken bones, and the wheels splash in blood.
+Resolved firmness is often accompanied with self-absorption which makes
+it gloomy, and with narrow limitations. Such men gather all their powers
+together to secure a certain end, and do it by shutting the eyes of
+their mind to everything but the one object, like the painter, who
+blocks up his studio window to get a top light, or as a mad bull lowers
+his head and blindly rushes on.
+
+There is none of all this in Christ's firmness. He was able at every
+moment to give His whole sympathy to all who needed it, to take in all
+that lay around Him, and His resolute concentration of Himself on His
+work made Him none the less perfect in all which goes to make up
+complete manhood. Not only was Christ's firmness that of a fixed Will
+and a most loving Heart, like one of these 'rocking stones,' whose solid
+mass can be set vibrating by a poising bird, but the fixed Will came
+from the loving Heart. The very compassion and pity of His nature led to
+that resolved continuance in His path of redeeming love, though
+suffering and mockery waited for Him at each turn.
+
+And so He is the Joshua, the Warrior-King, as well as the Priest. That
+Face, ever ready to kindle into pity, to melt into tenderness, to
+express every shade of tender feeling, was 'set as a flint.' That Eye,
+ever brimming with tears, was ever fixed on one goal. That Character is
+the type of all strength and of all gentleness.
+
+III. The basis of Christ's fixed resolve in filial confidence.
+
+'The Lord God will help Me.' So Christ lived by faith.
+
+That faith led to this heroic resistance and immovable resolution.
+
+That confidence of divine help was based upon consciousness of
+obedience.
+
+It is most blessed for us to have Him as our example of faith and of
+brave opposition to all the antagonistic forces around us. But we need
+more than an example. He will but rebuke our wavering purposes of
+obedience, if He is no more than our pattern. Thank God, He is more,
+even our Fountain of Power, from Whom we can draw life akin to, because
+derived from, His own. In Him we can feel strength stealing into flaccid
+limbs, and gain 'the wrestling thews that throw the world.' If we are
+'in Christ' and on the path of duty, we too may be able to set our faces
+as a flint, and to say truthfully: 'None of these things move me,
+neither count I my life dear to myself, that I may finish my course with
+joy.' And yet we may withal be gentle, and keep hearts 'open as day to
+melting charity,' and have leisure and sympathy to spare for every
+sorrow of others, and a hand to help and 'sustain him that is weary.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SERVANT'S TRIUMPH
+
+'He is near that justifieth Me; who will contend with Me? let us stand
+together: who is Mine adversary? let him come near to Me. 9. Behold, the
+Lord God will help Me; who is he that shall condemn Me? lo, they all
+shall wax old as a garment; the moth shall eat them up.'--ISAIAH l. 8,
+9.
+
+
+We have reached the final words of this prophecy, and we hear in them a
+tone of lofty confidence and triumph. While the former ones sounded
+plaintive like soft flute music, this rings out clear like the note of a
+trumpet summoning to battle. The Servant of the Lord seems here to be
+eager for the conflict, not merely patient and enduring, not merely
+setting His face like a flint, but confidently challenging His
+adversaries, and daring them to the strife.
+
+As for the form of the words, the image underlying the whole is that of
+a suit at law. It is noteworthy that since Isaiah xli. this metaphor has
+run through the whole prophecy. The great controversy is God _versus_
+Idols. God appears at the bar of men, pleads His cause, calls His
+witnesses (xliii. 9). 'Let them' (_i.e._ idols) 'bring forth their
+witnesses that they may be justified.'
+
+Possibly the form of the words here is owing to the dominance of that
+idea in the context, and implies nothing more than the general notion of
+opposition and victory. But it is at least worth remembering that in the
+life of Christ we have many instances in which the prophetic images were
+literally fulfilled even though their meaning was mainly symbolical: as
+_e.g._ the riding on the ass, the birth in Bethlehem, the silence before
+accusers, 'a bone of Him shall not be broken,' and in this very contest,
+'shame and spitting.' So here there may be included a reference to that
+time when the hatred of opposition reached its highest point--in the
+sufferings and death of our Lord. And it is at least a remarkable
+coincidence that that highest point was reached in formal trials before
+the ecclesiastical and civil authorities, for the purpose of convicting
+Him, and that these processes as legal procedures broke down so
+signally.
+
+Keeping up the metaphor, we mark here--
+
+I. The Messiah's lofty challenge to His accusers. II. The Messiah's
+expectation of divine vindication and acquittal. III. The Messiah's
+confidence of ultimate triumph.
+
+I. Messiah's lofty challenge to His accusers.
+
+The 'justifying' which He expects may refer either to personal character
+or to official functional faithfulness. I think it refers to both, and
+that we have here, expressed in prophetic outline, not only the fact of
+Christ's sinlessness, but the fact of His consciousness of sinlessness.
+
+The words are the strongest assertion of His absolute freedom from
+anything that an adversary could lay hold of on which to found a charge,
+and not merely so, but they also dare to assert that the unerring and
+all-penetrating eye of the Judge of all will look into His heart, and
+find nothing there but the mirrored image of His own perfection. I do
+not need to dwell on the fact of Christ's sinlessness, that He is
+perfect manhood without stain, without defect. I have had occasion to
+touch upon that truth in a former sermon on 'I was not rebellious.' Here
+we have to do not so much with sinlessness as with the consciousness of
+sinlessness.
+
+Now note that consciousness on Christ's part.
+
+We have to reckon with the fact of it as expressed in His own words: 'I
+do always the things that please Him. Which of you convinceth Me of
+sin?' 'The Prince of this world cometh and hath nothing in Me.'
+
+In Him there is the absence of all trace of sense of sin.
+
+No prayer for forgiveness comes from His lips.
+
+No penitence, no acknowledgment of even weakness is heard from Him. Even
+in His baptism, which for others was an acknowledgment of impurity, He
+puts His submission to the rite, not on the ground of needing to be
+washed from sin, but of 'fulfilling all righteousness.'
+
+Now, unless Christ was sinless, what do we say of these assertions? 'If
+we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves and the truth is not in
+us'--are we to apply that canon to Him when He stands before us and
+asks, 'Which of you convinceth Me of sin?' Surely it augurs small self-
+knowledge or a low moral standard if, from the lips of a religious
+teacher, there never comes one word to indicate that he has felt the
+hold of evil on him. I make bold to say that if Christ were not sinless,
+the Apostle Paul stood far above Him, with his 'of whom I am chief.'
+What difference would there be between Him and the Pharisees who called
+forth His bitterest words by this very absence in them of consciousness
+of sin: 'If ye were blind ye would have no sin, but now ye say, We see,
+therefore your sin remaineth.'
+
+Singularly enough the world has accepted Him at His own estimate, and
+has felt that these lofty assertions of absolute perfection were borne
+out by His life, and were consistent with the utmost lowliness of heart.
+
+As to the adversary's failure, I need only recall the close of His life,
+which is representative of the whole impression made on the world by
+Him. What a wonderful and singular concurrence of testimonies was borne
+to His pure and blameless life! After months of hatred and watching,
+even the rulers' lynx-eyed jealousy found nothing, and they had to fall
+back upon false witnesses. 'Hearest thou not how many things they
+witness against Thee?' He stood with unmoved silence, and the lies fell
+down dead at His feet. Had He answered, they would have been preserved
+and owed their immortality to the Gospels: He held His peace and they
+vanished. All attempts failed so signally that at the last they were
+fain, in well-simulated holy abhorrence, to base His condemnation on
+what He had said in their presence. 'How think ye, ye have heard the
+blasphemy?' So all that the adversary, raking through a life, could
+find, was that one word. That was His sin; in all else He was pure.
+Remember Pilate's acquittal: 'I find no fault in Him,' and his wife's
+warning, 'Have thou nothing to do with that just Person.' Think of
+Judas, 'I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood.'
+Listen to the penitent thief's low voice gasping out in his pangs and
+almost collapse: 'This man hath done nothing amiss.' Listen to the
+Centurion telling the impression made even on his rough nature: 'Truly
+this was a righteous Man.'
+
+These are the answers to the Servant's challenge, wrung from the lips of
+His adversaries; and they but represent the universal judgment of
+humanity.
+
+There is one Man whose life has been without stain or spot, whose soul
+has never been crossed by a breath of passion, nor dimmed by a speck of
+sin, whose will has ever been filled with happy obedience, whose
+conscience has been undulled by evil and untaught to speak in
+condemnation, whose whole nature has been like some fair marble, pure in
+hue, perfect in form, and unstained to the very core. There is one Man
+who can front the most hostile scrutiny with the bold challenge, 'Which
+of you convinceth Me of sin?' and His very haters have to answer, 'I
+find no fault in Him,' while those that love Him rejoice to proclaim Him
+'holy, harmless, undefiled, and separate from sinners.' There is one Man
+who can front the most rigid Law of Duty and say, 'I came not to destroy
+but to fulfil,' and the stony tables seem to glow with tender light, as
+of rocky cliffs in morning sunshine, attesting that He has indeed
+fulfilled all righteousness. There is one Man who can stand before God
+without repentance or confession, and whose claim 'I do always the
+things that please Him,' the awful voice from the opening heavens
+endorses, when it proclaims; 'This is My beloved Son in whom I am well
+pleased.' The lowly Servant of God flings out His challenge to the
+universe: 'Who will contend with Me?' and that gage has lain in the
+lists for nineteen centuries unlifted.
+
+II. The Messiah's expectation of divine vindication and acquittal.
+
+Like many another man, Christ had to strengthen Himself against calumny
+and slander by turning to God, and finding comfort in the belief that
+there was One who would do Him right, and as throughout this context we
+have had the true humanity of our Lord in great prominence, it is worth
+while to dwell for a moment on that thought of His real sharing in the
+pain of misconstruction and groundless charges, and of His too having to
+say, as we have so often to say, 'Well, there is one who knows. Men may
+condemn but God will acquit.'
+
+But there is something more than that here. The divine vindication and
+acquittal is not a mere hidden thought and judgment in the mind of God.
+It is a declaring and showing to be innocent, and that not by word but
+by deed. That expectation seemed to be annihilated and made ludicrous by
+His death. But the 'justifying' of which our text speaks takes place in
+Christ's resurrection and ascension.
+
+'Manifest in the flesh, justified in the spirit' (1 Timothy iii. 16).
+'Declared to be the Son of God with power, ... by the resurrection from
+the dead' (Rom. i. 4).
+
+His death seems the entire abandonment of this holy and sinless man. It
+seems to demonstrate His claims to be madness, His hope to be futile,
+His promises to be wind. No wonder that the sorrowing apostles wailed,
+'We trusted that it had been He who should have redeemed Israel.' The
+death of Christ, if it were but a martyr's death, and if we had to
+believe that that frame had crumbled into dust, and that heart ceased
+for ever to beat, would not only destroy the worth of all that He spoke,
+but would be the saddest instance in all history of the irreversible
+sway that death wields over all mankind, and would deepen the darkness
+and sadden the gloom of the grave. True, there were not wanting even in
+His dying hours mysterious indications, such as His promise to the
+penitent thief. But these only make the disappointment the deeper, if
+there was nothing more after His death.
+
+So Christ's justification is in His resurrection and ascension.
+
+III. The Messiah's confidence of ultimate triumph.
+
+In the last words of the text the adversaries are massed together. The
+confidence that the Lord God will help and justify leads to the
+conviction that all opposition to Him is futile and leads to
+destruction.
+
+We see the historical fulfilment in the fate of the nation. 'His blood
+be upon us and upon our children.'
+
+We have a truth applying universally that antagonism to Him is self-
+destructive.
+
+Two forms of destruction are here named. There is a slow decay going on
+in the opponents and their opposition, as a garment waxing old, and
+there is a being fretted away by the imperceptible working of external
+causes, as by gnawing moths.
+
+Applied to persons. To opposing systems.
+
+How many antagonists the Gospel has had, and one after another has been
+antiquated, and their books are only known because fragments of them are
+preserved in Christian writings. Paganism is gone from Europe, and its
+idols are in our museums. Each generation has its own phase of
+opposition, which lasts for a little while. The mists round the sun
+melt, the clouds piled in the north, surging up to bury it beneath their
+banks, are dissipated. The sea roars and smashes on the cliffs, but it
+ebbs and calms. Some of us have seen more than one school of thought
+which came to the assault of Christianity, with colours flying and drums
+rattling, defeated utterly and forgotten, and so it will always be. One
+may be sure that each enemy in turn will descend to the oblivion that
+has already received so many, and can imagine these beaten foes rising
+from their seats to welcome the newcomer with the sad greeting: 'Art
+thou also become weak as we? art thou become like unto us?'
+
+We are 'justified' in His 'justification.'
+
+The real connection between us and Christ by faith, makes our
+justification to be involved in His, so that it is no mere accommodation
+but a profound perception of the real relation between Christ and us,
+when Paul, in Romans viii. 34, triumphantly claims the words of our text
+for Christ's disciples, and rings out their challenge on behalf of all
+believers: 'It is God that justifieth, who is he that condemneth?'
+
+Do you trust in Christ? Then you too can dare to say: 'The Lord God will
+help me; who is he that shall condemn me?'
+
+'Who is among you that feareth the Lord, that obeyeth the voice of his
+servant, that walketh in darkness, and hath no light? let him trust in
+the name of the Lord, and stay upon his God.'--ISAIAH l. 10.
+
+The persons addressed in this call to faith are 'those who fear the
+Lord,' and 'obey the voice of His Servant.' In that collocation is
+implied that these two things are necessarily connected, so that
+obedience to Christ is the test of true religion, and the fear of the
+Lord does not exist where the word of the Son is neglected or rejected.
+
+But besides that most fruitful and instructive juxtaposition, other
+important thoughts come into view here. The fact that the call to faith
+is addressed to those who are regarded as already fearing God suggests
+the need for renewed and constantly repeated acts of confidence, at
+every stage of the Christian life, and opens up the whole subject of the
+growth and progress of individual religion, as secured by the continuous
+exercise of faith. The call is addressed to all at every stage of
+advancement. Of course it is addressed also to those who are disobedient
+and rebellious. But that wider aspect of the merciful invitation does
+not come into view here.
+
+But there is another clause in the description of the persons addressed,
+'Who walketh in darkness and hath no light.' This is, no doubt,
+primarily a reference to the great sorrow that filled, like a gloomy
+thundercloud, the horizon of Jewish prophets, small and uninteresting as
+it seems to us, namely, the captivity of Israel and their expulsion from
+their land. The faithful remnant are not to escape their share in the
+national calamity. But while it lasts, they are to wait patiently on the
+Lord, and not to cast away their confidence, though all seems dark and
+dreary.
+
+The exhortation thus regarded suggests the power and duty of faith even
+in times of disaster and sorrow. But another meaning has often been
+attached to these words, they have been lifted into another region, the
+spiritual, and have been supposed to refer to a state of feeling not
+unknown to devout hearts, in which the religious life is devoid of joy
+and peace. That is a phase of Christian experience, which meets any one
+who knows much of the workings of men's hearts, and of his own, when
+faith is exercised with but little of the light of faith, and the fear
+of the Lord is cherished with but scant joy in the Lord. Now if it be
+remembered that such an application of the words is not their original
+purpose, there can be no harm in using them so. Indeed we may say that,
+as the words are perfectly general, they include a reference to all
+darkness of life or soul, however produced, whether it come from the
+night of sorrow falling on us from without, or from mists and gloom
+rising like heavy vapours from our own hearts. So considered, the text
+suggests the one remedy for all gloom and weakness in the spiritual
+life.
+
+Thus, then, we have three different sets of circumstances in which faith
+is enforced as the source of true strength and our all-embracing duty.
+In outward sorrow and trial, trust; in inward darkness and sadness,
+trust; in every stage of Christian progress, trust. Or
+
+I. Faith the light in the darkness of the world. II. Faith the light in
+the darkness of the soul. III. Faith the light in every stage of
+Christian progress.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I. Faith our light in the darkness of the world.
+
+The mystery and standing problem of the Old Testament is the coexistence
+of goodness and sorrow, and the mystery still remains, and ever will
+remain, a fact. It is partially alleviated if we remember that one main
+purpose of all our sorrows is to lead us to this confidence.
+
+1. The call to faith is the true voice of all our sorrows.
+
+It seems easy to trust when all is bright, but really it is just as
+hard, only we can more easily deceive ourselves, when physical well-
+being makes us comfortable. We are less conscious of our own emptiness,
+we mask our poverty from ourselves, we do not seem to need God so much.
+But sorrow reveals our need to us. Other props are struck away, and it
+is either collapse or Him. We learn the vanity, the transiency, of all
+besides.
+
+Sorrow reveals God, as the pillar of cloud glowed brighter when the
+evening fell. Sorrow is meant to awaken the powers that are apt to sleep
+in prosperity.
+
+So the true voice of all our griefs is 'Come up hither.' They call us to
+trust, as nightfall calls us to light up our lamps. The snow keeps the
+hidden seeds warm; shepherds burn heather on the hillside that young
+grass may spring.
+
+2. The call to faith echoes from the voice of the Servant.
+
+Jesus in His darkness rested on God, and in all His sorrows was yet
+anointed with the oil of gladness. In every pang He has been before us.
+The rack is sanctified because He has been stretched upon it.
+
+3. The substance of the call.
+
+It is to _trust_, not to anything more. No attempts to stifle tears are
+required. There is no sin in sorrow. The emotions which we feel to God
+in bright days are not appropriate at such times. There are seasons in
+every life when all that we can say is, 'Truly this is a grief, and I
+will bear it.'
+
+What then _is_ required? Assurance of God's loving will sending sorrow.
+Assurance of God's strengthening presence in it, assurance of
+deliverance from it. These, not more, are required; these are the
+elements of the faith here called for.
+
+Such faith may co-exist with the keenest sense of loss. The true
+attitude in sorrow may be gathered from Christ's at the grave of
+Lazarus, contrasted with the excessive mourning of the sisters, and the
+feigned grief of the Jews.
+
+There are times when the most that we can do is to trust even in the
+great darkness, 'Though He slay me yet will I trust in Him.' Submissive
+silence is sometimes the most eloquent confession of faith. 'I was dumb,
+I opened not my mouth, because Thou didst it.'
+
+4. The blessed results of such faith.
+
+It is implied that we may find all that we need, and more, in God. Have
+we to mourn friends? 'In the year that King Uzziah died, I saw the Lord
+sitting on a throne.' Have we lost wealth? We have in Him a treasure
+that moth or rust cannot touch. Are our hopes blasted? 'Happy is He ...
+whose hope is in the Lord his God.' Is our health broken? 'I shall yet
+praise Him, who is the health of my countenance.' 'The Lord is able to
+give thee much more than these.'
+
+How can we face the troubles of life without Him? God calls us when in
+darkness, and by the darkness, to trust in His name and stay ourselves
+on Him. Happy are we if we answer 'Though the fig-tree shall not
+blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines ... yet I will rejoice in
+the Lord, and joy in the God of my salvation.'
+
+II. Faith, our light in the darkness of the soul.
+
+No doubt there may be such a thing as true fear of God in the soul along
+with spiritual darkness, faith without the joy of faith. Now this
+condition seems contradictory of the very nature of the Christian life.
+For religion is union with God who is light, and if we walk in Him, we
+are in the light. How then can such experience be?
+
+We must dismiss the notion of God's desertion of the trusting soul. He
+is always the same; He has 'never said to the seed of Jacob, Seek ye Me
+in vain.' But while putting aside that false explanation, we can see how
+such darkness may be. If our religious life was in more vigorous
+exercise, more pure, perfect and continuous, there would be no
+separation of faith and the joy of faith. But we have not such
+unruffled, perfect, uninterrupted faith, and hence there may be, and
+often is, faith without much joy of faith. I would not say that such
+experience is always the fruit of sin. But certainly we are not to blame
+Him or to think of Him as breaking His promises, or departing from His
+nature. No principles, be they ever so firmly held, ever so undoubtingly
+received, ever so passionately embraced, exert their whole power equally
+at all moments in a life. There come times of languor when they seem to
+be mere words, dead commonplaces, as unlike their former selves as
+sapless winter boughs to their summer pride of leafy beauty. The same
+variation in our realising grasp affects the truths of the Gospel.
+Sometimes they seem but words, with all the life and power sucked out of
+them, pale shadows of themselves, or like the dried bed of a wady with
+blazing, white stones, where flashing water used to leap, and all the
+flowerets withered, which once bent their meek little heads to drink. No
+facts are always equally capable of exciting their correspondent
+emotions. Those which most closely affect our personal life, in which we
+find our deepest joys, are not always present in our minds, and when
+they are, do not always touch the springs of our feelings. No
+possessions are always equally precious to us. The rich man is not
+always conscious with equal satisfaction of his wealth. If, then, the
+way from the mind to the emotions is not always equally open, there is a
+reason why there may be faith without light of joy. If the thoughts are
+not always equally concentrated on the things which produce joy, _there_
+is a reason why there may be the habit of fearing God, though there be
+not the present vigorous exercise of faith, and consequently but little
+light.
+
+Another reason may lie in the disturbing and saddening influence of
+earthly cares and sorrows. There are all weathers in a year. And the
+highest hope and nearest possible approach to joy is sometimes 'Unto the
+upright there ariseth light in the darkness.' Our lives are sometimes
+like an Arctic winter in which for many days is no sun.
+
+Another reason may be found in the very fact that we are apt to look
+impatiently for peace and joy, and to be more exercised with these than
+with that which produces them.
+
+Another may be errors or mistakes about God and His Gospel.
+
+Another may be absorption with our own sin instead of with Him. To all
+these add temperament, education, habit, example, influence of body on
+the mind, and of course also positive inconsistencies and a low tone of
+Christian life.
+
+It is clear then that, if these be the causes of this state, the one
+cure for it is to exercise our faith more energetically.
+
+Trust, do not look back. We are tempted to cast away our confidence and
+to say: What profit shall I have if I pray unto Him? But it is on
+looking onwards, not backwards, that safety lies.
+
+Trust, do not think about your sins.
+
+Trust, do not think so much about your joy.
+
+It is in the occupation of heart and mind with Jesus that joy and peace
+come. To make them our direct aim is the way not to attain them. Though
+now there seems a long wintry interval between seed time and harvest,
+yet 'in due season we shall reap if we faint not.'
+
+'In the fourth watch of the night Jesus came unto them.'
+
+III. Faith our guiding light in every stage of Christian progress.
+
+Those who already 'fear God' are in the text exhorted to trust.
+
+In the most advanced Christian life there are temptations to abandon our
+confidence. We never on earth come to such a point as that, without
+effort, we are sure to continue in the way. True, habit is a wonderful
+ally of goodness, and it is a great thing to have it on our side, but
+all our lives long, there will be hindrances without and within which
+need effort and self-repression. On earth there is no time when it is
+safe for us to go unarmed. The force of gravitation acts however high we
+climb. Not till heaven is reached will 'love' be 'its own security,' and
+nature coincide with grace. And even in heaven faith 'abideth,' but
+there it will be without effort.
+
+1. The most advanced Christian life needs a perpetual renewal and
+repetition of past acts of faith.
+
+It cannot live on a past any more than the body can subsist on last
+year's food. The past is like the deep portions of coral reefs, a mere
+platform for the living present which shines on the surface of the sea,
+and grows. We must gather manna daily.
+
+The life is continued by the same means as that by which it was begun.
+There is no new duty or method for the most advanced Christian; he has
+to do just what he has been doing for half a century. We cannot
+transcend the creatural position, we are ever dependent. 'To hoar hairs
+will I carry you.' The initial point is prolonged into a continuous
+line.
+
+2. The most advanced and mature faith is capable of increase, in regard
+to its knowledge of its object, and in intensity, constancy, power. At
+first it may be a tremulous trust, afterwards it should become an
+assured confidence. At first it may be but a dim recognition, as in a
+glass darkly, of the great love which has redeemed us at a great price;
+afterwards it should become the clear vision of the trusted Friend and
+lifelong companion of our souls, who is all in all to us. At first it
+may be an interrupted hold, afterwards it should become such a grasp as
+the roots of a tree have on the soil. At first it may be a feeble power
+ruling over our rebel selves, like some king beleaguered in his capital,
+who has no sway beyond its walls, afterwards it should become a peaceful
+sovereign who guides and sways all the powers of the soul and outgoings
+of the life. At first it may be like a premature rose putting forth pale
+petals on an almost leafless bough, afterwards the whole tree should be
+blossomed over with fragrant flowers, the homes of light and sweetness.
+The highest faith may be heightened, and the spirits before the throne
+pray the prayer, 'Lord, increase our faith.'
+
+For us all, then, the merciful voice of the servant of the Lord calls to
+His light. Our faith is our light in darkness, only as a window is the
+light of a house, or the eye, of the body, because it admits and
+discerns that true light. He calls us each from the darkness. Do not try
+to make fires for yourselves, ineffectual and transient, but look to
+Him, and you shall not walk in darkness, even amid the gloom of earth,
+but shall have light in your darkness, till the time come when, in a
+clearer heaven and a lighter air, 'Thy sun shall no more go down,
+neither shall thy moon withdraw itself, for the Lord shall be thine
+everlasting light, and the days of thy mourning shall be ended.'
+
+
+
+
+DYING FIRES
+
+'Behold, all ye that kindle a fire, that gird yourselves about with
+firebrands: walk ye in the flame of your fire, and among the brands that
+ye have kindled. This shall ye have of mine hand; ye shall lie down in
+sorrow.'--ISAIAH l. 11.
+
+
+The scene brought before us in these words is that of a company of
+belated travellers in some desert, lighting a little fire that glimmers
+ineffectual in the darkness of the eerie waste. They huddle round its
+dying embers for a little warmth and company, and they hope it will
+scare wolf and jackal, but their fuel is all burned, and they have to go
+to sleep without its solace and security. The prophet's imaginative
+picture is painted from life, and is a sad reality in the cases of all
+who seek to warm themselves at any fire that they kindle for themselves,
+apart from God.
+
+I. A sad, true picture of human life.
+
+It does not cover, nor is presented by the prophet as covering, all the
+facts of experience. Every man has his share of sunshine, but still it
+is true of all who are not living in dependence on and communion with
+God, that they are but travellers in the dark.
+
+Scripture uses the image of darkness as symbolic of three sad facts of
+our experience: ignorance, sin, sorrow. Are not all these the
+characteristics of godless lives?
+
+As for ignorance--a godless man has no key to the awful problems that
+front him. He knows not God, who is to him a dread, a name, a mystery.
+He knows not himself, the depths of his nature, its possibilities for
+good or evil, whence it cometh nor whither it goeth. He has no solution
+for the riddle of the universe. It is to him a chaos, and darkness is
+upon the face of the deep.
+
+As to sin, the darkness of ignorance is largely due to the darkness of
+sin. In every heart comes sometimes the consciousness that it is thus
+darkened by sin. The sense of sin is with all men more or less--much
+perverted, often wrong in its judgments, feeble, easily silenced, but
+for all that it is there--and it is great part of the cold obstruction
+that shuts out the light. Sin weaves the pall that shrouds the world.
+
+As for darkness of sorrow--we must beware that we do not exaggerate. God
+makes His sun to rise on the evil and the good, and there is gladness in
+every life, much that arises from fulfilled desires, from accomplished
+purposes, from gratified affections. But when all this has been freely
+admitted, still sadness crouches somewhere in all hearts, and over every
+life the storm sometimes stoops.
+
+We need nothing beyond our own experience and the slightest knowledge of
+other hearts to know how shallow and one-sided a view of life that is
+which sees only the joy and forgets the sorrow, which ignores the night
+and thinks only of the day; which, looking out on nature, is blind to
+the pain and agony, the horror and the death, which are as real parts of
+it as brightness and beauty, love and life. Every little valley that
+lies in lovely loneliness has its scenes of desolation, and tempest has
+broken over the fairest scenes. Every river has drowned its man. Over
+every inch of blue sky the thunder cloud has rolled. Every summer has
+its winter, every day its night, every life its death. All stars set,
+all moons wane. 'Bare ruined choirs where late the sweet birds sang'
+come after every leafy June.
+
+Sorrow is as deeply embedded in the necessity and constitution of things
+as joy. 'God hath set one over against another, and hath made all things
+double.'
+
+II. The vain attempts at light.
+
+There is bitter irony in the prophet's description of the poor
+flickering spot of light in the black waste and of its swift dying out.
+The travellers without a watch-fire are defenceless from midnight
+prowlers. How full of solemn truth about godless lives the vivid outline
+picture is!
+
+Men try to free themselves from the miseries of ignorance, sin, and
+sorrow.
+
+Think of the insufficiency of all such attempts, the feeble flicker
+which glimmers for an hour, and then fuel fails and it goes out. Then
+the travellers can journey no further, but 'lie down in sorrow,' and
+without a watchfire they become a prey to all the beasts of the field.
+It is a little picture taken from the life.
+
+It vividly paints how men _will_ try to free themselves from the
+miseries of their condition, how insufficient all their attempts are,
+how transient the relief, and how bitter and black the end.
+
+We may apply these thoughts to--
+
+1. Men-made grounds of hope before God.
+
+2. Men-made attempts to read the mysteries.
+
+We do not say this of all human learning, but of that which, apart from
+God's revelation, deals with the subjects of that revelation.
+
+3. Men-made efforts at self-reformation.
+
+4. Men-made attempts at alleviating sorrow.
+
+Scripture abounds in other metaphors for the same solemn spiritual facts
+as are set before us in this picture of the dying watchfire and the sad
+men watching its decline. Godless lives draw from broken cisterns out of
+which the water runs. They build with untempered mortar. They lean on
+broken reeds that wound the hand pressed on them. They spend money for
+that which is not bread. But all these metaphors put together do not
+tell all the vanity, disappointments, and final failure and ruin of such
+a life. That last glimpse given in the text of the sorrowful sleeper
+stretched by the black ashes, with darkness round and hopeless heaviness
+within, points to an issue too awful to be dwelt on by a preacher, and
+too awful not to be gravely considered by each of us for himself.
+
+III. The light from God.
+
+What would the dead fire and the ring of ashes on the sand matter when
+morning dawned? Jesus is our Sun. He rises, and the spectres of the
+night melt into thin air, and 'joy cometh in the morning.' He floods our
+ignorance with knowledge of the Father whose name He declares, with
+knowledge of ourselves, of the world, of our destiny and our duty, our
+hopes and our home. He takes away the sin of the world. He gives the oil
+of joy for mourning. For every human necessity He is enough. Follow Him
+and your life's pilgrimage shall not be a midnight one, but accomplished
+in sunshine. 'I am the light of the world; he that followeth Me shall
+not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.'
+
+
+
+
+THE AWAKENING OF ZION
+
+'Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm of the Lord; awake, as in the
+ancient days, in the generations of old.'--ISAIAH li. 9.
+
+'Awake, awake; put on thy strength, O Zion.'--ISAIAH lii. 1.
+
+
+Both these verses are, I think, to be regarded as spoken by one voice,
+that of the Servant of the Lord. His majestic figure, wrapped in a light
+veil of obscurity, fills the eye in all these later prophecies of
+Isaiah. It is sometimes clothed with divine power, sometimes girded with
+the towel of human weakness, sometimes appearing like the collective
+Israel, sometimes plainly a single person.
+
+We have no difficulty in solving the riddle of the prophecy by the light
+of history. Our faith knows One who unites these diverse
+characteristics, being God and man, being the Saviour of the body, which
+is part of Himself and instinct with His life. If we may suppose that He
+speaks in both verses of the text, then, in the one, as priest and
+intercessor, He lifts the prayers of earth to heaven in His own holy
+hands--and in the other, as messenger and Word of God, He brings the
+answer and command of heaven to earth on His own authoritative
+lips--thus setting forth the deep mystery of His person and double
+office as mediator between man and God. But even if we put aside that
+thought, the correspondence and relation of the two passages remain the
+same. In any case they are intentionally parallel in form and connected
+in substance. The latter is the answer to the former. The cry of Zion is
+responded to by the call of God. The awaking of the arm of the Lord is
+followed by the awaking of the Church. He puts on strength in clothing
+us with His might, which becomes ours.
+
+The mere juxtaposition of these verses suggests the point of view from
+which I wish to treat them on this occasion. I hope that the thoughts to
+which they lead may help to further that quickened earnestness and
+expectancy of blessing, without which Christian work is a toil and a
+failure.
+
+We have here a common principle underlying both the clauses of our text,
+to which I must first briefly ask attention, namely--
+
+I. The occurrence in the Church's history of successive periods of
+energy and of languor.
+
+It is freely admitted that such alternation is not the highest ideal of
+growth, either in the individual or in the community. Our Lord's own
+parables set forth a more excellent way--the way of uninterrupted
+increase, whereof the type is the springing corn, which puts forth
+'first the blade, then the ear, after that the full corn in the ear,'
+and passes through all the stages from the tender green spikelets that
+gleam over the fields in the spring-tide to the yellow abundance of
+autumn, in one unbroken season of genial months. So would our growth be
+best, healthiest, happiest. So _might_ our growth be, if the mysterious
+life in the seed met no checks. But, as a matter of fact, the Church has
+not thus grown. Rather at the best, its emblem is to be looked for, not
+in corn, but in the forest tree-the very rings in whose trunk tell of
+recurring seasons when the sap has risen at the call of spring, and sunk
+again before the frowns of winter. I have not to do now with the causes
+of this. These will fall to be considered presently. Nor am I saying
+that such a manner of growth is inevitable. I am only pointing out a
+fact, capable of easy verification and familiar to us all. Our years
+have had summer and winter. The evening and the morning have completed
+all the days since the first.
+
+We all know it only too well. In our own hearts we have known such
+times, when some cold clinging mist wrapped us round and hid all the
+heaven of God's love and the starry lights of His truth; when the
+visible was the only real, and He seemed far away and shadowy; when
+there was neither confidence in our belief, nor heat in our love, nor
+enthusiasm in our service; when the shackles of conventionalism bound
+our souls, and the fetters of the frost imprisoned all their springs.
+And we have seen a like palsy smite whole regions and ages of the Church
+of God, so that even the sensation of impotence was dead like all the
+rest, and the very tradition of spiritual power had faded away. I need
+not point to the signal historical examples of such times in the past.
+Remember England a hundred years ago--but what need to travel so far?
+May I venture to draw my example from nearer home, and ask, have we not
+been living in such an epoch? I beseech you, think whether the power
+which the Gospel preached by us wields on ourselves, on our churches, on
+the world, is what Christ meant it and fitted to exercise. Why, if we
+hold our own in respect to the material growth of our population, it is
+as much as we do. Where is the joyful buoyancy and expansive power with
+which the Gospel burst into the world? It looks like some stream that
+leaps from the hills, and at first hurries from cliff to cliff full of
+light and music, but flows slower and more sluggish as it advances, and
+at last almost stagnates in its flat marshes. Here we are with all our
+machinery, our culture, money, organisations--and the net result of it
+all at the year's end is but a poor handful of ears. 'Ye sow much and
+bring home little.' Well may we take up the wail of the old Psalm, 'We
+see not our signs. There is no more any prophet; neither is there any
+among us that knoweth how long--arise, O Lord, plead Thine own cause.'
+
+If, then, there are such recurring seasons of languor, they must either
+go on deepening till sleep becomes death, or they must be broken by a
+new outburst of vigorous life. It would be better if we did not need the
+latter. The uninterrupted growth would be best; but if that has not been
+attained, then the ending of winter by spring, and the suppling of the
+dry branches, and the resumption of the arrested growth, is the next
+best, and the only alternative to rotting away.
+
+And it is by such times that the Kingdom of Christ always has grown. Its
+history has been one of successive impulses gradually exhausted, as by
+friction and gravity, and mercifully repeated just at the moment when it
+was ceasing to advance and had begun to slide backwards. And in such a
+manner of progress, the Church's history has been in full analogy with
+that of all other forms of human association and activity. It is not in
+religion alone that there are 'revivals,' to use the word of which some
+people have such a dread. You see analogous phenomena in the field of
+literature, arts, social and political life. In them all, there come
+times of awakened interest in long-neglected principles. Truths which
+for many years had been left to burn unheeded, save by a faithful few
+watchers of the beacon, flame up all at once as the guiding pillars of a
+nation's march, and a whole people strike their tents and follow where
+they lead. A mysterious quickening thrills through society. A contagion
+of enthusiasm spreads like fire, fusing all hearts in one. The air is
+electric with change. Some great advance is secured at a stride; and
+before and after that supreme effort are years of comparative
+quiescence; those before being times of preparation, those after being
+times of fruition and exhaustion--but slow and languid compared with the
+joyous energy of that moment. One day may be as a thousand years in the
+history of a people, and a nation may be born in a day.
+
+So also is the history of the Church. And thank God it is so, for if it
+had not been for the dawning of these times of refreshing, the steady
+operation of the Church's worldliness would have killed it long ago.
+
+Surely, dear brethren, we ought to desire such a merciful interruption
+of the sad continuity of our languor and decay. The surest sign of its
+coming would be a widespread desire and expectation of its coming,
+joined with a penitent consciousness of our heavy and sinful slumber.
+For we believe in a God who never sends mouths but He sends meat to fill
+them, and in whose merciful providence every desire is a prophecy of its
+own fruition. This attitude of quickened anticipation, diffusing itself
+silently through many hearts, is like the light air that springs up
+before sunrise, or like the solemn hush that holds all nature listening
+before the voice of the Lord in the thunder.
+
+And another sign of its approach is the extremity of the need. 'If
+winter come, can spring be far behind?' For He who is always with Zion
+strikes in with His help when the want is at its sorest. His 'right
+early' is often the latest moment before destruction. And though we are
+all apt to exaggerate the urgency of the hour and the severity of _our_
+conflict, it certainly does seem that, whether we regard the languor of
+the Church or the strength of our adversaries, succour delayed a little
+longer would be succour too late. 'The tumult of those that rise up
+against Thee increaseth continually. It is time for Thee to work.'
+
+The juxtaposition of these passages suggests for us--
+
+II. The twofold explanation of these variations.
+
+That bold metaphor of God's sleeping and waking is often found in
+Scripture, and generally expresses the contrast between the long years
+of patient forbearance, during which evil things and evil men go on
+their rebellious road unchecked but by Love, and the dread moment when
+some throne of iniquity, some Babylon cemented by blood, is smitten to
+the dust. Such is the original application of the expression here. But
+the contrast may fairly be widened beyond that specific form of it, and
+taken to express any apparent variations in the forth-putting of His
+power. The prophet carefully avoids seeming to suggest that there are
+changes in God Himself. It is not He but His arm, that is to say. His
+active energy, that is invoked to awake. The captive Church prays that
+the dormant might which could so easily shiver her prison-house would
+flame forth into action.
+
+We may, then, see here implied the cause of these alternations, of which
+we have been speaking, on its divine side, and then, in the
+corresponding verse addressed to the Church, the cause on the human
+side.
+
+As to the former, it is true that God's arm sometimes slumbers, and is
+not clothed with power. There are, as a fact, apparent variations in the
+energy with which He works in the Church and in the world. And they are
+real variations, not merely apparent. But we have to distinguish between
+the power, and what Paul calls 'the might of the power.' The one is
+final, constant, unchangeable. It does not necessarily follow that the
+other is. The rate of operation, so to speak, and the amount of energy
+actually brought into play may vary, though the force remains the same.
+
+It is clear from experience that there are these variations; and the
+only question with which we are concerned is, are they mere arbitrary
+jets and spurts of a divine power, sometimes gushing out in full flood,
+sometimes trickling in painful drops, at the unknown will of the unseen
+hand which controls the flow? Is the 'law of the Spirit of life' at all
+revealed to us; or are the reasons occult, if there be any reasons at
+all other than a mere will that it shall be so? Surely, whilst we never
+can know all the depths of His counsels and all the solemn concourse of
+reasons which, to speak in man's language, determine the energy of His
+manifested power, He has left us in no doubt that this is the weightiest
+part of the law which it follows--the might with which God works on the
+world through His Church varies according to the Church's receptiveness
+and faithfulness.
+
+Our second text tells us that if God's arm seems to slumber and really
+does so, it is because Zion sleeps. In itself that immortal energy knows
+no variableness. 'He fainteth not, neither is weary.' 'The Lord's arm is
+not shortened that He cannot save.' 'He that keepeth Israel shall
+neither slumber nor sleep.' But He works through us; and we have the
+solemn and awful power of checking the might which would flow through
+us; of restraining and limiting the Holy One of Israel. It avails
+nothing that the ocean stretches shoreless to the horizon; a jar can
+hold only a jarful. The receiver's capacity determines the amount
+received, and the receiver's desire determines his capacity. The law has
+ever been, 'according to your faith be it unto you.' God gives as much
+as we will, as much as we can hold, as much as we use, and far more than
+we deserve. As long as we will bring our vessels the golden oil will
+flow, and after the last is filled, there yet remains more that we might
+have had, if we could have held it, and might have held if we would. 'Ye
+are not straitened in Me, ye are straitened in yourselves.'
+
+So, dear brethren, if we have to lament times of torpor and small
+success, let us be honest with ourselves, and recognise that all the
+blame lies with us. If God's arm seems to slumber, it is because we are
+asleep. His power is invariable, and the Gospel which is committed to
+our trust has lost none of its ancient power, whatsoever men may say. If
+there be variations, they cannot be traced to the divine element in the
+Church, which in itself is constant, but altogether to the human, which
+shifts and fluctuates, as we only too sadly know. The light in the
+beacon-tower is steady, and the same; but the beam it throws across the
+waters sometimes fades to a speck, and sometimes flames out clear and
+far across the heaving waves, according to the position of the glasses
+and shades around it. The sun pours out heat as profusely and as long at
+midwinter as on midsummer-day, and all the difference between the frost
+and darkness and glowing brightness and flowering life, is simply owing
+to the earth's place in its orbit and the angle at which the unalterable
+rays fall upon it. The changes are in the terrestrial sphere; the
+heavenly is fixed for ever the same.
+
+May I not venture to point an earnest and solemn appeal with these
+truths? Has there not been poured over us the spirit of slumber? Does it
+not seem as if an opium sky had been raining soporifics on our heads? We
+have had but little experience of the might of God amongst us of late
+years, and we need not wonder at it. There is no occasion to look far
+for the reason. We have only to regard the low ebb to which religious
+life has been reduced amongst us to have it all and more than all
+accounted for. I fully admit that there has been plenty of activity,
+perhaps more than the amount of real life warrants, not a little
+liberality, and many virtues. But how languid and torpid the true
+Christian life has been! how little enthusiasm! how little depth of
+communion with God! how little unworldly elevation of soul! how little
+glow of love! An improvement in social position and circumstances, a
+freer blending with the national life, a full share of civic and
+political honours, a higher culture in our pulpits, fine chapels, and
+applauding congregations--are but poor substitutes for what many of us
+have lost in racing after them. We have the departed prophets' mantle,
+the outward resemblance to the fathers who have gone, but their fiery
+zeal has passed to heaven with them; and softer, weaker men, we stand
+timidly on the river's brink, invoking the Lord God of Elijah, and too
+often the flood that obeyed them has no ear for our feebler voice.
+
+I speak to many who are in some sort representatives of the churches
+throughout the land, and they can tell whether my words are on the whole
+true or overstrained. We who labour in our great cities, what say we? If
+one of the number may speak for the rest, we have to acknowledge that
+commercial prosperity and business cares, the eagerness after pleasure
+and the exigencies of political strife, diffused doubt and widespread
+artistic and literary culture, are eating the very life out of thousands
+in our churches, and lowering their fervour till, like molten iron
+cooling in the air, what was once all glowing with ruddy heat is crusted
+over with foul black scoriae ever encroaching on the tiny central
+warmth. You from rural churches, what say you? Have you not to speak of
+deepening torpor settling down on quiet corners, of the passing away of
+grey heads which leave no successors, of growing difficulties and
+lessened power to meet them, that make you sometimes all but despair?
+
+I am not flinging indiscriminate censures. I know that there are lights
+as well as shades in the picture. I am not flinging censures at all. But
+I am giving voice to the confessions of many hearts, that our
+consciousness of our blame may be deepened, and we may hasten back to
+that dear Lord whom we have left to serve alone, as His first disciples
+left Him once to agonise alone under the gnarled olives in Gethsemane,
+while they lay sleeping in the moonlight. Listen to His gentle rebuke,
+full of pain and surprised love, 'What, could ye not watch with Me one
+hour?' Listen to His warning call, loving as the kiss with which a
+mother wakes her child, 'Arise, let us be going'--and let us shake the
+spirit of slumber from our limbs, and serve Him as those unsleeping
+spirits do, who rest not day nor night from vision and work and praise.
+
+III. The beginning of all awaking is the Church's earnest cry to God.
+
+It is with us as with infants, the first sign of whose awaking is a cry.
+The mother's quick ear hears it through all the household noises, and
+the poor little troubled life that woke to a scared consciousness of
+loneliness and darkness, is taken up into tender arms, and comforted and
+calmed. So, when we dimly perceive how torpid we have been, and start to
+find that we have lost our Father's hand, the first instinct of that
+waking, which must needs be partly painful, is to call to Him, whose ear
+hears our feeble cry amid the sound of praise like the voice of many
+waters, that billows round His throne, and whose folding arms keep us
+'as one whom his mother comforteth.' The beginning of all true awaking
+must needs be prayer.
+
+For every such stirring of quickened religious life must needs have in
+it bitter penitence and pain at the discovery flashed upon us of the
+wretched deadness of our past--and, as we gaze like some wakened
+sleepwalker into the abyss where another step might have smashed us to
+atoms, a shuddering terror seizes us that must cry, 'Hold Thou me up,
+and I shall be safe.' And every such stirring of quickened life will
+have in it, too, desire for more of His grace, and confidence in His
+sure bestowal of it, which cannot but breathe itself in prayer.
+
+Nor is Zion's cry to God only the beginning and sign of all true
+awaking: it is also the condition and indispensable precursor of all
+perfecting of recovery from spiritual languor.
+
+I have already pointed out the relation between the waking of God and
+the waking of His Church, from which that necessarily follows. God's
+power flows into our weakness in the measure and on condition of our
+desires. We are sometimes told that we err in praying for the outpouring
+of His Holy Spirit, because ever since Pentecost His Church has had the
+gift. The objection alleges an unquestioned fact, but the conclusion
+drawn from it rests on an altogether false conception of the manner of
+that abiding gift. The Spirit of God, and the power which comes from
+Him, are not given as a purse of money might be put into a man's hand
+once and for all, but they are given in a continuous impartation and
+communication and are received and retained moment by moment, according
+to the energy of our desires and the faithfulness of our use. As well
+might we say, Why should I ask for natural life, I received it half a
+century ago? Yes, and at every moment of that half-century I have
+continued to live, not because of a past gift, but because at each
+moment God is breathing into my nostrils the breath of life. So is it
+with the life which comes from His Spirit. It is maintained by constant
+efflux from the fountain of Life, by constant impartation of His
+quickening breath. And as He must continually impart, so must we
+continually receive, else we perish. Therefore, brethren, the first step
+towards awaking, and the condition of all true revival in our own souls
+and in our churches, is this earnest cry, 'Awake, awake, put on
+strength, O arm of the Lord.
+
+Thank God for the outpouring of a long unwonted spirit of prayer in many
+places. It is like the melting of the snows in the high Alps, at once
+the sign of spring and the cause of filling the stony river beds with
+flashing waters, that bring verdure and growth wherever they come. The
+winter has been long and hard. We have all to confess that we have been
+restraining prayer before God. Our work has been done with but little
+sense of our need of His blessing, with but little ardour of desire for
+His power. We have prayed lazily, scarcely believing that answers would
+come; we have not watched for the reply, but have been like some
+heartless marksman who draws his bow and does not care to look whether
+his arrow strikes the target. These mechanical words, these conventional
+petitions, these syllables winged by no real desire, inspired by no
+faith, these expressions of devotion, far too wide for their real
+contents, which rattle in them like a dried kernel in a nut, are these
+prayers? Is there any wonder that they have been dispersed in empty air,
+and that we have been put to shame before our enemies? Brethren in the
+ministry, do we need to be surprised at our fruitless work, when we
+think of our prayerless studies and of our faithless prayers? Let _us_
+remember that solemn word, 'The pastors have become brutish, and have
+not sought the Lord, therefore they shall not prosper, and all their
+flocks shall be scattered.' And let us all, brethren, betake ourselves,
+with penitence and lowly consciousness of our sore need, to prayer,
+earnest and importunate, believing and persistent, like this
+heaven-piercing cry which captive Israel sent up from her weary bondage.
+
+Look at the passionate earnestness of it--expressed in the short, sharp
+cry, thrice repeated, as from one in mortal need; and see to it that our
+drowsy prayers be like it. Look at the grand confidence with which it
+founds itself on the past, recounting the mighty deeds of ancient days,
+and looking back, not for despair but for joyful confidence, to the
+generations of old; and let our faint-hearted faith be quickened by the
+example, to expect great things of God. The age of miracles is not gone.
+The mightiest manifestations of God's power in the spread of the Gospel
+in the past remain as patterns for His future. We have not to look back
+as from low-lying plains to the blue peaks on the horizon, across which
+the Church's path once lay, and sigh over the changed conditions of the
+journey. The highest watermark that the river in flood has ever reached
+will be reached and overpassed again, though to-day the waters may seem
+to have hopelessly subsided. Greater triumphs and deliverances shall
+crown the future than have signalised the past. Let our faithful prayer
+base itself on the prophecies of history and on the unchangeableness of
+God.
+
+Think, brethren, of the prayers of Christ. Even He, whose spirit needed
+not to be purged from stains or calmed from excitement, who was ever in
+His Father's house whilst He was about His Father's business, blending
+in one, action and contemplation, had need to pray. The moments of His
+life thus marked are very significant. When He began His ministry, the
+close of the first day of toil and wonders saw Him, far from gratitude
+and from want, in a desert place in prayer. When He would send forth His
+apostles, that great step in advance, in which lay the germ of so much,
+was preceded by solitary prayer. When the fickle crowd desired to make
+Him the centre of political revolution, He passed from their hands and
+beat back that earliest attempt to secularise His work, by prayer. When
+the seventy brought the first tidings of mighty works done in His name,
+He showed us how to repel the dangers of success, in that He thanked the
+Lord of heaven and earth who had revealed these things to babes. When He
+stood by the grave of Lazarus, the voice that waked the dead was
+preceded by the voice of prayer, as it ever must be. When He had said
+all that He could say to His disciples, He crowned all with His
+wonderful prayer for Himself, for them, and for us all. When the horror
+of great darkness fell upon His soul, the growing agony is marked by His
+more fervent prayer, so wondrously compact of shrinking fear and filial
+submission. When the cross was hid in the darkness of eclipse, the only
+words from the gloom were words of prayer. When, Godlike, He dismissed
+His spirit, manlike He commended it to His Father, and sent the prayer
+from His dying lips before Him to herald His coming into the unseen
+world. One instance remains, even more to our present purpose than all
+these--'It came to pass, that Jesus also being baptized, and praying,
+the heaven was opened, and the Holy Ghost descended in a bodily shape
+like a dove upon Him.' Mighty mystery! In Him, too, the Son's desire is
+connected with the Father's gift, and the unmeasured possession of the
+Spirit was an answer to _His_ prayer.
+
+Then, brethren, let us lift our voices and our hearts. That which
+ascends as prayer descends as blessing, like the vapour that is drawn up
+by the kiss of the sun to fall in freshening rain. 'Call upon Me, and I
+will answer thee, and show thee great and hidden things which thou
+knowest not.'
+
+IV. The answering call from God to Zion.
+
+Our truest prayers are but the echo of God's promises. God's best
+answers are the echo of our prayers. As in two mirrors set opposite to
+each other, the same image is repeated over and over again, the
+reflection of a reflection, so here, within the prayer, gleams an
+earlier promise, within the answer is mirrored the prayer.
+
+And in that reverberation, and giving back to us our petition
+transformed into a command, we are not to see a dismissal of it as if we
+had misapprehended our true want. It is not tantamount to, Do not ask me
+to put on my strength, but array yourselves in your own. The very
+opposite interpretation is the true one. The prayer of Zion is heard and
+answered. God awakes, and clothes Himself with might. Then, as some
+warrior king, himself roused from sleep and girded with flashing steel,
+bids the clarion sound through the grey twilight to summon the prostrate
+ranks that lie round his tent, so the sign of God's awaking and the
+first act of His conquering might is this trumpet call--'The night is
+far spent, the day is at hand, let us put off the works of
+darkness,'--the night gear that was fit for slumber--'and put on the
+armour of light,' the mail of purity that gleams and glitters even in
+the dim dawn. God's awaking is our awaking. He puts on strength by
+making us strong; for His arm works through us, clothing itself, as it
+were, with our arm of flesh, and perfecting itself even in our weakness.
+
+Nor is it to be forgotten that this, like all God's commands, carries in
+its heart a promise. That earliest word of God's is the type of all His
+latter behests: 'Let there be light,' and the mighty syllables were
+creative and self-fulfilling. So ever, with Him, to enjoin and to bestow
+are one and the same, and His command is His conveyance of power. He
+rouses us by His summons, He clothes us with power in the very act of
+bidding us put it on. So He answers the Church's cry by stimulating us
+to quickened zeal, and making us more conscious of, and confident in,
+the strength which, in answer to our cry, He pours into our limbs.
+
+But the main point which I would insist on in what remains of this
+sermon, is the practical discipline which this divine summons requires
+from us.
+
+And first, let us remember that the chief means of quickened life and
+strength is deepened communion with Christ.
+
+As we have been saying, our strength is ours by continual derivation
+from Him. It has no independent existence, any more than a sunbeam could
+have, severed from the sun. It is ours only in the sense that it flows
+through us, as a river through the land which it enriches. It is His
+whilst it is ours, it is ours when we know it to be His. Then, clearly,
+the first thing to do must be to keep the channels free by which it
+flows into our souls, and to maintain the connection with the great
+Fountainhead unimpaired. Put a dam across the stream, and the effect
+will be like the drying up of Jordan before Israel: 'the waters that
+were above rose up upon an heap, and the waters that were beneath failed
+and were cut off,' and the foul oozy bed was disclosed to the light of
+day. It is only by constant contact with Christ that we have any
+strength to put on.
+
+That communion with Him is no mere idle or passive attitude, but the
+active employment of our whole nature with His truth, and with Him whom
+the truth reveals. The understanding must be brought into contact with
+the principles of His word, the heart must touch and beat against His
+heart, the will meekly lay its hand in His, the conscience draw at once
+its anodyne and its stimulus from His sacrifice, the passions know His
+finger on the reins, and follow, led in the silken leash of love. Then,
+if I may so say, Elisha's miracle will be repeated in nobler form, and
+from Himself, the Life thus touching all our being, life will flow into
+our deadness. 'He put his mouth upon his mouth, and his eyes upon his
+eyes, and his hands upon his hands, and he stretched himself upon the
+child, and the flesh of the child waxed warm.' So, dear brethren, all
+our practical duty is summed up in that one word, the measure of our
+obedience to which is the measure of all our strength-'Abide in Me, and
+I in you. As the branch cannot bear fruit of itself, except it abide in
+the vine, no more can ye, except ye abide in Me.'
+
+Again, this summons calls us to the faithful use of the power which, on
+condition of that communion, we have.
+
+There is no doubt a temptation, in all times like the present, to look
+for some new and extraordinary forms of blessing, and to substitute such
+expectation for present work with our present strength. There is nothing
+new to look for. There is no need to wait for anything more than we
+possess. Remember the homely old proverb, 'You never know what you can
+do till you try,' and though we are conscious of much unfitness, and
+would sometimes gladly wait till our limbs are stronger, let us brace
+ourselves for the work, assured that in it strength will be given to us
+that equals our desire. There is a wonderful power in honest work to
+develop latent energies and reveal a man to himself. I suppose, in most
+cases, no one is half so much surprised at a great man's greatest deeds
+as he is himself. They say that there is dormant electric energy enough
+in a few raindrops to make a thunderstorm, and there is dormant
+spiritual force enough in the weakest of us to flash into beneficent
+light, and peal notes of awaking into many a deaf ear. The effort to
+serve your Lord will reveal to you strength that you know not. And it
+will increase the strength which it brings into play, as the used
+muscles grow like whipcord, and the practised fingers become deft at
+their task, and every faculty employed is increased, and every gift
+wrapped in a napkin melts like ice folded in a cloth, according to that
+solemn law, 'To him that hath shall be given, and from him that hath not
+shall be taken away even that which he hath.'
+
+Then be sure that to its last particle you are using the strength you
+have, ere you complain of not having enough for your tasks. Take heed of
+the vagrant expectations that wait for they know not what, and the
+apparent prayers that are really substitutes for possible service. 'Why
+liest thou on thy face? Speak unto the children of Israel that they go
+forward.'
+
+The Church's resources are sufficient for the Church's work, if the
+resources are used. We are tempted to doubt it, by reason of our
+experience of failure and our consciousness of weakness. We are more
+than ever tempted to doubt it to-day, when so many wise men are telling
+us that our Christ is a phantom, our God a stream of tendency, our
+Gospel a decaying error, our hope for the world a dream, and our work in
+the world done. We stand before our Master with doubtful hearts, and, as
+we look along the ranks sitting there on the green grass, and then at
+the poor provisions which make all our store, we are sometimes tempted
+almost to think that He errs when He says with that strange calmness of
+His, 'They need not depart, give ye them to eat.' But go out among the
+crowds and give confidently what you have, and you will find that you
+have enough and to spare. If ever our stores seem inadequate, it is
+because they are reckoned up by sense, which takes cognizance of the
+visible, instead of by faith which beholds the real. Certainly five
+loaves and two small fishes are not enough, but are not five loaves and
+two small fishes and a miracle-working hand behind them, enough? It is
+poor calculation that leaves out Christ from the estimate of our forces.
+The weakest man and Jesus to back him are more than all antagonism, more
+than sufficient for all duty. Be not seduced into doubt of your power,
+or of your success, by others' sneers, or by your own faint-heartedness.
+The confidence of ability is ability. 'Screw your courage to the
+sticking place,' and you will _not_ fail--and see to it that you use the
+resources you have, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God. 'Put
+on _thy_ strength, O Zion.'
+
+So, dear brethren, to gather all up in a sentence, let us confidently
+look for times of blessing, penitently acknowledge that our own
+faithlessness has hindered the arm of the Lord, earnestly beseech Him to
+come in His rejoicing strength, and, drawing ever fresh power from
+constant communion with our dear Lord, use it to its last drop for Him.
+Then, like the mortal leader of Israel, as he pondered doubtingly with
+sunken eyes on the hard task before his untrained host, we shall look up
+and be aware of the presence of the sworded angel, the immortal Captain
+of the host of the Lord, standing ready to save, 'putting on
+righteousness as a breastplate, an helmet of salvation on His head, and
+clad with zeal as a cloak.' From His lips, which give what they command,
+comes the call, 'Take unto you the whole armour of God, that ye may be
+able to withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.'
+Hearkening to His voice, the city of the strong ones shall be made an
+heap before our wondering ranks, and the land shall lie open to our
+conquering march.
+
+Wheresoever _we_ lift up the cry, 'Awake, awake, put on strength, O arm
+of the Lord,' there follows, swift as the thunderclap on the lightning
+flash, the rousing summons, 'Awake, awake, put on thy strength, O Zion;
+put on thy beautiful garments, O Jerusalem!' Wheresoever it is obeyed
+there will follow in due time the joyful chorus, as in this context,
+'Sing together, ye waste places of Jerusalem; the Lord hath made bare
+His holy arm in the eyes of all the nations, and all the ends of the
+earth have seen the salvation of our God.'
+
+
+
+
+A PARADOX OF SELLING AND BUYING
+
+'Ye have sold yourselves for nought; and ye shall be redeemed without
+money.'--ISAIAH iii. 3.
+
+
+THE first reference of these words is of course to the Captivity. They
+come in the midst of a grand prophecy of freedom, all full of leaping
+gladness and buoyant hope. The Seer speaks to the captives; they had
+'sold themselves for nought.' What had they gained by their departure
+from God?--bondage. What had they won in exchange for their freedom?--
+only the hard service of Babylon. As Deuteronomy puts it: 'Because thou
+servedst not the Lord thy God with joyfulness... by reason of the
+abundance of all things, therefore shalt thou serve thine enemies...in
+want of all things.' A wise exchange! a good market they had brought
+their goods to! In striking ironical parallel the prophet goes on to say
+that so should they be redeemed. They had got nothing by bondage, they
+should give nothing for liberty. This text has its highest application
+in regard to our captivity and our redemption.
+
+I. The reality of the captivity.
+
+The true idea of bondage is that of coercion of will and conscience, the
+dominance and tyranny of what has no right to rule. So men are really in
+bondage when they think themselves most free. The only real slavery is
+that in which we are tied and bound by our own passions and lusts. 'He
+that committeth sin is the slave of sin.' He thinks himself master of
+himself and his actions, and boasts that he has broken away from the
+restraints of obedience, but really he has only exchanged masters. What
+a Master to reject--and what a master to prefer!
+
+II. The voluntariness of the captivity.
+
+'Ye have sold _yourselves_,' and become authors of your own bondage. No
+sin is forced upon any man, and no one is to blame for it but himself.
+The many excuses which people make to themselves are hollow. Now-a-days
+we hear a great deal of heredity, how a man is what his ancestors have
+made him, and of organisation, how a man is what his body makes him, and
+of environment, how a man is what his surroundings make him. There is
+much truth in all that, and men's guilt is much diminished by
+circumstances, training, and temperament. The amount of responsibility
+is not for us to settle, in regard to others, or even in regard to
+ourselves. But all that does not touch the fact that we ourselves have
+sold ourselves. No false brethren have sold us as they did Joseph.
+
+The strong tendency of human nature is always to throw the blame on some
+one else; God or the devil, the flesh or the world, it does not matter
+which. But it remains true that every man sinning is 'drawn away of _his
+own_ lust and enticed.'
+
+After all, conscience witnesses to the truth, and by that mysterious
+sense of guilt and gnawing of remorse which is quite different from the
+sense of mistake, tears to tatters the sophistries. Nothing is more
+truly my own than my sin.
+
+III. The profitlessness of the captivity.
+
+'For nought'; that is a picturesque way of putting the truth that all
+sinful life fails to satisfy a man. The meaning of one of the Hebrew
+words for sin is 'missing the mark.' It is a blunder as well as a crime.
+It is trying to draw water from broken cisterns. It is 'as when a hungry
+man dreameth and behold he eateth, but he awaketh and his soul is
+empty.' Sin buys men with fairy money, which looks like gold, but in the
+morning is found to be but a handful of yellow and faded leaves. 'Why do
+ye spend your money for that which is not bread?' It cannot but be so,
+for only God can satisfy a man, and only in doing His will are we sure
+of sowing seed which will yield us bread enough and to spare, and
+nothing but bread. In all other harvests, tares mingle and they yield
+poisoned flour. We never get what we aim at when we do wrong, for what
+we aim at is not the mere physical or other satisfaction which the
+temptation offers us, but rest of soul--and that we do _not_ get. And we
+are sure to get something that we did not aim at or look for--a wounded
+conscience, a worsened nature, often hurts to health or reputation, and
+other consequent ills, that were carefully kept out of sight, while we
+were being seduced by the siren voice. The old story of the traitress,
+who bargained to let the enemies into the city, if they would give her
+'what they wore on their left arms,' meaning bracelets, and was crushed
+to death under their shields heaped on her, is repeated in the
+experience of every man who listens to the 'juggling fiends, who keep
+the word of promise to the ear, but break it to the hope.' The truth of
+this is attested by a cloud of witnesses. Conscience and experience
+answer the question, 'What fruit had ye then in those things whereof ye
+are now ashamed?' Wasted lives answer; tyrannous evil habits answer;
+diseased bodies, blighted reputations, bitter memories answer.
+
+IV. The unbought freedom.
+
+'Ye shall be redeemed without money.' You gained nothing by your
+bondage; you need give nothing for your emancipation. The original
+reference is, of course, to the great act of divine power which set
+these literal captives free, not for price nor reward. As in the Exodus
+from Egypt, so in that from Babylon, no ransom was paid, but a nation of
+bondsmen was set at liberty without war or compensation. That was a
+strange thing in history. The paradox of buying back without buying is a
+symbol of the Christian redemption.
+
+(1) A price has been paid.
+
+'Ye were redeemed not with corruptible things as silver and gold, but
+with the precious blood of Christ.' The New Testament idea of
+redemption, no doubt, has its roots in the Old Testament provisions for
+the Goel or kinsman redeemer, who was to procure the freedom of a
+kinsman. But whatever figurative elements may enter into it, its core is
+the ethical truth that Christ's death is the means by which the bonds of
+sin are broken. There is much in the many-sided applications and powers
+of that Death which we do not know, but this is clear, that by it the
+power of sin is destroyed and the guilt of sin taken away.
+
+(2) That price has been paid for all.
+
+We have therefore nothing to pay. A slave cannot redeem himself, for all
+that he has is his master's already. So, no efforts of ours can set
+ourselves free from the 'cords of our sins.' Men try to bring something
+of their own. 'I do my best and God will have mercy.' We will bring our
+own penitence, efforts, good works, or rely on Church ordinances, or
+anything rather than sue _in forma pauperis_. How hard it is to get men
+to see that 'It is finished,' and to come and rest only on the mere
+mercy of God.
+
+How do we ally ourselves with that completed work? By simple faith, of
+which an essential is the recognition that we have nothing and can do
+nothing.
+
+Suppose an Israelite in Babylon who did not choose to avail himself of
+the offered freedom; he must die in bondage. So must we if we refuse to
+have eternal life as the gift of God. The prophet's paradoxical
+invitation, 'He that hath no money, come ye, buy...without money,' is
+easily solved. The price is to give up ourselves and forsake all self-
+willed striving after self-purchased freedom which is but subtler
+bondage. 'If the Son make you free, ye shall be free indeed.' If not,
+then are ye slaves indeed, having 'sold yourselves for nought,' and
+declined to be 'redeemed without money.'
+
+
+
+
+CLEAN CARRIERS
+
+'Be ye clean, that bear the vessels of the Lord.'--ISAIAH lii. 11.
+
+
+The context points to a great deliverance. It is a good example of the
+prophetical habit of casting prophecies of the future into the mould of
+the past. The features of the Exodus are repeated, but some of them are
+set aside. This deliverance, whatever it be, is to be after the pattern
+of that old story, but with very significant differences. Then, the
+departing Israelites had spoiled the Egyptians and come out, laden with
+silver and gold which had been poured into their hands; now there is to
+be no bringing out of anything which was tainted with the foulness of
+the land of captivity. Then the priests had borne the sacred vessels for
+sacrifice, now they are to exercise the same holy function, and for its
+discharge purity is demanded. Then, they had gone out in haste; now,
+there is to be no precipitate flight, but calmly, as those who are
+guided by God for their leader, and shielded from all pursuit by God as
+their rearward, the men of this new Exodus are to take their march from
+the new Egypt.
+
+No doubt the nearest fulfilment is to be found in the Return from
+Babylon, and the narrative in Ezra may be taken as a remarkable parallel
+to the prophecy here. But the restriction to Babylon must seem
+impossible to any reader who interprets aright the significance of the
+context, and observes that our text follows the grand words of verse 10,
+and precedes the Messianic prophecy of verse 13 and of ch. liii. To such
+a reader the principle will not be doubtful according to which Egypt and
+Babylon are transparencies through which mightier forms shine, and a
+more wonderful and world-wide making bare of the arm of the Lord is
+seen. Christ's great redemption is the highest interpretation of these
+words; and the trumpet-call of our text is addressed to all who have
+become partakers of it.
+
+So Paul quotes the text in 2 Cor. vi. 17, blending with it other words
+which are gathered from more than one passage of Scripture. We may then
+take the whole as giving the laws of the new Exodus, and also as
+shadowing certain great peculiarities connected with it, by which it
+surpasses all the former deliverances.
+
+I. The Pilgrims of this new Exodus.
+
+A true Christian is a pilgrim, not only because he, like all men, is
+passing through a life which is transient, but because he is consciously
+detached from the Visible and Present, as a consequence of his conscious
+attachment to the Unseen and Eternal. What is said in Hebrews of Abraham
+is true of all inheritors of his faith: 'dwelling in tabernacles, for he
+looked for the city.'
+
+II. The priests.
+
+Priests and Levites bore the sacred vessels. All Christians are priests.
+The only true priesthood is Christ's, ours is derived from Him. In that
+universal priesthood of believers are included the privileges and
+obligations of
+
+a. Access to God--Communion.
+
+b. Offering spiritual sacrifices. Service and self-surrender.
+
+c. Mediation with men.
+
+Proclamation. Intercession. Thus follows
+
+d. Bearing the holy vessels. A sacred deposit is entrusted to them--the
+honour and name of God; the treasure of the Gospel.
+
+III. The separation that becomes pilgrims.
+
+'Come out and be ye separate.' The very meaning of our Christian
+profession is separation. There is ludicrous inconsistency in saying
+that we are Christians and not being pilgrims. Of course, the separation
+is not to be worked out by mere external asceticism or withdrawal from
+the world. That has been so thoroughly preached and practised of late
+years that we much need the other side to be put. There should be some
+plain difference between the life of Christians and that of men whose
+portion is in this life. They should differ in the aspect under which
+all outward things are regarded.
+
+To a Christian they are to be means to an end, and ever to be felt to be
+evanescent. They should differ in the motive for action, which should,
+for a Christian, ever be the love of God. They should differ in that a
+Christian abstains from much which non-Christians feel free to do, and
+often has to say, 'So did not I, because of the fear of the Lord.' He
+who marches light marches quickly and marches far; to bring the
+treasures of Egypt along with us, is apt to retard our steps.
+
+IV. The purity that becomes priests.
+
+The Levites would cleanse themselves before taking up the holy vessels.
+And for us, clean hands and a pure heart are essential. There is no
+communion with God without these; a small speck of dust in the eye
+blinds us. There is no sacrificial service without them. No efficient
+work among men can be done without them. One main cause of the weakness
+of our Christian testimony is the imperfection of character in the
+witnesses, which is more powerful than all talk and often neutralises
+much effort. Keen eyes are watching us.
+
+The consciousness of our own impurity should send us to Jesus, with the
+prayer and the confidence, 'Cleanse me and I shall be clean.' 'The blood
+of Jesus Christ cleanseth from all sin.' 'He hath loosed us from our
+sins and made us kings and priests to God.'
+
+
+
+
+MARCHING ORDERS
+
+'Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence, touch no unclean thing; go
+ye out of the midst of her; be ye clean, that bear the vessels of the
+Lord. 12. For ye shall not go out with haste, nor go by flight: for the
+Lord will go before you, and the God of Israel will be your
+reward.'--ISAIAH iii. 11, 12.
+
+
+These ringing notes are parts of a highly poetic picture of that great
+deliverance which inspired this prophet's most exalted strains. It is
+described with constant allusion to the first Exodus, but also with
+significant differences. Now no doubt the actual historical return of
+the Jews from the Babylonish captivity is the object that fills the
+foreground of this vision, but it by no means exhausts its significance.
+The restriction of the prophecy to that more immediate fulfilment may
+well seem impossible when we note that my text follows the grand promise
+that 'all the ends of the earth shall see the salvation of our God,' and
+immediately precedes the Messianic prophecy of the fifty-third chapter.
+Egypt was transparent, and through it shone Babylon; Babylon was
+transparent, and through it shone Christ's redemption. That was the real
+and highest fulfilment of the prophet's anticipations, and the
+trumpet-calls of my text are addressed to all who have a share in it. We
+have, then, here, under highly metaphorical forms, the grand ideal of
+the Christian life; and I desire to note briefly its various features.
+
+I. First, then, we have it set forth as a march of warrior priests.
+
+Note that phrase--'Ye that bear the vessels of the Lord.' The returning
+exiles as a whole are so addressed, but the significance of the
+expression, and the precise metaphor which it is meant to convey, may be
+questionable. The word rendered 'vessel' is a wide expression, meaning
+any kind of equipment, and in other places of the Old Testament the
+whole phrase rendered here, 'ye that bear the vessels,' is translated
+'armour-bearers.' Such an image would be quite congruous with the
+context here, in which warlike figures abound. And if so, the picture
+would be that of an army on the march, each man carrying some of the
+weapons of the great Captain and Leader. But perhaps the other
+explanation is more likely, which regards 'the vessels of the Lord' as
+being an allusion to the sacrificial and other implements of worship,
+which, in the first Exodus, the Levites carried on the march. And if
+that be the meaning, as seems more congruous with the command of purity
+which is deduced from the function of bearing the vessels, then the
+figure here, of course, is that of a company of priests. I venture to
+throw the two ideas together, and to say that we may here find an ideal
+of the Christian community as being a great company of warrior-priests
+on the march, guarding a sacred deposit which has been committed to
+their charge.
+
+Look, then, at that combination in the true Christian character of the
+two apparently opposite ideas of warrior and priest. It suggests that
+all the life is to be conflict, and that all the conflict is to be
+worship; that everywhere, in the thick of the fight, we may still bear
+the remembrance of the 'secret place of the most High.' It suggests,
+too, that the warfare is worship, that the offices of the priest and of
+the warrior are one and the same thing, and both consist in their
+mediating between man and God, bringing God in His Gospel to men, and
+bringing men through their faith to God. The combination suggests,
+likewise, how, in the true Christian character, there ought ever to be
+blended, in strange harmony, the virtues of the soldier and the
+qualities of the priest; compassion for the ignorant and them that are
+out of the way, with courage; meekness with strength; a quiet, placable
+heart hating strife, joined to a spirit that cheerily fronts every
+danger and is eager for the conflict in which evil is the foe and God
+the helper. The old Crusaders went to battle with the Cross on their
+hearts, and on their shoulders, and on the hilts of their swords; and
+we, too, in all our warfare, have to remember that its weapons are not
+carnal but spiritual, and that only then do we fight as the Captain of
+our salvation fought, when our arms are meekness and pity, and our
+warfare is waged in gentleness and love.
+
+Note, further, that in this phrase we have the old, old metaphor of life
+as a march, but so modified as to lose all its melancholy and weariness
+and to become an elevating hope. The idea which runs through all poetry,
+of life as a journey, suggests effort, monotonous change, a uniform law
+of variety and transiency, struggle and weariness, but the Christian
+thought of life, while preserving the idea of change, modifies it into
+the blessed thought of progress. Life, if it is as Christ meant it to
+be, is a journey in the sense that it is a continuous effort, not
+unsuccessful, toward a clearly discerned goal, our eternal home. The
+Christian march is a march from slavery to freedom, and from a foreign
+land to our native soil.
+
+Again, this metaphor suggests that this company of marching priests have
+in charge a sacred deposit. Paul speaks of the 'glorious Gospel which
+was committed to my trust.' 'That good thing which was committed unto
+thee by the Holy Ghost, keep.' The history of the return from Babylon in
+the Book of Ezra presents a remarkable parallel to the language of my
+text, for there we are told how, in the preparation for the march, the
+leader entrusted the sacred vessels of the temple, which the liberality
+of the heathen king had returned to him, to a group of Levites and
+priests, weighing them at the beginning, and bidding them keep them safe
+until they were weighed again in the courts of the Lord's house in
+Jerusalem.
+
+And, in like manner, to us Christians is given the charge of God's great
+weapons of warfare, with which He contends with the wickedness of the
+world--viz. that great message of salvation through, and in, the Cross
+of Jesus Christ. And there are committed to us, further, to guard
+sedulously, and to keep bright and untarnished and undiminished in
+weight and worth, the precious treasures of the Christian life of
+communion with Him. And we may give another application to the figure
+and think of the solemn trust which is put into our hands, in the gift
+of our own selves, which we ourselves can either waste, and stain, and
+lose, or can guard and polish into vessels 'meet for the Master's use.'
+
+Gathering, then, these ideas together, we take this as the ideal of the
+Christian community--a company of priests on the march, with a sacred
+deposit committed to their trust. If we reflected more on such a
+conception of the Christian life, we should more earnestly hearken to,
+and more sedulously discharge, the commands that are built thereon. To
+these commands I now turn.
+
+II. Note the separation that befits the marching company.
+
+'Depart ye, depart ye, go ye out from thence, touch no unclean thing, go
+ye out of the midst of her.' In the historical fulfilment of my text,
+separation from Babylon was the preliminary of the march. Our task is
+not so simple; our separation from Babylon must be the constant
+accompaniment of our march. And day by day it has to be repeated, if we
+would lift a foot in advance upon the road. There is still a Babylon.
+The order in the midst of which we live is not organised on the
+fundamental laws of Christ's Kingdom. And wherever there are men who
+seek to order their lives as Christ would have them to be ordered, the
+first necessity for them is, 'Come out from amongst them, and be ye
+separate, saith the Lord.' There is no need in this day to warn
+Christian people against an exaggerated interpretation of these
+commandments. I almost wish there were more need. We have been told so
+often, in late years, of how Christian men ought to mingle with all the
+affairs of life, and count nothing that is human foreign to themselves,
+that it seems to me there is vast need for a little emphasis being put
+on the other side of the truth, and for separation being insisted upon.
+Wherever there is a real grasp of Jesus Christ for a man's own personal
+Saviour, and a true submission to Him as the Pattern and Guide of life,
+a broad line of demarcation between that man and the irreligious life
+round him will draw itself. If the heart have its tendrils twined round
+the Cross, it will have detached them from the world around. Separation
+by reason of an entirely different conception of life, separation
+because the present does not look to you as it looks to the men who see
+only it, separation because you and they have not only a different ideal
+and theory of life, but are living from different motives and for
+different ends and by different powers, will be the inevitable result of
+any real union with Jesus Christ. If I am joined to Him I am separated
+from the world; and detachment from it is the simple and necessary
+result of any real attachment to Him. There will always be a gulf in
+feeling, in purpose, in view, and therefore there will often have to be
+separation outward things. 'So did not I because of the fear of the
+Lord' will have to be said over and over again by any real and honest
+follower of the Master.
+
+This separation will not only be the result of union with Jesus Christ,
+but it is the condition of all progress in our union with Him. We must
+be unmoored before we can advance. Many a caravan has broken down in
+African exploration for no other reason than because it was too well
+provided with equipments, and so collapsed of its own weight. Therefore,
+our prophet in the context says, 'Touch no unclean thing.' _There_ is
+one of the differences between the new Exodus and the old. When Israel
+came out of Egypt they spoiled the Egyptians, and came away laden with
+gold and jewels; but it is dangerous work bringing anything away from
+Babylon with us. Its treasure has to be left if we would march close
+behind our Lord and Master. We must touch 'no unclean thing,' because
+our hands are to be filled with the 'vessels of the Lord.' I am
+preaching no impossible asceticism, no misanthropical withdrawal from
+the duties of life, and the obligations that we owe to society. God's
+world is a good one; man's world is a bad one. It is man's world that we
+have to leave, but the lofties, sanctity requires no abstention from
+anything that God has ordained.
+
+Now, dear friends, I venture to think that this message is one that we
+all dreadfully need to-day. There are a great many Christians, so-
+called, in this generation, who seem to think that the main object they
+should have in view is to obliterate the distinction between themselves
+and the world of ungodly men, and in occupation and amusements to be as
+like people that have no religion as they possibly can manage. So they
+get credit for being 'liberal' Christians, and praise from quarters
+whose praise is censure, and whose approval ought to make a Christian
+man very uncomfortable. Better by far the narrowest Puritanism--I was
+going to say better by far monkish austerities--than a Christianity
+which knows no self-denial, which is perfectly at home in an irreligious
+atmosphere, and which resents the exhortation to separation, because it
+would fain keep the things that it is bidden to drop. God's reiteration
+of the text through Paul to the Church in luxurious, corrupt, wealthy
+Corinth is a gospel for this day for English Christians, 'Come out from
+among them, and I will receive you.'
+
+III. Further, note the purity which becomes the bearers of the vessels
+of the Lord.
+
+'Be ye clean.' The priest's hands must be pure, which figure, being
+translated, is that transparent purity of conduct and character is
+demanded from all Christian men who profess to bear God's sacred
+deposit. You cannot carry it unless your hands are clean, for all the
+gifts that God gives us glide from our grasp if our hands be stained.
+Monkish legends tell of sacred pictures and vessels which, when an
+impure touch was laid upon them, refused to be lifted from their place,
+and grew there, as rooted, in spite of all efforts to move them. Whoever
+seeks to hold the gifts of God in His Gospel in dirty hands will fail
+miserably in the attempt; and all the joy and peace of communion, the
+assurance of God's love, and the calm hope of immortal life will vanish
+as a soap bubble, grasped by a child, turns into a drop of foul water on
+its palm, if we try to hold them in foul hands. Be clean, or you cannot
+bear the vessels of the Lord.
+
+And further, remember that no priestly service nor any successful
+warfare for Jesus Christ is possible, except on the same condition. One
+sin, as well as one sinner, destroys much good, and a little
+inconsistency on the part of us professing Christians neutralises all
+the efforts that we may ever try to put forth for Him. Logic requires
+that God's vessels should be carried with clean hands. God requires it,
+men require it, and have a right to require it. The mightiest witness
+for Him is the witness of a pure life, and if we go about the world
+professing to be His messengers, and carrying His epistle in our dirty
+fingers, the soiled thumb-mark upon it will prevent men from caring for
+the message; and the Word will be despised because of the unworthiness
+of its bearers. 'Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.'
+
+IV. Lastly, notice the leisurely confidence which should mark the march
+that is guarded by God. 'Ye shall not go out with haste, nor go by
+flight, for the Lord will go before you, and the God of Israel will be
+your reward.'
+
+This is partly an analogy and partly a contrast with the story of the
+first Exodus. The unusual word translated 'with haste' is employed in
+the Pentateuch to describe the hurry and bustle, not altogether due to
+the urgency of the Egyptians, but partly also to the terror of Israel,
+with which that first flight was conducted. And, says my text, in this
+new coming out of bondage there shall be no need for tremor or
+perturbation, lending wings to any man's feet; but, with quiet
+deliberation, like that with which Peter was brought out of his dungeon,
+because God knew that He could bring him out safely, the new Exodus
+shall be carried on.
+
+'He that believeth shall not make haste.' Why should he? There is no
+need for a Christian man ever to be flurried, or to lose his self-
+command, or ever to be in an undignified and unheroic hurry. His march
+should be unceasing, swift, but calm and equable, as the motions of the
+planets, unhasting and unresting.
+
+There is a very good reason why we need not be in any haste due to
+alarm. For, as in the first Exodus, the guiding pillar led the march,
+and sometimes, when there were foes behind, as at the Red Sea, shifted
+its place to the rear, so 'the Lord will go before you, and the God of
+Israel will be your rereward.' He besets us behind and before, going in
+front to be our Guide, and in the rear for our protection, gathering up
+the stragglers, so that there shall not be 'a hoof left behind,' and
+putting a wall of iron between us and the swarms of hovering enemies
+that hang on our march. Thus encircled by God, we shall be safe. Christ
+fulfils what the prophet pledged God to do; for He goes before us, the
+Pattern, the Captain of our salvation, the Forerunner, 'the Breaker is
+gone up before them '; and He comes behind us to guard us from evil; for
+He is 'the _Alpha_ and _Omega_, the beginning and the ending, the
+Almighty.'
+
+Dear brethren, life for us all must be a weary pilgrimage. We cannot
+alter that. It is the lot of every son of man. But we have the power of
+either making it a dreary, solitary tramp over an undefended desert, to
+end in the great darkness, or else of making it a march in which the
+twin sisters Joy and Peace shall lead us forth, and go out with us, and
+the other pair of angel-forms, 'Goodness and Mercy,' shall follow us all
+the days of our lives. We may make it a journey with Jesus for Guide and
+Companion, to Jesus as our Home. 'The ransomed of the Lord shall return,
+and come to Zion with songs, and everlasting joy upon their heads.'
+
+
+
+
+THE ARM OF THE LORD
+
+'To whom is the arm of the Lord revealed?'---ISAIAH liii 1.
+
+
+In the second Isaiah there are numerous references to 'the arm of the
+Lord.' It is a natural symbol of the active energy of Jehovah, and is
+analogous to the other symbol of 'the Face of Jehovah,' which is also
+found in this book, in so far as it emphasises the notion of power in
+manifestation, though 'the Face' has a wider range and may be explained
+as equivalent to that part of the divine Nature which is turned to men.
+The latter symbol will then be substantially parallel with 'the Name.'
+But there are traces of a tendency to conceive of 'the arm of the Lord'
+as personified, for instance, where we read (ch. lxiii. 12) that Jehovah
+'caused His glorious arm to go at the right hand of Moses.' Moses was
+not the true leader, but was himself led and sustained by the divine
+Power, dimly conceived as a person, ever by his side to sustain and
+direct. There seems to be a similar imperfect consciousness of
+personification in the words of the text, especially when taken in their
+close connection with the immediately following prophecy of the
+suffering servant. It would be doing violence to the gradual development
+of Revelation, like tearing asunder the just-opening petals of a rose,
+to read into this question of the sad prophet full-blown Christian
+truth, but it would be missing a clear anticipation of that truth to
+fail to recognise the forecasting of it that _is_ here.
+
+I. We have here a prophetic forecast that the arm of the Lord is a
+person.
+
+The strict monotheism of the Old Testament does not preclude some very
+remarkable phenomena in its modes of conception and speech as to the
+divine Nature. We hear of the 'angel of His face,' and again of 'the
+angel in whom is His Name.' We hear of 'the angel' to whom divine
+worship is addressed and who speaks, as we may say, in a divine dialect
+and does divine acts. We meet, too, with the personification of Wisdom
+in the Book of Proverbs, to which are ascribed characteristics and are
+attributed acts scarcely distinguishable from divine, and eminently
+associated in the creative work. Our text points in the same direction
+as these representations. They all tend in the direction of preparing
+for the full Christian truth of the personal 'Power of God.' What was
+shown by glimpses 'at sundry times and in divers manners,' with many
+gaps in the showing and much left all unshown, is perfectly revealed in
+the Son. The New Testament, by its teaching as to 'the Eternal Word,'
+endorses, clears, and expands all these earlier dimmer adumbrations.
+That Word is the agent of the divine energy, and the conception of power
+as being exercised by the Word is even loftier than that of it as put
+forth by 'the arm,' by as much as intelligent and intelligible utterance
+is more spiritual and higher than force of muscle. The apostolic
+designation of Jesus as 'the power of God and the wisdom of God' blends
+the two ideas of these two symbols. The conception of Jesus Christ as
+the arm of the Lord, when united with that of the Eternal Word, points
+to a threefold sphere and manner of His operations, as the personal
+manifestation of the active power of God. In the beginning, the arm of
+the Lord stretched out the heavens as a tent to dwell in, and without
+Him 'was not anything made that was made.' In His Incarnation, He
+carried into execution all God's purposes and fulfilled His whole will.
+From His throne He wields divine power, and rules the universe. 'The
+help that is done on earth, He doeth it all Himself,' and He works in
+the midst of humanity that redeeming work which none but He can effect.
+
+II. We have here a prophetic paradox that the mightiest revelation of
+the arm of the Lord is in weakness.
+
+The words of the text stand in closest connection with the great picture
+of the Suffering Servant which follows, and the pathetic figure
+portrayed there is the revealing of the arm of the Lord. The close
+bringing together of the ideas of majesty and power and of humiliation,
+suffering, and weakness, would be a paradox to the first hearers of the
+prophecy. Its solution lies in the historical manifestation of Jesus.
+Looking on Him, we see that the growing up of that root out of a dry
+ground was the revelation of the great power of God. In Jesus' lowly
+humanity God's power is made perfect in man's weakness, in another and
+not less true sense than that in which the apostle spoke. There we see
+divine power in its noblest form, in its grandest operation, in its
+widest sweep, in its loftiest purpose. That humble man, lowly and poor,
+despised and rejected in life, hanging faint and pallid on the Roman
+cross, and dying in the dark, seems a strange manifestation of the
+'glory' of God, but the Cross is indeed His throne, and sublime as are
+the other forms in which Omnipotence clothes itself, this is, to human
+eyes and hearts, the highest of them all. In Jesus the arm of the Lord
+is revealed in its grandest operation. Creation and the continual
+sustaining of a universe are great, but redemption is greater. It is
+infinitely more to say, 'He giveth power to the faint,' than to say,
+'For that He is strong in might, not one faileth,' and to principalities
+and powers in heavenly places who have gazed on the grand operations of
+divine power for ages, new lessons of what it can effect are taught by
+the redemption of sinful men. The divine power that is enshrined in
+Jesus' weakness is power in its widest sweep, for it is to every one
+that believeth, and in its loftiest purpose, for it is 'unto salvation.'
+
+III. We have here a prophetic lament that the power revealed to all is
+unseen by many.
+
+The text is a wail over darkened eyes, blind at noonday. The prophet's
+radiant anticipations of the Servant's exaltation, and of God's holy arm
+being made bare in the eyes of all nations, are clouded over by the
+thought of the incredulity of the multitude to 'our report.' Jehovah had
+indeed 'made bare His arm,' as a warrior throws back his loose robe,
+when he would strike. But what was the use of that, if dull eyes would
+not look? The 'report' had been loudly proclaimed, but what was the use
+of that, if ears were obstinately stopped? Alas, alas! nothing that God
+can do secures that men shall see what He shows, or listen to what He
+speaks. The mystery of mysteries is that men can, the tragedy of
+tragedies is that they will, make any possible revelation of none
+effect, so far as they are concerned.
+
+The Arm is revealed, but only by those who have 'believed our report'
+does the prophet deem it to be actually beheld. Faith is the individual
+condition on which the perfected revelation becomes a revelation to me.
+The 'salvation of our God' is shown in splendour to 'all the ends of the
+earth,' but only they who exercise faith in Jesus, who is the power of
+God, will see that far-shining light. If we are not of those who
+'believe the report,' we shall, notwithstanding that 'He hath made bare
+His holy arm,' be of those who grope at noonday as in the dark.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT-I
+
+'For He grew up before Him as a tender plant, and as a root out of a dry
+ground He hath no form nor comeliness; and when we see Him, there is no
+beauty that we should desire Him. 3. He was despised, and rejected of
+men, a Man of Sorrows, and acquainted with grief: and as one from whom
+men hide their face He was despised, and we esteemed Him not.'--ISAIAH
+liii, 2, 3.
+
+
+To hold fast the fulfilment of this prophecy of the Suffering Servant in
+Jesus it is not necessary to deny its reference to Israel. Just as
+offices, institutions, and persons in it were prophetic, and by their
+failures to realise to the full their own _role_, no less than by their
+partial presentation of it, pointed onwards to Him, in whom their idea
+would finally take form and substance, so this great picture of God's
+Servant, which was but imperfectly reproduced even by the Israel within
+Israel, stood on the prophet's page a fair though sad dream, with
+nothing corresponding to it in the region of reality and history, till
+He came and lived and suffered.
+
+If we venture to make it the theme of a short series of sermons, our
+object is simply to endeavour to bring out clearly the features of the
+wonderful portrait. If they are fully apprehended, it seems to us that
+the question of who is the original of the picture answers itself. We
+must note that the whole is introduced by a 'For,' that is to say, that
+it is all explanatory of the unbelief and blindness to the revealed arm
+of the Lord, which the prophet has just been lamenting. This close
+connection with the preceding words accounts for the striking way in
+which the description of the person of the Servant is here blended with,
+or interrupted by, that of the manner in which he was treated.
+
+I. The Servant's lowly origin and growth.
+
+'He _grew_,'--not '_shall_ grow.' The whole is cast into the form of
+history, and to begin the description with a future tense is not only an
+error in grammar but gratuitously introduces an incongruity. The word
+rendered 'tender plant' means a sucker, and 'root' probably would more
+properly be taken as a shoot from a root, the tree having been felled,
+and nothing left but the stump. There is here, then, at the outset, an
+unmistakable reference to the prophecy in ch. xi. 1, which is Messianic
+prophecy, and therefore there is a presumption that this too has a
+Messianic reference. In the original passage the stump or 'stock' is
+explained as being the humiliated house of David, and it is only
+following the indications supplied by the fact of the second Isaiah's
+quotation of the first, if we take the implication in his words to be
+the same. Royal descent, but from a royal house fallen on evil days, is
+the plain meaning here.
+
+And the eclipse of its glory is further brought out in that not only
+does the shoot spring from a tree, all whose leafy honours have long
+been lopped away, but which is 'in a dry ground.' Surely we do not force
+a profounder meaning than is legitimate into this feature of the picture
+when we think of the Carpenter's Son 'of the house and lineage of
+David,' of the Son of God 'who was found in fashion as a man,' of Him
+who was born in a stable, and grew up in a tiny village hidden away
+among the hills of Galilee, who, as it were, stole into the world 'not
+with observation,' and opened out, as He grew, the wondrous blossom of a
+perfect humanity such as had never before been evolved from any root,
+nor grown on the most sedulously cultured plant. Is this part of the
+prophet's ideal realised in any of the other suggested realisations of
+it?
+
+But there is still another point in regard to the origin and growth of
+the lowly shoot from the felled stump--it is 'before Him.' Then the
+unnoticed growth is noticed by Jehovah, and, though cared for by no
+others, is cared for, tended, and guarded, by Him.
+
+II. The Servant's unattractive form.
+
+Naturally a shoot springing in a dry ground would show but little beauty
+of foliage or flower. It would be starved and colourless beside the
+gaudy growths in fertile, well-watered gardens. But that
+unattractiveness is not absolute or real; it is only 'that _we_ should
+desire Him.' We are but poor judges of true 'form or comeliness,' and
+what is lustrous with perfect beauty in God's eyes may be, and generally
+is, plain and dowdy in men's. Our tastes are debased. Flaunting
+vulgarities and self-assertive ugliness captivate vulgar eyes, to which
+the serene beauties of mere goodness seem insipid. Cockatoos charm
+savages to whom the iridescent neck of a dove has no charms. Surely this
+part of the description fits Jesus as it does no other. The entire
+absence of outward show, or of all that pleases the spoiled tastes of
+sinful men, need not be dwelt on. No doubt the world has slowly come to
+recognise in Him the moral ideal, a perfect man, but He has been
+educating it for nineteen hundred years to get it up to that point, and
+the educational process is very far from complete. The real desire of
+most men is for something much more pungent and dashing than Jesus' meek
+wisdom and stainless purity, which breed in them ennui rather than
+longing. 'Not this man but Barabbas,' was the approximate realisation of
+the Jewish ideal then; not this man but--some type or other of a less
+oppressive perfection, and that calls for less effort to imitate it, is
+the world's real cry still. Pilate's scornfully wondering question: Art
+_Thou_--such a poor-looking creature--the King of the Jews? is very much
+of a piece with the world's question still: Art Thou the perfect
+instance of manhood? Art Thou the highest revelation of God?
+
+III. The Servant's reception by men.
+
+The two preceding characteristics naturally result in this third. For
+lowliness of condition and lack of qualities appealing to men's false
+ideals will certainly lead to being 'despised and rejected.' The latter
+expression is probably better taken, as in the margin of the Rev. Ver.
+as 'forsaken.' But whichever meaning is adopted, what an Iliad of woes
+is condensed into these two words! 'The spurns that patient merit of the
+unworthy takes,' the loneliness of one who, in all the crowd descries
+none to trust--these are the wages that the world ever gives to its
+noblest, who live but to help it and be misunderstood by it, and as
+these are the wages of all who with self-devotion would serve God by
+serving the world for its good, they were paid in largest measure to
+'_the_ Servant of the Lord.' His claims were ridiculed, His words of
+wisdom thrown back on Himself; none were so poor but could afford to
+despise Him as lower than they, His love was repulsed, surely He drank
+the bitterest cup of contempt. All His life He walked in the solitude of
+uncomprehended aims, and at His hour of extremest need appealed in vain
+for a little solace of companionship, and was deserted by those whom He
+trusted most. His was a lifelong martyrdom inflicted by men. His was a
+lifelong solitude which was most utter at the last. And He brought it
+all on Himself because He _would_ be God's Servant in being men's
+Saviour.
+
+IV. The Servant's sorrow of heart.
+
+The remarkable expression 'acquainted with grief' seems to carry an
+allusion to the previous clause, in which men are spoken of as despising
+and rejecting the Servant. They left Him alone, and His only companion
+was 'grief'--a grim associate to walk at a man's side all his days! It
+is to be noted that the word rendered 'grief' is literally sickness.
+That description of mental or spiritual sorrows under the imagery of
+bodily sicknesses is intensified in the subsequent terrible picture of
+Him as one from whom men hide their faces with disgust at His hideous
+appearance, caused by disease. Possibly the meaning may rather be that
+He hides His face, as lepers had to do.
+
+Now probably the 'sorrows' touched on at this point are to be
+distinguished from those which subsequently are spoken of in terms of
+such poignancy as laid on the Servant by God. Here the prophet is
+thinking rather of those which fell on Him by reason of men's rejection
+and desertion. We shall not rightly estimate the sorrowfulness of
+Christ's sorrows, unless we bring to our meditations on them the other
+thought of His joys. How great these were we can judge, when we remember
+that He told the disciples that by His joy remaining in them their joy
+would be full. As much joy then as human nature was capable of from
+perfect purity, filial obedience, trust, and unbroken communion with
+God, so much was Jesus' permanent experience. The golden cup of His pure
+nature was ever full to the brim with the richest wine of joy. And that
+constant experience of gladness in the Father and in Himself made more
+painful the sorrows which He encountered, like a biting wind shrieking
+round Him, whenever He passed out from fellowship with God in the
+stillness of His soul into the contemptuous and hostile world. His
+spirit carrying with it the still atmosphere of the Holy Place, would
+feel more keenly than any other would have done the jarring tumult of
+the crowds, and would know a sharper pain when met with greetings in
+which was no kindness. Jesus was sinless, His sympathy with all sorrow
+was thereby rendered abnormally keen, and He made others' griefs His own
+with an identification born of a sympathy which the most compassionate
+cannot attain. The greater the love, the greater the sorrow of the
+loving heart when its love is spurned. The intenser the yearning for
+companionship, the sharper the pang when it is repulsed. The more one
+longs to bless, the more one suffers when his blessings are flung off.
+Jesus was the most sensitive, the most sympathetic, the most loving soul
+that ever dwelt in flesh. He saw, as none other has ever seen, man's
+miseries. He experienced, as none else has ever experienced, man's
+ingratitude, and, therefore, though God, even His God, 'anointed Him
+with the oil of gladness above His fellows,' He was 'a Man of Sorrows,'
+and grief was His companion during all His life's course.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT-II
+
+'Surely He hath borne our griefs, and carried our sorrows: yet we did
+esteem Him stricken, smitten of God, and afflicted. 5. But He was
+wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for our iniquities: the
+chastisement of our peace was upon Him; and with His stripes we are
+healed. 6. All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned every one
+to his own way; and the Lord hath laid (made to light) on Him the
+iniquity of us all.'--ISAIAH liii. 4-6.
+
+
+The note struck lightly in the close of the preceding paragraph becomes
+dominant here. One notes the accumulation of expressions for suffering,
+crowded into these verses--griefs, sorrows, wounded, bruised, smitten,
+chastisement, stripes. One notes that the cause of all this multiform
+infliction is given with like emphasis of reiteration--our griefs, our
+sorrows, and that these afflictions are invested with a still more
+tragic and mysterious aspect, by being traced to our transgressions, our
+iniquities. Finally, the deepest word of all is spoken when the whole
+mystery of the servant's sufferings is referred to Jehovah's making the
+universal iniquity to lie, like a crushing burden, on Him.
+
+I. The Burdened Servant.
+
+It is to be kept in view that the 'griefs' which the servant is here
+described as bearing are literally 'sicknesses,' and that, similarly,
+the 'sorrows' may be diseases. Matthew in his quotation of the verse
+(viii. 17) takes the words to refer to bodily ailments, and finds their
+'fulfilment' in Christ's miracles of healing. And that interpretation is
+part of the whole truth, for Hebrew thought drew no such sharp line of
+distinction between diseases of the body and those of the soul as we are
+accustomed to draw. All sickness was taken to be the consequence of sin,
+and the intimate connection between the two was, as it were, set forth
+for all forms of bodily disease by the elaborate treatment prescribed
+for leprosy, as pre-eminently fitted to stand as type of the whole. But
+the fulfilment through the miracles is but a parable of the deeper
+fulfilment in regard to the more virulent and deadly diseases of the
+soul. Sin is the sickness, as it is also the grief, which most afflicts
+humanity. Of the two words expressing the Servant's taking their burden
+on His shoulders, the former implies not only the taking of it but the
+bearing of it away, and the latter emphasises the weight of the load.
+
+Following Matthew's lead, we may regard Christ's miracles of healing as
+one form of His fulfilment of the prophecy, in which the principles that
+shape all the forms are at work, and which, therefore, may stand as a
+kind of pictorial illustration of the way in which He bears and bears
+away the heavier burden of sin. And one point which comes out clearly is
+that, in these acts of healing, He felt the weight of the affliction
+that He took away. Even in that region, the condition of ability to
+remove it, was identifying Himself with the sorrow. Did He not 'sigh and
+look up' in silent appeal to heaven before He could say, Ephphatha? Did
+He not groan in Himself before He sent the voice into the tomb which the
+dead heard? His miracles were not easy, though He had all power, for He
+felt all that the sufferers felt, by the identifying power of the
+unparalleled sympathy of a pure nature. In that region His pain on
+account of the sufferers stood in vital relation with His power to end
+their sufferings. The load must gall His shoulders, ere He could bear it
+away from theirs.
+
+But the same principles as apply to these deeds of mercy done on
+diseases apply to all His deeds of deliverance from sorrow and from sin.
+In Him is set forth in highest fashion the condition of all brotherly
+help and alleviation. Whoever would lighten a brother's load must stoop
+his own shoulders to carry it. And whilst there is an element in our
+Lord's sufferings, as the text passes on to say, which is not explained
+by the analogy with what is required from all human succourers and
+healers, the extent to which the lower experience of such corresponds
+with His unique work should always be made prominent in our devout
+meditations.
+
+II. The Servant's sufferings in their reason, their intensity, and their
+issue.
+
+The same measure that was meted out to Job by his so-called friends was
+measured to the servant, and at the Impulse of the same heartless
+doctrinal prepossession. He must have been had to suffer so much; that
+is the rough and ready verdict of the self-righteous. With crashing
+emphasis, that complacent explanation of the Servant's sufferings and
+their own prosperity is shivered to atoms, by the statement of the true
+reason for both the one and the other. You thought that He was afflicted
+because He was bad and you were spared because you were good--no, He was
+afflicted because _you_ were bad, and you were spared because He was
+afflicted.
+
+The reason for the Servant's sufferings was 'our transgressions.' More
+is suggested now than sympathetic identification with others' sorrows.
+This is an actual bearing of the consequences of sins which He had not
+committed, and that not merely as an innocent man may be overwhelmed by
+the flood of evil which has been let loose by others' sins to sweep over
+the earth. The blow that wounds Him is struck directly and solely at
+Him. He is not entangled in a widespread calamity, but is the only
+victim. It is pre-supposed that all transgression leads to wounds and
+bruises; but the transgressions are done by us, and the wounds and
+bruises fall on Him. Can the idea of vicarious suffering be more plainly
+set forth?
+
+The intensity of the Servant's sufferings is brought home to our hearts
+by the accumulation of epithets, to which reference has already been
+made. He was 'wounded' as one who is pierced by a sharp sword; 'bruised'
+as one who is stoned to death; beaten and with livid weales on His
+flesh. A background of unnamed persecutors is dimly seen. The
+description moves altogether in the region of physical violence, and
+that violence is more than symbol.
+
+It is no mere coincidence that the story of the Passion reproduces so
+many of the details of the prophecy, for, although the fulfilment of the
+latter does not depend on such coincidences, they are not to be passed
+by as of no importance. Former generations made too much of the physical
+sufferings of Jesus; is not this generation in danger of making too
+little of them?
+
+The issue of the Servant's sufferings is presented in a startling
+paradox. His bruises and weales are the causes of our being healed. His
+chastisement brings our peace. Surely it is very hard work, and needs
+much forcing of words and much determination not to see what is set
+forth in as plain light as can be conceived, to strike the idea of
+atonement out of this prophecy. It says as emphatically as words can
+say, that we have by our sins deserved stripes, that the Servant bears
+the stripes which we have deserved, and that therefore we do not bear
+them.
+
+III. The deepest ground of the Servant's sufferings.
+
+The sad picture of humanity painted in that simile of a scattered flock
+lays stress on the universality of transgression, on its divisive
+effect, on the solitude of sin, and on its essential characteristic as
+being self-willed rejection of control. But the isolation caused by
+transgression is blessedly counteracted by the concentration of the sin
+of all on the Servant. Men fighting for their own hand, and living at
+their own pleasure, are working to the disruption of all sweet bonds of
+fellowship. But God, in knitting together all the black burdens into
+one, and loading the Servant with that tremendous weight, is preparing
+for the establishment of a more blessed unity, in experience of the
+healing brought about by His sufferings.
+
+Can one man's 'iniquity,' as distinguished from the consequences of
+iniquity, be made to press upon any other? It is a familiar and not very
+profound objection to the Christian Atonement that guilt cannot be
+transferred. True, but in the first place, Christ's nature stands in
+vital relations to every man, of such intimacy that what is impossible
+between two of us is not impossible between Christ and any one of us;
+and, secondly, much in His life, and still more in His passion, is
+unintelligible unless the black mass of the world's sin was heaped upon
+Him, to His own consciousness. In that dread cry, wrung from Him as He
+hung there in the dark, the consciousnesses of possessing God and of
+having lost Him are blended inextricably and inexplicably. The only
+approach to an explanation of it is that then the world's sin was felt
+by Him, in all its terrible mass and blackness, coming between Him and
+God, even as our own sins come, separating us from God. That grim burden
+not only came on Him, but was _laid_ on Him by God. The same idea is
+expressed by the prophet in that awful representation and by Jesus in
+that as awful cry, 'Why hast Thou _forsaken_ Me?'
+
+The prophet constructs no theory of Atonement. But no language could be
+chosen that would more plainly set forth the fact of Atonement. And it
+is to be observed that, so far as this prophecy is concerned, the
+Servant's sole form of service is to suffer. He is not a teacher, an
+example, or a benefactor, in any of the other ways in which men need
+help. His work is to bear our griefs and be bruised for our healing.
+
+'He was oppressed, yet He humbled Himself and opened not His mouth; as a
+lamb that is led to the slaughter, and as a sheep that before her
+shearers is dumb; yea, He opened not His mouth. 8. By oppression and
+judgment He was taken away; and as for His generation, who among them
+considered that He was cut off out of the land of the living? for the
+transgression of my people was He stricken. 9. And they made His grave
+with the wicked, and with the rich in His death; although He had done no
+violence, neither was any deceit in His mouth'--ISAIAH liii, 7-9. R. V.
+
+In this section of the prophecy we pass from contemplating the
+sufferings inflicted on the Servant to the attitude of Himself and of
+His contemporaries towards these, His patience and their blindness. To
+these is added a remarkable reference to His burial, which strikes one
+at first sight as interrupting the continuity of the prophecy, but on
+fuller consideration assumes great significance.
+
+I. The unresisting endurance of the Servant.
+
+The Revised Version's rendering of the first clause is preferable to
+that of the Authorised Version. 'Afflicted' would be little better than
+tautology, but 'humbled Himself' strikes the keynote of the verse, which
+dwells not on the Servant's afflictions, but on His bearing under them.
+Similarly, the pathetic imagery of the lamb led and the sheep dumb gives
+the same double representation, first of the indignities, and next of
+His demeanour in enduring them, as is conveyed in 'He was oppressed, yet
+He humbled Himself.' Unremonstrating, unresisting endurance, then, is
+the point emphasised in the lovely metaphor.
+
+We recall the fact that this emphatically reduplicated phrase 'opened
+not His mouth' was verbally fulfilled in our Lord's silence before each
+of the three authorities to whom He was presented, before the Jewish
+rulers, before Pilate, and before Herod. Only when adjured by the living
+God and when silence would have been tantamount to withdrawal of His
+claims, did He speak before the Sanhedrin. Only when silence would have
+been taken as disowning His Kingship, did He speak before Pilate. And
+Herod, who had no right to question Him, received no answer at all.
+Jesus' lips were opened in witness but never in complaint or
+remonstrance. No doubt, the prophecy would have been as really fulfilled
+though there had been no such majestic silences, for its substance is
+patient endurance, not mere abstinence from speech. Still, as with other
+events in His life, the verbal correspondence with prophetic details may
+help, and be meant to help, to bring out more clearly, for purblind
+eyes, the true fulfilment. So we may meditate on the wonder and the
+beauty of that picture which the evangelists draw, and which the world
+has recognised, with whatever differences as to its interpretation, as
+the most perfect, pathetic, and majestic picture of meek endurance that
+has ever been painted.
+
+But we gather only the most superficial of its lessons, if that is all
+that we find to say about it. For the main point for us to lay to heart
+is not merely the fact of that silent submission, but the motive which
+led to it. He opened not His mouth, because He willingly embraced the
+Cross, and He willingly embraced the Cross because He loved the Father
+and would do His will, because He loved the world and would be its
+Saviour,
+
+That touching imagery of the dumb lamb has manifold felicities and
+significances beyond serving to figure meekness. And we are not forcing
+unintended meanings into a mere piece of poetic imagination when we note
+how remarkably the metaphor links on to that of strayed sheep in the
+preceding verse, or when we venture to recall John Baptist's first
+proclamation of the Lamb of God, and Peter's quotation of this very
+prophecy, and the continual recurrence in the Apocalypse of the name of
+The Lamb as _the_ title of honour of 'Him who sitteth on the throne.' A
+kind of nimbus or aureole shines round the humble figure as drawn by the
+prophet.
+
+II. The misunderstood end of the Servant's life.
+
+The difficult expressions of verse 8 are rendered in the Revised Version
+with clearness and so as to yield a profound meaning. We may note that
+here, for the first time, is spoken out that end to which all the
+preceding description of sufferings has been leading up, and yet it is
+spoken with a kind of solemn reticence, very impressive. The Servant is
+'taken away,' 'cut off,' 'stricken.' Not yet is the grim word 'death'
+plainly uttered; that comes in the next verse, only after the Servant's
+death is supposed to be past. The three words suggest, at all events,
+though in half-veiled language, violence and suddenness in the Servant's
+fate. Who were the agents who took Him, cut Him off and struck Him, is
+left in impressive obscurity. But the fact that His death was a judicial
+murder is set in clear light. Whether we read 'By' or 'From--oppression
+and judgment He was taken away,' the forms of law are represented as
+wrested to bring about flagrant injustice. And, if it were my object now
+to defend the Messianic interpretation, one might ask where any facts
+corresponding to this element in the picture are to be found in regard
+to either the national Israel, or the Israel within the nation.
+
+That unjust death by illegal violence under the mask of law was,
+further, wholly misunderstood by 'His generation.' We need not do more
+than remark in a sentence how that feature corresponds with the facts in
+regard to Jesus, and ask whether it does so on any other theory of
+'fulfilment.' Neither friends nor foes had even the faintest conception
+of what the death of Jesus was or was to effect. And it is worth while
+to dwell for a moment on this, because we are often told that there is
+no trace of the doctrine of an atoning sacrifice in the Gospels, and the
+inference is drawn that it was an afterthought of the apostles, and
+therefore to be set aside as an excrescence on Christianity according to
+Christ. The silence of Jesus on that subject is exaggerated; but
+certainly no thought of His being the Sacrifice for the sins of the
+world was in the minds of the sad watchers by the Cross, nor for many a
+day thereafter. Is it not worth noting that precisely such a blindness
+to the meaning of His death had been prophesied eight hundred years
+before?
+
+But the reason why this feature is introduced seems mainly to be to
+underscore the lesson, that those who exercised the violence which
+hurried the Servant from the land of the living were blind instruments
+of a higher power. And may we not also see in it a suggestion of the
+great solitude of sorrow in which the Servant was to die, even as He had
+lived in it? Misapprehended and despised He lived, misapprehended He
+died. Jesus was the loneliest man that ever breathed human breath. He
+gave up His breath in a more awful solitude than ever isolated any other
+dying man. Utterly solitary, He died that none of us need ever face
+death alone.
+
+III. The Servant's Grave.
+
+Following on the mystery of the uncomprehended death comes the enigma of
+the burial. The words are an enigma, but they seem meaningless on any
+hypothesis but the Messianic one. As they stand, they assert that
+unnamed persons gave Him a grave with the wicked, as they would do by
+putting Him to death under strained forms of law, and that then,
+somehow, the criminal destined to be buried with other criminals in a
+dishonoured grave was laid in a tomb with the rich. It seems a
+singularly minute trait to find place in such a prophecy. The remarks
+already made as to similar minute correspondences in details of the
+prophecy with purely external facts in Christ's life need not be
+repeated now. One does not see that it is a self-evident axiom needing
+only to be enunciated in order to be accepted, that such minute
+prophecies are beneath the dignity of revelation. It might rather seem
+that, as one element in prophecy, they are eminently valuable. The
+smaller the detail, the more remarkable the prevision and the more
+striking the fulfilment. For a keen-sighted man may forecast tendencies
+and go far to anticipate events on the large scale, but only God can
+foresee trifles. The difficulty in which this prediction of the
+Servant's grave being 'with the rich' places those who reject the
+Messianic reference of the prophecy to our Lord may be measured by the
+desperate attempts to evade it by suggesting other readings, or by
+making 'rich' to be synonymous with 'wicked.' The words as they stand
+have a clear and worthy meaning on one interpretation, and we even
+venture to say, on one interpretation only, namely, that they refer to
+the reverent laying of the body of the Lord in the new tomb belonging to
+'a certain rich man from Arimathea, named Joseph.'
+
+If in the latter clause of verse 9 we render 'Because' rather than
+'Although,' we get the thought that the burial was a sign that the
+Servant, slain as a criminal, yet was not a criminal. The criminals were
+either left unburied or disgraced by promiscuous interment in an unclean
+place. But that body reverently bedewed with tears, wrapped in fine
+linen clean and white, softly laid down by loving hands, watched by love
+stronger than death, lay in fitting repose as the corpse of a King till
+He came forth as a Conqueror. So once more the dominant note is struck,
+and this part of the prophecy closes with the emphatic repetition of the
+sinlessness of the Suffering Servant, which makes His sufferings a deep
+and bewildering mystery, unless they were endured because of 'our
+transgressions.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--IV
+
+'It pleased the Lord to bruise Him; He hath put Him to grief: when Thou
+shalt make His soul an offering for sin, He shall see His seed, He shall
+prolong His days, and the pleasure of the Lord shall prosper in His
+hand.'--ISAIAH liii. 10.
+
+
+We have seen a distinct progress of thought in the preceding verses.
+There was first the outline of the sorrows and rejection of the Servant;
+second, the profound explanation of these as being for us; third, the
+sufferings, death and burial of the Servant.
+
+We have followed Him to the grave. What more can there be to be said?
+Whether the Servant of the Lord be an individual or a collective or an
+ideal, surely all fitness of metaphor, all reality of fact would require
+that His work should be represented as ending with His life, and that
+what might follow His burial should be the influence of His memory, the
+continued operation of the principles He had set agoing and so on, but
+nothing more.
+
+Now observe that, however we may explain the fact, this is the fact to
+be explained, that there is a whole section, this closing one, devoted
+to the celebration of His work after His death and burial, and, still
+more remarkable, that the prophecy says nothing about His activity on
+the world till _after_ death. In all the former portion there is not a
+syllable about His doing anything, only about His suffering; and then
+when He is dead He begins to work. That is the subject of these last
+three verses, and it would be proper to take them all for our
+consideration now, but fur two reasons, one, because of their great
+fulness and importance, and one because, as you will observe, the two
+latter verses are a direct address of God's concerning the Servant. The
+prophetic words, spoken as in his own person, end with verse 10, and,
+catching up their representations, expanding, defining, glorifying them,
+comes the solemn thunder of the voice of God. I now deal only with the
+prophet's vision of the work of the Servant of the Lord.
+
+One other preliminary remark is that the work of the Servant after death
+is described in these verses with constant and very emphatic reference
+to His previous sufferings. The closeness of connection between these
+two is thus thrown into great prominence.
+
+I. The mystery of God's treatment of the sinless Servant.
+
+The first clause is to be read in immediate connection with the
+preceding verse. The Servant was of absolute sinlessness, and yet the
+Divine Hand crushed and bruised Him. Certainly, if we think of the
+vehemence of prophetic rebukes, and of the standing doctrine of the Old
+Testament that Israel was punished for its sin, we shall be slow to
+believe that this picture of the Sinless One, smitten for the sins of
+others, can have reference to the nation in any of its parts, or to any
+one man. However other poetry may lament over innocent sufferers, the
+Old Testament always takes the ground: 'Our iniquities, like the wind,
+have carried us away.' But mark that here, however understood, the
+prophet paints a figure so sinless that God's bruising Him is an
+outstanding wonder and riddle, only to be solved by regarding these
+bruises as the stripes by which our sins were healed, and by noting that
+'the pleasure of the Lord' is carried on through Him, after and through
+His death. What conceivable application have such representations except
+to Jesus? We note, then, here:--
+
+1. The solemn truth that His sufferings were divinely inflicted. That is
+a truth complementary to the other views in the prophecy, according to
+which these sufferings are variously regarded as either inflicted by men
+('By oppression and judgment He was taken away') or drawn on Him by His
+own sacrificial act ('His soul shall make an offering for sin'). It was
+the divine counsel that used men as its instruments, though they were
+none the less guilty. The hands that 'crucified and slew' were no less
+'the hands of lawless men,' because it was 'the determinate counsel and
+foreknowledge of God' that 'delivered Him up.'
+
+But a still deeper thought is in these words. For we can scarcely avoid
+seeing in them a glimpse into that dim region of eclipse and agony of
+soul from which, as from a cave of darkness, issued that last cry:
+'Eloi, Eloi, lama sabacthani?' The bruises inflicted by the God, who
+made to meet on Him the iniquities of us all, were infinitely more
+severe than the weales of the soldiers' rods, or the wounds of the nails
+that pierced His hands and feet.
+
+2. The staggering mystery of His sinlessness and sufferings.
+
+The world has been full from of old of stories of goodness tortured and
+evil exalted, which have drawn tears and softened hearts, but which have
+also bewildered men who would fain believe in a righteous Governor and
+loving Father. But none of these have cast so black a shadow of
+suspicion on the government of the world by a good God as does the fate
+of Jesus, unless it is read in the light of this prophecy. Standing at
+the cross, faith in God's goodness and providence can scarcely survive,
+unless it rises to be faith in the atoning sacrifice of Him who was
+wounded there for our transgressions.
+
+II. The Servant's work in His sufferings.
+
+The margin of the Revised Version gives the best rendering--'His soul
+shall make an offering for sin.' The word employed for 'offering' means
+a trespass offering, and carries us at once back to the sacrificial
+system. The trespass offering was distinguished from other offerings.
+The central idea of it seems to have been to represent sin or guilt as
+_debt_, and the sacrifice as making compensation. We must keep in view
+the variety of ideas embodied in His sacrifice, and how all correspond
+to realities in our wants and spiritual experience.
+
+Now there are three points here:--
+
+a. The representation that Christ's death is a sacrifice. Clearly
+connecting with whole Mosaic system--and that in the sense of a trespass
+offering. Christ seems to quote this verse in John x. 15, when He speaks
+of laying down His life, and when He declares that He came to 'give His
+life a _ransom_ for many.' At any rate here is the great word,
+sacrifice, proclaimed for the first time in connection with Messiah.
+Here the prophet interprets the meaning of all the types and shadows of
+the law.
+
+That sacrificial system bore witness to deep wants of men's souls, and
+prophesied of One in whom these were all met and satisfied.
+
+b. His voluntary surrender.
+
+He is sacrifice, but He is Priest also. His soul makes the offering, and
+His soul is the offering and offers itself in concurrence with the
+Divine Will. It is difficult and necessary to keep that double aspect in
+view, and never to think of Jesus as an unwilling Victim, nor of God as
+angry and needing to be appeased by blood.
+
+c. The thought that the true meaning of His sufferings is only reached
+when we contemplate the effects that have flowed from them. The pleasure
+of the Lord in bruising Him is a mystery until we see how pleasure of
+the Lord prospers in the hand of the Crucified.
+
+III. The work of the Servant after death.
+
+Surely this paradox, so baldly stated, is meant to be an enigma to
+startle and to rouse curiosity. This dead Servant is to see of the
+travail of His soul, and to prolong His days. All the interpretations of
+this chapter which refuse to see Jesus in it shiver on this rock. What a
+contrast there is between platitudes about the spirit of the nation
+rising transformed from its grave of captivity (which was only very
+partially the case), and the historical fulfilment in Jesus Christ!
+Here, at any rate, hundreds of years before His Resurrection, is a word
+that seems to point to such a fact, and to me it appears that all fair
+interpretation is on the side of the Messianic reference.
+
+Note the singularity of special points.
+
+a. Having died, the Servant sees His offspring.
+
+The sacrifice of Christ is the great power which draws men to Him, and
+moves to repentance, faith, love. His death was the communication of
+life. Nowhere else in the world's history is the teacher's death the
+beginning of His gathering of pupils, and not only has the dead Servant
+children, but He _sees_ them. That representation is expressive of the
+mutual intercourse, strange and deep, whereby we feel that He is truly
+with us, 'Jesus Christ, whom having not seen we love.'
+
+b. Having died, the Servant prolongs His days.
+
+He lives a continuous life, without an end, for ever. The best
+commentary is the word which John heard, as he felt the hand of the
+Christ laid on his prostrate form: 'I became dead, and lo, I am alive
+for evermore.'
+
+c. Having died, the Servant carries into effect the divine purposes.
+
+'Prosper' implies progressive advancement. Christ's Sacrifice carried
+out the divine pleasure, and by His Sacrifice the divine pleasure is
+further carried out.
+
+If Christ is the means of carrying out the divine purpose, consider what
+this implies of divinity in His nature, of correspondence between His
+will and the divine.
+
+But Jesus not only carries into effect the divine purpose as a
+consequence of a past act, but by His present energy this dead man is a
+living power in the world today. Is He not?
+
+The sole explanation of the vitality of Christianity, and the sole
+reason which makes its message a gospel to any soul, is Christ's death
+for the world and present life in the world.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--V
+
+'He shall see of the travail of His soul, and shall be satisfied: by His
+knowledge shall My righteous servant justify many; and He shall bear
+their iniquities'--ISAIAH liii. 11.
+
+
+These are all but the closing words of this great prophecy, and are the
+fitting crown of all that has gone before. We have been listening to the
+voice of a member of the race to whom the Servant of the Lord belonged,
+whether we limit that to the Jewish people or include in it all
+humanity. That voice has been confessing for the speaker and his
+brethren their common misapprehensions of the Servant, their blindness
+to the meaning of His sufferings and the mystery of His death. It has
+been proclaiming the true significance of these as now he had learned
+them, and has in verse 10 touched the mystery of the reward and triumph
+of the Servant.
+
+That note of His glory and coronation is caught up in the two closing
+verses, which, in substance, are the continuation of the idea of verse
+10. But this identity of substance makes the variety of form the more
+emphatic. Observe the '_My_ Servant' of verse 11, and the '_I_ will
+divide' of verse 12. These oblige us to take this as the voice of God.
+The confession and belief of earth is hushed, that the recognition and
+the reward of the Servant may be declared from heaven. An added
+solemnity is thus given to the words, and the prophecy comes round again
+to the keynote on which it started in chapter lii, 13, '_My_ Servant.'
+Notice, too, how the same characteristic is here as in verse 10--that
+the recapitulation of the sufferings is almost equally prominent with
+the description of the reward. The two are so woven together that no
+power can part them. We may take these two verses as setting forth
+mainly two things--the divine promise that the Servant shall give
+righteousness to many, and the divine promise that the Servant shall
+conquer many for Himself.
+
+As to the exposition, 'of' here is probably casual, not partitive, as
+the Authorised Version has it; 'travail' is not to be understood in the
+sense of childbirth, but of toil and suffering; 'soul' is equivalent to
+_life_. This fruit of His soul's travail is further defined in the words
+which follow. The great result which will be beheld by Him and will fill
+and content His heart is that 'by His knowledge He shall justify many.'
+'By _His_ knowledge' certainly means, by the knowledge of Him on the
+part of others. The phrase might be taken either objectively or
+subjectively, but it seems to me that only the former yields an adequate
+sense. 'My righteous servant' is scarcely emphatic enough. The words in
+the original stand in an unusual order, which might be represented by
+'the righteous one, My servant,' and is intended to put emphasis on the
+Servant's righteousness, as well as to suggest the connection between
+His righteousness and His 'justifying,' in virtue of His being
+righteous. 'Justify' is an unusual form, and means to procure for, or
+impart righteousness to. '_The_ many' has stress on the article, and is
+the antithesis not to _all_, but to _few_. We might render it 'the
+masses,' an indefinite expression, which if not declaring universality,
+approaches very near to it, as in Romans v. 19 and Matthew xxvi. 28. 'He
+shall bear,' a future referring to the Servant in a state of exaltation,
+and pointing to His continuous work after death. This bearing is the
+root of our righteousness.
+
+We may put the thoughts here in a definite order.
+
+I. The great work which the Servant carries on.
+
+It consists in giving or imparting righteousness. It seems to me that it
+is out of place to be too narrow here in interpreting so as to draw
+distinctions between righteousness imparted and righteousness bestowed.
+We should rather take the general idea of _making righteous_, making, in
+fact, like Himself. Note that this is the work which is Christ's
+characteristic one. All thoughts of His blessings to the world which
+omit that are imperfect.
+
+II. The preparation for that making of us righteous.
+
+The roots of our being made righteous by the righteous Servant are found
+in His bearing our sins. His sin-bearing work is basis of our
+righteousness. Christ justifies men by giving to them His own
+righteousness, and taking in turn their sins on Himself that He may
+expiate them.
+
+Not only 'did He bear our sins in His own body on the tree,' but He
+_will_ bear them in His exaltation to the Throne, and only because He
+continuously and eternally does so are we justified on earth and shall
+we be sanctified in heaven.
+
+III. The condition on which He imparts righteousness.
+
+'His knowledge,' which is to be taken in the profound Biblical sense as
+including not only understanding but experience also.
+
+Parallels are found in 'This is life eternal to know Thee' (John xvii.
+3), and in 'That I may know Him' (Phil. iii. 10). So this prophecy comes
+very near to the New Testament proclamation of righteousness by faith.
+
+IV. The grand sweep of the Servant's work.
+
+'The many' is indefinite, and its very indefiniteness approximates it to
+universality. A shadowy vision of a great multitude that no man can
+number stretches out, as to the horizon, before the prophet. How many
+they are he knows not. He knows that they are numerous enough to
+'satisfy' the Servant for all His sufferings. He knows, too, that there
+is no limit to the happy crowd except that which is set by the necessary
+condition of joining the bands of 'the justified'--namely, 'the
+knowledge of Him.' They who receive the benefits which the Servant has
+died and will live to bring cannot be few; they may be all. If any are
+shut out, they are self-excluded.
+
+V. The Servant's satisfaction.
+
+It may be that the word employed means 'full,' rather than 'content,'
+but the latter idea can scarcely be altogether absent from it. We have,
+then, the great hope that the Servant, gazing on the results of His
+sufferings, will be content, content to have borne them, content with
+what they have effected.
+
+'The glory dies not and the grief is past.'
+
+And the 'grief' has had for fruit not only 'glory' gathering round the
+thorn-pierced head, but reflected glory shining on the brows of 'the
+many,' whom He has justified and sanctified by their experience of Him
+and His power. The creative week ended with the 'rest' of the Creator,
+not because His energy was tired and needed repose, but because He had
+fully carried out His purpose, and saw the perfected idea embodied in a
+creation that was 'very good.' The redemptive work ends with the
+Servant's satisfied contemplation of the many whom He has made like
+Himself, His better creation.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUFFERING SERVANT--VI
+
+'Therefore will I divide Him a portion with the great, and He shall
+divide the spoil with the strong; because He hath poured out His soul
+unto death: and was numbered with the transgressors; and He bare the
+sins of many, and made intercession for the transgressors.'--ISAIAH
+liii. 12.
+
+
+The first clause of this verse is somewhat difficult. There are two ways
+of understanding it. One is that adopted in A. V., according to which
+the suffering Servant is represented as equal to the greatest
+conquerors. He is to be as gloriously successful in His victory as they
+have been in theirs. But there are two very strong objections to this
+rendering-first, that it takes 'the many' in the sense of _mighty_, thus
+obscuring the identity of the expression here and in the previous verse
+and in the end of this verse; and secondly, that it gives a very feeble
+and frigid ending to the prophecy. It does not seem a worthy close
+simply to say that the Servant is to be like a Cyrus or a Nebuchadnezzar
+in His conquests.
+
+The other rendering, though there are some difficulties, is to be
+preferred. According to it 'the many' and 'the strong' are themselves
+the prey or spoil. The words might be read, 'I will apportion to Him the
+many, and He shall apportion to Himself the strong ones.'
+
+This retains the same meaning of 'many' for the same expression
+throughout the context, and is a worthy ending to the prophecy. The
+force of the clause is then to represent the suffering Servant as a
+conqueror, leading back from His conquests a long train of captives, a
+rich booty.
+
+Notice some points about this closing metaphor.
+
+Mark its singular contrast to the tone of the rest of the prophecy. Note
+the lowliness, the suffering, the minor key of it all, and then, all at
+once, the leap up to rapture and triumph. The special form of the
+metaphor strikes one as singular. Nothing in the preceding context even
+remotely suggests it. Even the previous clause about 'making the many
+righteous' does not do much to prepare the way for it. Whatever be our
+explanation of the words, it must be one that does full justice to this
+metaphor, and presents some conquering power or person, whose victories
+are brilliant and real enough to be worthy to stand at the close of such
+a prophecy. We must keep in mind, too, what has been remarked on the two
+previous verses, that this victorious campaign and growing conquest is
+achieved after the Servant is dead. That is a paradox. And note that the
+strength of language representing His activity can scarcely be
+reconciled with the idea that it is only the post-mortem influence of
+His life which is meant.
+
+Note, too, the singular blending of God's power and the Servant's own
+activity in the winning of this extended sovereignty. Side by side the
+two are put. The same verb is used in order to emphasise the intended
+parallel. 'I will divide,' 'He shall divide.' I will give Him--He shall
+conquer for Himself. Remember the intense vehemence with which the Old
+Testament guards the absolute supremacy of divine power, and how
+strongly it always puts the thought that God is everything and man
+nothing. Look at the contrast of the tone when a human conqueror, whose
+conquests are the result of God's providence, is addressed (xlv. 1-3).
+There is an entire suppression of his personality, not a word about his
+bravery, his military genius, or anything in him. It is all _I, I, I_.
+Remember how, in chapter x., one of the sins for which the Assyrian is
+to be destroyed is precisely that he thought of his victories as due to
+his own strength and wisdom. So he is indignantly reminded that he is
+only 'a staff in Mine hand,' the axe with which God hewed the nations,
+whereas here the voice of God Himself speaks, and gives a strange place
+beside Himself to the will and power of this Conqueror. This feature of
+the prophecy should be accounted for in any satisfactory interpretation.
+
+Note, too, the wide sweep of the Servant's dominion, which carries us
+back to the beginning of this prophecy in chapter lii. 15, where we hear
+of the Servant as 'sprinkling' (or startling') many nations, and the
+'kings' is parallel with the 'strong' in this verse. No bounds are
+assigned to the Servant's conquests, which are, if not declared to be
+universal, at least indefinitely extended and striding on to world-wide
+empire.
+
+These points are plainly here. I do not dilate upon them. But I ask
+whether any of the interpretations of these words, except one, gives
+adequate force to them? Is there anything in the history of the restored
+exiles which corresponds to this picture? Even if you admit the violent
+hypothesis that there was a better part of the nation, so good that the
+national sorrows had no chastisement for them, and the other violent
+hypothesis that the devoutest among the exiles suffered most, and the
+other that the death and burial and resurrection of the Servant only
+mean the reformation wrought on Israel by captivity. What is there in
+the history of Israel which can be pointed at as the conquest of the
+world? Was the nation that bore the yokes of a Ptolemy, an Antiochus, a
+Herod, a Caesar, the fulfiller of this dream of world-conquest? There
+is only one thing which can be called the Jew conquering the world. It
+is that which, as I believe, is meant here, viz. Christ's conquest.
+Apart from that, I know of nothing which would not be ludicrously
+disproportionate if it were alleged as fulfilment of this glowing
+prophecy.
+
+This prophetic picture is at least four hundred years before Christ, by
+the admission of those who bring it lowest down, in their eagerness to
+get rid of prophecy. The life of Christ does correspond to it, in such a
+way that, clause by clause, it reads as if it were quite as much a
+history of Jesus as a prophecy of the Servant. This certainly is an
+extraordinary coincidence if it be not a prophecy. And there is really
+no argument against the Messianic interpretation, except dogmatic
+prejudice--'there cannot be prophecy.'
+
+No straining is needed in order to fit this great prophetic picture of
+the world-Conqueror to Jesus. Even that, at first sight incongruous,
+picture of a victor leading long lines of captives, such as we see on
+Assyrian slabs and Egyptian paintings, is historically true of Him who
+'leads captivity captive,' and is, through the ages, winning ever fresh
+victories, and leading His enemies, turned into lovers, in His triumphal
+progress. He, and He only, really owns men. His slaves have made real
+self-surrenders to Him. Other conquerors may imprison or load with irons
+or deport to other lands, but they are only lords of bodies. Jesus'
+chains are silken, and bind hearts that are proud of their bonds. He
+carries off His free prisoners 'from the power of darkness' into His
+kingdom of light. His slaves rejoice to say, 'I am not my own,' and he
+only truly possesses himself who has given himself away to the
+Conquering Christ. For all these centuries He has been conquering
+hearts, enthralling and thereby liberating wills, making Himself the
+life of lives. There is nothing else the least like the bond between
+Jesus and millions who never saw him. Who among all the leaders of
+thought or religious teachers has been able to impress his personality
+on others and to dominate them in the fashion that Jesus has done and is
+doing to-day? How has He done this thing, which no other man has been
+able in the least to do? What is His charm, the secret of His power? The
+prophet has no doubt what it is, and unfolds it to us with a significant
+'For.' We turn, then, to the prophetic explanation of that worldwide
+empire and note--
+
+II. The foundation of the Servant's dominion.
+
+That explanation is given in four clauses which fall into two pairs.
+They remarkably revert to the thought of the Servant's sufferings, but
+in how different a tone these are now spoken of, when they are no longer
+regarded as the results of man's blind failure to see His beauty, or as
+inflicted by the mysterious 'pleasure of Jehovah,' but as the causes of
+His triumph! Echoes of both the two first clauses are heard from the
+lips of Jesus. As He passed beneath the tremulous shadow of the olives
+of Gethsemane, He appealed for the companionship of the three, by an all
+but solitary revelation of His weakness and sorrow, 'My soul is
+exceeding sorrowful, even unto death; abide ye here and watch with Me.'
+And even more distinctly did He lay His hand on this prophecy when He
+ended all His words in the upper room with 'This which is written must
+be fulfilled in Me, And He was reckoned with "transgressors."' May we
+not claim Jesus as endorsing the Messianic interpretation of this
+prophecy? He gazed on the portrait painted ages before that night of
+sorrow, and saw in it His own likeness, and said, That is meant for Me.
+Some of us feel that, _kenosis_ or no _kenosis_, He is the best judge of
+who is the original of the prophet's portrait.
+
+The two final clauses are separated from the preceding by the emphatic
+introduction of the pronominal nominative, and cohere closely as
+gathering up for the last time all the description of the Servant, and
+as laying broad and firm the basis of His dominion, in the two great
+facts which sum up His office and between them stretch over the past and
+the future. 'He bare the sin of many, and maketh intercession for the
+transgressors.' The former of these two clauses brings up the pathetic
+picture of the scapegoat who 'bore upon him all their iniquities into a
+solitary land.' The Servant conquers hearts because He bears upon Him
+the grim burden which a mightier hand than Aaron's has made to meet on
+His head, and because He bears it away. The ancient ceremony, and the
+prophet's transference of the words describing it to his picture of the
+Servant who was to be King, floated before John the Baptist, when he
+pointed his brown, thin finger at Jesus and cried: 'Behold the Lamb of
+God, which taketh away the sin of the world.' The goat had borne the
+sins of one nation; the prophet had extended the Servant's ministry
+indefinitely, so as to include unnumbered 'many'; John spoke the
+universal word, 'the world.' So the circles widened.
+
+But it is not enough to bear away sins. We need continuous help in the
+present. Our daily struggles, our ever-felt weakness, all the ills that
+flesh is heir to, cry aloud for a mightier than we to be at our sides.
+So on the Servant's bearing the sins of the many there follows a
+continuous act of priestly intercession, in which, not merely by prayer,
+but by meritorious and prevailing intervention, He makes His own the
+cause of the many whose sins He has borne.
+
+On these two acts His dominion rests. Sacrifice and Intercession are the
+foundations of His throne.
+
+The empire of men's hearts falls to Him because of what He has done and
+is doing for them. He who is to possess us absolutely must give Himself
+to us utterly. The empire falls to Him who supplies men's deepest need.
+He who can take away men's sins rules. He who can effectually undertake
+men's cause will be their King.
+
+If Jesus is or does anything less or else, He will not rule men for
+ever. If He is but a Teacher and a Guide, oblivion, which shrouds all,
+will sooner or later wrap Him in its misty folds. That His name should
+so long have resisted its influence is due altogether to men having
+believed Him to be something else. He will exercise an everlasting
+dominion only if He have brought in an everlasting righteousness. He
+will sit King for ever, if and only if He is a priest for ever. All
+other rule is transient.
+
+A remarkable characteristic of this entire prophecy is the frequent
+repetition of expressions conveying the idea of sufferings borne for
+others. In one form or another that thought occurs, as we reckon, eleven
+times, and it is especially frequent in the last verses of the chapter.
+Why this perpetual harking back to that one aspect? It is to be further
+noticed that throughout there is no hint of any other kind of work which
+this Servant had to do. He fulfils His service to God and man by being
+bruised for men's iniquities. He came not to be ministered unto but to
+minister, and the chief form of His ministry was that He gave His life a
+ransom for the many. He came not to preach a gospel, but to die that
+there might be a gospel to preach. The Cross is the centre of His work,
+and by it He becomes the Centre of the world.
+
+Look once more at the sorrowful, august figure that rose before the
+prophet's eye--with its strange blending of sinlessness and sorrow,
+God's approval and God's chastisement, rejection and rule, death and
+life, abject humiliation and absolute dominion. Listen to the last
+echoes of the prophet's voice as it dies on our ear--'He bore the sins
+of the many.' And then hearken how eight hundred years after another
+voice takes up the echoes--but instead of pointing away down the
+centuries, points to One at his side, and cries, 'Behold the Lamb of
+God, which taketh away the sin of the world.' Look at that life, that
+death, that grave, that resurrection, that growing dominion, that
+inexhaustible intercession--and say, 'Of whom speaketh the prophet
+this?'
+
+May we all be able to answer with clear confidence, 'These things saith
+Esaias when he saw _His_ glory and spake of _Him_.' May we all take up
+the ancient confession: 'Surely He hath borne our griefs and carried our
+sorrows.... He was wounded for our transgressions, He was bruised for
+our iniquities, the chastisement of our peace was upon Him, and with His
+stripes we are healed.'
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSING AND THE PERMANENT
+
+'For the mountains shall depart, and the hills be removed; but My
+kindness shall not depart from thee, neither shall the covenant of My
+peace be removed, saith the Lord that hath mercy on thee.'--ISAIAH liv,
+10.--
+
+
+There is something of music in the very sound of these words. The
+stately march of the grand English translation lends itself with
+wonderful beauty to the melody of Isaiah's words. But the thought that
+lies below them, sweeping as it does through the whole creation, and
+parting all things into the transient and eternal, the mortal and
+immortal, is still greater than the music of the words. These are
+removed; this abides. And the thing in God which abides is all-gentle
+tenderness, that strange love mightier than all the powers of Deity
+beside, permanent with the permanence of His changeless heart. The
+mountains shall depart, the emblems of eternity shall crumble and change
+and pass, and the hills be removed; but this immortal, impalpable, and,
+in some men's minds, fantastic and unreal something, 'My loving kindness
+and the covenant of My peace,' shall outlast them all. And this great
+promise is stamped with the sign manual of Heaven, being spoken by the
+Lord that hath mercy on thee.'
+
+So then, dear friends, I think I shall most reverentially deal with
+these words if I handle them in the simplest possible way, and think,
+first of all, of that great antithesis that is set before us here--what
+passes and what abides; and, secondly, draw two or three plain, homely
+lessons and applications from the thoughts thus suggested.
+
+I. First, then, we have to deal with the contrast between the apparently
+enduring which passes, and that which truly abides.
+
+'The mountains depart, the hills remove, My loving-kindness shall not
+depart, neither shall the covenant of My peace be removed.' Let me then
+say a word or two about that first thought--'the mountains shall
+depart.' There they tower over the plains, looking down upon the flat
+valley beneath as they did when the prophet spoke. The eternal
+buttresses of the hills stand to the eyes of the fleeting generations as
+emblems of permanence, and yet winter storms and summer heats, and the
+slow processes of decay which we call the gnawing of time, are ever
+working upon them, and changing their forms, and at last they shall
+pass. Modern science, whilst it has all but incalculably enlarged our
+conceptions of the duration of the material universe, emphasises, as
+faith alone never could, the thought of the ultimate perishing of this
+material world. For geology tells us that 'where rears the cliff there
+rolled the sea,' that through the cycles of the shifting history of the
+world there have been elevations and depressions so that the ancient
+hills in many places are the newest of all things, and the world's form
+has changed many and many a time since first it circled as a planet. And
+researches into the ultimate constitution of matter have taught us to
+think of solids and liquids and gases, as being an infinite multitude of
+atoms all in rapid motion with inconceivable velocity, and have shown us
+the very atoms in the act of breaking up. So that the old guess of the
+infancy of physical science which divined that 'all things are in a
+state of flux' is confirmed by its last utterances. Science prophesies
+too, and bids us expect that the earth shall one day become, like some
+of the stars, a burnt out mass of uniform temperature, incapable of
+change or of sustaining life, and shall end by falling into the
+diminished sun, and so the old word will be fulfilled that 'the earth
+and the works that are therein shall be burnt up.' None should be able
+to utter the words of my text, 'The mountains shall depart and the hills
+be removed,' with such emphasis of certitude as the present students of
+physical science.
+
+But our text does not stop there. It brings into view the transiency of
+the transient, in order to throw into greater relief and prominence the
+perpetuity of the abiding. If we had nothing abiding beyond this
+perishable material universe, it would indeed be misery to exist. Life
+would be not only insignificant but wretched, and a ghastly irony, a
+meaningless, aimless ripple on the surface of that silent, shoreless
+sea. The great 'But' of this text lifts the oppression from humanity
+with which the one-sided truth of the passing of all the Visible loads
+it.
+
+And so turn for a moment to the other side of this great text. There
+stands out above all that is mortal, which, although it counts its
+existence by millenniums, is but for an instant, visible to the eye of
+faith, the Great Spirit who moves all the material universe, Himself
+unmoved, and lives undiminished by creation, and undiminished if
+creation were swept out of existence. Let that which may pass, pass; let
+that which can perish, perish; let the mountains crumble and the hills
+melt away; beyond the smoke and conflagration, and rising high above
+destruction and chaos, stands the calm throne of God, with a loving
+Heart upon it, with a council of peace and purpose of mercy for you and
+for me, the creatures of a day indeed, but who are to live when the days
+shall cease to be. 'My kindness!' What a wonderful word that is, so far
+above all the cold delusion of so-called theism! 'My kindness!' the
+tender-heartedness of an infinite love, the abounding favour of the
+Father of my spirit, His gentle goodness bending down to me, His
+tenderness round about me, eternal love that never can die; the thing
+that lasts in the universe is His kindness, which continues from
+everlasting to everlasting. What a revelation of God! Oh, dear friends,
+if only our hearts could open to the full acceptance of that thought,
+sorrow and care and anxiety, and every other form of trouble, would fade
+away and we should be at rest. The infinite, undying, imperishable love
+of God is mine. Older than the mountains, deeper than their roots, wider
+than the heavens, and stronger than all my sin, is the love that grasps
+me and keeps me and will not let me go, and lavishes its tenderness upon
+me, and beseeches me, and pleads with me, and woos me, and rebukes me,
+and corrects me when I need, and sent His Son to die for me. 'My
+kindness shall not depart from thee.'
+
+But even that great conception does not exhaust the encouragement which
+the prophet has to give to souls weighed upon with the transiency of the
+material. He speaks of 'the covenant of My peace.' We are to think of
+this great, tender, changeless love of God, which underlies all things
+and towers above all things, which overlaps them all and fills eternity,
+as being placed, so to speak, under the guarantee of a solemn
+obligation. God's covenant is a great thought of Scripture which we far
+too little apprehend in the depth and power of its meaning. His covenant
+with you and me, poor creatures, is this, 'I promise that My love shall
+never leave thee.' He makes Himself a constitutional monarch, so to
+speak, giving us a plighted word to which we can appeal and go to Him
+and say, 'There, that is the charter given by Thyself, given irrevocably
+for ever, and I hold Thee to it. Fulfil it, O Thou God of Truth.'
+
+'My covenant of peace.' Dear friends, the prophet spoke a deeper thing
+than he knew when he uttered these words. Let me remind you of the large
+meaning which the New Testament puts into them. 'Now the God of Peace
+that brought again from the dead our Lord Jesus, the Great Shepherd of
+the Sheep, through the blood of the everlasting Covenant, make us
+perfect in every good work, to do His will.' God has bound Himself by
+His promise to give you and me the peace that belongs to His own nature,
+and that covenant is sealed to us in the blood of Jesus Christ upon the
+Cross, and so we sinful men, with all the burden of our evil upon us,
+with all our sins known to us, with all our manifest failings and
+infirmities, can turn to Him and say, 'Thou hast pledged Thyself to
+forgive and accept, and that covenant is made sure to me because Thy Son
+hath died, and I come and ask Thee to fulfil it.' And be sure of this,
+that no poor creature upon earth, however lame his hand, who puts out
+that hand to grasp that peaceful covenant--that new covenant in the
+blood of Christ--can plead in vain.
+
+My brother, have you done that? Have you entered into this covenant of
+peace with God--peace in believing, peace by the blood of Christ, peace
+that fills a new heart, peace that rules amidst all the perturbations
+and disappointments of life? Then you may be sure that that covenant
+will stand for evermore, though the mountains depart and the hills be
+removed.
+
+II. Now turn with me to a few practical lessons which we may gather from
+these great contrasts here, between the perishable mortal and the
+immortal divine love.
+
+Surely the first plain one is a warning against fastening our love, our
+hope, or our trust on these transient things.
+
+What folly it is for a man to risk his peace and the strength and the
+joy of his life upon things that crumble and change, when all the while
+there is lying before him open for his entrance, and wooing him to come
+into the eternal home of his spirit, this covenant! Here are we, from
+day to day, plunged into these passing vanities, and always tempted to
+think that they are the true abiding things, and it needs great
+discipline and watchfulness to live the better life. There is nothing
+that will help us to do it like a firm grasp of the love of God in Jesus
+Christ. Then we can hold these mortal joys with a loose hand, knowing
+that they are only for a little time, and feeling that they are passing
+whilst we look at them, and are changing like the scenery in the sky on
+a summer's night, with its cliffs and hills in the clouds, even while we
+gaze. Where there was a mountain a moment ago up there, there is now a
+depression, and the world and everything in it lasts very little longer
+than these. It is only a film on the surface of the great sea of
+eternity--there is no reality about it. It is but a dream--a vision,
+slipping, slipping, slipping away, and you and I slipping along with it.
+How foolishly, how obstinately, we all cling to it, though even the very
+grasp of our hands tends to make it pass away, as the children coming in
+from the fields with their store of buttercups and daisies in their hot
+hands, which by their very clutch hasten the withering. And that is just
+our position. We have them for a brief moment, and they all perish in
+the using. Oh, brother, have you set your heart on that which is not,
+when all the while there, longing to bless and love us, stands the
+Eternal God, with His unchanging love and faithful covenant of His
+perpetual peace? Surely it were wiser--wiser, to put it on the lowest
+ground--to seek the things that are above, and, knowing as we do that
+the mountains shall depart and the hills be removed, so make our portion
+the kindness which shall not depart, and seek our share in the peace
+that shall not pass away.
+
+But there is another lesson to be put in the same simple fashion. Surely
+we ought to use thoughts like these of my text in order to stay the soul
+in seasons which come to every one sometimes, when we are made painfully
+conscious of the transiency of this Present. Meditative hours come to us
+all--moments when perhaps some strain of music gives us back childhood's
+days; when perhaps some perfume of a flower reminds us of long-vanished
+gardens and hands that have crumbled into dust; when some touch of a
+sunset sky, or some word of a book, or some providence of our lives,
+comes upon the heart and mind, reminding us how everything is passing.
+You have all had these thoughts. Some of us stifle them--they are not
+pleasant to many of us; some of us brood over them unwholesomely, and
+that is not wise; but the best use of them is to bear us onward into the
+peaceful region where we clasp to our troubled hearts that which cannot
+go. If any of us are making experience to-day of earthly change, if any
+of us have hearts heavy with earthly losses, if any of us are bending
+under the weight of that awful law, that everything becomes part and
+parcel of that dreadful past, if any of us are looking at our empty
+hands and saying, 'They have taken away my god and what have I more?'
+let us listen to the better voice that says, 'My kindness shall not
+depart from thee, and so, whatever goes, thou canst not be desolate if
+thou hast Me.'
+
+And then, still further, let me remind you that this same thought may
+avail to give to us hopes of years as immortal as itself. We do not
+belong to the mountains and hills that shall depart, or to the order of
+things to which they belong. There is coming a very solemn day, I
+believe, not by any mere processes of natural decay as I take it, but by
+the action of God Himself, the Judge that 'day of the Lord that shall
+come as a thief in the night'--when the mountains shall depart, and the
+hills be removed, and the throne of judgment shall be set, and you and I
+will be there. My brother, lay your hand on that covenant of peace which
+is made for us all in Christ Jesus the Lord, and then 'calm as the
+summer's ocean we shall be, and all the wreck of nature' cannot disturb
+us, for we shall abide unshaken as the throne of God. The mountains may
+pass, the hills be removed, but herein is our love made perfect, that we
+may have boldness in the day of 'judgment,' for that kindness shall not
+depart from us, and God's gentle tenderness is eternal as Himself. Then
+we shall not depart from it either, and we are immortal as the
+tenderness that encloses us. God's endless love must have undying
+creatures on whom to pour itself out, and if to-day I possess--as we all
+may possess in however feeble a measure--some sips and prelibations of
+that great flood of love that is in God, I can look unblanched right
+into the eyes of death and say, 'Thou hast no power at all over me, I am
+eternal because the God that loves me is so, and since He hath loved me
+with an everlasting love, His loving-kindness shall not depart from me.
+Therefore, seeing that all these things shall be dissolved, I know that
+I have a building of God, a house not made with hands, eternal in the
+heavens, and because He lives I shall live also.' The hope that is built
+upon the eternal love of God in Christ is the true guarantee to me of
+immortal existence, and this hope is ours if, and only if, we come into
+the covenant--the covenant of peace. God says, 'I will love thee, I will
+bless thee, I will keep thee, I will pardon thee, I will save thee, I
+will glorify thee, and there is My bond on that Cross, the new covenant
+in His blood.' Close with the covenant that God is ready to make with
+you, and then 'life and death, principalities and powers, things present
+and things to come, height and depth, and every other creature shall be
+impotent to separate you from the love of God that is in Christ Jesus
+our Lord.'
+
+'Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath
+no money; come ye, buy, and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without
+money and without price. 2. Wherefore do ye spend money for that which
+is not bread? and your labour for that which satisfieth not? hearken
+diligently unto Me, and eat ye that which is good, and let your soul
+delight itself in fatness. 3. Incline your ear, and come unto Me, hear,
+and your soul shall live; and I will make an everlasting covenant with
+you, even the sure mercies of David. 4. Behold, I have given him for a
+witness to the people, a leader and commander to the people. 5. Behold,
+thou shalt call a nation that thou knowest not, and nations that knew
+not thee shall run unto thee because of the Lord thy God, and for the
+Holy One of Israel; for He hath glorified thee. 6. Seek ye the Lord
+while He may be found, call ye upon Him while He is near: 7. Let the
+wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts: and let
+him return unto the Lord, and He will have mercy upon him; and to our
+God, for He will abundantly pardon. 8. For My thoughts are not your
+thoughts, neither are your ways My ways, saith the Lord. 9. For as the
+heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways,
+and My thoughts than your thoughts. 10. For as the rain cometh down, and
+the snow from heaven, and returneth not thither, but watereth the earth,
+and maketh it bring forth and bud, that it may give seed to the sower,
+and bread to the eater: 11. So shall My word be that goeth forth out of
+My mouth: it shall not return unto Me void, but it shall accomplish that
+which I please, and it shall prosper in the thing whereto I sent it. 12.
+For ye shall go out with joy, and be led forth with peace: the mountains
+and the hills shall break forth before you into singing, and all the
+trees of the field shall clap their hands. 13. Instead of the thorn
+shall come up the fir tree, and instead of the brier shall come up the
+myrtle tree: and it shall be to the Lord for a name, for an everlasting
+sign that shall not be cut off.'--ISAIAH lv. 1-13.
+
+The call to partake of the blessings of the Messianic salvation worthily
+follows the great prophecy of the suffering Servant. No doubt the
+immediate application of this chapter is to the exiled nation, who in it
+are summoned from their vain attempts to find satisfaction in the
+material prosperity realised in exile, and to make the only true
+blessedness their own by obedience to God's voice. But if ever the
+prophet spoke to the world he does so here. It is no unwarranted
+spiritualising of his invitation which hears in it the voice which
+invites all mankind to share the blessings of the gospel feast.
+
+The glorious words need little exposition. What we have to do is to see
+that they do not fall on our ears in vain. They may be roughly divided
+into two sections--the invitation to the feast, with the promises to the
+obedient Israel (verses 1-5), and the summons to the necessary
+preparation for the feast, namely, repentance, with the reason for its
+necessity, and the encouragements to it in the might of God's faithful
+promises (verses 6-13).
+
+I. Whose voice sounds so beseechingly and welcoming in this great call,
+which rings out to all thirsty souls? If we note the 'Me' and 'I' which
+follow, we shall hear God Himself thus taking the office of summoner to
+His own feast. By whatever media the gospel call reaches us, it is in
+reality God's own voice to our hearts, and that makes the responsibility
+of hearing more tremendous, and the folly of refusing more inexcusable.
+
+Who are invited? There are but two conditions expressed in verse 1, and
+these are fulfilled in every soul. All are summoned who are thirsty and
+penniless. If we have in our souls desires that all the broken cisterns
+of earth can never slake-and we all have these-and if we have nothing by
+which we can procure what will still the gnawing hunger and burning
+thirst of our souls--and none of us has--then we are included in the
+call. Universal as are the craving for blessedness and the powerlessness
+to satisfy it, are the adaptation and destination of the gospel.
+
+What is offered? Water, wine, milk--all the beverages of a simple
+civilisation, differing in their operation, but all precious to a
+thirsty palate. Water revives, wine gladdens and inspirits, milk
+nourishes. All that any man needs or desires is to be found in Christ.
+We shall not understand the nature of the feast unless we remember that
+He Himself is the 'gift of God.' What these three draughts mean is best
+perceived when we listen to Him saying, in a plain quotation of this
+call, 'If any man thirst, let him come unto Me and drink.' Nothing short
+of Himself can satisfy the thirst of one soul, much less of all the
+thirsty. Like the flow from the magic fountain of the legend, Jesus
+becomes to each what each most desires.
+
+How does He become ours? The paradox of buying with what is not money is
+meant, by its very appearance of contradiction, to put in strongest
+fashion that the possession of Him depends on nothing in us but the
+sense of need and the willingness to accept. We buy Christ when we part
+with self, which is all that we have, in order to win Him. We must be
+full of conscious emptiness and desire, if we are to be filled with His
+fulness. Jesus interpreted the meaning of 'come to the waters' when He
+said, 'He that cometh to Me shall never hunger, and he that believeth on
+Me shall never thirst.' Faith is coming, faith is drinking, faith is
+buying.
+
+The universal call, with is clear setting forth of blessing and
+conditions of possessing, is followed by a pleading remonstrance as to
+the folly of lavishing effort and money on what is not bread. It is
+strange that men will cheerfully take more pains to continue thirsty
+than to accept the satisfaction which God provides. They toil and
+continue unsatisfied. Experience does not teach them, and all the while
+the one real good is waiting to be theirs for nothing.
+
+ ''Tis heaven alone that is given away;
+ 'Tis only God may be had for the asking.'
+
+Christ goes a-begging, and we spend our strength in vain toil to acquire
+what we turn away from when it is offered us in Him. When the great
+Father offers bread for nothing, we will not have it, but we are ready
+to give any price for a stone. It is not the wickedness, but the folly,
+of unbelief, which is the marvel.
+
+The contrast between the heavy price at which men buy hunger, and the
+easy rate at which they may have full satisfaction, is further set forth
+by the call to 'incline the ear,' which is all that is needed in order
+that life and nourishment which delights the soul may be ours. 'Hearken,
+and eat' is equivalent to 'Hearken, and ye shall eat.' The real 'good'
+for man is only to be found in listening to and obeying the divine
+voice, whether it sound in invitation, promise, or command. The true
+life of the soul lies in that listening receptiveness which takes for
+one's own God's great gift of Christ, and yields glad obedience to His
+every word.
+
+The exiled Israel was promised an 'everlasting covenant' as the result
+of their acceptance of the invitation; and we know whose blood it is
+that has sealed the new covenant, which abides as long as Christ's
+fulness and men's need shall last. That covenant, of which we seldom
+hear in Isaiah, but which fills a prominent place in Jeremiah and
+Ezekiel, is further explained as being 'the sure mercies of David.' This
+phrase and its context are difficult, but the general meaning is clear.
+The great promises of God's unfailing mercy, made to the historical
+founder of the royal house, shall be transferred and continued, with
+inviolable faithfulness, to those who drink of the gift of God.
+
+This parallel between the great King and the whole mass of the true
+Israel is further set forth in verses 4 and 5. Each begins with
+'Behold,' and the similar form indicates similarity in contents. The son
+of Jesse was in some degree God's witness to the heathen nations, as is
+expressed in several psalms; and, what he was imperfectly, the ransomed
+Israel would be to the world. The office of the Christian Church is to
+draw nations that it knew not, to follow in the blessed path, in which
+it has found satisfaction and the dawnings of a more than natural glory
+transfiguring it. They who have themselves drunk of the unfailing
+fountain in Christ are thereby fitted and called to cry to others, 'Come
+ye to the waters.' Experience of Christ's preciousness, and of the rest
+of soul which comes from partaking of His salvation, impels and obliges
+to call others to share the bliss.
+
+II. The second part of the chapter begins with an urgent call to
+repentance, based upon the difference between God's ways and man's, and
+on the certainty that the divine promises will be fulfilled. The summons
+in verses 6 and 7 is first couched in most general terms, which are then
+more closely defined. To 'seek the Lord' is to direct conduct and heart
+to obtain possession of God as one's own. Of that seeking, the chief
+element is calling upon Him; since such is His desire to be found of us
+that it only needs our asking in order to receive. As surely as the
+mother hears her child's cry, so surely does He catch the faintest voice
+addressed to Him. But, men being what they are, a change of ways and of
+their root in thoughts is indispensable. Seeking which is not
+accompanied by forsaking self and an evil past is no genuine seeking,
+and will end in no finding. But this forsaking is only one side of true
+repentance; the other is return to God, as is expressed in the New
+Testament word for it, which implies a change of mind, purpose, and
+conduct. The faces which were turned earthward and averted from God are
+to be turned God-ward and diverted from earth. Whosoever thus seeks may
+be confident of finding and of abundant pardon. The belief in God's
+loving forgivingness is the strongest motive to repentance, and the most
+melting argument to listen to the call to seek Him. But there is another
+motive of a more awful kind; namely, the consideration that the period
+of mercy is limited, and that a time may come, and that soon, when God
+no longer 'may be found' nor 'is near.'
+
+The need for such a radical change in conduct and mind is further
+enforced, in verses 8 and 9, by the emphatic statement of present
+discord between the exiled Israel and God. Mark that the deepest seat of
+the discord is first dealt with, and then the manifestation of it in
+active life. Mark also that the order of comparison is inverted in the
+two successive clauses in verse 8. God's thoughts have not entered into
+Israel's mind and become theirs. The 'thinkings' not being regulated
+according to God's truth, nor the desires and sentiments brought into
+accord with His will and mind, a contrariety of 'ways' must follow, and
+the paths which men choose for themselves cannot run parallel with
+God's, nor be pleasing to Him. Therefore the stringent urgency of the
+call to forsake 'the crooked, wandering ways in which we live,' and to
+come back to the path of righteousness which is traced by God for our
+feet.
+
+But divergence which necessitates repentance is not the only relation
+between our ways and God's. There is elevation, transcendency, like that
+of the eternal heavens, high, boundless, the home of light, the
+storehouse of beneficent influences which fertilise. If we think of the
+dreary, flat plains where the exiles were, and the magnificent sweep of
+the sky over them, we shall feel the beauty of the figure. If 'My
+thoughts are not your thoughts' was all that was to be said, repentance
+would be of little use, and there would be little to encourage to it;
+but if God's thoughts of love and ways of blessing arch themselves above
+our low lives as the sky bends, pitying and bestowing, above squalor,
+barrenness, and darkness, then penitence is not in vain, and the low
+earth may be visited with gifts from the highest heaven.
+
+The certainty that such gifts will be bestowed is the last thought of
+this magnificent summons. The prophet dilates on that assurance to the
+end of the chapter. He seems to catch fire, as it were, from the
+introduction of that grand figure of the lofty heavens domed above the
+flat earth. In effect, what he says is: They are high and inaccessible,
+but think what pours down from them, and how all fertility depends on
+their gifts of rain and snow, and how the moisture which they drop is
+turned into 'seed to the sower, and bread to the eater.' Thinking of
+that continuous benefaction and miracle, we should see in it a symbol of
+the better gifts from the higher heavens. So does God's word come down
+from His throne. So does it turn barrenness into nodding harvest. So
+does it quicken undreamed of powers of fruitfulness in human nature and
+among the forces of the world. So does it supply nourishment for hungry
+souls, and germs which shall bear fruit in coming years. No complicated
+machinery nor the most careful culture can work what the gentle dropping
+rain effects. There is mightier force in it than in many thunder-clouds.
+The gospel does with ease and in silence what nothing else can do. It
+makes barren souls fruitful in all good works, and in all happiness
+worthy of men. Therefore the summons to drink of the springing fountain
+and to turn from evil ways and thoughts is recommended by the assurance
+that God's word is faithful, and all His promises firm.
+
+The final verses (verses 12, 13) give the glowing picture of the return
+from exile amid the jubilation of a transformed world, as the strongest
+motive to the obedient hearkening to God's voice, to which the chapter
+has summoned, and as the great instance of God's keeping His word.
+
+The flight from Egypt was 'in haste' (Deut. xvi. 3); but this shall be a
+triumphal exodus, without conflict or alarms. All nature shall
+participate in the joy. Mountains and hills shall raise the shrill note
+of rejoicing, and the trees wave their branches, as if clapping hands in
+delight. This is more than mere poetic rhetoric. A redeemed humanity
+implies a glorified world. Nature has been involved in the consequences
+of sin, and will share in the results of redemption, and have some
+humble reflected light from 'the liberty of the glory of the sons of
+God.'
+
+The fulfilment of this final promise is not yet. All earlier returns of
+the exiled Israel from the Babylon of their bondage to God and the city
+of God, such as the historical one which the prophet foretold, and the
+spiritual one which is repeated age by age in the history of the
+Christian Church and of single penitent souls, point on to that last
+triumphant day when 'the ransomed of the Lord shall return,' and the
+world be transfigured to match the glory that they inherit. That fair
+world without poison or offence, and the nations of the saved who
+inhabit its peaceful spaces, shall be, in the fullest stretch of the
+words, 'to the Lord for a name, and for an everlasting sign that shall
+not be cut off.' The redemption of man and his establishing amid the
+felicities of a state correspondent to His God-given glory shall be to
+all eternity and to all possible creations the highest evidence of what
+God is, and His token to all beings.
+
+
+
+
+THE GREAT PROCLAMATION
+
+'Ho, every one that thirsteth, come ye to the waters, and he that hath
+no money; come ye, buy and eat; yea, come, buy wine and milk without
+money and without price.'--ISAIAH lv.1.
+
+
+The meaning of the word _preach_ is 'proclaim like a herald'; or, what
+is perhaps more familiar to most of us, like a town-crier; with a loud
+voice, clearly and plainly delivering the message. Now, there are other
+notions of a sermon than that; and there is other work which ministers
+have to do, of an educational kind. But my business now is to preach. We
+have ventured to ask others than the members of our own congregation to
+join us in this service; and I should be ashamed of myself, and have
+good reason to be so, if I had asked you to come to hear me talk, or to
+entertain you with more or less eloquent and thoughtful discourses.
+There is a time for everything; and what this is the time for is to ring
+out like a bellman the message which I believe God has given me for you.
+It cannot but suffer in passing through human lips; but I pray that my
+poor words may not be all unworthy of its stringency, and of the
+greatness of its blessing. My text is God's proclamation, and all that
+the best of us can do is but to reiterate that, more feebly alas, but
+still earnestly.
+
+Suppose there was an advertisement in to-morrow morning's papers that
+any one that liked to go to a certain place might get a fortune for
+going, what a _queue_ of waiting suppliants there would be at the door!
+Here is God's greatest gift going a-begging; and there are no doubt some
+among you who listen to my text with only the thought, 'Oh, the old
+threadbare story is what we have been asked to come and hear!' Brethren,
+have you taken the offer? If not, it needs to be pressed upon you once
+more. So my purpose in this sermon is a very simple one. I wish, as a
+brother to a brother, to put before you these three things: to whom this
+offer is made; what it consists of; and how it may be ours.
+
+I. To whom this offer is made.
+
+It is to every one thirsty and penniless. That is a melancholy
+combination, to be needing something infinitely, and to have not a
+farthing to get it with. But that is the condition in which we all
+stand, in regard to the highest and best things. This invitation of my
+text is as universal as if it had stopped with its third word. 'Ho,
+every one' would have been no broader than is the offer as it stands.
+For the characteristics named are those which belong, necessarily and
+universally, to human experience. If my text had said, 'Ho, every one
+that breathes human breath,' it would not have more completely covered
+the whole race, and enfolded thee and me, and all our brethren, in the
+amplitude of its promise, than it does when it sets up as the sole
+qualifications thirst and penury--that we infinitely need, and that we
+are absolutely unable to acquire, the blessings that it offers.
+
+'Every one that thirsteth'--that means desire. Yes; but it means need
+also. And what is every man but a great bundle of yearnings and
+necessities? None of us carry within ourselves that which suffices for
+ourselves. We are all dependent upon external things for being and for
+wellbeing.
+
+There are thirsts which infallibly point to their true objects. If a man
+is hungry he knows that it is food that he wants. And just as the
+necessities of the animal life are incapable of being misunderstood, and
+the objects which will satisfy them incapable of being confused or
+mistaken, so there are other nobler thirsts, which, in like manner, work
+automatically, and point to the thing that they need. We have social
+instincts; we need love; we need friendship; we need somebody to lean
+upon; we thirst for some heart to rest our heads upon, for hands to
+clasp ours; and we know where the creatures and the objects are that
+will satisfy these desires. And there are the higher thirsts of the
+spirit, that 'follows knowledge, like a sinking star, beyond the
+furthest bounds of human thought'; and a man knows where and how to
+gratify the impulse that drives him to seek after the many forms of
+knowledge and wisdom.
+
+But besides all these, besides sense, besides affection, besides
+emotions, besides the intellectual spur of which we are all more or less
+conscious, there come in a whole set of other thirsts that do not in
+themselves carry the intimation of the place where they can be slaked.
+And so you get men restless, as some of you are; always dissatisfied, as
+some of you are; feeling that there is something wanting, yet not
+knowing what, as some of you are. You remember the old story in the
+_Arabian Nights_, of the man who had a grand palace, and lived in it
+quite contentedly, until some one told him that it needed a roc's egg
+hanging from the roof to make it complete, and he did not know where to
+get that, and was miserable accordingly. We build our houses, we fancy
+that we are satisfied; and then there comes the stinging thought that it
+is not all complete yet, and we go groping, groping in the dark, to find
+out where the lacking thing is. Shipwrecked sailors sometimes, in their
+desperation, drink salt water, and that makes them thirstier than ever,
+and brings on madness and death. Some publicans drug the vile liquors
+which they sell, so that they increase thirst. We may make no mistake
+about how to satisfy the desires of sense or of earthly affections; we
+may be quite certain that 'money answereth all things,' and that it is
+good to get on in business in Manchester; or may have found a pure and
+enduring satisfaction in study and in books--yet we have thirsts that
+some of us know not where to satisfy; and so we have parched lips and
+swollen tongues, and raging desire that earth can give nothing to fill.
+
+My brother, do you know what it is that you want?
+
+It is God. Nothing else, nothing less. 'My soul thirsteth for God, for
+the living God.' The man that knows what it is of which he is in such
+sore need, is blessed. The man who only feels dimly that he needs
+something, and does not know that it is God whom he does need, is
+condemned to wander in a dry and thirsty land, where no water is, and
+where his heart gapes, parched and cracked like the soil upon which he
+treads. Understand your thirst. Interpret your desires aright. Open your
+eyes to your need; and be sure of this, that mountains of money and the
+clearest insight into intellectual problems, and fame, and love, and
+wife, and children, and a happy home, and abundance of all things that
+you can desire, will leave a central aching emptiness that nothing and
+no person but God can ever fill. Oh, that we all knew what these
+yearnings of our hearts mean!
+
+Aye! but there are _dormant_ thirsts too. It is no proof of superiority
+that a savage has fewer wants than you and I have, for the want is the
+open mouth into which supply comes. And it is no proof that you have
+not, deep in your nature, desires which, unless they are satisfied, will
+prevent your being blessed, that these desires are all unconscious to
+yourselves. The business of us preachers is, very largely, to get the
+people who will listen to us, to recognise the fact that they do want
+things which they do not wish; and that, for the perfection of their
+natures, the cherishing of noble longings and thirstings is needful, and
+that to be without this sense of need is to be without one of the
+loftiest prerogatives of humanity.
+
+Some of you do not wish forgiveness. Many of you would much rather not
+have holiness. You do not want to have God. The promises of the Gospel
+go clean over your heads, and are as impotent to influence you as the
+wind whistling through a keyhole, because you have never been aware of
+the wants to which these promises correspond, and do not understand what
+it is that you truly require.
+
+And yet there is no desire--that is to say, consciousness of
+necessities--so dormant but that its being un-gratified makes a man
+restless. You do not wish forgiveness, but you will never be happy till
+you get it. You do not wish to be good and true and holy men, but you
+will never be blessed till you are. You do not want to have God, some of
+you, but you will be restless till you find Him. You fancy you wish
+heaven when you are dead; you do not want it while you are living. But
+until your earthly life is like the life of Jesus Christ in heaven,
+though in an inferior degree, whilst it is on earth, you will never be
+at rest. You are thirsty enough after these things to be ill at ease
+without them, when you bethink yourselves and pass out of the region of
+mere mechanical and habitual existence; but until you get these things
+that you do not desire, be sure of this: that you will be tortured with
+vain unrest, and will find that the satisfactions which you do seek turn
+to ashes in your mouth. 'Bread of deceit,' says the Book, 'is sweet to a
+man.' The writer meant by that that there were people to whom it was
+pleasant to tell profitable lies. But we might widen the meaning, and
+say that all these lower satisfactions, apart from the loftier ones of
+forgiveness, acceptance, reconciliation with God, the conscious
+possession of Him, a well-grounded hope of immortality, the power to
+live a noble life and to look forward to a glorious heaven, are 'bread
+of deceit,' which promises nourishment and does not give it, but breaks
+the teeth that try to masticate it; 'it turneth to gravel.'
+
+'Ho, every one that thirsteth.' That designation includes us all. 'And
+he that hath no money.' Who has any? Notice that the persons represented
+in our text as penniless are, in the next verse, remonstrated with for
+spending 'money.' So then the penniless man had some pence away in some
+corner of his pocket which he could spend. He had the money that would
+buy shams, 'that which is not bread' but a stone though it looks like a
+loaf, but he had no money for the true food. Which being translated out
+of parable into fact, is simply this, that our efforts may and do win
+for us the lower satisfactions which meet our transitory and superficial
+necessities, but that no effort of ours can secure for us the loftier
+blessings which slake the diviner thirsts of immortal souls. A man lands
+in a far country with English shillings in his pocket, but he finds that
+no coins go there but thalers, or francs, or dollars, or the like; and
+his money is only current in his own land, and he must have it changed
+before he can make his purchases. So though he has a pocketful of it he
+may as well be penniless.
+
+And, in like fashion, you and I, with all our strenuous efforts, which
+we are bound to make, and which there is joy in making, after these
+lower good things that correspond to our efforts, find that we have no
+coinage that will buy the good things of the kingdom of heaven, without
+which we faint and die. For them our efforts are useless. Can a man by
+his penitence, by his tears, by his amendment, make it possible for the
+consequences of his past to be obliterated, or all changed in their
+character into fatherly chastisement? No! A thousand times, no! The
+superficial notions of Christianity, which are only too common amongst
+both educated and uneducated, may say to a man, 'You need no divine
+intervention, if only you will get up from the dust, and do your best to
+keep up when you are up.' But those who realise more deeply what the
+significance of sin is, and what the eternal operation of its
+consequences upon the soul is, and what the awful majesty of a divine
+righteousness is, learn that the man who has sinned can, by nothing that
+he can do, obliterate that awful fact, or reduce it to insignificance,
+in regard to the divine relations to him. It is only God who can do
+that. We have no money.
+
+So we stand thirsty and penniless--a desperate condition! Ay! brother,
+it _is_ desperate, and it is the condition of every one of us. I wish I
+could turn the generalities of my text into the individuality of a
+personal address. I wish I could bring its wide-flowing beneficence to a
+sharp point that might touch your conscience, heart, and will. I cannot
+do that; you must do it for yourself.
+
+'Ho, every one that thirsteth.' Will you pause for a moment, and say to
+yourself, 'That is I'? 'And he that hath no money'--that is I. 'Come ye
+to the waters'--that is I. The proclamation is for thine ear and for thy
+heart; and the gift is for thy hand and thy lips.
+
+II. In what this offer consists.
+
+They tell an old story about the rejoicings at the coronation of some
+great king, when there was set up in the market-place a triple fountain,
+from each of whose three lips flowed a different kind of rare liquor
+which any man who chose to bring a pitcher might fill it with, at his
+choice. Notice my text, 'come ye to the _waters_' ... 'buy _wine_ and
+_milk_.' The great fountain is set up in the market-place of the world,
+and every man may come; and whichever of this glorious triad of
+effluents he needs most, there his lip may glue itself and there it may
+drink, be it 'water' that refreshes, or 'wine' that gladdens, or 'milk'
+that nourishes. They are all contained in this one great gift that flows
+out from the deep heart of God to the thirsty lips of parched humanity.
+
+And what is that gift? Well, we may say, salvation; or we may use many
+other words to define the nature of the gifts. I venture to take a
+shorter one, and say, it means Christ. He, and not merely some truth
+about Him and His work; He Himself, in the fulness of His being, in the
+all-sufficiency of His love, in the reality of His presence, in the
+power of His sacrifice, in the daily derivation, into the heart that
+waits upon Him, of His life and His spirit, He is the all-sufficient
+supply of every thirst of every human soul. Do we want happiness? Christ
+gives us His joy, abiding and full, and not as the world gives. Do we
+want love? He gathers us to His heart, in which 'there is no
+variableness, neither shadow cast by turning,' and binds us to Himself
+by bonds that death, the separator, vainly attempts to untie, and which
+no unworthiness, ingratitude or coldness of ours will ever be able to
+unloose. Do we want wisdom? He will dwell with us as our light. Do our
+hearts yearn for companionship? With Him we shall never be solitary. Do
+we long for a bright hope which shall light up the dark future, and
+spread a rainbow span over the great gorge and gulf of death? Jesus
+Christ spans the void, and gives us unfailing and undeceiving hope. For
+everything that you and I need here or yonder, in heart, in will, in
+practical life, Jesus Christ Himself is the all-sufficient supply.
+
+'My life in death, my all in all.' What is offered in Him may be
+described by all the glorious and blessed names which men have invented
+to designate the various aspects of the Good. These are the goodly
+pearls that men seek, but there is one of great price which is worth
+them all, and gathers into itself all their clouded and fragmentary
+splendours. Christ is all, and the soul that has Him shall never thirst.
+
+ 'Thou of life the fountain art,
+ Freely let me take of Thee.'
+
+III. Lastly, how do we obtain the offered gifts?
+
+The paradox of my text needs little explanation, 'Buy without money and
+without price.' The contradiction on the surface is but intended to make
+emphatic this blessed truth, which I pray may reach your memories and
+hearts, that the only conditions are a sense of need, and a willingness
+to take--nothing less and nothing more. We must recognise our penury and
+must abandon self, and put away all ideas of having a finger in our own
+salvation, and be willing--which, strangely and sadly enough, many of us
+are not-to be under obligations to God's unhelped and undeserved love
+for all.
+
+Cheap things are seldom valued. Ask a high price and people think that
+the commodity is precious. A man goes into a fair, for a wager, and he
+carries with him a try full of gold watches and offers to sell them for
+a farthing apiece, and nobody will buy them. It does not, I hope,
+degrade the subject, if I say Jesus Christ comes into the market-place
+of the world with His hands full of the gifts which His pierced hands
+have bought, that He may give them away. He says, 'Will you take them?'
+And you, and you, and you, pass by on the other side, and go away to
+another merchant, and buy dearly things that are not worth the having.
+
+'My father, my father, if the prophet had bid thee do some great thing,
+wouldst thou not have done it?' Would you not? Swing at the end of a
+pole, with hooks in your back; measure all the way from Cape Comorin to
+the Himalayas, lying down on your face and rising at each length; do a
+hundred things which heathens and Roman Catholics and unspiritual
+Protestants think to be the way to get salvation; deny yourselves things
+that you would like to do; do things that you do not want to do; give
+money that you would like to keep; avoid habits that are very sweet, go
+to church or chapel when you have no heart for worship; and so try to
+balance the account. If the prophet had bid thee do some great thing,
+thou wouldst have done it. How much rather when he says, 'Wash, and be
+clean.' 'Nothing in my heart I bring.' You do _not_ bring anything.
+'Simply to Thy Cross I cling.' Do you? Do you? Jesus Christ catches up
+the 'comes' of my text, and He says, 'Come unto Me, all ye that labour
+and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.' 'If any man thirst, let
+him come unto Me and drink.' Brethren, I lay it on your hearts and
+consciences to answer Him--never mind about me--to answer _Him_: 'Sir,
+give me this water that I thirst not.'
+
+
+
+
+GOD'S WAYS AND MAN'S
+
+'For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways,
+saith the Lord. 9. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are
+My ways higher than your ways, and My thoughts than your thoughts.'--
+ISAIAH lv. 8, 9.
+
+
+Scripture gives us no revelations concerning God merely in order that we
+may know about Him. These words are grand poetry and noble theology, but
+they are meant practically and in fiery earnestness. The 'for' at the
+beginning of each clause points us back to the previous statement, and
+both of the verses of our text are in different ways its foundation. And
+what has preceded is this: 'Let the wicked forsake his way and the
+unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return unto the Lord, for He
+will have mercy upon him, and to our God, for He will abundantly
+pardon.' That is why the prophet dilates upon the difference between the
+'thoughts' and the 'ways' of God and of men.
+
+If we look at these two verses a little more closely we shall perceive
+that they by no means cover the same ground nor suggest the same idea as
+to the relationship between God's 'ways' and 'thoughts' and ours. The
+former of them speaks of unlikeness and opposition, the latter of
+elevation and superiority; the former of them is the basis of an
+indictment and an exhortation, the latter is the basis of an
+encouragement and a promise. The former of them is the reason why 'the
+wicked' and 'unrighteous man' ought to and must 'turn' from 'his ways'
+and 'thoughts,' the latter of them is the reason why, 'turning,' he may
+be sure that the Lord 'will abundantly pardon.'
+
+And so we have here two things to consider in reference to the relation
+between the divine purposes and acts and man's purposes and acts. First,
+the antagonism, and the indictment and exhortation that are based upon
+that; second, the analogy but superiority, and the exhortation and hope
+that are built upon that. Let me deal, then, with these separately.
+
+I. We have here an unlikeness declared, and upon that is rested an
+appeal.
+
+Notice the remarkable order and alternation of pronouns in the first
+verse. '_My_ thoughts are not _your_ thoughts,' saith the Lord. The
+things that God thinks and purposes are not the things that man thinks
+and purposes, and therefore, because the thoughts are different, the
+outcomes of them in deeds are divergent. God's 'ways' are His acts, the
+manner and course of His working considered as a path on which He moves,
+and on which, in some sense, we can also journey. Our 'ways'--our manner
+of life--are not parallel with His, as they should be.
+
+But that opposition is expressed with a remarkable variation. Observe
+the change of pronouns in the two clauses. First, '_My_ thoughts are not
+your thoughts'--you have not taken My truth into your minds, nor My
+purposes into your wills; you do riot think God's thoughts.
+Therefore--'_your_ ways (instead of 'My,' as we should have expected, to
+keep the regularity of the parallelism) are not My ways'--I repudiate
+and abjure your conduct and condemn it utterly.
+
+Now, of course, in this charge of man's unlikeness to God, there is no
+contradiction of, nor reference to, man's natural constitution, in which
+there are, at one and the same time, the likeness of the child with the
+parent and the unlikeness between the creature and the Creator. If our
+thoughts were not in a measure like God's thoughts, we should know
+nothing about Him. If our thoughts were not like God's thoughts, we
+should have no standard for life or thinking. Righteousness and beauty
+and truth and goodness are the same things in heaven and earth, and
+alike in God and man. We are made after His image, poor creatures though
+we be; and though there must ever be a gulf of unlikeness, which we
+cannot bridge, between the thoughts of Him whose knowledge has no growth
+nor uncertainty, whose wisdom is infinite and all whose nature is
+boundless light, and our knowledge, and must ever be a gulf between the
+workings and ways of Him who works without effort, and knows neither
+weariness nor limitation, and our work, so often foiled, so always
+toilsome, yet in all the unlikeness there is (and no man can denude
+himself of it) a likeness to the Father. For the image in which God made
+man at the beginning is not an image that it is in the power of men to
+cast away, and in the worst of his corruptions and the widest of his
+departures he still bears upon him the signs of likeness 'to Him that
+created him.' The coin is rusty, battered, defaced; but still legible
+are the head and the writing. 'Whose image and superscription hath it?'
+Render unto God the things that are declared to be God's, because they
+bear His likeness and are stamped with His signature.
+
+But that very necessary and natural likeness between God and man makes
+more solemnly sinful the voluntary unlikeness which we have brought upon
+ourselves. If there were no analogy, there could be no contrast. If God
+and man were utterly unlike, then there would be no evil in our
+unlikeness and no need for our repentance.
+
+The true state for each of us is that we should, as the great astronomer
+said he had done in regard to his own science, 'think God's thoughts
+after Him,' and have our minds filled with His truth and our wills all
+harmonised with His purposes, and that we should thus make our ways to
+run parallel with the ways of God. The blessedness, the peace, the true
+manhood of a man, are that his ways and thoughts should be like God's.
+And so my text comes with its indictment--You who by nature were formed
+in His image, you to whom it is open to sympathise with His designs, to
+harmonise your wills with His will, and to bring all the dark and
+crooked ways in which you walk into full parallelism with His way--you
+have departed into darkness of unlikeness, and in thought and in ways
+are the opposites of God.
+
+Mark how wonderfully, in the simple language of my text, deep truths
+about this sin of ours are conveyed. Notice its growth and order. It
+begins with a heart and mind that do not take in God's thoughts, truths,
+purposes, desires, and then the alienated will and the darkened
+understanding and the conscience which has closed itself against His
+imperative voice issue afterwards in conduct which He cannot accept as
+in any way corresponding with His. First comes the thought unreceptive
+of God's thought, and then follow ways contrary to God's ways.
+
+Notice the profound truth here in regard to the essential and deepest
+evil of all our evil. '_Your_ thoughts'; '_your_ ways,'--self-dependence
+and self-confidence are the master-evils of humanity. And every sin is
+at bottom the result of saying--'I will not conform myself to God, but I
+am going to please myself, and take my own way.' My own way is never
+God's way; my own way is always the devil's way. And the root of all sin
+lies in these two strong, simple words, '_Your_ thoughts not Mine;
+_your_ ways not Mine.'
+
+Notice, too, how there are suggested the misery and retribution of this
+unlikeness. 'If you will not make My thoughts your thoughts, I shall not
+take your ways as My ways. I will leave you to them.' 'You will be
+filled with the fruit of your own devices. I shall not incorporate your
+actions into My great scheme and purpose.' Men
+
+ 'Would not know His ways,
+ And He has left them to their own.'
+
+So here we have the solemn indictment brought by God's own voice against
+us all. The criminality of our unlikeness to Him rests upon our original
+likeness.
+
+The unlikeness roots itself in thought, and blossoms in the poisonous
+flower of God-displeasing acts. It brings down upon our heads the solemn
+retribution of separation from Him, and being filled with the fruit of
+our own devices. Such is the indictment brought against every soul of
+man upon the earth, and there is built upon it the call to repentance
+and change,' let the wicked forsake his _way_, and the unrighteous man
+his _thoughts_.' The question rises in many a heart, 'How am I to
+forsake these paths on which my feet have so longed walked?' And if I
+do, what about all the years behind me, full of wild wanderings and
+thoughts in all of which God was not?
+
+II. The second verse of our text meets that despairing question. It
+proclaims the elevation of God's ways and thoughts above ours, and
+thereon bases the assurance of pardon.
+
+The relation is not only one of unlikeness and opposition, but it is
+also one of analogy and superiority. The former clause began with
+thoughts which are the parents of ways, and, as befits the all-seeing
+Judge, laid bare first the hidden discord of man's heart and will, ere
+it pointed to the manifest antagonism of his doings. This clause begins
+with God's ways, from which alone men can reach the knowledge of His
+thoughts. The first follows the order of God's knowledge of man; the
+second, that of man's knowledge of God.
+
+It is a wonderful and beautiful turn which the prophet here gives to the
+thought of the transcendent elevation of God. The heavens are the very
+type of the unattainable; and to say that they are 'higher than the
+earth' seems, at first sight, to be but to say, 'No man hath ascended
+into the heavens,' and you sinful men must grovel here down upon your
+plain, whilst they are far above, out of your reach. But the heavens
+bend. They are an arch, and not a straight line. They touch the horizon;
+and there come from them the sweet influences of sunshine and of rain,
+of dew and of blessing, which bring fertility. So they are not only far
+and unattainable, but friendly and beneficent, and communicative of
+good. Like them, in true analogy but yet infinite superiority to the
+best and noblest in man, is the boundless mercy of our pardoning God:
+
+ 'The glorious sky, embracing all,
+ Is like its Maker's love,
+ Wherewith encompassed, great and small
+ In peace and order move.'
+
+'As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than
+your ways.' _The_ special 'thought' and 'way' which is meant here is
+God's thought and way about sin. There are three points here on which I
+would touch for a moment. First, God's way of dealing with sin is lifted
+up above all human example. There is such a thing as pardoning mercy
+amongst men. It is a faint analogy of, as it is an offshoot from, the
+divine pardon, but all the forgivingness of the most placable and
+long-suffering and gladly pardoning of men is but as earth to heaven
+compared with the greatness of His. Our forgiveness has its limitations.
+We sometimes cannot pardon as freely as we thought, because there blends
+with our indignation against evil a passionate personal sense of wrong
+done to us which we cannot get rid of, and that disturbs the freeness
+and the joyfulness of many a human pardon. But God's pardon is
+undisturbed and hindered by any sense of personal resentment, though sin
+is an offense against Him, and in its freeness, its fulness, its
+frequency, and its sovereign power to melt away that which it forgives,
+it towers above the loftiest of earth's beauties of forgiveness, as the
+starry heavens do above the flat plain.
+
+God's pardon is above all human example, even though, having once been
+received by us, it ought to become for us the pattern by which we shape
+and regulate our own lives. Nothing of which we have any experience in
+ourselves or in others is more than as a drop to the ocean compared with
+the absolute fulness and perfect freeness and unwearied frequency of His
+forgiveness. 'He will abundantly pardon.' He will multiply pardon. 'With
+Him there is plenteous redemption.' We think we have stretched the
+elasticity of long suffering and forgiveness further than we might have
+been reasonably expected to do if seven times we forgive the erring
+brother, but God's measure of pardon is seventy times seven, two
+perfectnesses multiplied into themselves perfectly; for the measure of
+His forgiveness is boundless, and there is no searching of the depths of
+His pardoning mercy. You cannot weary Him out, you cannot exhaust it. It
+is full at the end as at the beginning; and after all its gifts still it
+remains true, 'With Him is the multiplying of redemption.'
+
+Again, God's way of dealing with sin surpasses all our thought. All
+religion has been pressed with this problem, how to harmonise the
+perfect rectitude of the divine nature and the solemn claims of law with
+forgiveness. All religions have borne witness to the fact that men are
+dimly aware of the discord and dissonance between themselves and the
+divine thoughts and ways; and a thousand altars proclaim to us how they
+have felt that something must be done in order that forgiveness might be
+possible to an all-righteous and Sovereign Judge. The Jew knew that God
+was a pardoning God, but to him that fact stood as needing much
+explanation and much light to be thrown upon its relations with the
+solemn law under which he lived. We have Jesus Christ. The mystery of
+forgiveness is solved, in so far as it is capable of solution, in Him
+and in Him alone. His death somewhat explains how God is just and the
+Justifier of him that believeth. High above man's thoughts this great
+central mystery of the Gospel rises, that with God there is forgiveness
+and with God there is perfect righteousness. The Cross as the basis of
+pardon is the central mystery of revelation; and it is not to be
+expected that our theories shall be able to sound the depths of that
+great act of the divine love. Perhaps our plummets do not go to the
+bottom of the bottomless after all; but is it needful that we should
+have gone to the rim of the heavens, and round about it on the outside,
+before we rejoice in the sunshine? Is it needful that we should have
+traversed the abysses of the heavens, and passed from star to star and
+told their numbers, before we can say that they are bright, or before we
+can walk in their light? We do not need to understand the 'how' in order
+to be sure of the fact that Christ's death is our forgiveness. Do not be
+in such a hurry as some people are nowadays, to declare that the
+doctrine of the Cross is contrary to man's conceptions. It _surpasses_
+them, and the very fact that it surpasses ought to stop us from
+pronouncing that it _contradicts_. 'As the heavens are higher than the
+earth, so are My thoughts higher than your thoughts.'
+
+Lastly, we are taught here that God's way of dealing with sin is the
+very highest point of His self-revelation. There are many glories of the
+divine nature set forth in all His ways, but the loftiest of them all is
+this, that He can neutralise and destroy the fact of man's
+transgressing, wiping it out by pardon; and in the very act of pardon
+reconstituting in purity, and with a heart for all holiness, the sinful
+men whom He forgives. This is the shining apex of all that He has done,
+rising above creation and every other 'way' of His, as high as the
+loftiest heavens are above the earth.
+
+Therefore, have a care of all forms of Christianity which do not put
+God's pardoning mercy in the foreground. They are maimed, and in them
+mist and cloud have covered with a roof of doleful grey the low-lying
+earth, and separated it from the highest heavens. The true glory of the
+revelation of God gathers round that central Cross; and there, in that
+Man dying upon it in the dark--the sacrifice for a world's sin--is the
+loftiest, most heavenly revelation of the all-revealing God. Strike out
+the Cross from Christianity, or weaken its aspect as a message of
+forgiveness and redemption, and you have quenched its brightest light,
+and dragged it down to be but a little higher, if any, than many another
+scheme of other moralists, philosophers, poets, and religious teachers.
+The distinctive glory of Christianity is this--it tells us how God
+sweeps away sin.
+
+And so my last thought is that, if we desire to see up on the highest
+heavens of God's character, we must go down into the depths of the
+consciousness of our own sin, and learn first, how unlike our ways and
+thoughts are to God, ere we can understand how high above us, and yet
+beneficently arching over us, are His ways and thoughts to us. We lie
+beneath the heavens like some foul bog full of black ooze, rotten earth
+and putrid water, where there is nothing green or fair. But the promise
+of the bending heavens, with their sweet influences, declares the
+possibility of reclaiming even that waste, and making it rejoice and
+blossom as the rose. Spread yourselves out, dear friends, in lowly
+submission and penitent acknowledgment beneath the all-vivifying mercy
+of that shining heaven of God's pardon; and then the old promise will be
+fulfilled in you: 'Truth shall spring out of the earth, and
+righteousness shall look down from heaven; yea, the Lord shall give that
+which is good, and our land'--barren and poisoned as it has been--
+responding to the skyey influences, 'shall yield her increase.'
+
+
+
+
+WE SURE OF TO-MORROW? A NEW YEAR'S SERMON
+
+'To-morrow shall be as this day, and much more abundant.'--ISAIAH lvi.
+12.
+
+
+These words, as they stand, are the call of boon companions to new
+revelry. They are part of the prophet's picture of a corrupt age when
+the men of influence and position had thrown away their sense of duty,
+and had given themselves over, as aristocracies and plutocracies are
+ever tempted to do, to mere luxury and good living. They are summoning
+one another to their coarse orgies. The roystering speaker says, 'Do not
+be afraid to drink; the cellar will hold out. To-day's carouse will not
+empty it; there will be enough for to-morrow.' He forgets to-morrow's
+headaches; he forgets that on some tomorrow the wine will be finished;
+he forgets that the fingers of a hand may write the doom of the rioters
+on the very walls of the banqueting chamber.
+
+What have such words, the very motto of insolent presumption and short-
+sighted animalism, to do with New Year's thoughts? Only this, that base
+and foolish as they are on such lips, it is possible to lift them from
+the mud, and take them as the utterance of a lofty and calm hope which
+will not be disappointed, and of a firm and lowly resolve which may
+ennoble life. Like a great many other sayings, they may fit the mouth
+either of a sot or of a saint. All depends on what the things are which
+we are thinking about when we use them. There are things about which it
+is absurd and worse than absurd to say this, and there are things about
+which it is the soberest truth to say it. So looking forward into the
+merciful darkness of another year, we may regard these words as either
+the expressions of hopes which it is folly to cherish, or of hopes that
+it is reasonable to entertain.
+
+I. This expectation, if directed to any outward things, is an illusion
+and a dream.
+
+These coarse revellers into whose lips our text is put only meant by it
+to brave the future and defy to-morrow in the riot of their drunkenness.
+They show us the vulgarest, lowest form which the expectation can take,
+a form which I need say nothing about now.
+
+But I may just note in passing that to look forward principally as
+anticipating pleasure or enjoyment is a very poor and unworthy thing. We
+weaken and lower every day, if we use our faculty of hope mainly to
+paint the future as a scene of delights and satisfactions. We spoil to-
+day by thinking how we can turn it to the account of pleasure. We spoil
+to-morrow before it comes, and hurt ourselves, if we are more engaged
+with fancying how it will minister to our joy, than how we can make it
+minister to our duty. It is base and foolish to be forecasting our
+pleasures; the true temper is to be forecasting our work.
+
+But, leaving that consideration, let us notice how useless such
+anticipation, and how mad such confidence, as that expressed in the text
+is, if directed to anything short of God.
+
+We are so constituted as that we grow into a persuasion that what has
+been will be, and yet we can give no sufficient reason to ourselves of
+why we expect it. 'The uniformity of the course of nature is the
+corner-stone, not only of physical science, but, in a more homely form,
+of the wisdom which grows with experience, We all believe that the sun
+will rise to-morrow because it rose to-day, and on all the yesterdays.
+But there was a today which had no yesterday, and there will be a to-
+day which will have no to-morrow. The sun will rise for the last time.
+The uniformity had a beginning and will have an end.
+
+So, even as an axiom of thought, the anticipation that things will
+continue as they have been because they have been, seems to rest on an
+insufficient basis. How much more so, as to our own little lives and
+their surroundings! There the only thing which we may be quite sure of
+about to-morrow is that it will not be 'as this day.' Even for those of
+us who may have reached, for example, the level plateau of middle life,
+where our position and tasks are pretty well fixed, and we have little
+more to expect than the monotonous repetition of the same duties
+recurring at the same hour every day--even for such each day has its own
+distinctive character. Like a flock of sheep they seem all alike, but
+each, on closer inspection, reveals a physiognomy of its own. There will
+be so many small changes that even the same duties or enjoyments will
+not be quite the same, and even if the outward things remained
+absolutely unaltered, we who meet them are not the same. Little
+variations in mood and tone, diminished zest here, weakened power there,
+other thoughts breaking in, and over and above all the slow, silent
+change wrought on us by growing years, make the perfect reproduction of
+any past impossible. So, however familiar may be the road which we have
+to traverse, however uneventfully the same our days may sometimes for
+long spaces in our lives seem to be, though to ourselves often our day's
+work may appear as a mill-horse round, yet in deepest truth, if we take
+into account the whole sum of the minute changes in it and in us, it may
+be said of each step of our journey, 'Ye have not passed this way
+heretofore.'
+
+But, besides all this, we know that these breathing-times when 'we have
+no changes,' are but pauses in the storm, landing-places in the ascent,
+the interspaces between the shocks. However hope may tempt us to dream
+that the future is like the present, a deeper wisdom lies in all our
+souls which says 'No.' Drunken bravery may front that darkness with such
+words as these of our text, but the least serious spirit, in its most
+joyous moods, never quite succeeds in forgetting the solemn
+probabilities, possibilities, and certainties which lodge in the unknown
+future. So to a wise man it is ever a sobering exercise to look forward,
+and we shall be nearest the truth if we take due account, as we do
+today, of the undoubted fact that the only thing certain about to-morrow
+is that it will not be as this day.
+
+There are the great changes which come to some one every day, which may
+come to any of us any day, which will come to all of us some day. Some
+of us will die this year; on a day in our new diaries some of us will
+make no entry, for we shall be gone. Some of us will be smitten down by
+illness; some of us will lose our dearest; some of us will lose fortune.
+Which of us it is to be, and where within these twelve months the blow
+is to fall, are mercifully hidden. The only thing that we certainly know
+is that these arrows will fly. The thing we do not know is whose heart
+they will pierce. This makes the gaze into the darkness grave and
+solemn. There is ever something of dread in Hope's blue eyes.
+
+True, the ministry of change is blessed and helpful; true, the darkness
+which hides the future is merciful and needful, if the present is not to
+be marred. But helpful and merciful as they are, they invest the unknown
+to-morrow with a solemn power which it is good, though sobering, for us
+to feel, and they silence on every lip but that of riot and foolhardy
+debauchery the presumptuous words, 'To-morrow shall be as this day, and
+much more abundant.'
+
+II. But yet there is a possibility of so using the words as to make them
+the utterance of a sober certainty which will not be put to shame.
+
+So long as our hope and anticipations creep along the low levels of
+earth, and are concerned with external and creatural good, their
+language can never rise beyond, 'To-morrow _may_ be as this day.'
+Oftenest they reach only to the height of the wistful wish, 'May it be
+as this day!' But there is no need for our being tortured with such
+slippery possibilities. We may send out our hope like Noah's dove, not
+to hover restlessly over a heaving ocean of change, but to light on
+firm, solid certainty, and fold its wearied wings there. Forecasting is
+ever close by foreboding. Hope is interwoven with fear, the golden
+threads of the weft crossing the dark ones of the warp, and the whole
+texture gleaming bright or glooming black according to the angle at
+which it is seen. So is it always until we turn our hope away from earth
+to God, and fill the future with the light of His presence and the
+certainty of His truth. Then the mists and doubts roll away; we get
+above the region of 'perhaps' into that of 'surely'; the future is as
+certain as the past, hope as assured of its facts as memory, prophecy as
+veracious as history.
+
+Looking forward, then, let us not occupy ourselves with visions which we
+know may or may not come true. Let us not feed ourselves with illusions
+which may make the reality, when it comes to shatter them, yet harder to
+bear. But let us make God in Christ our hope, and pass from
+peradventures to certitudes; from 'To-morrow may he as this day--would
+that it might,' to 'It shall be, it shall be, for God is my expectation
+and my hope.' We have an unchanging and an inexhaustible God, and He is
+the true guarantee of the future for us. The more we accustom ourselves
+to think of Him as shaping all that is contingent and changeful in the
+nearest and in the remotest to-morrow, and as being Himself the
+immutable portion of our souls, the calmer will be our outlook into the
+darkness, and the more bright will be the clear light of certainty which
+burns for us in it.
+
+To-day's wealth may be to-morrow's poverty, to-day's health to-morrow's
+sickness, to-day's happy companionship of love to-morrow's aching
+solitude of heart, but to-day's God will be to-morrow's God, to-day's
+Christ will be to-morrow's Christ. Other fountains may dry up in heat or
+freeze in winter, but this knows no change, 'in summer and winter it
+shall be.' Other fountains may sink low in their basins after much
+drawing, but this is ever full, and after a thousand generations have
+drawn from it, its stream is broad and deep as ever. Other springs may
+be left behind on the march, and the wells and palm-trees of each Elim
+on our road may be succeeded by a dry and thirsty land where no water
+is, but this spring follows us all through the wilderness, and makes
+music and spreads freshness ever by our path. We can forecast nothing
+beside; we can be sure of this, that God will be with us in all the days
+that lie before us. What may be round the next headland we know not; but
+this we know, that the same sunshine will make a broadening path across
+the waters right to where we rock on the unknown sea, and the same
+unmoving mighty star will burn for our guidance. So we may let the waves
+and currents roll as they list--or rather as He wills, and be little
+concerned about the incidents or the companions of our voyage, since He
+is with us. We can front the unknown to-morrow, even when we most keenly
+feel how solemn and sad are the things it may bring.
+
+ 'It can bring with it nothing
+ But He will bear us through.'
+
+If only our hearts be fixed on God and we are feeding our minds and
+wills on Him, His truth and His will, then we may be quite certain that,
+whatever goes, our truest riches will abide, and whoever leaves our
+little company of loved ones, our best Friend will not go away.
+Therefore, lifting our hopes beyond the low levels of earth, and making
+our anticipations of the future the reflection of the brightness of God
+thrown on that else blank curtain, we may turn into the worthy utterance
+of sober and saintly faith, the folly of the riotous sensualist when he
+said, 'To-morrow shall be as this day.'
+
+The past is the mirror of the future for the Christian; we look back on
+all the great deeds of old by which God has redeemed and helped souls
+that cried to Him, and we find in them the eternal laws of His working.
+They are all true for to-day as they were at first; they remain true
+forever. The whole history of the past belongs to us, and avails for our
+present and for our future. 'As we have heard, so have we seen in the
+city of our God.'
+
+To-day's experience runs on the same lines as the stories of the 'years
+of old,' which are 'the years of the right hand of the Most High.'
+Experience is ever the parent of hope, and the latter can only build
+with the bricks which the former gives. So the Christian has to lay hold
+on all that God's mercy has done in the ages that are gone by, and
+because He is a 'faithful Creator' to transmute history into prophecy,
+and triumph in that 'the God of Jacob is our refuge.'
+
+Nor only does the record of what He has been to others come in to bring
+material for our forecast of the future, but also the remembrance of
+what He has been to ourselves. Has He been with us in six troubles? We
+may be sure He will not abandon us at the seventh. He is not in the way
+of beginning to build and leaving His work unfinished. Remember what He
+has been to you, and rejoice that there has been one thing in your lives
+which, you may be sure, will always be there. Feed your certain hopes
+for to-morrow on thankful remembrances of many a yesterday. 'Forget not
+the works of God,' that you may 'set your hopes on God.' Let our
+anticipations base themselves on memory, and utter themselves in the
+prayer, 'Thou hast been my help; leave me not, neither forsake me, O God
+of my salvation.' Then the assurance that He whom we know to be good and
+wise and strong will shape the future, and Himself be the Future for us,
+will take all the fear out of that forward gaze, will condense our light
+and unsubstantial hopes into solid realities, and set before us an
+endless line of days, in each of which we may gain more of Him whose
+face has brightened the past and will brighten the future, till days
+shall end and time open into eternity.
+
+III. Looked at in another aspect, these words may be taken as the vow of
+a firm and lowly resolve.
+
+There is a future which we can but very slightly influence, and the less
+we look at that the better every way. But there is also a future which
+we can mould as we wish--the future of our own characters, the only
+future which is really ours at all--and the more clearly we set it
+before ourselves and make up our minds as to whither we wish it to be
+tending, the better. In that region, it is eminently true that 'to-
+morrow shall be as this day, and much more abundant.' The law of
+continuity shapes our moral and spiritual characters. What I am to-day,
+I shall increasingly be to-morrow. The awful power of habit solidifies
+actions into customs, and prolongs the reverberation of every note once
+sounded, along the vaulted roof of the chamber where we live. To-day is
+the child of yesterday and the parent of to-morrow.
+
+That solemn certainty of the continuance and increase of moral and
+spiritual characteristics works in both good and bad, but with a
+difference. To secure its full blessing in the gradual development of
+the germs of good, there must be constant effort and tenacious
+resolution. So many foes beset the springing of the good seed in our
+hearts--what with the flying flocks of light-winged fugitive thoughts
+ever ready to swoop down as soon as the sower's back is turned and
+snatch it away, what with the hardness of the rock which the roots soon
+encounter, what with the thick-sown and quick-springing thorns--that if
+we trust to the natural laws of growth and neglect careful husbandry, we
+may sow much but we shall gather little. But to inherit the full
+consequences of that same law working in the growth and development of
+the evil in us, nothing is needed but carelessness.
+
+Leave it alone for a year or two and the 'fruitful field will be a
+forest,' a jungle of matted weeds, with a straggling blossom where
+cultivation had once been.
+
+But if humbly we resolve and earnestly toil, looking for His help, we
+may venture to hope that our characters will grow in goodness and in
+likeness to our dear Lord, that we shall not cast away our confidence
+nor make shipwreck of our faith, that each new day shall find in us a
+deeper love, a perfecter consecration, a more joyful service, and that
+so, in all the beauties of the Christian soul and in all the blessings
+of the Christian life, 'to-morrow shall be as this day, and much more
+abundant.' 'To him that hath shall be given.' 'The path of the just is
+as the shining light, that shineth more and more until the noontide of
+the day.'
+
+So we may look forward undismayed, and while we recognise the darkness
+that wraps to-morrow in regard to all mundane affairs, may feed our
+fortitude and fasten our confidence on the double certainties that we
+shall have God and more of God for our treasure, that we shall have
+likeness to Him and more of likeness in our characters. Fleeting moments
+may come and go. The uncertain days may exercise their various ministry
+of giving and taking away, but whether they plant or root up our earthly
+props, whether they build or destroy our earthly houses, they will
+increase our riches in the heavens, and give us fuller possession of
+deeper draughts from the inexhaustible fountain of living waters.
+
+How dreadfully that same law of the continuity and development of
+character works in some men there is no need now to dwell upon. By slow,
+imperceptible, certain degrees the evil gains upon them. Yesterday's sin
+smooths the path for to-day's. The temptation once yielded to gains
+power. The crack in the embankment which lets a drop or two ooze through
+is soon a great hole which lets in a flood. It is easier to find a man
+who has never done a wrong thing than to find a man who has done it only
+once. Peter denied his Lord thrice, and each time more easily than the
+previous time. So, before we know it, the thin gossamer threads of
+single actions are twisted into a rope of habit, and we are 'tied with
+the cords of our sins.' Let no man say, 'Just for once I may venture on
+evil; so far I will go and no farther.' Nay, 'to-morrow shall be as this
+day, and much more abundant.'
+
+How important, then, the smallest acts become when we think of them as
+thus influencing character! The microscopic creatures, thousands of
+which will go into a square inch, make the great white cliffs that
+beetle over the wildest sea and front the storm. So, permanent and solid
+character is built up out of trivial actions, and this is the solemn
+aspect of our passing days, that they are making _us_.
+
+We might well tremble before such a thought, which would be dreadful to
+the best of us, if it were not for pardoning mercy and renewing grace.
+The law of reaping what we have sown, or of continuing as we have begun,
+may be modified as far as our sins and failures are concerned. The
+entail may be cut off, and to-morrow need not inherit to-day's guilt,
+nor to-day's habits. The past may be all blotted out through the mercy
+of God in Christ. No debt need be carried forward to another page of the
+book of our lives, for Christ has given Himself for us, and He speaks to
+us all--'Thy sins be forgiven thee.' No evil habit need continue its
+dominion over us, nor are we obliged to carry on the bad tradition of
+wrongdoing into a future day, for Christ lives, and 'if any man be in
+Christ, he is a new creature; old things are passed away, all things are
+become new.'
+
+So then, brethren, let us humbly take the confidence which these words
+may be used to express, and as we stand on the threshold of a new year
+and wait for the curtain to be drawn, let us print deep on our hearts
+the uncertainty of our hold of all things here, nor seek to build nor
+anchor on these, but lift our thoughts to Him, who will bless the future
+as He has blessed the past, and will even enlarge the gifts of His love
+and the help of His right hand. Let us hope for ourselves not the
+continuance or increase of outward good, but the growth of our souls in
+all things lovely and of good report, the daily advance in the love and
+likeness of our Lord.
+
+So each day, each succeeding wave of the ocean of time shall cast up
+treasures for us as it breaks at our feet. As we grow in years, we shall
+grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ,
+until the day comes when we shall exchange earth for heaven. That will
+be the sublimest application of this text, when, dying, we can calmly be
+sure that though to-day be on this side and to-morrow on the other bank
+of the black river, there will be no break in the continuity, but only
+an infinite growth in our life, and heaven's to-morrow shall be as
+earth's to-day, and much more abundant.
+
+
+
+
+FLIMSY GARMENTS
+
+'Their webs shall not become garments.'--ISAIAH lix. 6.
+
+'I counsel thee to buy of me ... white raiment, that thou mayest be
+clothed, and that the shame of thy nakedness do not appear.'--REV. iii.
+18.
+
+
+The force of these words of the prophet is very obvious. He has been
+pouring out swift, indignant denunciation on the evil-doers in Israel;
+and, says he, 'they hatch cockatrice's eggs and spin spiders' webs,'
+pointing, as I suppose, to the patient perseverance, worthy of a better
+cause, which bad men will exercise in working out their plans. Then with
+a flash of bitter irony, led on by his imagination to say more than he
+had meant, he adds this scathing parenthesis, as if he said, 'Yes, they
+spin spiders' webs, elaborate toil and creeping contrivance, and what
+comes of it all! The flimsy foul thing is swept away by God's besom
+sooner or later. A web indeed! but they will never make a garment out of
+it. It looks like cloth, but it is useless.' That is the old lesson that
+all sin is profitless and comes to nothing.
+
+I venture to connect with that strongly figurative declaration of the
+essential futility of godless living, our second text, in which Jesus
+uses a similar figure to express one aspect of His gifts to the
+believing soul. He is ready to clothe it, so that 'being clothed, it
+will not be found naked.'
+
+I. Sin clothes no man even here.
+
+Notice in passing what a hint there is of the toil and trouble that men
+are so willing to take in a wrong course. Hatching and spinning both
+suggest protracted, sedulous labour. And then the issue of it all is--
+_nothing_.
+
+Take the plainest illustrations of this truth first--the breach of
+common laws of morality, the indulgence, for instance, in dissipation. A
+man gets a certain coarse delight out of it, but what does he get
+besides? A weakened body, a tyrannous craving, ruined prospects,
+oftenest poverty and shame, the loss of self-respect and love; of moral
+excellences, of tastes for what is better. He is not a beast, and he
+cannot live for pure animalism without injuring himself.
+
+Then take actual breaches of human laws. How seldom these 'pay,' even in
+the lowest sense. Thieves are always poor. The same experience of
+futility dogs all coarse and palpable breaches of morality. It is always
+true that 'He that breaketh a hedge, a serpent shall bite him.'
+
+The reasons are not far to seek. This is, on the whole, God's world, a
+world of retribution. Things are, on the whole, on the side of goodness.
+God is in the world, and that is an element not to be left out in the
+calculation. Society is on the side of goodness to a large extent. The
+constitution of a man's own soul, which God made, works in the same
+direction. Young men who are trembling on the verge of youthful
+yieldings to passion, are tempted to fancy that they can sow sin and not
+reap suffering or harm. Would that they settled it in their thoughts
+that he who fires a fuse must expect an explosion!
+
+But the same rule applies to every godless form of life. Take our
+Manchester temptation, money or success in business. Take ambition. Take
+culture, literary fame. Take love and friendship. What do they all come
+to, if godless? I do not point to the many failures, but suppose
+success: would that make you a happy man? If you won what you wanted,
+would it be enough? What 'garments' for your conscience, for your sense
+of sin, for your infinite longings would success in any godless course
+provide? You would have what you wanted, and what would it bring with
+it? Cares and troubles and swift satiety, and not seldom incapacity to
+enjoy what you had won with so much toil. If you gained the prize, you
+would find clinging to it something that you did not bargain for, and
+that took most of the dazzle away from it.
+
+II. The rags are all stripped off some day.
+
+Death is a becoming naked as to the body, and as to all the occupations
+that terminate with bodily life. It necessarily involves the loss of
+possessions, the cessation of activities, the stripping off of self-
+deceptions, and exposure to the gaze of the Judge, without defence. The
+godless soul will 'be found naked' and ashamed. All 'works of darkness,'
+laden with rich blossom or juicy fruit though they have seemed to be,
+will then be seen to be in tragic truth 'fruitless.' A life's spinning
+and weaving, and not a rag to cover the toiler after all! Is that
+'productive labour'?
+
+III. Christ will clothe you.
+
+'White raiment.' Pure character. Covering before the Judge. Festal robe
+of Victory.
+
+'Buy'--how? By giving up self.
+
+
+
+
+THE SUNLIT CHURCH
+
+'Arise, shine; for thy light is come, and the glory of the Lord is risen
+upon thee. 2. For, behold, the darkness shall cover the earth, and gross
+darkness the people; but the Lord shall arise upon thee, and His glory
+shall be seen upon thee. 3. And the Gentiles shall come to thy light,
+and kings to the brightness of thy rising.'--ISAIAH lx. 1-3.
+
+
+The personation of Israel as a woman runs through the whole of this
+second portion of Isaiah's prophecy. We see her thrown on the earth a
+mourning mother, a shackled captive. We hear her summoned once and again
+to awake, to arise, to shake herself from the dust, to loose the bands
+of her neck. These summonses are prophecies of the impending Messianic
+deliverance. The same circle of truths, in a somewhat different aspect,
+is presented in the verses before us. The prophet sees the earth wrapped
+in a funeral pall of darkness, and a beam of more than natural light
+falling on one prostrate form. The old story is repeated, Zion stands in
+the light, while Egypt cowers in gloom. The light which shines upon her
+is 'the Glory of the Lord,' the ancient brightness that dwelt between
+the cherubim within the veil in the secret place of the Most High, and
+is now come out into the open world to envelop the desolate captive.
+Thus touched by the light she becomes light, and in her turn is bidden
+to shine. There is a very remarkable correspondence reiterated in my
+text between the illuminating God and the illuminated Zion. The word for
+shine is connected with the word for light, and might fairly be rendered
+'lighten,' or 'be light.' Twice the phrase 'thy light' is employed; once
+to mean the light which is thine because it shines on thee; once to mean
+the light which is thine because it shines from thee. The other word,
+three times repeated, for _rising_, is the technical word which
+expresses the sunrise, and it is applied both to the flashing glory that
+falls upon Zion and to the light that gleams from her. Touched by the
+sun, she becomes a sun, and blazes in her heaven in a splendour that
+draws men's hearts. So, then, if that be the fair analysis of the words
+before us, they present to us some thoughts bearing on the Missionary
+work of the Church, and I gather them all up in three--the fact, the
+ringing summons, and the confident promise.
+
+I. Now, as to the fact.
+
+Beneath the poetry of my text there lie very definite conceptions of a
+very solemn and grave character, and these conceptions are the
+foundation of the ringing summons that follows, and which reposes upon a
+double basis--viz. '_for_ thy light is come,' and '_for_ darkness covers
+the earth.' There is a double element in the representation. We have a
+darkened earth, and a sunlit and a sunlike church; and unless we hold
+these two convictions--both of them-in firm grasp, and that not merely
+as convictions that influence our understanding, but as ever present
+forces acting on our emotions, our consciences, our wills, we shall not
+do the work which God has set us to do in the world. I need not dwell
+long on the former of these, or speak of that funeral pall that wraps
+the whole earth. Only remember that it is no darkness that came from His
+hand who forms the light and creates darkness, but is like the smoke
+that lies over our great cities--the work of many an earth-born fire,
+whose half-consumed foulness hides the sun from us. If we take the
+sulphureous and smoky pall that wraps the earth, and analyse its
+contents, they are these: the darkness of ignorance, the darkness of
+sorrow, the darkness of sin. Of ignorance; for throughout the wide
+regions that lie beneath that covering spread over all nations is there
+any certitude about God, about man, about morals, about
+responsibilities, about eternity? Peradventures, guesses, dreams,
+precious fragments of truth, twisted in with the worst of lies, noble
+aspirations side by side with bestial representations--these are the
+things on which our brethren repose, or try to repose. We do not forget
+that light which lighteneth every man that cometh into the world.
+
+We do not forget, of course, that everywhere there are feelings after
+Him, and everywhere there are gleams and glimpses of a vanishing light,
+else life were impossible; but oh, dear brethren, let us not forget
+either that the people sit in darkness of ignorance, which is the
+saddest darkness that can afflict men.
+
+And it is a darkness of sorrow, for all the ills that flesh is heir to
+press, unalleviated and unsustained by any known helper in the heavens,
+upon millions of our fellows. They stand, as the great German poet
+describes himself as standing, in one of the most pathetic of his
+lyrics, before the marble image of the fair goddess, who has pity on her
+face and beauty raying from her limbs, but she has no arms. So tears
+fall undried. The light-hearted savage is a fiction. What a heavy gloom
+lies upon his past and his present, which darkens into an impenetrable
+mist that wraps and hides the future!
+
+And the darkness is a darkness of sin as well as of sorrow and of
+ignorance. On that point I need not dwell. We all believe that all have
+'sinned and come short of the glory of God,' and we all believe that
+idolatry, as we see it, and as it is wrought out, is an ally of impurity
+and of sin. The process is this: men make gods in their own image, and
+the gods make devils of the men. 'They that make them are like unto
+them, so is every one that trusteth in them.' We need no other principle
+than that to account for the degradation of heathenism and for the
+obscenities and foul transgression within the very courts of the temple.
+
+Now, dear friends, that I may not dwell too long upon the A B C of our
+belief, let me urge you in one sentence to be on your guard against
+present-day tendencies which weaken the force of this solemn, tragical
+conviction as to the realities of heathendom. The new science of
+comparative religion has done much for us. I am not saying one word
+against this pursuit, or the conclusions which are drawn from it. But I
+pray you to remember that the underlying truths buried beneath the
+system that any men hold as their religion are one thing, and the
+practical working of that system, as we see it in daily life, is
+altogether another. The actual character of heathenism is not to be
+learned from the sacred books of all nations and the precious gleams of
+wisdom and feeling after the Divine which we recognise in man. As a
+simple matter of fact, all over the world the religion of heathen
+nations is a mass of obscenity, intertwined so closely with nobler
+thoughts that the two seem to be inseparable. Unalleviated sorrows,
+hideous foulnesses, a gross ignorance covering all the most important
+realities for men--these are the facts with which we have to grapple. Do
+not let us forget them.
+
+And on the other side, remember the contrasted picture here of the
+sunlit and sunny church. The incarnation of Jesus Christ is the
+fulfilment of my text. 'We behold His glory, the glory as of the only
+begotten of the Father, full of grace and truth.' If you and I are
+Christians, we are bound to believe in Him as the exclusive source of
+certainty. We hear from Him no peradventure, but His word is, 'Verily,
+verily, I say unto you,' and on that word we rest all our knowledge of
+God, of duty, of man, and of the future. Instead of fears, doubt,
+perhapses, we have a living Christ and His rock-word. And in Him is all
+joy, and in Him is the cleansing from all sin. And this threefold
+radiance, into which the one pure light may be analysed, falls upon us.
+It falls all over the world as well; but they into whose hearts it has
+come, they whose faces are turned to it, they receive it in a sense in
+which the unreceptive and unresponsive darkness of the world does not.
+The light shineth in the darkness, and the darkness will have none of
+it, and so it is darkness yet. The light shineth upon us, and if by His
+mercy we have opened our hearts to it, then, according to the profound
+teaching of this context, we are not only a sun-lighted but a sunlike
+Church, and to us the commandment comes, 'Arise, shine, for thy light is
+come,' and has turned thy poor darkness into a sun too.
+
+If we have the light we shall be light. That is but putting in a
+picturesque form the very central truth of Christianity. The last word
+of the gospel is transformation. We become like Him if we live near Him,
+and the end for which the Master became like unto us in His incarnation
+and passion was that we might become like to Him by the reception of His
+very own life unto our souls. Light makes many a surface on which it
+falls flash, but in the optics of earth it is the rays which are not
+absorbed that are reflected; but in this loftier region the illumination
+is not superficial but inward, and it is the light which is swallowed up
+within us that then comes forth from us. Christ will dwell in our
+hearts, and we shall be like some poor little diamond-shaped pane of
+glass in a cottage window which, when the sun smites it, is visible over
+miles of the plain. If that sun falls upon us, its image will be
+mirrored in our hearts and flashing in our lives. The clouds that lie
+over the sunset, though in themselves they be but poor, grey, and moist
+vapour, when smitten by its beneficent radiance, become not unworthy
+ministers and attendants upon its glory. So, my brethren, it may be with
+us, for Christ comes to be our light, Because He is in us and with us we
+are changed into His likeness, and the names that are most appropriate
+to Him He shares with us. Is He the 'Son'?--we are sons. Is He 'the
+Light of the world'? His own lips tell us, 'Ye are the light of the
+world.' Is He the Christ? The Psalm says: 'Touch not my Christs, and do
+My prophets no harm.' Critics have quarrelled over these last chapters
+of the Book of Isaiah, as to whom the servant of the Lord is; whether he
+is the personal or collective Israel, whether he is Christ or His
+Church. Let us take the lesson that He and we are so united that His
+office that made the union possible, wherein He was sacrificed on the
+Cross for us all--belongs by derivation to His servants, and that He,
+the Sun of Righteousness, moves in the heavens circled by many another
+sun.
+
+So, dear friends, these two convictions of these two facts, the dark
+earth, the sunlit, sunlike church, lie at the basis of all our
+missionary work. If once we begin to doubt about them, if once we begin
+to think that men have got a good deal of light already, and can do very
+well without much more, or if we at all are hesitant about our
+possession of the light, and the certitudes and the joys that are in it,
+then good-bye to our missionary zeal. We shall soon begin to ask the
+question, 'To what purpose is this waste?'--though the lips that first
+asked it, by the bye, did not much recommend it--and shall consider that
+money and resources and precious lives are too precious to be thrown
+away thus. But if we rightly appreciate the force of these twin
+principles, then we shall be ready to listen to the ringing summons.
+
+II. We have here, in the second place, based upon these two facts, the
+summons to the Church. 'Shine, for thy light is come.' If we _have_
+light, we _are_ light. If we are light, we shall shine; but the shining
+is not altogether spontaneous and effortless. Stars do not need to be
+bidden to shine nor candles either; but _we_ need the exhortation,
+because there are many things that dim the brilliance of our light and
+interfere with its streaming forth. True, the property of light is to
+shine, but we can rob the inward light of its beams. The silent witness
+of a Christian life transformed into the likeness of Jesus Christ is,
+perhaps, the best contribution that any of us can make to the spread of
+His kingdom. It is with us as it is with the great lights in the
+heavens. 'There is no speech nor language; their voice is not heart,'
+yet, 'their line has gone through all the earth, and their words to the
+end of the world.' So we may quietly ray out the light in us and witness
+the transforming power of our Master by the transparent purity of our
+lives. But the command suggests likewise effort, and that effort must be
+in the direction of the specific vocal proclamation of His name.
+
+I take both these methods of fulfilling the command into my view, in the
+further remarks that I make, and I put that which I have to say upon
+this into three sentences: if we are light, we shall be able to shine;
+if we are light, we are bound to shine; if we are light, we shall wish
+to shine. We shall be able to shine. And man can manifest what he is
+unless he is a coward. Any man can talk about the things that are
+interesting to him if only they are interesting to him. Any man that has
+Jesus Christ can say so; and perhaps the utterance of the simple
+personal conviction is the best method of proclaiming His name. All
+other things are surplusage. They are good when they come, they may be
+done without. Learning, eloquence, and the like of these, are the
+adornments of the lamp, but it does not matter whether the lamp be a
+gorgeous affair of gilt and crystal, or whether it be a poor piece of
+block tin; the main question is: are there wick and oil in it? The
+pitcher may be gold and silver, or costly china, or it may be a poor
+potsherd. Never mind. If there is water in it, it will be precious to a
+thirsty lip. And so, dear brethren, I press this upon you: every
+Christian man has the power, if he is a Christian, to proclaim his
+Master, and if he has the Light he will be able to show it. I pause for
+a moment to say that this suggests for us the condition of all faithful
+and effectual witness for Jesus Christ. Cultivate understanding and all
+other faculties as much as you like: but oh! you Christian ministers, as
+well as others in less official and public positions, remember this: the
+fitness to impart is to possess, and that being taken for granted, the
+main thing is secured. As long as the electric light is in contact with
+the battery, so long does it burn. Electricians have been trying during
+the past few years to make accumulators, things in which they can store
+the influence and put it away in a corner and use it so that the light
+need not be in connection with the battery; and they have not
+succeeded--at least it is only a very partial success. You and I cannot
+start accumulators. Let us remember that personal contact with Jesus is
+power, and only that personal contact is so. Arise, shine! but if thou
+hast gone out of the light, thou wilt shine no more.
+
+But again, if we are light we are bound to shine. That is an obvious
+principle. The capacity to shine is the obligation to shine, for we are
+all knit together by such mystical cords in this strange brotherhood of
+humanity that every one of us holds his possession as trust property for
+the use and behoof of others, and in the present case that which we have
+received, and the price at which we have received it, give an edge to
+the keenness of the obligation, and add a new grip to the stringency of
+the command. It is because Christ has given Himself thus to us that the
+possession of Him binds us to the imitation of His example, and the
+impartation of Him to all our brethren. The obligation lies at our
+doors, and cannot be delegated or devolved.
+
+If we have light, we shall wish to shine. What shall we say about the
+Christian people who never really had such a wish? God forbid that I
+should say they have no light; but this I will say, it burns very dimly.
+Dear brethren, there is no better test of the depth and the purity of
+our personal attachment to, and possession of, our Master than the
+impulse that will spring from them to communicate Him to others.
+'Necessity is laid upon me, yea, woe is me if I preach not.' That should
+be the word of every one of us, and it will be so in the measure in
+which we ourselves have thoroughly laid hold of Jesus Christ. 'This is a
+day of good tidings, and we cannot hold our peace,' said the handful of
+lepers in the camp. 'If we are silent some mischief will come to us.'
+'Thy word, when I shut it up in my bones and said, I will speak no more
+in Thy name, was like a fire, and was weary of forbearing and could not
+stay.' Brother, do you know anything of the divine necessity to share
+your blessing with the men around you? Did you ever feel what it was to
+carry a burden of the Lord that drove you to speech, and left you no
+rest until you had done what it impelled you to do? If not, I beseech
+you to ask yourselves whether you cannot get nearer to the sun than away
+out there on the very edge of its system, receiving so few of its beams,
+and these so impotent that they can scarcely do more than melt the
+surface of the thick-ribbed ice that warps your spirit. If we are light
+we shall be enabled, we shall be bound, we shall wish, to shine.
+Christian men and women, is this true of you?
+
+III. Lastly, notice here the confident promise.
+
+'The Gentiles shall come to thy light, and kings to the brightness of
+thy rising.' If we have the light we shall be light; if we are light we
+shall shine, and if we shine we shall attract. Certainly men and women
+with the light of Christ in them will draw others to them, just as many
+an eye that cannot look undazzled upon the sun can look upon it mirrored
+upon some polished surface. A painter will fling upon his canvas a scene
+that you and I, with our purblind eyes, have looked at hundreds of
+times, and seen no beauty; but when we gaze on the picture, then we know
+how fair it is. There is an attractive power in the light of Christ
+shining from the face of a man. Of course, we have to moderate our
+expectations. We have to remember that whilst it is true that some men
+will come to the light, it is also true that some men 'love the
+darkness, and will not come to the light because their deeds are evil';
+and we have to remember that we have no right to anticipate rapid
+results. 'An inheritance may be begotten hastily at the beginning, but
+the end thereof shall not be blessed,' said the wise man; and the
+history of the Christian Church in many of its missionary operations is
+a sad commentary upon the saying. We must remember that we cannot
+estimate how long the preparation for a change, which will be developed
+swiftly, may be. The sun on autumn mornings shines upon the fog; and the
+people below, because there is a fog, do not know that it is shining;
+but it is doing its work on the upper layer all the while, and at length
+eats its way through the fleecy obstruction, which then swiftly
+disappears. That must be a very, very long day of which the morning
+twilight has been nineteen hundred years. Therefore, although the vision
+tarries, we may fall back with unswerving confidence on these words of
+my text--'The Gentiles shall come to the brightness of thy rising.'
+
+But after all this has been said, are you satisfied with the rate of
+progress, are you satisfied with the swiftness of the fulfilment of such
+hopes? Whose fault is it that the rate of progress is what it is? Yours
+and mine and our predecessors'. There is such a thing as 'hasting the
+day of the Lord,' and there is such a thing as protracting the time of
+waiting. Dear brethren, the secret of our slow growth at home and abroad
+lies in my text. Fulfil the conditions and you will get the result; but
+if you are not shining by a light which is Christ's light, who promised
+that _it_ would have attraction or draw men to it? A great deal of the
+work of the Christian Church--but do not let us hide ourselves in the
+generality of that word--a great deal of _our_ work is artificial light,
+brewed out of retorts, and smelling sulphureous; and a great deal more
+of it is the phosphorescence that glimmers above decay. If the Christian
+Church has ceased in any measure, or in any of its members, to be able
+to attract by the exhibition of its light, let the Christian Church sit
+down and bethink itself of the sort of light it gives, and perhaps it
+will find a reason for its failure. It is Christ, the holy Christ, the
+loving Christ, the Christ in us making us wise and gentle, it is the
+Christ manifested by word and by work, who will draw the nations to Him.
+
+So, men and brethren, do you keep near your Master and live close by His
+side till you are drenched and saturated with His glory, and all your
+cold vapours turned into visible divinity and manifested Jesus. Keep
+near to Him. As long as a bit of scrap-iron touches a magnet, _it_ is a
+magnet: as soon as the contact is broken it ceases to attract. If you
+live in the full sunshine of Christ and have Him, not merely playing
+upon the surface of your mind, but sinking deep down into it and
+transforming your whole being, then some men will, as they look at you,
+be filled with strange longings, and will say: 'Come, let us walk in the
+light of the Lord.' So may you and I live, like the morning star, which,
+from its serene altitudes, touched into radiance by the sun unseen from
+the darkened plains, prophesies its rising to a sleeping world, and is
+content to be lost in the lustre of that unsetting Light!
+
+
+
+
+WALLS AND GATES
+
+'Thou shalt call thy walls Salvation, and thy gates Praise'--ISAIAH lx.
+18.
+
+
+The prophet reaches the height of eloquence in his magnificent picture
+of the restored Jerusalem, 'the city of the Lord, the Zion of the Holy
+One of Israel.' To him the city stands for the embodiment of the nation,
+and his vision of the future is moulded by his knowledge of the past.
+Israel and Jerusalem were to him the embodiments of the divine idea of
+God's dwelling with men, and of a society founded on the presence of God
+in its midst. We are not forcing meanings on his words which they will
+not bear, when we see in the society of men redeemed by Christ the
+perfect embodiment of his vision. Nor is the prophet of the New
+Testament doing so when he casts his vision of the future which is to
+follow Resurrection and Judgment into a like form, and shows us the new
+Jerusalem coming down out of heaven.
+
+The end of the world's history is to be, not a garden but a city, a
+visible community, bound together because God dwells in it, and yet not
+having lost the blessed characteristics of the Garden from which man set
+out on his long and devious march.
+
+The Christian form of the prophet's vision is the Christian Society, and
+in that society, each individual member possesses his own portion of the
+common blessings, so that the great words of this text have a personal
+as well as a general application. We shall best bring out their rich
+contents by simply taking them as they stand, and considering what is
+promised by the two eloquent metaphors, which liken salvation to the
+walls and praise to the gates of the City of God.
+
+I. Salvation is to be the city's wall.
+
+Another prophet foretold that the returning exiles would dwell in a
+Jerusalem that had no walls, 'for I, saith the Lord, will be unto her a
+wall of fire round about'; and Isaiah sang, 'We have a strong city;
+salvation will God appoint for walls and bulwarks.' There is no need for
+material defences for the community or the individual whom God defends.
+Would that the Church had lived up to the height of that great thought!
+Would that we each believed it true in regard to our own lives! There
+are three ways in which this promise may be viewed. We may think of
+'salvation' as meaning God's purpose to save. And then the comfort and
+sense of security will be derived from the thought that what He intends
+He performs, and that nothing can traverse that purpose except our own
+rebellions self-will. They whom God designs to keep are kept; they whom
+God wills to save are saved, unless they oppose His will, which
+opposition is in itself to be lost, and leads to ultimate and
+irreparable loss.
+
+We may think of salvation as an actually begun work. Then the comfort
+and sense of security will be derived from that great work by which
+salvation has begun to be ours. The work of Christ keeps us from all
+danger, and no foes can make a breach in that wall, nor reach those who
+stand safe behind its strong towers.
+
+We may think of salvation as a personal experience, and then the comfort
+and sense of security will be derived from that blessed consciousness of
+possessing in some measure at least the spirit, not of bondage, but of a
+son. The consciousness of having 'salvation' is our best defence against
+spiritual foes and our best shield against temporal calamities.
+
+It is good for us to live by faith, to be thrown back on our unseen
+protector, to feel with the psalmist, 'Thou, Lord, makest me to dwell in
+safety, though alone,' and to see the wall great and high that is drawn
+round our defenceless tent pitched on the sands of the flat desert.
+
+II. Praise is to be the city's gate.
+
+As to the Church, this prophecy anticipates the Apostle's teaching that
+the whole divine work of Redemption, from its fore-ordination before the
+foundation of the world, to its application to each sinful soul, is 'to
+the end that we should be unto the praise of His glory' or, as he
+elsewhere expands and enriches the expression, 'to the praise of the
+glory of His grace.'
+
+We are 'secretaries of His praise.' A gate is that by which the safe
+inhabitants go out into the region beyond, and the outgoings of the
+active life of every Christian should be such as to make manifest the
+blessings that he enjoys within the shelter of the city's walls. Only if
+our hidden life is blessed with a begun salvation will our outward life
+be vocal with the music of praise. The gate will be praise if, and only
+if, the wall is salvation.
+
+And praise is the gate by which we should go out into the world, even
+when the world into which we go is dark and the ways rough and hard. If
+we have the warm glow of a realised salvation in our hearts, sorrows
+that are but for a moment will not silence the voice of praise, though
+they may cast it into a minor key. The praise that rises from a sad
+heart is yet more melodious in God's ear than that which carols when all
+things go well. The bird that sings in a darkened cage makes music to
+its owner. 'Songs in the night' have a singular pathos and thrill the
+listeners. When we 'take the cup of salvation' and call on the name of
+the Lord, we shall offer to Him the sacrifices of thanksgiving, though
+He may recall some of the precious gifts that He gave. For He never
+takes away the wall of salvation which He has built around us, and as
+long as that wall stands, its gates will be praise. Submission,
+recognition of His will, and even 'silence because Thou didst it,' are
+praise to His ear.
+
+
+
+
+THE JOY-BRINGER
+
+'To appoint unto them that mourn in Zion, to give unto them beauty for
+ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of praise for the spirit
+of heaviness.'--ISAIAH lxi. 3.
+
+
+In the little synagogue of Nazareth Jesus began His ministry by laying
+His hand upon this great prophecy and saying, 'It is Mine! I have
+fulfilled it.' The prophet had been painting the ideal Messianic
+Deliverer, with special reference to the return from the Babylonian
+captivity. That was 'the liberty to the captives, and the opening of the
+prison to them that are bound,' and about which he was thinking. But no
+external deliverance of that sort could meet the needs, nor satisfy the
+aspirations, of a soul that knows itself and its circumstances. Isaiah,
+or the man who goes by his name, spoke greater things than he knew. I am
+not going to enter upon questions of interpretation; but I may say, that
+no conception of Jewish prophecy can hold its ground which is not framed
+in the light of that great saying in the synagogue of Nazareth. So,
+then, we have here the 'Man of Sorrows,' as this very prophet calls Him
+in another place, presenting Himself as the Transformer of sorrow and
+the Bringer of joy, in regard to infinitely deeper griefs than those
+which sprang in the heart of the nation because of the historical
+captivity.
+
+There is another beautiful thing in our text, which comes out more
+distinctly if we follow the Revised Version, and read 'to give unto them
+a _garland_ for ashes, the oil of joy for mourning, the garment of
+praise for the spirit of heaviness.' There we have two contrasted
+pictures suggested: one of a mourner with grey ashes strewed upon his
+dishevelled locks, and his spirit clothed in gloom like a black robe;
+and to him there comes One who, with gentle hand, smoothes the ashes out
+of his hair, trains a garland round his brow, anoints his head with oil,
+and, stripping off the trappings of woe, casts about him a bright robe
+fit for a guest at a festival. That is the miracle that Jesus Christ can
+do for every one, and is ready to do for us, if we will let Him. Let us
+look at this wonderful transformation, and at the way by which it is
+effected.
+
+The first point I would make is that--
+
+I. Jesus Christ is the Joy-bringer to men because He is the Redeemer of
+men.
+
+Remember that in the original application of my text to the deliverance
+from captivity, this gift of joy and change of sorrow into gladness was
+no independent and second bestowment, but was simply the issue of the
+one that preceded it, viz., the gift of liberty to the captives, and the
+opening of the prison to them that were bound. The gladness was a
+gladness that welled up in the heart of the captives set free, and
+coming out from the gloom of the Babylonian dungeon into the sunshine of
+God's favour, with their faces set towards Zion 'with songs and
+everlasting joy upon their heads.'
+
+Now you have only to keep firm hold of this connection between these two
+thoughts to come to the crown and centre-point of this great prophecy,
+as far as it applies to us, and that is that it is Christ as the
+Emancipator, Christ as the Deliverer, Christ as He who brings us out of
+the prison of bondage of the tyranny of sin, who is the great Joy-Giver.
+For there is no real, deep, fundamental and impregnable gladness
+possible to a man until his relations to God have been rectified, and
+until, with these rectified relations, with the consciousness of
+forgiveness and the divine love nestling warm at his heart, he has
+turned himself away from his dread and his sin, and has recognised in
+his Father God 'the gladness of his joy.'
+
+Of course, there are many of us who feel that life is sufficiently
+comfortable and moderately happy, or at least quite tolerable, without
+any kind of reference to God at all. And in this day of growing
+materialism, and growing consequent indifference to the deepest needs of
+the spirit and the claims of religion, more and more men are finding, or
+fancying that they find, that they can rub along somehow, and have a
+fair share of gladness and satisfaction, without any need for a
+redeeming gospel and a forgiving Christ. But about all that kind of
+surface-joy the old words are true, 'even in laughter the heart is
+sorrowful,' and hosts of us are satisfied with joys which Jesus has no
+part in bringing, simply because our truest self has never once
+awakened. When it does-and perhaps it will do so with some of you, like
+the sleeping giant that is fabled to lie beneath the volcano whose sunny
+slopes are smiling with flowers--then you will find out that no one can
+bring real joy who does not take away guilt and sin.
+
+Jesus Christ is the Joy-bringer, because Jesus Christ is the
+Emancipator. And true gladness is the gladness that springs from the
+conscious possession of liberty from the captivity which holds men
+slaves to evil and to their worst selves. Brethren, let us not fancy
+that these surface-joys are the joys adequate to a human spirit. They
+are ignoble, and they are infinitely foolish, because a touch of an
+awakened conscience, a stirring of one's deeper self, can scatter them
+all to pieces. So then, that is my first thought.
+
+Let us suggest a second, that--
+
+II. Jesus Christ transforms sorrow because He transforms the mourner.
+
+In my text, all that this Joy-bringer and Transmuter of grief into its
+opposite is represented as doing is on the man who feels the sorrow. And
+although, as I have said, the text, in its original position, is simply
+a deduction from the previous great prophecy which did point to a change
+of circumstances, and although Jesus does bring the 'joy of salvation'
+by a great change in a man's relations, yet in regard to the ordinary
+sorrows of life, He affects these not so much by an operation upon our
+circumstances as by an operation upon ourselves, and transforms sorrow
+and brings gladness, because He transforms the man who endures it. The
+landscape remains the same, the difference is in the colour of the glass
+through which we look at it. Instead of having it presented through some
+black and smoked medium, we see it through what the painter calls a
+'Claude Lorraine' glass, tinged golden, and which throws its own lovely
+light upon all that it shows us. It is possible--the eye that looks
+being purged and cleansed, so as to see more clearly-that the facts
+remaining identical, their whole aspect and bearing may be altered, and
+that which was felt, and rightly felt, to be painful and provocative of
+sadness and gloom, may change its character and beget a solemn joy. It
+would be but a small thing to transform the conditions; it is far better
+and higher to transform us. We all need, and some of us, I have no
+doubt, do especially need, to remember that the Lord who brings this
+sudden transformation for us, does so by His operation within us, and,
+therefore, to that operation we should willingly yield ourselves.
+
+How does He do this? One answer to that question is--by giving to the
+man with ashes on his head and gloom wrapped about his spirit, sources
+of joy, if he will use them, altogether independent of external
+circumstances.' Though the fig-tree shall not blossom, and there be no
+fruit in the vine ... yet will I rejoice in the Lord.' And every
+Christian man, especially when days are dark and clouds are gathering,
+has it open to him, and is bound to use the possibility, to turn away
+his mind from the external occasions of sadness, and fix it on the
+changeless reason for deep and unchanging joy--the sweet presence, the
+strong love, the sustaining hand, the infinite wisdom, of his Father
+God.
+
+Brethren, "the paradox of the Christian life" is, 'as sorrowful, yet
+always rejoicing.' Christ calls for no hypocritical insensibility to
+'the ills that flesh is heir to.' He has sanctioned by His example the
+tears that flow when death hurts loving hearts. He commanded the women
+of Jerusalem to 'weep for themselves and for their children.' He means
+that we should feel the full bitterness and pain of sorrows which will
+not be medicinal unless they are bitter, and will not be curative unless
+they cut deep. But He also means that whilst thus we suffer as men, in
+the depths of our own hearts we should, at the same time, be turning
+away from the sufferings and their cause, and fixing our hearts, quiet
+even then amidst the distractions, upon God Himself. Ah! it is hard to
+do, and because we do not do it, the promise that He will turn the
+sorrow into joy often seems to be a vain word for us.
+
+It is not ours to rejoice as the world does, nor is it ours to sorrow as
+those who have no hope, or as those who have no God with them. But the
+two opposite emotions may, to a large extent, be harmonised and co-
+existent in a Christian heart, and, since they can be, they should be.
+The Christian in sorrow should be as an island set in some stormy sea,
+with wild waves breaking against its black, rocky coast, and the wind
+howling around it, but in the centre of it there is a deep and shady
+dell 'that heareth not the loud winds when they call,' and where not a
+leaf is moved by the tempest. In a like depth of calm and central
+tranquillity it is possible for us to live, even while the storm hurtles
+its loudest on the outermost coasts of our being; 'as sorrowful, yet
+always rejoicing,' because the Joy-bringer has opened for us sources of
+gladness independent of externals.
+
+And then there is another way by which, for us, if we will use our
+privileges, the sorrows of life may be transmuted, because we,
+contemplating them, have come to a changed understanding of their
+meaning. That is, after all, the secret charm to be commended to us at
+all times, but to be commended to us most when our hearts are heavy and
+the days are dark around us. We shall never understand life if we class
+its diverse events simply under the two opposite categories of good--
+evil; prosperity--adversity; gains--losses; fulfilled expectations--
+disappointed hopes, Put them all together under one class--discipline
+and education; means for growth; means for Christlikeness. When we have
+found out, what it takes a long while for us to learn, that the lancet
+and the bandage are for the same purpose, and that opposite weathers
+conspire to the same end, that of the harvest, the sting is out of the
+sorrow, the poison is wiped off the arrow. We can have, if not a solemn
+joy, at least a patient acquiescence, in the diversities of operation,
+when we learn that the same hand is working in all for the same end, and
+that all that contributes to that end is good.
+
+Here we may suggest a third way by which a transformation wrought upon
+ourselves transforms the aspect of our sorrows, and that is, that
+possessing independent sources of joy, and having come to learn the
+educational aspect of all adversity, we hereby are brought by Jesus
+Christ Himself to the position of submission. And that is the most
+potent talisman to transform mourning into praise. An accepted grief is
+a conquered grief; a conquered grief will very soon be a comforted
+grief; and a comforted grief is a joy. By all these means Jesus Christ,
+here and now, is transmuting the lead and iron of our griefs into the
+gold of a not ignoble nor transient gladness.
+
+And may I say one last word? My text suggests not only these two points
+to which I have already referred--viz. that Jesus Christ is the Joy-
+bringer because He is the Emancipator, and that He transforms sorrow by
+transforming the mourner--but, lastly, that
+
+III. Jesus gives joy after sorrow.
+
+'Nevertheless, afterward' is a great word of glowing encouragement for
+all sad hearts. 'Fools and children,' says the old proverb, 'should not
+see half-done work '; at least, they should not judge it. When the
+ploughshare goes deep into the brown, frosty ground, the work is only
+begun. The earth may seem to be scarped and hurt, and, if one might say,
+to bleed, but in six months' time 'you scarce can see' the soil for
+waving corn. Yes; and sorrow, as some of us could witness, is the
+forecast of purest joy. I have no doubt that there are men and women
+here who could say, 'I never knew the power of God, and the blessedness
+of Christ as a Saviour, until I was in deep affliction, and when
+everything else went dark, then in His light I saw light.' Do not some
+of you know the experience? and might we not all know it? and why do we
+not know it?
+
+Jesus Christ, even here and now, gives these blessed results of our
+sorrows, if they are taken to the right place, and borne in right
+fashion. For it is they 'that mourn in Zion' that He thus blesses. There
+are some of us, I fear, whose only resource in trouble is to fling
+ourselves into some work, or some dissipation. There are people who try
+to work away their griefs, as well as people who try feverishly to drink
+them away. And there are some of us whose only resource for deliverance
+from our sorrows is that, after the wound has bled all it can, it stops
+bleeding, and the grief simply dies by lapse of time and for want of
+fuel. An affliction wasted is the worst of all waste. But if we carry
+our grief into the sanctuary, then, here and now, it will change its
+aspect and become a solemn joy.
+
+I say nothing about the ultimate result where every sorrow rightly borne
+shall be represented in the future life by some stage in grace or glory,
+where every tear shall be crystallised, if I might say so, into a
+flashing diamond, which flings off the reflection of the divine light,
+where 'there shall be no sorrow nor sighing, nor any more pain, for the
+former things are passed away.' When the lesson has been learned, God
+burns the rod.
+
+But, brethren, there is another sadder transformation. I have been
+speaking about the transformation of sorrow into joy. There is also the
+transformation of joy into sorrow. I spoke a little while ago about the
+'laughter' in which the heart is 'sorrowful,' and the writer from whom I
+quoted the words goes on to say, 'The end of that mirth is heaviness.'
+'Thereof cometh in the end despondency and madness.' I saw, on a
+hilltop, a black circle among the grass and heather. There had been a
+bonfire there on Coronation Night, and it had all died down, and that
+was the end--a hideous ring of scorched barrenness amidst the verdure.
+Take care that your gladnesses do not die down like that, but that they
+are pure, and being pure are undying. Union with Jesus Christ makes
+sorrow light, and secures that it shall merge at last into 'joy
+unspeakable and full of joy.' I believe that separation from Christ
+makes joy shallow, and makes it certain that at last, instead of a
+garland, shall be ashes on the head, and that, instead of a festal robe,
+the spirit shall be wrapped in a garment of heaviness.
+
+
+
+
+THE HEAVENLY WORKERS AND THE EARTHLY WATCHERS
+
+'For Zion's sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem's sake I
+will not rest ... I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, which
+shall never hold their peace day nor night: ye that make mention of the
+Lord, keep not silence, and give Him no rest'--ISAIAH lxii. 1, 6, 7.
+
+
+Two remarks of an expository nature will prepare the way for the
+consideration of these words. The first is that the speaker is the
+personal Messiah. The second half of Isaiah's prophecies forms one great
+whole, which might be called The Book of the Servant of the Lord. One
+majestic figure stands forth on its pages with ever-growing clearness of
+outline and form. The language in which He is described fluctuates at
+first between the collective Israel and the one Person who is to be all
+that the nation had failed to attain. But even near the beginning of the
+prophecy we read of 'My servant whom I uphold,' whose voice is to be low
+and soft, and whose meek persistence is not to fail till He have 'set
+judgment in the earth.' And as we advance the reference to the nation
+becomes less and less possible, and the recognition of the person more
+and more imperative. At first the music of the prophetic song seems to
+move uncertainly amid sweet sounds, from which the true theme by degrees
+emerges, and thenceforward recurs over and over again with deeper,
+louder harmonies clustering about it, till it swells into the grandeur
+of the choral close.
+
+In the chapter before our text we read, 'The Spirit of the Lord God is
+upon me, because the Lord hath anointed me to preach good tidings unto
+the meek.' Throughout the remainder of the prophecy, with the exception
+of one section which contains the prayer of the desolate Israel, this
+same person continues to speak; and who he is was taught in the
+synagogue of Nazareth. Whilst the preceding chapter, then, brings in
+Christ as proclaiming the great work of deliverance for which He is
+anointed of God, the following chapter presents Him as 'treading the
+wine-press alone,' which is a symbol of the future judgment by the
+glorified Saviour. Between these two prophecies of the earthly life and
+of the still future judicial energy, this chapter of our text lies,
+referring, as I take it, to the period between these two--that is, to
+all the ages of the Church's development on earth. For these Christ here
+promises His continual activity, and His continual bestowment of grace
+to His servants who watch the walls of His Jerusalem.
+
+The second point to be noticed is the remarkable parallelism in the
+expressions selected as the text: 'I will not hold _My_ peace'; the
+watchmen 'shall never hold _their peace_.' And His command to them is
+literally, 'Ye that remind Jehovah--no _rest_ (or silence) to you, and
+give not _rest_ to Him.'
+
+So we have here Christ, the Church, and God all represented as
+unceasingly occupied in the one great work of establishing 'Zion' as the
+centre of light, salvation, and righteousness for the whole world. The
+consideration of these three perpetual activities may open for us some
+great truths and stimulating lessons.
+
+I. First, then, The glorified Christ is constantly working for His
+Church.
+
+We are too apt to regard our Lord's real work as all lying in the past,
+and, from the very greatness of our estimate of what He has done, to
+forget the true importance of what He evermore does. 'Christ that died'
+is the central object of trust and contemplation for devout souls--and
+that often to the partial hiding of Christ that is 'risen again, who is
+even at the right hand of God, who also maketh intercession for us.' But
+Scripture sets forth the present glorious life of our ascended Lord
+under two contrasted and harmonious aspects--as being rest, and as being
+continuous activity in the midst of rest. He was 'received up into
+heaven, and sat on the right hand of God.' In that session on the throne
+manifold and mighty truths are expressed. It proclaims the full
+accomplishment of all the purposes of His earthly ministry; it
+emphasises the triumphant completion of His redeeming work by His death;
+it proclaims the majesty of His nature, which returns to the 'glory
+which He had with the Father before the world was'; it shows to the
+world, as on some coronation day, its King on His throne, girded with
+power and holding the far-reaching sceptre of the universe; it
+prophesies for men, in spite of all present sin and degradation, a share
+in the dominion which manhood has in Christ attained, for though we see
+not yet all things put under Him, we see Jesus crowned with glory and
+honour. It prophesies, too, His final victory over all that sets itself
+in unavailing antagonism to His love. It points us backward to an
+historical fact as the basis of all our hopes for ourselves and for our
+fellows, giving us the assurance that the world's deliverance will come
+from the slow operation of the forces already lodged in its history by
+Christ's finished work. It points us forwards to a future as the goal of
+all these hopes, giving us that confidence of victory which He has who,
+having kindled the fire on earth, henceforward sits at God's right hand,
+waiting in the calm and sublime patience of conscious omnipotence and
+clear foreknowledge 'until His enemies become His footstool.'
+
+But whilst on the one side Christ rests as from a perfected work which
+needs no addition nor repetition, on the other He 'rests not day nor
+night.' And this aspect of His present state is as distinctly set forth
+in Scripture as that is. Indeed the words already quoted as embodying
+the former phase contain the latter also. For is not 'the right hand of
+God' the operative energy of the divine nature? And is not 'sitting at
+the right hand of God' equivalent to possessing and wielding that
+unwearied, measureless power? Are there not blended together in this
+pregnant phrase the ideas of profoundest calm and of intensest action,
+that being expressed by the attitude, and this by the locality?
+Therefore does the evangelist who uses the expression expand it into
+words which wonderfully close his gospel, with the same representation
+of Christ's swift and constant activity as he had been all along
+pointing out as characterising His life on earth. 'They went forth,'
+says he, 'and preached everywhere'--so far the contrast between the Lord
+seated in the heavens and His wandering servants fighting on earth is
+sharp and almost harsh. But the next words tone it down, and weave the
+two apparently discordant halves of the picture into a whole: 'the Lord
+_working_ with them.' Yes! in all His rest He is full of work, in all
+their toils He shares, in all their journeys His presence goes beside
+them. Whatever they do is His deed, and the help that is done upon the
+earth He doeth it all Himself.
+
+Is not this blessed conviction of Christ's continuous operation in and
+for His Church that which underlies, as has often been pointed out, the
+language of the introduction to the Acts of the Apostles, where mention
+is made of the former treatise that told 'all which Jesus began both to
+do and teach'? The gospel records the beginning, the Book of the Acts
+the continuance; it is one biography in two volumes. Being yet present
+with them He spoke and acted. Being exalted He 'speaketh from heaven,'
+and from the throne carries on the endless series of His works of power
+and healing. The whole history is shaped by the same conviction.
+Everywhere 'the Lord' is the true actor, the source of all the life
+which is in the Church, the arranger of all the providences which affect
+its progress. The Lord adds to the Church daily. His name works
+miracles. To the Lord believers are added. His angel, His Spirit, bring
+messages to His servants. He appears to Paul, and speaks to Ananias. The
+Gentiles turn to the Lord because the hand of the Lord is with the
+preachers. The Lord calls Paul to carry the gospel to Macedonia. The
+Lord opens the heart of Lydia, and so throughout. Not 'the Acts of the
+Apostles,' but 'the Acts of the Lord in and by His servants,' is the
+accurate title of this book. The vision which flashed angel radiance on
+the face, and beamed with divine comfort into the heart, of Stephen, was
+a momentary revelation of an abiding reality, and completes the
+representation of the Saviour throned beside Almighty power. He beheld
+his Lord, not seated, as if careless or resting, while His servant's
+need was so sore, but as if risen with intent to help, and ready to
+defend--'_standing_ on the right hand of God.'
+
+And when once again the heavens opened to the rapt eyes of John in
+Patmos, the Lord whom he beheld was not only revealed as glorified in
+the lustre of the inaccessible light, but as actively sustaining and
+guiding the human reflectors of it. He 'holdeth the seven stars in His
+right hand,' and '_walketh_ in the midst of the seven golden
+candlesticks.'
+
+Not otherwise does my text represent the present relation of Christ to
+His Church. It speaks of a continuous forth-putting of power, which it
+is, perhaps, not over-fanciful to regard as dimly set forth here in a
+twofold form--namely, work and word. At all events, that division stands
+out clearly on the pages of the New Testament, which ever holds forth
+the double truth of our Lord's constant action on, in, through, and for
+His Zion, and of our High Priest's constant intercession.
+
+'I will not rest.' Through all the ages His power is in exercise. He
+inspires in good men all their wisdom, and every grace of life and
+character. He uses them as His weapons in the contest of His love with
+the world's hatred; but the hand that forged, and tempered, and
+sharpened the blade is that which smites with it; and the axe must not
+boast itself against him that heweth. He, the Lord of lords, orders
+providences, and shapes the course of the world for that Church which is
+His witness: 'Yea, He reproved kings for their sake, saying, Touch not
+Mine anointed, and do My prophets no harm.' The ancient legend which
+told how, on many a well-fought field, the ranks of Rome discerned
+through the battle-dust the gleaming weapons and white steeds of the
+Great Twin Brethren far in front of the solid legions, is true in
+loftier sense in our Holy War. We may still see the vision which the
+leader of Israel saw of old, the man with the drawn sword in his hand,
+and hear the majestic word, 'As Captain of the Lord's host am I now
+come.' The Word of God, with vesture dipped in blood, with eyes alit
+with His flaming love, with the many crowns of unlimited sovereignty
+upon His head, rides at the head of the armies of heaven; 'and in
+righteousness doth He judge and make war.' For the single soul
+struggling with daily tasks and petty cares, His help is near and real,
+as for the widest work of the collective whole. He sends none of us
+tasks in which He has no share. The word of this Master is never 'Go,'
+but 'Come.' He unites Himself with all our sorrows, with all our
+efforts. 'The Lord also working with them' is a description of all the
+labours of Christian men, be they great or small.
+
+Nor is this all. There still remains the wonderful truth of His
+continuous intercession for us. In its widest meaning that word
+expresses the whole of the manifold ways by which Christ undertakes and
+maintains our cause. But the narrower signification of prayer on our
+behalf is applicable, and is in Scripture applied, to our Lord. As on
+earth, the climax of all His intercourse with His disciples was that
+deep yet simple prayer which forms the Holy of Holies of John's Gospel,
+so in heaven His loftiest office for us is set forth under the figure of
+His intercession. Before the Throne stands the slain Lamb, and therefore
+do the elders in the outer circle bring acceptable praises. Within the
+veil stands the Priest, with the names of the tribes blazing on the
+breastplate and on the shoulders of His robes, near the seat of love,
+near the arm of power. And whatever difficulty may surround that idea of
+Christ's priestly intercession, this at all events is implied in it,
+that the mighty work which He accomplished on earth is ever present to
+the divine mind as the ground of our acceptance and the channel of our
+blessings; and this further, that the utterance of Christ's will is ever
+in harmony with the divine purpose. Therefore His prayer has in it a
+strange tone of majesty, and, if we may so say, of command, as of one
+who knows that He is ever heard: '_I will_ that they whom Thou hast
+given Me, be with Me where I am.'
+
+The instinct of the Church has, from of old, laid hold of an event in
+His earthly life to shadow forth this great truth, and has bid us see a
+pledge and a symbol of it in that scene on the Lake of Galilee: the
+disciples toiling in the sudden storm, the poor little barque tossing on
+the waters tinged by the wan moon, the spray dashing over the wearied
+rowers. They seem alone, but up yonder, in some hidden cleft of the
+hills, their Master looks down on all the weltering storm, and lifts His
+voice in prayer. Then when the need is sorest, and the hope least, He
+comes across the waves, making their surges His pavement, and using all
+opposition as the means of His approach, and His presence brings
+calmness, and immediately they are at the land.
+
+So we have not only to look back to the Cross, but up to the Throne.
+From the Cross we hear a voice, 'It is finished.' From the Throne a
+voice, 'For Zion's sake I will not hold My peace, and for Jerusalem's
+sake I will not rest.'
+
+II. Secondly, Christ's servants on earth derive from Him a like
+perpetual activity for the same object.
+
+The Lord, who in the former portion of these verses declares His own
+purpose of unwearied action for Zion, associates with Himself in the
+latter portion the watchmen, whom He appoints and endows for functions
+in some measure resembling His own, and exercised with constancy derived
+from Him. 'I have set watchmen upon thy walls, O Jerusalem, which shall
+never hold their peace day nor night.' On the promise follows, as ever,
+a command (for all divine gifts involve the responsibility of their use,
+and it is not His wont either to bestow without requiring, or to require
+before bestowing), 'Ye that remind Jehovah, keep not silence.'
+
+There is distinctly traceable before a reference to a two-fold form of
+occupation devolving on these Christ-sent servants. They are watchmen,
+and they are also God's remembrancers. In the one capacity as in the
+other, their voices are to be always heard. The former metaphor is
+common in the Old Testament, as a designation of the prophetic office,
+but, in the accordance with the genius of the New Testament, as
+expressed on Pentecost, when the Spirit was poured out on the lowly as
+well as on the high, on the young as on the old, and all prophesied, it
+may be fairly extended to designated not to some selected few, but the
+whole mass of Christian people. The watchman's office falls to be done
+by all who see the coming peril, and have a tongue to echo it forth. The
+remembrancer's priestly office belongs to every member of Christ's
+priestly kingdom, the lowest and least of whom has the privilege of
+unrestrained entry into God's presence-chamber, and the power of
+blessing the world by faithful prayer. What should we think of a citizen
+in a beleaguered city, who saw enemy mounting the very ramparts, and
+gave no alarm because that was the sentry's business? In such extremity
+every man is a soldier, and women and children can at least keep watch
+and raise shrill cries of warning. The gifts, then, here promised, and
+the duties that flow from them, are not the prerogatives or the tasks of
+any class or order, but the heritage and the burden of the Lord to every
+member of His Church.
+
+Our voices should ever be heard on earth. A solemn message is committed
+to us, by the very fact of our belief in Jesus Christ and His work. With
+that faith come responsibilities of which no Christian can denude
+himself. To warn the wicked man to turn from His wickedness; to blow the
+trumpet when we see the sword coming; to catch ever gleaming on the
+horizon, like the spears of an army through the dust of the march, the
+outriders and advance-guard of the coming of Him whose coming is life or
+death to all, and to lift up our voices with strength and say, 'Behold
+your God'; to peal into the ears of men, sunken in earthliness and
+dreaming of safety, the cry which may startle and save; to ring out in
+glad tones to all who wearily ask, 'Watchman, what of the night? will
+the night soon pass?' the answer which the slow dawning east has
+breathed into our else stony lips, 'The morning cometh'; to proclaim
+Christ, who came once to put away sin by the sacrifice of Himself, who
+comes ever, through the ages, to bless and uphold the righteousness
+which He loves and to destroy the iniquity which He hates, who will come
+at the last to judge the world--this is the never-ending task of the
+watchmen on the walls of Jerusalem. The New Testament calls it
+'preaching,' proclaiming as a herald does. And both metaphors carry one
+common lesson of the manner in which the work should be done. With clear
+loud voice, with earnestness and decision, with faithfulness and
+self-oblivion, forgetting himself in his message, must the herald sound
+out the will of his King, the largess of his Lord. And the watchman who
+stands on his watch-tower whole nights, and sees foemen creeping through
+the gloom, or fire bursting out among the straw-roofed cottages within
+the walls, shouts with all his might the short, sharp alarm, that wakes
+the sleepers to whom slumber were death. Let us ponder the pattern.
+
+Our voices should ever be heard in heaven. They who trust God remind Him
+of His promises by their very faith; it is a mute appeal to His faithful
+love, which He cannot but answer. And, beyond that, their prayers come
+up for a memorial before God, and have as real an effect in furthering
+Christ's kingdom on earth as is exercised by their entreaties and
+proclamations to men.
+
+How distinctly these words of our text define the region within which
+our prayers should ever move, and the limits which bound their efficacy!
+They _remind_ God. Then the truest prayer is that which bases itself on
+God's uttered will, and the desires which are born of our own fancies or
+heated enthusiasms have no power with Him. The prayer that prevails is a
+reflected promise. Our office in prayer is but to receive on our hearts
+the bright rays of His word, and to flash them back from the polished
+surface to the heaven from whence they came.
+
+These two forms of action ought to be inseparable. Each, if genuine,
+will drive us to the other, for who could fling himself into the
+watchman's work, with all its solemn consequences, knowing how weak his
+voice was, and how deaf the ears that should hear, unless he could bring
+God's might to his help? and who could honestly remind God of His
+promises and forget his own responsibilities? Prayerless work will soon
+slacken, and never bear fruit; idle prayer is worse than idle. You
+cannot part them if you would. How much of the busy occupation which is
+called 'Christian work' is detected to be spurious by this simple test!
+How much so-called prayer is reduced by it to mere noise, no better than
+the blaring trumpet or the hollow drum!
+
+The power for both is derived from Christ. He sets the watchmen; He
+commands the remembrancers. From Him flows the power, from His good
+Spirit comes the desire, to proclaim the message. That message is the
+story of His life and death. But for what He does and is we should have
+nothing to say; but for His gift we should have no power to say it; but
+for His influence we should have no will to say it. He commands and fits
+us to be intercessors, for His mighty work brings us near to God; He
+opens for us access with confidence to God. He inspires our prayers. He
+'hath made us priests to God.'
+
+And, as the Christian power of discharging these twofold duties is drawn
+from Christ, so our pattern is His manner of discharging them, and the
+condition of receiving the power is to abide in Him. He proposes Himself
+as our Example. He calls us to no labours which He has not Himself
+shared, nor to any earnestness or continuance in prayer which He has not
+Himself shown forth. This Master works in front of His men. The farmer
+that goes first among all the sowers, and heads the line of reapers in
+the yellowing harvest-field, may well have diligent servants. Our Master
+'went forth, weeping, bearing precious seed,' and has left it in our
+hands to sow in all furrows. Our Master is the Lord of the harvest, and
+has borne the heat of the day before His servants. Look at the amount of
+work, actual hard work, compressed into these three short years of His
+ministry. Take the records of the words He spake on that last day of His
+public teaching, and see what unwearied toil they represent. Ponder upon
+that life till you catch the spirit which breathed through it all, and,
+like Him, embrace gladly the welcome necessity of labour for God, under
+the sense of a vocation conferred upon you, and of the short space
+within which your service must be condensed. 'I must work the work of
+Him that sent me, while it is day: the night cometh, when no man can
+work.'
+
+Christ asks no romantic impossibilities from us, but He does ask a
+continuous, systematic discharge of the duties which depend on our
+relation to the world, and on our relation to Him. Let it be our life's
+work to show forth His praise; let the very atmosphere in which we move
+and have our being be prayer. Let two great currents set ever through
+our days, which two, like the great movements in the ocean of the air,
+are but the upper and under halves of the one movement--that beneath
+with constant energy of desire rushing in from the cold poles to be
+warmed and expanded at the tropics, where the all-moving sun pours his
+directest rays; that above charged with rich gifts from the Lord of
+light, glowing with heat drawn from Him, and made diffusive by His
+touch, spreading itself out beneficent and life-bringing into all colder
+lands, swathing the world in soft, warm folds, and turning the polar ice
+into sweet waters.
+
+In the tabernacle of Israel stood two great emblems of the functions of
+God's people, which embodied these two sides of the Christian life. Day
+by day, there ascended from the altar of incense the sweet odour, which
+symbolised the fragrance of prayer as it wreathes itself upwards to the
+heavens. Night by night, as darkness fell on the desert and the camp,
+there shone through the gloom the hospitable light of the great golden
+candlestick with its seven lamps, whose steady rays outburned the stars
+that paled with the morning. Side by side they proclaimed to Israel its
+destiny to be the light of the world, to be a kingdom of priests.
+
+The offices and the honour have passed over to us, and we shall fall
+beneath our obligations unless we let our light shine constantly before
+men, and let our voice rise like a fountain night and day' before God--
+even as He did who, when every man went to his own house, went alone to
+the Mount of Olives, and in the morning, when every man returned to his
+daily task, went into the Temple and taught. By His example, by His
+gifts, by the motive of His love, our resting, working Lord says to each
+of us, 'Ye that remind God, keep not silence.' Let us answer, 'For
+Zion's sake will I not hold my peace, and for Jerusalem's sake I will
+not rest.'
+
+III. Finally, The constant activity of the servants of Christ will
+secure the constant operation of God's power.
+
+'_Give_ Him no rest': let there be no cessation to Him. These are bold
+words, which many people would not have been slow to rebuke if they had
+been anywhere else than in the Bible. Those who remind God are not to
+suffer Him to be still. The prophet believes that they can regulate the
+flow of divine energy, can stir up the strength of the Lord.
+
+It is easy to puzzle ourselves with insoluble questions about the co-
+operation of God's power and man's; but practically, is it not true that
+God reaches His end, of the establishment of Zion, through the Church?
+He has not barely willed that the world should be saved, nor barely that
+it should be saved through Christ, nor barely that it should be saved
+through the knowledge of Christ; but His will is that the world shall be
+saved, by faith in the person and work of Christ, proclaimed as a gospel
+by men who believe it. And, as a matter of fact, is it not true that the
+energy with which God's power in the gospel manifests itself depends on
+the zeal and activity and prayerfulness of the Church? The great
+reservoir is always full--full to the brim; however much may be drawn
+from it, the water sinks not a hairsbreadth; but the bore of the pipe
+and the power of the pumping-engine determine the rate at which the
+stream flows from it. 'He could there do no mighty works because of
+their unbelief.' The obstruction of indifference dammed back the water
+of life. The city perishes for thirst if the long line of aqueduct that
+strides across the plain towards the home of the mountain torrents be
+ruinous, broken down, choked with rubbish.
+
+God is always the same--equally near, equally strong, equally gracious.
+But our possession of His grace, and the impartation of His grace
+through us to others, vary, because our faith, our earnestness, our
+desires, vary. True, these no doubt are also His gifts and His working,
+and nothing that we say now touches in the least on the great truth that
+God is the sole originator of all good in man; but while believing that,
+as no less sure in itself than blessed in its message of confidence and
+consolation to us, we also have to remember, 'If any man open the door,
+I will come in to him.' We may have as much of God as we want, as much
+as we can hold, far more than we deserve. And if ever the victorious
+power of His Church seems to be almost paling to defeat, and His
+servants to be working no deliverance upon the earth, the cause is not
+to be found in Him who is 'without variableness,' nor in His gifts,
+which are 'without repentance,' but solely in us, who let go our hold of
+the Eternal Might. No ebb withdraws the waters of that great ocean; and
+if sometimes there be sand and ooze where once the flashing flood
+brought life and motion, it is because careless warders have shut the
+sea-gates.
+
+An awful responsibility lies on us. We can resist and refuse, or we can
+open our hearts and draw into ourselves His strength. We can bring into
+operation those energies which act through faithful men faithfully
+proclaiming the faithful saying; or we can limit the Holy One of Israel.
+'Why could not we cast him out?' 'Because of your unbelief.'
+
+With what grand confidence, then, may the weakest of us go to his task.
+We have a right to feel that in all our labour God works with us; that,
+in all our words for Him, it is not we that speak, but the Spirit of our
+Father that speaks in us; that if humbly and prayerfully, with
+self-distrust and resolute effort to crucify our own intrusive
+individuality, we wait for Him to enshrine Himself within us, strength
+will come to us, drawn from the deep fountains of God, and we too shall
+be able to say, 'Not I, but the grace of God in me.'
+
+How this sublime confidence should tell on our characters, destroying
+all self-confidence, repressing all pride, calming all impatience,
+brightening all despondency, and ever stirring us anew to deeds worthy
+of the 'exceeding greatness of the power which worketh in us'--I can
+only suggest.
+
+On all sides motives for strenuous toil press in upon us--chiefly those
+great examples which we have now been contemplating. But, besides these,
+there are other forms of activity which may point the same lesson. Look
+at the energy _around_ us. We live in a busy time. Life goes swiftly in
+all regions. Men seem to be burning away faster than ever before, in an
+atmosphere of pure oxygen. Do we work as hard for God as the world does
+for itself? Look at the energy _beneath_ us: how evil in every form is
+active; how lies and half-truths propagate themselves quick as the
+blight on a rose-tree; how profligacy, and crime, and all the devil's
+angels are busy on his errands. If _we_ are sitting drowsy by our
+camp-fires, the enemy is on the alert. You can hear the tramp of their
+legions and the rumble of their artillery through the night as they
+march to their posts on the field. It is no time for God's sentinels to
+nod. If they sleep, the adversary does not, but glides in the congenial
+darkness, sowing his baleful tares. Do we work as hard for God as the
+emissaries of evil do for their master? Look at the energy _above_ us.
+On the throne of the universe is the immortal Power who slumbereth not
+nor sleepeth. Before the altar of the heavens is the Priest of the
+world, the Lord of His Church, 'who ever liveth to make intercession for
+us.' Round Him stand perfected spirits, the watchmen on the walls of the
+New Jerusalem, who 'rest not day and night, saying, Holy, Holy, Holy,
+Lord God Almighty.' From His presence come, filling the air with the
+rustle of their swift wings and the light of their flame-faces, the
+ministering spirits who evermore 'do His commandments, hearkening to the
+voice of His word.' And we, Christian brethren, where are we in all this
+magnificent concurrence of activity, for purposes which ought to be dear
+to our hearts as they are to the heart of God? Do we work for Him as He
+and all that are with Him do? Is His will done by us on earth, as it is
+heaven?
+
+Alas! alas! have we not all been like those three apostles whose eyes
+were heavy with sleep even while the Lord was wrestling with the tempter
+under the gnarled olives in the pale moonlight of Gethsemane? Let us
+arouse ourselves from our sloth. Let us lift up our cry to God: 'Awake,
+awake, put on strength, O arm of the Lord, as in the ancient days in the
+generations of old'; and the answer shall sound from the heavens to us
+as it did to the prophet, an echo of his prayer turned into a command,
+'Awake, awake, put on _thy_ strength, O Zion.'
+
+
+
+
+MIGHTY TO SAVE
+
+'Mighty to save.'--ISAIAH lxiii. 1.
+
+
+We have here a singularly vivid and dramatic prophecy, thrown into the
+form of a dialogue between the prophet and a stranger whom he sees from
+afar striding along from the mountains of Edom, with elastic step, and
+dyed garments. The prophet does not recognise him, and asks who he is.
+The Unknown answers, 'I that speak in righteousness, mighty to save.'
+Another question follows, seeking explanation of the splashed crimson
+garments of the stranger, and its answer tells of a tremendous act of
+retributive destruction which he has recently launched at the nations
+hostile to 'My redeemed.'
+
+Now we note that this prophecy follows, both in the order of the book
+and in the evolution of events, on those in chapter lxi., which referred
+to our Lord's work on earth, and in chapter lxii, which has for part of
+its theme His intercession in heaven. And we are entitled to take the
+view that the place as well as the substance of this prophecy referred
+to the solemn act of final Judgment in which the returning Lord will
+manifest Himself. Very significant is it that the prophet does not
+recognise in this Conqueror, with blood-bespattered robes, the meek
+sufferer of chapter liii., or Him who in chapter lxi. came to bind up
+the broken-hearted. And very instructive is it that the title in our
+text comes from the stranger's own lips, as relevant to the tremendous
+act of judgment from which He is seen returning. The title might seem
+rather to look back to the former manifestation of Him as bearing our
+griefs and carrying our sorrows. It does indeed, thank God, look back to
+that never-to-be-forgotten miracle of mercy and power, but it also
+brings within the sweep of His saving might the judgment still to come.
+
+I. The mighty Saviour as made known in the past and present.
+
+We think much of the meek and gentle side of Christ's character. Perhaps
+we do not think enough of the strength of it. We trace His great
+sacrifice to His love, and we can never sufficiently adore that
+incomparable manifestation of a love deeper than our plummets can
+fathom. But probably we do not sufficiently realise what gigantic
+strength went to the completion of that sacrifice. We know the solemn
+imagining of a great artist who has painted a colossal Death overbearing
+the weak resistance of a puny Love; but here love is the giant, and his
+sovereign command brings Death obedient to it, to do his work. Yes, that
+weak man hanging on the Cross is therein revealed as 'the power of God.'
+Strange clothing of weakness which yet cannot hide the mighty limbs that
+wear it!
+
+And if we think of our Lord's life we see the same combination of
+gentleness and power. His very name rings with memories of the captain
+whose one commanded duty was to 'be strong and of a good courage.'
+
+In Him was all strength of manhood--inflexible, iron will, unchanging
+purpose, strength from consecration, strength from righteousness. In Him
+was the heroism of prophets and martyrs in supreme degree.
+
+In Him was the strength of indwelling Divinity. He fought and conquered
+all man's enemies, routed sin, and triumphed over Death.
+
+In the Cross we see divine power in operation in its noblest form, in
+its intensest energy, in its widest sweep, in its most magnificent
+result. He is able to save, to save all, to save any.
+
+He is mighty to save, and is able to save unto the uttermost, because He
+lives for ever, and His power is eternal as Himself.
+
+II. The mighty Saviour as to be manifested in the future.
+
+Clearly the imagery of the context describes a tremendous act of
+judgment. And as clearly the Apocalyptic Seer understood this prophecy
+as not only pointing to Christ, but as to be fulfilled in the final act
+of judgment. He quotes its words when he paints his magnificent vision
+of the Conqueror riding forth on his white horse, with garments
+sprinkled with blood and treading the 'winepress of the fierceness and
+wrath of Almighty God.' And the vision is interpreted unmistakably when
+we read that, though this Conqueror had a name unknown to any but
+Himself, 'His name is called the Word of God.' So the unity of person in
+the Word made flesh who dwelt among us, full of grace and of this Mighty
+One girt for battle, is taught.
+
+Keeping fast hold of this clue, the contrast between the characteristics
+of the historical Jesus and of the rider on the white horse becomes
+solemn and full of warning. And the contrast between the errand of the
+historical Jesus and that of the Conqueror bids us ponder on the
+possibilities that may sleep in perfect love. We have to widen our
+conceptions, if we have thought of our Jesus only as love, and have
+thought of love as shallow, as most men do. We are sometimes told that
+these two pictures, that of the Christ of the Gospels and that of the
+Christ of the Apocalypse, are incapable of being fused together in one
+original. But they can be stereoscoped, if we may say so. And they must
+be, if we are ever to understand the greatness of His love or the
+terribleness of His judgments. 'The wrath of the Lamb' sounds an
+impossibility, but if we ponder it, we shall find depths of graciousness
+as well as of awe in it.
+
+Let us learn that the righteous Judge is logically and chronologically
+the completion of the picture of the merciful Saviour. In this age there
+is a tendency to treat sin with too much pity and too little
+condemnation. And there is not a sufficiently firm grasp of the truth
+that divine love must be in irreconcilable antagonism with human sin,
+and can do nothing but chastise and smite it.
+
+III. The saving purpose of even that destructive might.
+
+Through the whole Old Testament runs the longing that God would 'awake'
+to smite evil.
+
+The tragedy of the drowned hosts in the Red Sea, and Miriam and her
+maidens standing with their timbrels and shrill song of triumph on the
+bank, is a prophecy of what shall be. 'Ye shall have a song as in the
+night a holy feast is kept, and gladness of heart as when one goeth with
+a pipe to come unto the mountain of the Lord.' And at the thought of
+that solemn act of judgment they who love the Judge, and have long known
+Him, 'may lift up their heads' in the confidence that 'their redemption
+draweth nigh.' That is the last, and in some sense the mightiest,
+greatest act by which He shows Himself 'mighty to save His redeemed.'
+
+So we may, like the prophet, see that swift form striding nearer and
+nearer, but, unlike the prophet, we need not to ask, 'Who is this that
+cometh?' for we have known Him from of old, and we remember the voice
+that said, 'This same Jesus shall so come in like manner as ye have seen
+Him go into heaven.' 'Herein is our love made perfect, that we may have
+boldness before Him in the day of judgment.'
+
+
+
+
+THE WINEPRESS AND ITS TREADER
+
+'Wherefore art thou red in thine apparel, and thy garments like him that
+treadeth in the winefat? I have trodden the winepress alone.'--ISAIAH
+lxiii. 2, 3.
+
+
+The structure of these closing chapters is chronological, and this is
+the final scene. What follows is epilogue. The reference of this
+magnificent imagery to the sufferings of Jesus is a complete
+misapprehension. These sufferings were dealt with once for all in
+chapter liii., and it is Messiah triumphant who has filled the prophet's
+vision since then.
+
+I. The treading of the winepress.
+
+The nations are flung into the press, as ripe grapes. The picture is
+plainly a figure of some tremendous judgment in which the powers that
+oppose the majestic march of the triumphant Messiah will be crushed and
+trampled to ruin. They are trodden 'in Mine anger, and their life-blood
+is sprinkled on My garments.' It is He who crushes, not He who is
+crushed. The winepress which He treads is the 'winepress of the wrath of
+Almighty God,' and His treading of it is His executing of God's
+judgments on those whose antagonism to Him and to His 'redeemed' has
+brought them within their sweep. The prophetic imagination kindles and
+casts its thought into that terrible picture, which some fastidious
+people would think coarse, of a peasant standing up to his knees in a
+vat heaped with purple clusters, and fiercely trampling them down, while
+the red juice splashes upon his girt-up clothes.
+
+The prophet does not date his vision. It has been realised many a time,
+and will be many a time still. Wherever opposition to Christ and His
+kingdom has reached ripeness, wherever antagonistic tendencies have
+borne fruit which has matured, the winepress is set up and the treading
+begins. 'Wheresoever the carcass is, there will the eagles be gathered
+together.' 'Immediately he putteth in the sickle because the harvest is
+done.' The judgments tarry long, and Christ's servants, oppressed or
+hard pressed, get impatient, and cry 'How long, O Lord, dost Thou not
+judge? It is time for Thee to work.' But long patience precedes the
+divine awaking, for it is not God's way nor Christ's to cut down even a
+cumbering tree, until the possibility of its bearing fruit is plainly
+ended, and the last use that He makes of anything is to burn it. The
+repeated settings up of Christ's winepress have all been one in
+principle, and they all point onwards to a final one. There have been
+many 'days of the Lord,' and if men were wise and 'observed these
+things,'--which most of them are not,--they would see that these lesser
+'days' made a 'final great and terrible day of the Lord' supremely
+probable, and in perfect analogy with all that experience and history
+have testified as to the method of the divine government.
+
+Surely it is strange that the groundless expectation of the unbroken
+continuance of the present order should be so strong that many should
+utterly ignore the truth taught by such teachers as these, and
+reiterated by science, which declares that the physical universe had a
+beginning and will have an end, and confirmed by Jesus Himself. There
+will come a to-morrow when the sun will _not_ rise. There will come a
+to-morrow which will be '_the_ day of the Lord,' of which all these
+earlier and partial epochs of judgment were but precursors and prophets.
+
+II. The Treader of the Winepress.
+
+The context clearly shows that, in the prophet's view, the suffering
+Messiah in His exalted royalty is the agent of this, as of all divine
+acts. He is clothed with majesty, and it is 'in His hand,' or through
+His agency, that all 'the pleasure of the Lord' is brought to pass. The
+contrast with the figure in chap. liii. is ever to be kept in view. The
+lowliness, the weales and bruises, the form without comeliness are gone,
+and for these we see a conqueror, glorious in apparel and striding
+onwards in conscious strength.
+
+But the access of majesty does not imply the putting off of lowliness
+and meekness. There is much that is severe and terrible in the figure
+that rises here before the prophet's vision, but both aspects equally
+belong to the glorified Christ, and that duality in His character makes
+each element more impressive. His long-suffering mercy and more than
+human tenderness do not hamper His arm when it is bared to smite; His
+judicial severity does not dam up the flow of His mercy and tenderness.
+When He was on earth, He wept over Jerusalem, but His tears did not
+hinder His pronouncing woe on the city. His love leads Him to warn
+before He smites, but it does not contradict His threatenings, nor augur
+our impunity. Nay rather, love compels Him to smite. And, more terrible
+still, it is His very love that smites most severely hearts that have
+rejected it and learn their folly and sin too late.
+
+III. Why the winepress is trodden.
+
+The context tells us. The triumphant figure, seen by the prophet
+striding onwards from Edom, answers the question as to His identity
+with, 'I that speak in righteousness, mighty to save.' Then the treading
+of the winepress, from which He is represented as coming, is regarded as
+an exemplification of both these characteristics. It is a great act of
+righteousness. It is a great act of salvation. Similarly, He is
+represented as having been moved to that destructive judgment by the
+'vengeance' that burned in His heart, and by His seeing that there were
+none to help His 'redeemed.'
+
+So, then, the destructive act is a manifestation of Righteousness, which
+in such a connection means retributive justice. Awe-inspiring as it may
+be, the thunderstorm brings relief to a world sweltering in a stagnant
+atmosphere, and each blinding flash freshens the air. 'When the wicked
+perish, there is shouting.' The destruction of some hoary evil that has
+long afflicted humanity and blocked the progress of the kingdom which is
+'righteousness and peace and joy,' is a good. Christ's 'terrible things'
+are all 'in righteousness,' and meant to set Him forth as 'the
+confidence of all the ends of the earth.' To clear His character and
+government from all suspicion of moral indifference, to demonstrate by
+facts which the blindest can see, that it is not all the same to Him
+whether men are good or bad, to write in great letters which, like the
+capitals on a map, stretch across a whole land, 'The Judge of all the
+earth shall do right'--surely these are worthy ends to move even the
+loving Christ to tread the winepress.
+
+Further, His destructive judgments, however terrible, will always be
+accurately measured by righteousness. They are not outbursts of feeling;
+they are in exact correspondence with the evils that bring them down.
+The lava flows according to its own density and the lie of the land
+which it covers. These judgments are deformed by no undue severity; no
+base elements of temper, no errors as to the degree of criminality mar
+them. They are calm and absolutely accurate judgments of Him who is not
+only just but Justice.
+
+But the context further teaches us that the true point of view from
+which to regard Christ's treading of the winepress is to think of it as
+redemptive and contributory to the salvation of 'My redeemed.' Therefore
+there follows immediately on this picture of the conqueror treading the
+peoples in His fury and pouring their life-blood on the earth, the song
+of the delivered. Up through the troubled air, heavy with
+thunder-clouds, soars their praise, as a lark might rise and pour its
+strains above a volcano in eruption--'I will mention the loving kindness
+of the Lord, and the praises of the Lord, according to all that the Lord
+hath bestowed on us and the great goodness toward the house of Israel
+which He hath bestowed on them, according to His mercies, and according
+to the multitude of His loving kindnesses.' Pharaoh is drowned in the
+Red Sea; Miriam and her maidens on the bank clash their cymbals, and
+lift shrill voices in their triumphant hymn. Babylon sinks like a
+millstone in the great waters--'and I heard as it were a great voice of
+a great multitude in heaven saying, Hallelujah; salvation and glory and
+power belong to our God, for true and righteous are His judgments.' The
+innermost impulse of judgment is love.
+
+
+
+
+THE SYMPATHY OF GOD
+
+'In all their afflictions He was afflicted, and the angel of His
+presence saved them'--ISAIAH lxiii. 9.
+
+
+I. The wonderful glimpse opened here into the heart of God.
+
+It is not necessary to touch upon the difference between the text and
+margin of the Revised Version, or to enter on the reason for preferring
+the former. And what a deep and wonderful thought that is, of divine
+sympathy with human sorrow! We feel that this transcends the prevalent
+tone of the Old Testament. It is made the more striking by reason of the
+other sides of the divine nature which the Old Testament gives so
+strongly; as, for instance, the unapproachable elevation and absolute
+sovereignty of God, and the retributive righteousness of God.
+
+Affliction is His chastisement, and is ever righteously inflicted. But
+here is something more, tender and strange. Sympathy is a necessary part
+of love. There is no true affection which does not put itself in the
+place and share the sorrows of its objects. And His sympathy is none the
+less because He inflicts the sorrow. These afflictions wherein He too
+was afflicted, were sent by Him. Like an earthly father who suffers more
+than the child whom he chastises, the Heavenly Father feels the strokes
+that He inflicts.
+
+That sympathy is consistent with the blessedness of God. Even in the
+pain of our human sympathy there is a kind of joy, and we may be sure
+that in His nature there is nothing else.
+
+Contrast with other thoughts about God.
+
+The vague agnosticism of the present day, which knows only a dim
+Something of which we can predicate nothing.
+
+The God of the philosophers--whom we are bidden to think of as
+passionless and unemotional. No wave of feeling ever ripples that
+tideless sea. The attribute of infinitude or sovereign completeness is
+dwelt on with such emphasis as to obscure all the rest.
+
+The gods of men's own creation are careless in their happiness, and
+cruel in their vengeance. But here is a God for all the weary and the
+sorrowful. What a thought for us in our own burdened days!
+
+II. The mystery of the divine salvation.
+
+Of course the salvation here spoken of is the deliverance from Egyptian
+bondage. This is a summary of the Exodus. But we must mark well that
+significant expression, 'the angel of His face' or 'presence.' We can
+only attempt a partial and bald enumeration of some of the very
+remarkable references to that mysterious person, 'the angel of the Lord
+'or 'of the presence.' The dying Jacob ascribed his being 'redeemed from
+all evil' to 'the Angel,' and invoked his blessing on 'the lads.' '_The_
+angel of the Lord' appeared to Moses out of the midst of the burning
+bush. On Sinai, Jehovah promised to send an 'angel' in whom was His own
+name, before the people. The promise was renewed after Israel's sin and
+repentance, and was then given in the form, '_My_ presence shall go with
+thee.' Joshua saw a man with a drawn sword in his hand, who declared
+himself to be the Captain of the Lord's host. 'The angel of the Lord'
+appeared to Manoah and his wife, withheld his name from them because it
+was 'wonderful' or 'secret,' accepted their sacrifice, and went up to
+heaven in its flame. Wherefore Manoah said, 'We have seen God.' Long
+after these early visions, a psalmist knows himself safe because 'the
+angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear Him.' Hosea,
+looking back on the story of Jacob's wrestling at Peniel, says, first,
+that 'he had power with _God_, yea, he had power over the _angel_,' and
+then goes on to say that 'there He spake with us, even _Jehovah_.' And
+Malachi, on the last verge of Old Testament prophecy, goes furthest of
+all in seeming to run together the conceptions of Jehovah and the Angel
+of Jehovah, for he says, 'The Lord whom ye seek shall suddenly come to
+His temple; and the angel of the covenant ... behold, _he_ cometh.' From
+this imperfect _resume_, we see that there appears in the earliest as in
+the latest books of the Old Testament, a person distinguished from the
+hosts of angels, identified in a very remarkable manner with Jehovah, by
+alternation of names, in attributes and offices, and in receiving
+worship, and being the organ of His revelation. That special relation to
+the divine revelation is expressed by both the representation that
+'Jehovah's name is in him,' and by the designation in our text, 'the
+angel of His presence,' or literally, 'of His face.' For 'name' and
+'face' are in so far synonymous that they mean the side of the divine
+nature which is turned to the world.
+
+For the present I go no further than this. It is clear, then, that our
+text is at all events remarkable, in that it ascribes to this 'angel of
+His presence' the praise of Jehovah's saving work. The loving heart,
+afflicted in all their afflictions, sends forth the messenger of His
+face, and by Him is salvation wrought. The whole sum of the deliverance
+of Israel in the past is attributed to Him. Surely this must have been
+felt by a devout Jew to conceal some great mystery.
+
+III. The crowning revelation both of the heart of God and of His saving
+power.
+
+(a) Jesus Christ is the true 'angel of the face.'
+
+I do not need to enter on the question of whether in the Old Testament
+the angel of the Covenant was indeed a pre-manifestation of the eternal
+Son. I am disposed to answer it in the affirmative. But be that as it
+may, all that was spoken of the angel is true of Him. God's name is in
+Him, and that not in fragments or half-syllables but complete. The face
+of God looks lovingly on men in Him, so that Jesus could declare, 'He
+that hath seen Me hath seen the Father.' His presence brings God's
+presence, and He can venture to say, '_We_ will come and make our abode
+with Him.' He is the agent of the divine salvation.
+
+The identity and the difference are here in their highest form.
+
+(b) The mystery of God's sharing our sorrows is explained in Him.
+
+We may find a difficulty in the thought of a suffering and sympathising
+God. But if we believe that 'My name is in Him,' then the sympathy and
+gentleness of Jesus is the compassion of God. This is a true revelation.
+So tears at the grave sighs in healing, and all the sorrows which He
+bore are an unveiling of the heart of God.
+
+That sharing our sorrows is the very heart of His work. We might almost
+say that He became man in order to increase His power of sympathy, as a
+prince might temporarily become a pauper. But certainly He became man
+that He might bear our burdens. 'Himself took our infirmities.'
+'Forasmuch as the children are partakers of flesh and blood, He himself
+also likewise took part of the same.'
+
+The atoning death is the climax of Christ's being afflicted with our
+afflictions. His priestly sympathy flows out now and for ever to us all.
+
+So complete is His unity with God, that He works the salvation which is
+God's, and that God's name is in Him. So complete is His union with us,
+that our sorrows touch Him and His life becomes ours. 'Ye have done it
+unto Me.' 'Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?'
+
+For us in all our troubles there are no darker rooms than Christ has
+been in before us. We are like prisoners put in the same cell as some
+great martyr. He drank the cup, and we can put the rim to our lips at
+the place that His lips have touched. But not only may we have our
+sufferings lightened by the thought that He has borne the same, and that
+we know the 'fellowship of Christ's sufferings,' but we have the further
+alleviation of being sure that He makes our afflictions His by perfect
+sympathy, and, still more wonderful and blessed, that there is such
+unity of life and sensation between the Head and the members that our
+afflictions _are_ His, and are not merely made so.
+
+ 'Think not thou canst sigh a sigh,
+ And thy Saviour is not by;
+ Think not thou canst shed a tear
+ And thy Saviour is not near.'
+
+Do not front the world alone. _In_ all our afflictions He is with us;
+_out_ of them all He saves.
+
+
+
+
+HOW TO MEET GOD
+
+'Thou meetest him that rejoiceth and worketh righteousness, those that
+remember Thee in Thy ways.'--ISAIAH lxiv. 5.
+
+
+The prophet here shows us how there is a great staircase which we
+ourselves build, which leads straight from earth to heaven, and how we
+can secure that we shall meet with God and God with us. 'Isaiah' is
+often called the evangelical prophet. He is so, not only because of his
+predictions of the suffering Servant of Jehovah which are 'fulfilled' in
+Christ, but because his conceptions of the religious life tremble on the
+very verge of the full-orbed teaching of the New Testament. In these
+ancient words of my text, in very different phraseology indeed, we see a
+strikingly accurate and full anticipation of the very central teaching
+of Paul and his brother apostles, as to the way by which God and man
+come into union with one another. 'Thou meetest him that rejoiceth';
+that joy is to be manifested by 'working righteousness,' but the joy
+which is the parent of righteousness is the child of something
+else--'those that remember Thee in Thy ways.' If we ponder these words,
+and carefully mark their relation to each other, we may discern, as it
+were, a great staircase with three flights in it, and at the top God's
+face.
+
+We have to begin with the last clause of our text--'Thou meetest him ...
+that remembers Thee in Thy ways.'
+
+The first stage on the road which will bring any man into, and keep any
+man in, contact with God, and loving fellowship with Him, is the
+contemplation of His character as it is made known to us by His acts.
+God, like man, is known by His 'fruits.' You cannot get at a clear
+conception of God by speculation, or by thinking about Him or about what
+He is in Himself. Lay hold of the clue of His acts, and it leads you
+straight into His heart. But the act of acts, in which the whole Godhead
+concurs, in which all its depths and preciousness are concentrated, like
+wine in a golden cup, is the incarnation and life and death of Jesus
+Christ our Lord. There, and not in the thoughts of our own hearts nor
+the tremors of our own consciences, nor in the enigmatical witness of
+Providence--which is enigmatical until it is interpreted in the light of
+the Incarnation and the Crucifixion--there we see most clearly the
+'ways' of God, the beaten, trodden path by which He is wont to come
+forth out of the thick darkness into which no speculation can peer an
+inch, and walk amongst men. The cross of Christ, and, subordinately, His
+other dealings with us, as interpreted thereby, is the 'way of the
+Lord,' from everlasting to everlasting. And it is by a loving gaze upon
+that 'way' that we learn to know Him for what He is. It is there, and
+there only, that the thick darkness passes into glorious light. It is at
+that point alone that the closed circle of the Infinite nature of Deity
+opens so as that a man can press into the very centre of the glory, and
+feel himself at home in the blaze. It is 'those that remember Thee in
+Thy ways,' and especially in that way of righteousness and peace, the
+way of the cross--it is they who have built the first flight of the
+solemn staircase that leads up from the lownesses and darknesses of
+earth into the loftinesses and lights of heaven.
+
+But note that word 'Remember,' for it suggests the warning that such
+contemplation of the ways of the Lord will not be realised by us without
+effort. We shall forget, assuredly, unless we earnestly try to
+'remember.' There are so many things within us to draw us away, the
+duties, and the joys, and the sorrows of life so insist upon having a
+place in our hearts and thoughts, that assuredly, unless by resolute
+effort, frequently repeated, we clear a space in this crowded and
+chattering market-place, where we can stand and gaze on the white
+summits far beyond the bustling crowd, we shall never see them, though
+they are visible from every place. Unless you try to remember, you will
+certainly forget.
+
+Many voices preach to-day many duties for Christians. Let me plead for
+times of quiet, for times of 'doing' nothing, for fruitful times of
+growth, for times when we turn all the rout and rabble of earthly
+things, and even the solemn company of pressing duties, out of our
+hearts and thoughts, and shut up ourselves alone with God. Be sure you
+will never build even the first step of the staircase unless you know
+what it is to go into the secret place of the Most High, and, alone with
+God, to summon to 'the sessions of sweet, silent thought' His ways, and
+especially Him who is 'the Way,' both of God to us, and of us to God.
+
+Now, the second flight of this great staircase is pointed out in the
+first clause of my text: 'Thou meetest him that rejoiceth.'
+
+That meditative remembrance of the ways of God will be the parent of
+holy joy which will bring God near to our heart. Alas! it is too often
+the very opposite of true that men's joys are such as to bring God to
+them. The excitement, and often the impure elements, that mingle with
+what the world calls 'joy,' are such as to shut Him out from us. But
+there is a gladness which comes from the contemplation of Him as He is,
+and as He is known by His 'ways' to be, which brings us very near to
+God, and God very near to us. It is that joy which was spoken of in an
+earlier part of this context: 'I will greatly rejoice in the Lord, My
+soul shall be joyful in my God; for He hath clothed me with the garments
+of salvation.' Here, then, is the second stage--gladness, deep, pure,
+based upon the contemplation of God's character as manifested in His
+work. I do not think that the ordinary type of modern Christianity is
+half joyful enough. And I think that we have largely lost the very
+thought that gladness is a plain Christian _duty_, to be striven after
+in the appropriate manner which my text suggests, and certainly to be
+secured if we seek it in the right way. We all know how outward cares,
+and petty annoyances, and crushing sorrows, and daily anxieties, and the
+tear and wear of work, and our own restlessness and ungovernableness,
+and the faults that still haunt our lives, and sometimes make us feel as
+if our Christianity was all a sham--how all these things are at enmity
+with joy in God. But in face of them all, I would echo the old grand
+words of the epistle of gladness written by the apostle in prison, and
+within hail of his death: 'Rejoice in the Lord alway, and again I say
+rejoice.' Recognise it as your duty to be glad, and if it is hard to be
+so, ask yourselves whether you are doing what will make you so,
+remembering 'Thee in Thy ways.' That is the second flight of the
+staircase.
+
+The third stage is working righteousness because of such joy. 'Thou
+meetest him that rejoiceth, and '--because he does--'worketh
+righteousness.' Every master knows how much more work can be got out of
+a servant who works with a cheery heart than out of one that is driven
+reluctantly to his task. You remember our Lord's parable where He traces
+idleness to fear: 'I knew thee that thou wast an austere man, gathering
+where thou didst not strew, and I was afraid, and I went and hid thy
+talent.' No work was got out of that servant because there was no joy in
+him. The opposite state of mind--diligence in righteous work, inspired
+by gladness which in its turn is inspired by the remembrance of God's
+ways--is the mark of a true servant of God. The prophet's words have the
+germ of the full New Testament doctrine that the first step to all
+practical obedience and righteous living is the recognition of the great
+truth of Christ's death for us on the Cross; that the second step is the
+acceptance of that great work, and the gladness that comes from the
+assurance of forgiveness and acceptance with God, and that the issue of
+both these things, the preached gospel and the faith that grasps it and
+the love by which the faith is followed, is obedience, instinct with
+willingness and buoyant with joyfulness, and therefore tending to be
+perfect in degree and in kind. The work that is worth doing, the work
+which God regards as 'righteous,' comes, and comes only, from the
+motives of 'remembering Thee in Thy ways,' and rejoicing because we do
+remember.
+
+And the gladness which is wholesome and blessed, and is 'joy in the
+Lord,' will manifest itself by efflorescing into all holiness and all
+loftiness and largeness of obedience. You may try to frighten men into
+righteousness, you will never succeed. You may try to coerce their
+wills, and your strongest bands will be broken as the iron chains were
+by the demoniac. But put upon them the silken leash of love, and you may
+lead them where you will. You cannot grow grapes on an iceberg, and you
+cannot get works of righteousness out of a man that has a dread of God
+at the back of his heart, killing all its joy. But let the spring
+sunshine come, and then all the frost-bound earth opens and softens, and
+the tender green spikelets push themselves up through the brown soil,
+and in due time come 'the blade, and the ear, and the full corn in the
+ear.' Isaiah anticipated Paul when he said, 'Thou meetest him that
+rejoiceth and worketh righteousness.'
+
+Lastly, we have the landing-place to which the stair leads. God comes to
+such a man. He meets him indeed at all the stages, for there is a
+blessed communion with God, that springs immediately from remembering
+Him in His ways, and a still more blessed one that springs from
+rejoicing in His felt friendship and Fatherhood, and a yet more blessed
+one that comes from practical righteousness. For if there is anything
+that breaks our communion with God, it is that there linger in our lives
+evils which make it impossible for God and us to come close together.
+The thinnest film of a non-conductor will stop the flow of the strongest
+electric current, and an almost imperceptible film of self-will and
+evil, dropped between oneself and God, will make a barrier impermeable
+except by that divine Spirit who worketh upon a man's heart and who may
+thin away the film through his repentance, and then the Father and the
+prodigal embrace. 'Thou meetest him,' not only 'that worketh
+righteousness,' but that hates his sin.
+
+Only remember, if there is the practice of evil, there cannot be the
+sunshine of the Presence of God. But remember, too, that the commonest,
+homeliest, smallest, most secular tasks may become the very highest
+steps of the staircase that brings us into His Presence. If we go about
+our daily work, however wearisome and vulgar and commonplace it often
+seems to us, and make it a work of righteousness resting on the joy of
+salvation, and that reposing on the contemplation of God as He is
+revealed in Jesus Christ, our daily work may bring us as close to God as
+if we dwelt in the secret place of the Most High, and the market and the
+shop may be a temple where we meet with Him.
+
+Dear brethren, there are two kinds of meeting God: 'Thou meetest him
+that rejoiceth and worketh righteousness,' and that is blessed, as when
+Christ met the two disciples on the road to Emmaus. There is another
+kind of meeting with God. 'Who, making war, sitteth not down first, and
+consulteth whether he be able with ten thousand to meet him that cometh
+against him with twenty thousand?'
+
+
+
+
+'THE GOD OF THE AMEN'
+
+'He who blesseth himself in the earth shall bless himself in the God of
+truth; and he that sweareth in the earth shall swear by the God of
+truth.'--ISAIAH lxv. 16.
+
+
+The full beauty and significance of these remarkable words are only
+reached when we attend to the literal rendering of a part of them which
+is obscured in our version. As they stand in the original they have, in
+both cases, instead of the vague expression, 'The God of truth,' the
+singularly picturesque one, 'The God of the Amen.'
+
+I. Note the meaning of the name. Now, _Amen_ is an adjective, which
+means literally firm, true, reliable, or the like. And, as we know, its
+liturgical use is that, in the olden time, and to some extent in the
+present time, it was the habit of the listening people to utter it at
+the close of prayer or praise. But besides this use at the end of some
+one else's statement, which the sayer of the 'Amen' confirms by its
+utterance, we also find it used at the beginning of a statement, by the
+speaker, in order to confirm his own utterance by it.
+
+And these two uses of the expression reposing on its plain meaning, in
+the first instance signifying, 'I tell you that it is so'; and in the
+second instance signifying, 'So may it be!' or, 'So we believe it is,'
+underlie this grand title which God takes to Himself here, 'the God of
+the Amen,' both His Amen and ours. So that the thought opens up very
+beautifully and simply into these two, His truth and our faith.
+
+First, it emphasises the absolute truthfulness of every word that comes
+from His lips. There is implied in the title that He really _has_
+spoken, and declared to man something of His will, something of His
+nature, something of His purposes, something of our destiny. And now He
+puts, as it were, the broad seal upon the charter and says, 'Amen!
+Verily it is so, and My word of Revelation is no man's imagination, and
+My word of command is the absolute unveiling of human duty and human
+perfectness, and My word of promise is that upon which a man may rest
+all his weight and be safe for ever.' God's word is 'Amen!' man's word
+is 'perhaps.' For in regard to the foundation truths of man's belief and
+experience and need, no human tongue can venture to utter its own
+asseverations with nothing behind them but itself, and expect men to
+accept them; but that is exactly what God does, and alone has the right
+to do. His word absolutely, and through and through, in every fibre of
+it, is reliable and true.
+
+Now do not forget that there was one who came to us and said, 'Amen!
+Amen! I say unto you.' Jesus Christ, in all His deep and wonderful
+utterances, arrogated to Himself the right which God here declares to be
+exclusively His, and He said, 'I too have, and I too exercise, the right
+and the authority to lay My utterances down before you, and expect you
+to take them because of nothing else than because I say them.' God is
+the God of the Amen! The last book of Scripture, when it draws back the
+curtain from the mysteries of the glorified session of Jesus Christ at
+the right hand of God, makes Him say to us, 'These things saith the
+Amen!' And if you want to know what that means, its explanation follows
+in the next clause, 'the faithful and true witness.'
+
+But then, on the other hand, necessarily involved in this title, though
+capable of being separately considered, is not only the absolute
+truthfulness of the divine word, but also the thorough-going reliance,
+on our parts, which that word expects and demands. God's 'Amen,' and
+'Verily,' of confirmation, should ever cause the 'Amen' of acceptance
+and assent to leap from our lips. If He begins with that mighty word, so
+soon as the solemn voice has ceased its echo should rise from our
+hearts. The city that cares for the charter which its King has given it
+will prepare a fitting, golden receptacle in which to treasure it. And
+the men who believe that God in very deed has spoken laws that
+illuminate, and commandments that guide, and promises that calm and
+strengthen and fulfil themselves, will surely prepare in their hearts an
+appropriate receptacle for those precious and infallible words. God's
+truth has corresponding to it our trust. God's faithfulness demands, and
+is only adequately met by, our faith. If He gives us the sure foundation
+to build upon, it will be a shame for us to bring wood, hay, stubble,
+and build these upon the Rock of Ages. The building should correspond
+with its foundation, and the faith which grasps the sure word should
+have in it something of the unchangeableness and certainty and
+absoluteness of that word which it grasps. If His revelation of Himself
+is certain, you and I ought to be certain of His revelation of Himself.
+Our certitude should correspond to its certainty.
+
+Ah! my friend, what a miserable contrast there is between the firm,
+unshaken, solid security of the divine word upon which we say that we
+trust, and the poor, feeble, broken trust which we build upon it. 'Let
+not that man think that He shall receive anything of the Lord'; but let
+us expect, as well as 'ask, in faith, nothing wavering'; and let our
+'Amen!' ring out in answer to God's.
+
+The Apostle Paul has a striking echo of the words of my text in the
+second Epistle to the Corinthians: 'All the promises of God in Him are
+yea! and through Him also is the Amen!' The assent, full, swift, frank
+--the assent of the believing heart to the great word of God comes
+through the same channel, and reaches God by the same way, as God's word
+on which it builds comes to us. The 'God of the Amen,' in both senses of
+the word, is the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who is the
+seal as well as the substance of the divine promises, and whose voice in
+us is the answer to, and the grasp of, the promises of which He is the
+substance and soul.
+
+II. Now notice, next, how this God of the Amen is, by reason of that
+very characteristic, the source of all blessing.
+
+'He who blesseth himself in the earth shall bless himself in the God of
+Truth.' That phrase of _blessing oneself in_, which is a frequent Old
+Testament expression, is roughly equivalent to invoking, and therefore
+receiving, blessing from. You find it, for instance, in the
+seventy-second Psalm, in that grand burst which closes one of the books
+of the Psalter and hails the coming of the Messianic times, of which my
+text also is a prediction. 'Men shall be blessed in Him,' or rather,
+'shall bless themselves in Him,' which is a declaration, that all
+needful benediction shall come down upon humanity through the coming
+Messias, as well as that men shall recognise in that Messias the source
+of all their blessing and good. So the text declares that, in those days
+that are yet to come, the whole earth shall be filled with men whose
+eyes have been purged from ignorance and sin, and from the illusions of
+sense and the fascinations of folly, and who have learned that only in
+the God of the Amen is the blessing of their life to be found.
+
+Of course it is so. For only on Him can I lean all my weight and be sure
+that the stay will not give. All other bridges across the great abysses
+which we have to traverse or be lost in them, are like those
+snow-cornices upon some Alp, which may break when the climber is on the
+very middle of them, and let him down into blackness out of which he
+will never struggle. There is only one path clear across the deepest
+gulf, which we poor pilgrims can tread with absolute safety that it will
+never yield beneath our feet. My brother! there is one support that is
+safe, and one stay upon which a man can lean his whole weight and be
+sure that the staff will never either break or pierce his palm, and that
+is the faithful God, in whose realm are no disappointments, amongst
+whose trusters are no heart-broken and deceived men, but who gives
+bountifully, and over and above all that we are able to ask or think.
+They who have made experience, as we have all made experience, of the
+insufficiency of earthly utterances, of the doubtfulness of the clearest
+words of men, of the possible incapacity of the most loving, to be what
+they pledge themselves to be, and of the certainty that even if they are
+so for a while they cannot be so always--have surely learned one half,
+at least, of the lesson that life is meant to teach us; and it is our
+own fault if we have not bettered it with the better half, having
+uncoiled the tendrils of our hearts from the rotten props round which
+they have been too apt to twine themselves, and wreathed them about the
+pillars of the eternal throne, which can never shake nor fail. 'He that
+blesseth himself in the earth shall bless himself'--unless he is a
+fool--'in the God of the Amen!' and not in the _man_ of the
+'peradventure.'
+
+III. Lastly, note how the God of the Amen should be the pattern of His
+servants.
+
+'He that sweareth in the earth shall swear by the God of truth,' or, 'of
+the Amen.' The prophet deduces from the name the solemn thought that
+those who truly feel its significance will shape _their_ words
+accordingly, and act and speak so that they shall not fear to call His
+pure eyes to witness that there are neither, hypocrisy, nor insincerity,
+nor vacillation, nor the 'hidden things of dishonesty' nor any of the
+skulking meannesses of craft and self-seeking in them. 'I swear by the
+God of the Amen, and call Thy faithfulness to witness that I am trying
+to be like Thee,' that is what we ought to do if we call ourselves
+Christians. If we have any hold at all of Him, and of His love, and of
+the greatness and majesty of His faithfulness, we shall try to make our
+poor little lives, in such measure as the dewdrops may be like the sun,
+radiant like His, and of the same shape as His, for the dewdrop and the
+sun are both of them spheres. That is exactly what the apostle does, in
+that same chapter in 2 Cor., to which I already referred. He takes these
+very thoughts of my text, and in their double aspect too, and says,
+'Just because God is faithful, do you Corinthians think that, when I
+told you that I was coming to see you, I did not mean it?' He brings the
+greatest thought that He can find about God and God's truth, down to the
+settlement of this very little matter, the vindication of Himself from
+the charge, on the one hand, of facile and inconsiderate vacillation,
+and, on the other hand, of insincerity. So, we may say, the greatest
+thoughts should regulate the smallest acts. Though our maps be but a
+quarter of an inch to a hundred miles, let us see that they are drawn to
+scale. Let us see that He is our Pattern; and that the truthfulness, the
+simplicity, and faithfulness, which we rest upon as the very foundation
+of our intellectual as well as our moral and religious being, are, in
+our measure, copied in ourselves. 'As God is faithful,' said Paul, 'our
+word to you was not yea! and nay!' And they who are trusting to the God
+of the Amen! will live in all simplicity and godly sincerity; their yea
+will be yea, and their nay, nay.
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF JEREMIAH
+
+
+GOD'S LAWSUIT
+
+
+'Wherefore I will yet plead with you, saith the Lord, and with your
+children's children will I plead.'--JER. ii. 9.
+
+Point out that 'plead' is a forensic term. There is a great lawsuit in
+which God is plaintiff and men defendants. The word is frequent in
+Isaiah.
+
+I. The reason for God's pleading.
+
+The cause--'wherefore.' Our transgression does not make Him turn away
+from us. It does profoundly modify the whole relation between us. It
+does give an aspect of antagonism to His dealings.
+
+II. The manner.
+
+The whole history of the world and of each individual. All outward
+providences. All the voice of Conscience. Christ. Spirit, who convinces
+the world of Sin.
+
+III. The purpose.
+
+Wholly our being drawn from our evil. The purely reformatory character
+of all punishment here. The sole object to win us back to Himself. He
+conquers in this lawsuit when we come to love Him.
+
+IV. The patience.
+
+That merciful pleading--'I will _yet_'--runs on through all sin, and is
+only made more earnest by deepening hostility. After rejections still
+lingers. Extends over a thousand generations. Is exercised even where He
+foresees failure.
+
+
+
+
+STIFF-NECKED IDOLATERS AND PLIABLE CHRISTIANS
+
+'Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods? but My people
+have changed their glory for that which doth not profit.'--JER. ii. 11.
+
+
+The obstinacy of the adherents of idolatry is in striking contrast with
+Israel's continual tendency to forsake Jehovah. It reads a scarcely less
+forcible lesson to many nominal and even to some real Christians.
+
+I. That contrast carries with it a disclosure of the respective origins
+of the two kinds of Religion.
+
+The strangeness of the contrasted conduct is intensified when we take
+into account the tremendous contrast between the two Objects of worship.
+Israel's God was Israel's 'Glory'; the idol-worshipper bowed down before
+'that which doth not profit,' and yet no experience of God could bind
+His fickle worshippers to Him, and no experience of the impotence of the
+idol could shake its votaries' devotion. They cried and were not heard.
+They toiled and had no results. They broke their teeth on 'that which is
+not bread,' and filled their mouths with gritty ashes that mocked them
+with a semblance of nourishment and left them with empty stomachs and
+excoriated gums, yet by some strange hallucination they clung to
+'vanities,' while Israel was always hankering after opportunity to
+desert Jehovah. The stage of civilisation partly accounts for the
+strange fascination of idolatry over the Israelites. But the deeper
+solution lies in the fact that the one religion rises from the hearts of
+men, corresponds to their moral condition, and is largely moulded by
+their lower nature; while the other is from above, corresponds, indeed,
+with the best and deepest longings and needs of souls, but contravenes
+many of their most clamant wishes, and necessarily sets before them a
+standard high and difficult to reach. Men make their gods in their own
+image, and are conscious of no rebuke nor stimulus to loftier living
+when they gaze on them. The God of Revelation bids men remake themselves
+in His image, and that command requires endless effort. The average man
+has to put a strain on his intellect in order to rise to the
+apprehension of God, and a still more unwelcome strain on his moral
+nature to rise to the imitation of God. No wonder, then, if the dwellers
+on the low levels should cleave to them, and the pilgrims to the heights
+should often weary of their toil and be distressed with the difficulty
+of breathing the thin air up there, and should give up climbing and drop
+down to the flats once more.
+
+II. That contrast carries with it a rebuke.
+
+Many voices echo the prophet's contrast nowadays. Our travelling
+countrymen, especially those of them who have no great love for earnest
+religion, are in the habit of drawing disparaging contrasts between
+Buddhists, Brahmins, Mohammedans, any worshippers of other gods and
+Christians. One may not uncharitably suspect that a more earnest
+Christianity would not please these critics much better than does the
+tepid sort, and that the pictures they draw both of heathenism and of
+Christianity are coloured by their likes and dislikes. But it is well to
+learn from an enemy, and caricatures may often be useful in calling
+attention to features which would escape notice but for exaggeration. So
+we may profit by even the ill-natured and distorted likenesses of
+ourselves as contrasted with the adherents of other religions which so
+many 'liberal-minded' writers of travels delight to supply.
+
+Think, then, of the rebuke which the obstinate adherence of idolaters to
+their idols gives to the slack hold which so many professing Christians
+have on their religion.
+
+Think of the way in which these lower religions pervade the whole life
+of their worshippers, and of how partial is the sway over a little
+territory of life and conduct which Christianity has in many of its
+adherents. The absorption in worship shown by Mohammedans, who will
+spread their prayer carpets anywhere and perform their drill of prayers
+without embarrassment or distraction in the sight of a crowd, or the
+rapt 'devotion' of fakirs, are held up as a rebuke to us 'Christians'
+who are ashamed to be caught praying. One may observe, in mitigation,
+that the worship which is of the heart is naturally more sensitive to
+surrounding distractions than that which is a matter of posturing and
+repetition by rote. But there still remains substance enough in the
+contrast to point a sharp arrow of rebuke.
+
+And there is no denying that in these 'heathen' religions, religion is
+intertwined with every act of life in a fashion which may well put to
+shame many of us. Remember how Paul had to deal at length with the duty
+of the Corinthians in view of the way in which every meal was a
+sacrifice to some god, and how the same permeation of life with religion
+is found in all these 'false faiths.' The octopus has coiled its
+tentacles round the whole body of its victim. Bad and sad and mad as
+idolatry is, it reads a rebuke to many of us, who keep life and religion
+quite apart, and lock up our Christianity in our pews with our
+prayer-books and hymnaries.
+
+Think of the material sacrifices made by idolaters, in costly offerings,
+in painful self-tortures, and in many other ways, and the niggardliness
+and self-indulgence of so many so-called Christians.
+
+III. The contrast suggests the greatness of the power which can overcome
+even such obstinate adherence to idols.
+
+There is one, and only one, solvent for that rock-like obstinacy--the
+Gospel. The other religions have seldom attempted to encroach on each
+other's territory, and where they have, their instrument of conversion
+has generally been the sword. The Gospel has met and mastered them all.
+It, and it only, has had power to draw men to itself out of every faith.
+The ancient gods who bewitched Israel, the gods of Greece, the gods of
+our own ancestors, the gods of the islands of the South Seas, lie
+huddled together, in undistinguished heaps, like corpses on a
+battlefield, and the deities of India and the East are wounded and
+slowly bleeding out their lives. 'Bel boweth down, Nebo stoopeth, the
+idols are upon the beasts,' all packed up, as it were, and ready to be
+carried off.
+
+The rate of progress in dethroning them varies with the varying national
+conditions. It is easier to cut a tunnel through chalk than through
+quartz.
+
+IV. That contrast carries with it a call for Christian effort to spread
+the conquering Gospel.
+
+
+FOUNTAIN AND CISTERNS
+
+'They have forsaken Me, the fountain of living waters, and hewed them
+out cisterns, broken cisterns, that can hold no water'--JER. ii. 13.
+
+
+The proclivity of the Jews to idolatry is an outstanding fact all
+through their history. That persistent national tendency surely compels
+us to recognise a divine inspiration as the source of the prophetic
+teaching and of the lofty spiritual theology of the Old Testament, which
+were in sharpest unlikeness and opposition to the whole trend of the
+people's thoughts.
+
+It is this apostasy which is referred to here. The false gods made by
+men are the broken cisterns. But the text embodies a general truth.
+
+I. The irksomeness of a godless life.
+
+The contrast is between the springing fountain, there in the desert,
+with the lush green herbage round about, where a man has only to stoop
+and drink, and the painful hewing of cisterns.
+
+This emblem of the fountain beautifully suggests the great thought of
+God's own loving will as the self-originated impulse by which He pours
+out all good. Apart from all our efforts, the precious gift is provided
+for us. Our relation is only that of receivers.
+
+We have the contrast with this in the laborious toils to which they
+condemn themselves who seek for created sources of good. 'Hewn out
+cisterns'--think of a man who, with a fountain springing in his
+courtyard, should leave it and go to dig in the arid desert, or to hew
+the live rock in hopes to gain water. It was already springing and
+sparkling before him. The conduct of men, when they leave God and seek
+for other delights, is like digging a canal alongside a navigable river.
+They condemn themselves to a laborious and quite superfluous task. The
+true way to get is to take.
+
+Illustrations in religion. Think of the toil and pains spent in idolatry
+and in corrupt forms of Christianity.
+
+Illustrations in common life. Your toils--aye, and even your pleasures
+--how much of them is laboriously digging for the water which all the
+while is flowing at your side.
+
+II. The hopelessness of a godless life.
+
+The contrast further is between living waters and broken cisterns. God
+is the fountain of living waters; in other words, in fellowship with God
+there is full satisfaction for all the capacities and desires of the
+soul; heart--conscience--will--understanding--hope and fear.
+
+The contrast of the empty cisterns. What a deep thought that with all
+their work men only make 'cisterns,' _i.e._ they only provide
+circumstances which _could hold_ delights, but cannot secure that water
+should be in them! The men-made cisterns must be God-filled, if filled
+at all. The true joys from earthly things belong to him who has made God
+his portion.
+
+Further, they are 'broken cisterns,' and all have in them some flaw or
+crack out of which the water runs. That is a vivid metaphor for the
+fragmentary satisfaction which all earthly good gives, leaving a deep
+yearning unstilled. And it is temporary as well as partial. 'He that
+drinketh of this water shall thirst again'--nay, even as with those who
+indulge in intoxicating drinks, the appetite increases while the power
+of the draught to satisfy it diminishes. But the crack in the cistern
+points further to the uncertain tenure of all earthly goods and the
+certain leaving of them all.
+
+All godless life is a grand mistake.
+
+III. The crime of a godless life.
+
+It is right to seek for happiness. It is sin to go away from God. You
+are thereby not merely flinging away your chances, but are transgressing
+against your sacredest obligations. Our text is not only a remonstrance
+on the grounds of prudence, showing God-neglecting men that they are
+foolish, but it is an appeal to conscience, convincing them that they
+are sinful. God loves us and cares for us. We are bound to Him by ties
+which do not depend on our own volition. And so there is punishment for
+the sin, and the evils experienced in a godless life are penal as well
+as natural.
+
+We recall the New Testament modification of this metaphor, 'The water
+that I shall give him shall be _in_ him a fountain of water.' Arabs in
+desert round dried--up springs. Hagar. Shipwrecked sailors on a reef.
+Christ opens 'rivers in the wilderness and streams in the desert.'
+
+
+
+
+FORSAKING JEHOVAH
+
+'Know therefore, and see, that it is an evil thing and bitter, that thou
+hast forsaken the Lord thy God, and that My fear is not in thee, saith
+the Lord God of hosts.'--JER. ii. 19.
+
+
+Of course the original reference is to national apostasy, which was
+aggravated by the national covenant, and avenged by national disasters,
+which are interpreted and urged by the prophet as God's merciful
+pleading with men. But the text is true in reference to individuals.
+
+I. The universal indictment.
+
+This is not so much a charge of isolated overt acts, as of departure
+from God. That departure, itself a sin, is the fountain of all other
+sins. Every act which is morally wrong is religiously a departure from
+God; it could not be done, unless heart and will had moved away from
+their allegiance to Him. So the solemn mystery of right and wrong
+becomes yet more solemn, when our personal relation to the personal God
+is brought in.
+
+Then--consider what this forsaking is-at bottom aversion of will, or
+rather of the whole nature, from Him.
+
+How strange and awful is that power which a creature possesses of
+closing his heart against God, and setting up a quasi-independence!
+
+How universal it is-appeal to each man's own consciousness.
+
+II. The special aggravation.
+
+'_Thy God_ '---the original reference is to Israel, whom God had taken
+for His and to whom He had given Himself as theirs, by His choice from
+of old, by redemption from Egypt, by covenant, and by centuries of
+blessings. But the designation is true in regard to God and each of us.
+It points to the personal relation which we each sustain to Him, and so
+is a pathetic appeal to affection and gratitude.
+
+III. The bitter fruit.
+
+6 Evil' may express rather the moral character of forsaking God, while
+'bitter' expresses rather the consequences of it, which are sorrows.
+
+So the prophet appeals to experience. As the Psalmist confidently
+invites to 'taste and see that God is good,' so Jeremiah boldly bids the
+apostates know and see that departing is bitter.
+
+It is so, for it leaves the soul unsatisfied.
+
+It leads to remorse.
+
+It drags after it manifold bitter fruits. 'The wages of sin is death.'
+
+Sin without consequent sorrow is an impossibility if there is a God.
+
+IV. The loving appeal.
+
+The text is not denunciation, but tender, though indignant, pleading, in
+hope of winning back the wanderers. The prophet has just been pointing
+to the sorrowful results which necessarily follow on the nation's
+apostasy, and tells Israel that its own wickedness shall correct it, and
+then, in the text, he beseeches them not to be blind to the meaning of
+their miseries, but to let these teach them how sinful and how sorrowful
+their apostasy is. Men's sorrows are a mystery, but that sinners should
+not have sorrows were a sadder mystery still. And God pleads with us all
+not to lose the good of our experiences of the bitterness of sin by our
+levity or our blindness to their meaning. By His providences, by His
+Spirit working on us, by the plain teachings and loving pleadings of His
+word, He is ever striving to open our eyes that we may see Good and
+Evil, and recognise that all Good is bound up for us with cleaving to
+God, and all Evil with departing from Him. When we turn our backs on Him
+we are full front with the deformed figure of Evil; when we turn away
+from it, we are face to face with Him, and in Him, with all Good.
+
+
+
+
+A COLLOQUY BETWEEN A PENITENT AND GOD
+
+'A voice was heard upon the high places, weeping and supplications of
+the children of Israel: for they have perverted their way, and they have
+forgotten the Lord their God. Return, ye backsliding children, and I
+will heal your backslidings. Behold, we come unto Thee; for Thou art the
+Lord our God.'---JER. iii. 21, 22.
+
+
+We have here a brief dramatic dialogue. First is heard a voice from the
+bare heights, the sobs and cries of penitence, produced by the prophet's
+earnest remonstrance. The penitent soul is absorbed in the thought of
+its own evil. Its sin stands clear before it. Israel sees its sin in its
+two forms. 'They have perverted their way,' or have led a wrong outward
+life of action, and the reason is that 'they have forgotten God,' or
+have been guilty of inward alienation and departure from Him. Here is
+the consciousness of sin in its essential character, and that produces
+godly sorrow. The distinction between mere remorse and repentance is
+here already, in the 'weeping and supplication.'
+
+I. So we have here a consciousness of sin in its true nature, as
+embracing both deeds and heart, as originating in departure from God,
+and manifested in perverted conduct.
+
+Further, we have here sorrow. There may be consciousness of sin in its
+true nature without any sorrow of heart. It is fatal when a man looks
+upon his evil, gets a more or less clear sight of it, and is not sorry
+and penitent. It is conceivable that there should be perfect knowledge
+of sin and perfect insensibility in regard to it.
+
+A sinful man's true mood should be sorrow--not flinging the blame on
+others, or on fate, or circumstances; not regarding his sin as
+misfortune or as inevitable or as disease.
+
+Conscience is meant to produce that consciousness and that sorrow: but
+conscience may be dulled or silenced. It cannot be anyhow induced to
+call evil good, but it may be mistaken in what is evil. The gnomon is
+true, but a veil of cloud may be drawn over the sky.
+
+Further, we have here supplication. These two former may both be
+experienced, without this third. There may be consciousness of sin and
+sorrow which lead to no blessing. 'My bones waxed old through my
+roaring.' Sorrow after a godly sort may be hindered by false notions of
+God's great love, or by false notions of what a man ought to do when he
+finds he has gone wrong. It may be hindered by cleaving, subtle love of
+sin, or by self-trust. But where all these have been overcome there is
+true repentance.
+
+II. The loving divine answer.
+
+Another ear than the prophet's has heard the plaint from the bare
+heights. Many a frenzied shriek had gone up from these shrines of
+idolatrous worship, and as with Baal's prophets, it had brought no
+answer, nor had there been any that regarded. But this weeping reaches
+the ear that is never closed. Contrast with verse 23: 'Truly in vain is
+the help that is looked for from the hills, the shouting (of idol-
+worshippers) on the mountains.'
+
+The instantaneousness of God's answer is very beautiful. It is like the
+action of the father in the parable of the prodigal son, who saw his
+repentant boy afar off and ran and kissed him.
+
+There seems to be, in both the invitation to return and in the promise
+to hear the backslidings, a quotation from Hosea xiv. (1-4). We see here
+how God meets the penitent with a love that recognises all his sin and
+yet is love. It is not rebuke or reproach that lies in that designation,
+'backsliding children.' It is tenderest mercy that lets us see that He
+knows exactly what we are, and yet promises His love and forgiveness. He
+loves us sinners with a love that beckons us back to Himself, with a
+love that promises healing. The truth which should be taken into the
+mind and heart of the man conscious of sin is God's knowledge of it all
+already and yet His undiminished love, God's welcome of him back, God's
+ready pardon. All this is true for the world in Christ, and is true for
+every individual soul.
+
+The answer and the invitation here are immediate.
+
+There is often a long period of painful struggle. It looks as if the
+answer were not immediate. But that is because we do not listen to it.
+
+III. The happy response of the returning soul.
+
+That too is immediate. The soul believes God's promises. It recognises
+God's claim. It returns to Him. We are attracted by His grace. The
+sunflower turns to the sun. The penitent is not driven only, but drawn
+--God's own loving self-revelation in Christ is His true power. 'I, if I
+am lifted up, will draw all men unto Me.'
+
+The consciousness of sin remains and is even deepened (subsequent
+verses), and yet is different. A light of hope is in it. The very sense
+of sin brings us to Him, to hide our faces on His heart like a child in
+its mother's lap.
+
+This response of the soul may be instantaneous. If it is not immediate,
+it too probably will never be at all.
+
+
+
+
+A QUESTION FOR THE BEGINNING
+
+'What will ye do in the end?'--JER. v. 31.
+
+
+I find that I preached to the young from this text just thirty years
+since--nearly a generation ago. How few of my then congregation are here
+to-night! how changed they and I are! and how much nearer the close we
+have drifted! How many of the young men and women of that evening have
+gone to meet the end, and how many of them have wrecked their lives
+because they would not face and answer this question!
+
+Ah, dear young friends, if I could bring some of the living and some of
+the dead, and set them to witness here instead of me, they would burn in
+on you, as my poor words never can do, the insanity of living without a
+satisfactory and sufficient reply to the question of my text, 'What will
+ye do in the end?'
+
+In its original application these words referred to a condition of
+religious and moral corruption in which a whole nation was involved. The
+men that should have spoken for God were 'prophesying lies.' The priests
+connived at profitable falsehoods because by these their rule was
+confirmed. And the deluded populace, as is always the case, preferred
+smooth falsehoods to stern truths. So the prophet turns round
+indignantly, and asks what can be the end of such a welter and carnival
+of vice and immorality, and beseeches his contemporaries to mend their
+ways by bethinking themselves of what their course led to.
+
+But we may dismiss the immediate application of the words for the sake
+of looking at the general principle which underlies them. It is a very
+familiar and well-worn one. It is simply this, that a large part of the
+wise conduct of life depends on grave consideration of consequences. It
+is a sharp-pointed question, that pricks many a bubble, and brings much
+wisdom down into the category of folly. There would be less misery in
+the world, and fewer fair young lives cast away upon grim rocks, if the
+question of my text were oftener asked and answered.
+
+I. I note, first, that here is a question which every wise man will ask
+himself.
+
+I do not mean to say that the consideration of consequences is the
+highest guide, nor that it is always a sufficient one; nor that it is,
+by any means, in every case, an easily applied one. For we can all
+conceive of circumstances in which it is the plainest duty to take a
+certain course of action, knowing that, as far as this life is
+concerned, it will bring down disaster and ruin. Do right! and face
+_any_ results therefrom. He who is always forecasting possible issues
+has a very leaden rule of conduct, and will be so afraid of results that
+he will not dare to move; and his creeping prudence will often turn out
+to be the truest imprudence.
+
+But whilst all that is true, and many deductions must be made from the
+principle which I have laid down, that the consideration of
+circumstances is a good guide in life, yet there are regions in which
+the question comes home with direct and illuminating force. Let me just
+illustrate one or two of these.
+
+Take the lower application of the question to nearer ends in life. Now
+this awful life that we live is so strangely concatenated of causes and
+effects, and each little deed drags after it such a train of eternal and
+ever-widening consequences, that a man must be an idiot if he never
+looks an inch beyond his nose to see the bearing of his actions. I
+believe that, in the long-run, and in the general, condition is the
+result of character and of conduct; and that, whatsoever deductions may
+be necessary, yet, speaking generally, and for the most part, men are
+the architects of their own condition, and that they make the houses
+that they dwell in to fit the convolutions of the body that dwells
+within them. And, that being so, it being certain that 'whatsoever a man
+soweth, that shall he also reap,' and that no deed, be it ever so small,
+be it ever so evanescent, be it ever so entirely confined within our own
+inward nature, and never travelling out into visibility in what men call
+actions--that every one of such produces an eternal, though it may be an
+all but imperceptible effect, upon ourselves; oh, surely there can be
+nothing more ridiculous than that a man should refrain from forecasting
+the issue of his conduct, and saying to himself? 'What am I to do in the
+end?'
+
+If you would only do that in regard to hosts of things in your daily
+life you _could_ not be the men and women that you are. If the lazy
+student would only bring clearly before his mind the examination-room,
+and the unanswerable paper, and the bitter mortification when the
+pass-list comes out and his name is not there, he would not trifle and
+dawdle and seek all manner of diversions as he does, but he would bind
+himself to his desk and his task. If the young man who begins to tamper
+with purity, and in the midst of the temptations of a great city to
+gratify the lust of the eye and the lust of the flesh, because he is
+away from the shelter of his father's house, and the rebuke of his
+mother's purity, could see, as the older of us have seen, men with their
+bones full of the iniquity of their youth, or drifted away from the city
+to die, down in the country like a rat in a hole, do you think the
+temptations of the streets and low places of amusement would not be
+stripped of their fascination? If the man beginning to drink were to say
+to himself, 'What am I to do in the end?' when the craving becomes
+physical, and volition is suspended, and anything is sacrificed in order
+to still the domineering devil within, do you think he would begin? I do
+not believe that all sin comes from ignorance, but sure I am that if the
+sinful man saw what the end is he would, in nine cases out of ten, be
+held back. 'What will ye do in the end?' Use that question, dear
+friends, as the Ithuriel spear which will touch the squatting tempter at
+your ear, and there will start up, in its own shape, the fiend.
+
+But the main application that I would ask you to make of the words of my
+text is in reference to the final end, the passing from life. Death, the
+end, is likewise Death, the beginning. If it were an absolute end, as
+coarse infidelity pretends to believe it is, then, of course, such a
+question as my text would have no kind of relevance. 'What will ye do in
+the end?' 'Nothing! for I shall be nothing. I shall just go back to the
+nonentity that I was. I do not need to trouble myself.' Ah, but Janus
+has two faces, one turned to the present and one to the future. His
+temple has two gates, one which admits from this lower level, and one,
+at the back, which launches us out on to the higher level. The end is a
+beginning, and the beginning is retribution. The end of sowing is the
+beginning of harvest. The man finishes his work and commences to live on
+his wages. The brewing is over, and the drinking of the brewst
+commences.
+
+And so, brother, 'What will ye do in the end--which is not an end, but
+which is a beginning? 'Surely every wise man will take that question
+into consideration. Surely, if it be true that we all of us are silently
+drifting to that one little gateway through which we have to pass one by
+one, and then find ourselves in a region all full of consequences of the
+present, he has a good claim to be counted a prince of fools who 'jumps
+the life to come,' and, in all his calculations of consequences, which
+he applies wisely and prudently to the trifles of the present, forgets
+to ask himself, 'And, after all that is done, what shall I do then?' You
+remember the question in the old ballad:
+
+ "'What good came of it at last?' ...
+ 'Nay, that I cannot tell,' quoth he;
+ But 'twas a famous victory.'"
+
+Ay, but what came of it at the last? Oh brother, that one question,
+pushed to its issues, condemns the wisdom of this world as folly, and
+pulverises into nothingness millions of active lives and successful
+schemes. What then? What then? 'I have much goods laid up for many
+years.' Well and good, what then? 'I will say to my soul, Take thine
+ease, eat, drink, and be merry.' Yes, what then? 'This night thy soul
+shall be required of thee.' He never thought of that! And so his
+epitaph was 'Thou fool!'
+
+II. So, secondly, mark, here is a question which a great many of us
+never think about.
+
+I do not mean, now, so much in reference to the nearer ends compassed
+in this life, though even in regard to them it is only too true; I mean
+rather in regard to that great and solemn issue to which we are all
+tending. But in regard of both, it seems to me one of the strangest
+things in all the world that men should be content so commonly to be
+ignorant of what they perfectly well know, and never to give attention
+to that of which, should they bethink themselves, they are absolutely
+certain.
+
+'What will ye do in the end?' Why! half of us put away that question
+with the thought in our minds, if not expressed, at least most
+operative, 'There is not going to be any end; and it is always going to
+be just like what it is to-day.' Did you ever think that there is no
+good ground for being sure that the sun will rise to-morrow; that it
+rose for the first time once; that there will come a day when it will
+rise for the last time? The uniformity of Nature may be a postulate,
+but you cannot find any logical basis for it. Or, to come down from
+heights of that sort, have you ever laid to heart, brother, that the
+only unchangeable thing in this world is change, and the only thing
+certain, that there is no continuance of anything; and that, therefore,
+you and I are bound, if we are wise, to look that fact in the face, and
+not to allow ourselves to be befooled by the difficulty of imagining
+that things will ever be different from what they are? Oh! many of us--
+I was going to say most of men, I do not know that it would be an
+exaggeration--are like the careless inhabitants of some of those sunny,
+volcanic isles in the Eastern Ocean, where Nature is prodigally
+luxuriant and all things are fair, but every fifty years or so there
+comes a roar and the island shakes, and half of it, perhaps, is
+overwhelmed, and the lava flows down and destroys gleaming houses and
+smiling fields, and heaven is darkened with ashes, and then everything
+goes on as before, and people live as if it was never going to happen
+again, though every morning, when they go out, they see the cone
+towering above their houses, and the thin column of smoke, pale against
+the blue sky.
+
+It is not altogether sinful or bad that we should live, to some extent,
+under the illusion of a fixity and a perpetuity which has no real
+existence, for it helps to concentrate effort and to consolidate habit,
+and to make life possible. But for men to live, as so many of us do,
+never thinking of what is more certain than anything else about us,
+that we shall slide out of this world, and find ourselves in another,
+is surely not the part of wisdom.
+
+Another reason why so many of us shirk this question is the lamentable
+want of the habit of living by principle and reflection. Most men never
+see their life steadily, and see it whole. They live from hand to
+mouth, they are driven this way and that way; they adapt means to ends
+In regard to business or the like, but in the formation of their
+character, and in the moulding of their whole being, crowds of them
+live a purely mechanical, instinctive, unreflective life. There is
+nothing more deplorable than the small extent to which reflection and
+volition really shape the lives of the bulk of mankind. Most of us take
+our cue from our circumstances, letting them dominate us. They tell us
+that in Nature there is such a thing as protective mimicry, as it is
+called-animals having the power--some of them to a much larger extent
+than others--of changing their hues in order to match the gravel of the
+stream in which they swim or the leaves of the trees on which they
+feed. That is like what a great many of us do. Put us into a place
+where certain forms of frivolity or vice are common, and we go in for
+them. Take us away from these and we change our hue to something a
+little whiter. But all through we never know what it is to put forth a
+good solid force of resistance and to say, 'No! I will not!' or, what
+is sometimes quite as hard to say, 'Yes! though,' as Luther said in
+his strong way, 'there were as many devils in Worms as there are tiles
+on the housetops, I will!' If people would live more by reflection and
+by the power of a resisting will, this question of my text would come
+oftener to them.
+
+And there is another cause that I must touch on for one moment, why so
+many people neglect this question, and that is because they are
+uneasily conscious that they durst not face it. I know of no stranger
+power than that by which men can ignore unwelcome questions; and I know
+of nothing more tragical than the fact that they choose to exercise the
+power. What would you think of a man who never took stock because he
+knew that he was insolvent, and yet did not want to know it? And what
+do you think of yourselves if, knowing that the thought of passing into
+that solemn eternity is anything but a cheering one, and that you have
+to pass thither, you never turn your head to look at it? Ah, brother,
+if it be true that this question of my text is unpleasant to you to
+hear put, be sure that that is the strongest reason why you should put
+it.
+
+III. Thirdly, here is a question especially directed to you young folk.
+
+It is so because you are specially tempted to forget it. It may seem as
+if there were no people in the world that had less need to be appealed
+to, as I have been appealing to you, by motives drawn from the end of
+life, than you who are only standing at its beginning. But it is not
+so. An old rabbi was once asked by his pupil when he should fulfil a
+certain precept of the law, and the answer was, 'The day before you
+die.' 'But,' said the disciple, 'I may die to-morrow.' 'Then,' said the
+master, 'do it to-day.' And so I say to you, do not make sure that the
+beginning at which you stand is separated by a long tract of years from
+the end to which you go. It may be, but it may not be. I know that
+arguments pleading with men to be Christians, and drawn from the
+consideration of a future life, are not fashionable nowadays, but I am
+persuaded that that preaching of the Gospel is seriously defective, and
+will be lamentably ineffective, which ignores this altogether. And,
+therefore, dear friends, I say to you that, although in all human
+probability a stretch of years may lie between you and the end of life,
+the question of my text is one specially adapted to you.
+
+And it is so because, with your buoyancy, with your necessarily limited
+experience, with the small accumulation of results that you have
+already in your possession, and with the tendencies of your age to live
+rather by impulse than by reflection, you are specially tempted to
+forget the solemn significance of this interrogation. And it is a
+question especially for you, because you have special advantages in the
+matter of putting it. We older people are all fixed and fossils, as you
+are very fond of telling us. The iron has cooled and gone into rigid
+shapes with us. It is all fluent with you. You may become pretty nearly
+what you like. I do not mean in regard to circumstances: other
+considerations come in to determine these; but circumstances are
+second, character is first; and I do say, in regard to character, you
+young folk have all but infinite possibilities before you; and, I
+repeat, may become almost anything that you set yourselves to be. You
+have no long, weary trail of failures behind you, depressing and
+seeming to bring an entail of like failure with them for the future.
+You have not yet acquired habits--those awful things that may be our
+worst foes or our best friends--you have not yet acquired habits that
+almost smother the power of reform and change. You have, perhaps, years
+before you in which you may practise the lessons of wisdom and self-
+restraint which this question fairly fronted would bring. And so I lay
+it on your hearts, dear young friends. I have little hope of the old
+people. I do not despair of any, God forbid! but the fact remains that
+the most of the men who have done anything for God and the world worth
+doing have been under the influence of Christian principle in their
+early days. And from fifteen to one or two and twenty is the period in
+which you get the set which, in all likelihood, you will retain through
+eternity. So, 'What will ye do in the end?' Answer the question whilst
+yet it is possible to answer it, with a stretch of years before you in
+which you may work out the conclusions to which the answer brings.
+
+IV. And that leads me to say, last of all, and but a word, that here is
+a question which Jesus Christ alone enables a man to answer with calm
+confidence.
+
+As I have said, the end is a beginning; the passage from life is the
+entrance on a progressive and eternal state of retribution. And Jesus
+Christ tells us two other things. He tells us that that state has two
+parts; that in one there is union with Him, life, blessedness for ever;
+and that in the other there is darkness, separation from Him, death,
+and misery. These are the facts, as revealed by the incarnate Word of
+God, on which answers to this question must be shaped.
+
+'What will ye do in the end?' If I am trusting to Him; if I have
+brought my poor, weak nature and sinful soul to Him, and cast them upon
+His merciful sacrifice and mighty intercession and life-giving Spirit,
+then I can say: 'As for me, I shall behold Thy face in righteousness; I
+shall be satisfied when I awake with Thy likeness.' Ay, and what about
+those who do not take Him for their Prince and their Saviour? 'What
+will _ye_ do in the end?' When life's illusions are over, when
+all its bubbles are burst, when conscience awakes, and when you stand
+to give an account of yourself to God, 'What will ye do in the end'
+which is a beginning? 'Can thy heart endure and thy hand be strong in
+the day that I shall deal with thee?' Oh brother, do not turn away from
+that Christ who is the Alpha and the Omega, the beginning and the
+ending! If you will cleave to Him, then you may let the years and weeks
+slip away without regret; and whether the close be far off or near,
+death will be robbed of all its terrors, and the future so filled with
+blessedness, that of you the wise man's paradox will be true: 'Better
+is the end of a thing than the beginning, and the day of death than the
+day of birth.'
+
+
+
+
+POSSESSING AND POSSESSED
+
+'The portion of Jacob is not like them--for He is the former of all
+things: and Israel is the tribe of His inheritance. The Lord of Hosts
+is His name.'--JER. x. 16, R.V.
+
+
+Here we have set forth a reciprocal possession. We possess God, He
+possesses us. We are His inheritance, He is our portion. I am His; He
+is mine.
+
+This mutual ownership is the very living centre of all religion.
+Without it there is no relation of any depth between God and us. How
+much profounder such a conception is than the shallow notions about
+religion which so many men have! It is not a round of observance; not a
+painful effort at obedience, not a dim reverence for some vague
+supernatural, not a far-off bowing before Omnipotence, not the mere
+acceptance of a creed, but a life in which God and the soul blend in
+the intimacies of mutual possession.
+
+I. The mutual possession.
+
+God is our portion.
+
+That thought presupposes the possibility of our possessing God. It
+presupposes the fact that He has given Himself to us, and the answering
+fact that we have taken Him for ours.
+
+We are God's inheritance.
+
+We give ourselves to Him--we do so where we apprehend that He has given
+Himself to us; it is His giving love that moves men to yield themselves
+to God. He takes us for His. What a wonderful thought that He delights
+in possessing us! The all-sufficiency of our portion is guaranteed
+because He is 'the former of all things.' The safety of His inheritance
+is secured because 'the Lord of Hosts is His name.' And that name
+accentuates the wonder that He to whom all the ordered armies of the
+universe submit and belong should still take us for His inheritance.
+
+Mark the contrast of this true possession with the false and merely
+external possessions of the world. Those outward things which a man has
+stand in no real relation with him. They fade and fleet away, or have
+to be left, and, even while they last, are not his in any real sense.
+Only what has indissolubly entered into, and become one with, our very
+selves is truly ours.
+
+Our possession of God suggests a view of our blessedness and our
+obligation. It secures blessedness--for we have in Him an all-
+sufficient object and a treasure for all our nature. It imposes the
+obligation to let our whole nature feed upon, and be filled by, Him, to
+see that the temple where He dwells is clean, and not to fling away our
+treasure.
+
+His possession of us suggests a corresponding view of our blessedness
+and our obligation.
+
+We are His--as slaves are their owners' property. So we are bound to
+submission of will. To be owned by God is an honour. The slave's goods
+and chattels belong to the master.
+
+His possession of us binds us to consecrate ourselves, and so to
+glorify Him in 'body and spirit which are His.'
+
+It ensures our safety. How constantly this calming thought is dwelt on
+in Scripture--that they who belong to Him need fear nothing. 'Fear not,
+I have called thee by thy name, them art Mine.' God does not hold His
+possessions with so slack a grasp as to lose them or to suffer them to
+be wrenched away. A psalmist rose to the hope of immortality by
+meditating on what was involved in his being God's possession here and
+now. He was sure that even Death's bony fingers could not keep their
+hold on him, and so he sang, 'Thou wilt not suffer Thine Holy One to
+see corruption.' The seal on the foundation of God which guarantees its
+standing sure is, 'The Lord knoweth them that are His.' 'They shall be
+Mine in the day that I do make, even a peculiar treasure,' is His own
+assurance, on which resting, a trembling soul may 'have boldness in the
+day of judgment.'
+
+II. The human response by which God becomes ours and we His.
+
+That response is first the act of faith, which is an act of both reason
+and will, and then the act of love and self-surrender which follows
+faith, and then the continuous acts of communion and consecration.
+
+All must commence with recognition of His free gift of Himself to us in
+Christ. We come empty-handed. That gift recognised and accepted moves
+us to give ourselves to Him. When we give ourselves to Him we find that
+we possess Him.
+
+Further, there must be continuous communion. This mutual possession
+depends on our occupation of mind and heart with Him. We possess Him
+and are possessed by Him, when our wills are kept in harmony with, and
+submission to, Him, when our thoughts are occupied with Him and His
+truth, when our affections rest in Him, when our desires go out to Him,
+when our hopes are centred in Him, when our practical life is devoted
+to Him.
+
+III. The blessedness of this mutual possession.
+
+To possess God is to have an all-sufficient object for all our nature.
+He who has God for his very own has the fountain of life in himself,
+has the spring of living water, as it were, in his own courtyard, and
+needs not to go elsewhere to draw. He need fear no loss, for his wealth
+is so engrained in the very substance of his being that nothing can rob
+him of it but himself, and that whilst he lasts it will last with,
+because in, him.
+
+How marvellous that into the narrow room of one poor soul He should
+come whom the heaven of heavens cannot contain! Solomon said, 'How much
+less this house which I have built,'--well may we say the same of our
+little hearts. But He can compress Himself into that small compass and
+expand His abode by dwelling in it.
+
+Nor is the blessedness of being possessed by Him less than the
+blessedness of possessing Him. For so long as we own ourselves we are
+burdens to ourselves, and we only own ourselves truly when we give
+ourselves away utterly. Earthly love, with its blessed mysteries of
+mutual possession, teaches us that. But all its depth and joy are as
+nothing when set beside the liberty, the glad peace, the assured
+possession of our enriched selves, which are ours when we give
+ourselves wholly to God, and so for the first time are truly lords of
+ourselves, and find ourselves by losing ourselves in Him.
+
+Nor need we fear to say that God, too, delights in that mutual
+possession, for the very essence of love is the desire to impart
+itself, and He is love supreme and perfect. Therefore is He glad when
+we let Him give Himself to us, and moved by 'the mercies of God, yield
+ourselves to Him a sacrifice of a sweet smell, acceptable to God.'
+
+
+
+
+CALMS AND CRISES
+
+'If thou hast run with the footmen, and they have wearied thee, then
+how canst thou contend with horses? and though in a land of peace thou
+art secure, yet how wilt thou do in the pride of Jordan?'--JER. xii. 5,
+R.V.
+
+
+The prophet has been complaining of his persecutors. The divine answer
+is here, reproving his impatience, and giving him to understand that
+harder trials are in store for him.
+
+Both clauses mean substantially the same thing, and are of a parabolic
+nature. The one adduces the metaphor of a race: 'Footmen have beaten
+you, have they? Then how will you run with cavalry?' The other is more
+clear in the Revised Version rendering: 'Though in a land of peace you
+are secure, what will you do in Jordan when it swells?' The 'swelling
+of Jordan' is a figure for extreme danger.
+
+The questions may be taken as referring to our own lives. Note how the
+one refers more to strength for duties, the other to peace and safety
+in dangers. They both recognise that life has great alternations as to
+the magnitude of its tasks and trials, and they call on experience to
+answer the question whether we are ready for times of stress and peril.
+
+I. Think of what may come to us.
+
+We all have had the experience of how in our lives there are long
+stretches of uneventful days, and then, generally without warning, some
+crisis is sprung on us, which demands quite a different order of
+qualities to cope with it. Our typhoons generally come without any
+warning from a falling barometer.
+
+We may at any moment be confronted with some hard duty which will task
+our utmost energy.
+
+We may at any moment be plunged in some great calamity to which the
+quiet course of our lives for years will be as the still flow of the
+river between smiling lawns is to the dash and fierce currents of the
+rapids in a grim canyon.
+
+The tasks that may come on us and the tasks that must come, the dangers
+that may beset us and the dangers that must envelop us, the
+possibilities that lie hidden in the future, and the certainties that
+we know to be shrouded there, should surely sometimes occupy a wise
+man's thoughts. It is but living in a fool's paradise to soothe
+ourselves with the assurance which a moment's thought will shatter:
+'To-morrow shall be as this day.' We shall not always have the easy
+competition with footmen; there will some time come a call to strain
+our muscles to keep up with the gallop of cavalry. We shall have to
+struggle to keep our feet in the swelling of Jordan, and must not
+expect to have a continual leisurely life in 'a land of peace.'
+
+II. Think of what experience tells us as to our power to meet these
+crises.
+
+The footmen have wearied you. The small tasks have been more than your
+patience and strength could manage. No doubt great exigencies often
+call forth great powers that were dormant in the humdrum of ordinary
+life. But the man who knows himself best will be the most ready to
+shrink with distrust from the dread possibilities of duty.
+
+If we think of the 'footmen' with whom we have contended as
+representing the smaller faults that we have tried to overcome, does
+our success in conquering some small bad habit, some 'little sin,'
+encourage the hope that we could keep our footing when some great
+temptation of a lifetime came down on us with a rush like the charge of
+a battalion of horsemen? Or, if we cast our eyes forward to the
+calamities that lie still 'on the knees of the gods' for us, do we feel
+ready to meet the hours of desolating disaster, the 'hour of death and
+the day of judgment'? Even in a land of peace we have all had alarms,
+perturbations, and defeats enough, and our security has been at the
+mercy of marauders so often that if we are wise, and take due heed of
+what experience has to say to us of our reserve of force, we shall not
+be hopeful of keeping our footing in the whirling currents of a river
+in full flood.
+
+III. Think of the power that will fit us for all crises.
+
+With the power of Jesus in our spirits we shall never have to attempt a
+duty for which we are not strengthened, nor to front a danger from and
+in which He will not defend us. With His life in us we shall be ready
+for the long hours of uneventful, unexciting duties, and for the short
+spurts that make exacting calls on us. We 'shall run and not be weary;
+we shall walk and not faint.' If we live in Jesus we shall always be in
+'a land of peace,' and no 'plague shall come nigh our dwelling.' Even
+when the soles of our feet rest in the waters of Jordan, the waters of
+Jordan shall be cut off, and we shall pass over on dry ground into the
+land of peace, where they that would swallow us up shall be far away
+for ever.
+
+
+
+
+AN IMPOSSIBILITY MADE POSSIBLE
+
+'Can the Ethiopian change his skin?'--JER. xiii. 23. 'If any man be in
+Christ, he is a new creature.'--2 COR. v. 17. 'Behold, I make all
+things new.'--REV. xxi. 5.
+
+
+Put these three texts together. The first is a despairing question to
+which experience gives only too sad and decisive a negative answer. It
+is the answer of many people who tell us that character must be
+eternal, and of many a baffled man who says, 'It is of no use--I have
+tried and can do nothing.' The second text is the grand Christian
+answer, full of confidence. It was spoken by one who had no superficial
+estimate of the evil, but who had known in himself the power of Christ
+to revolutionise a life, and make a man love all he had hated, and hate
+all he had loved, and fling away all he had treasured. The last text
+predicts the completion of the renovating process lying far ahead, but
+as certain as sunrise.
+
+I. The unchangeableness of character, especially of faults.
+
+We note the picturesque rhetorical question here. They were
+occasionally accustomed to see the dark-skinned, Ethiopian, whether we
+suppose that these were true negroes from Southern Egypt or dark Arabs,
+and now and then leopards came up from the thickets on the Jordan, or
+from the hills of the southern wilderness about the Dead Sea. The black
+hue of the man, the dark spots that starred the skin of the fierce
+beast, are fitting emblems of the evil that dyes and speckles the soul.
+Whether it wraps the whole character in black, or whether it only spots
+it here and there with tawny yellow, it is ineradicable; and a man can
+no more change his character once formed than a negro can cast his
+skin, or a leopard whiten out the spots on his hide.
+
+Now we do not need to assert that a man has no power of self-
+improvement or reformation. The exhortations of the prophet to
+repentance and to cleansing imply that he has. If he has not, then it
+is no blame to him that he does not mend. Experience shows that we have
+a very considerable power of such a kind. It is a pity that some
+Christian teachers speak in exaggerated terms about the impossibility
+of such self-improvement.
+
+But it is very difficult.
+
+Note the great antagonist as set forth here--Habit, that solemn and
+mystical power. We do not know all the ways in which it operates, but
+one chief way is through physical cravings set up. It is strange how
+much easier a second time is than a first, especially in regard to evil
+acts. The hedge once broken down, it is very easy to get through it
+again. If one drop of water has percolated through the dyke, there will
+be a roaring torrent soon. There is all the difference between once and
+never; there is small difference between once and twice. By habit we
+come to do things mechanically and without effort, and we all like
+that. One solitary footfall across the snow soon becomes a beaten way.
+As in the banyan-tree, each branch becomes a root. All life is held
+together by cords of custom which enable us to reserve conscious effort
+and intelligence for greater moments. Habit tends to weigh upon us with
+a pressure 'heavy as frost, and deep almost as life.' But also it is
+the ally of good.
+
+The change to good is further made difficult because liking too often
+goes with evil, and good is only won by effort. It is a proof of man's
+corruption that if left alone, evil in some form or other springs
+spontaneously, and that the opposite good is hard to win. Uncultivated
+soil bears thistles and weeds. Anything can roll downhill. It is always
+the least trouble to go on as we have been going.
+
+Further, the change is made difficult because custom blinds judgment
+and conscience. People accustomed to a vitiated atmosphere are not
+aware of its foulness.
+
+How long it takes a nation, for instance, to awake to consciousness of
+some national crime, even when the nation is 'Christian'! And how men
+get perfectly sophisticated as to their own sins, and have all manner
+of euphemisms for them!
+
+Further, how hard it is to put energy into a will that has been
+enfeebled by long compliance. Like prisoners brought out of the
+Bastille.
+
+So if we put all these reasons together, no wonder that such
+reformation is rare.
+
+I do not dwell on the point that it must necessarily be confined within
+very narrow limits. I appeal to experience. You have tried to cure some
+trivial habit. You know what a task that has been--how often you
+thought that you had conquered, and then found that all had to be done
+over again. How much more is this the case in this greater work! Often
+the efforts to break off evil habits have the same effect as the
+struggles of cattle mired in a bog, who sink the deeper for plunging.
+The sad cry of many a foiled wrestler with his own evil is, 'O wretched
+man that I am! who shall deliver me from the body of this death?' We do
+not wish to exaggerate, but simply to put it that experience shows that
+for men in general, custom and inclination and indolence and the lack
+of adequate motive weigh so heavily that a thorough abandonment of
+evil, much more a hearty practice of good, are not to be looked for
+when once a character has been formed. So you young people, take care.
+And all of us listen to---
+
+II. The great hope for individual renewal.
+
+The second text sets forth a possibility of entire individual renewal,
+and does so by a strong metaphor.
+
+'If any man be in Christ he is a new creature,' or as the words might
+be rendered, 'there is a new creation,' and not only is he renewed, but
+all things are become new. He is a new Adam in a new world.
+
+Now (a) let us beware of exaggeration about this matter. There
+are often things said about the effects of conversion which are very
+far in advance of reality, and give a handle to caricature. The great
+law of continuity runs on through the change of conversion. Take a man
+who has been the slave of some sin. The evil will not cease to tempt,
+nor will the effects of the past on character be annihilated.
+'Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap,' remains true. In
+many ways there will be permanent consequences. There will remain the
+scars of old wounds; old sores will be ready to burst forth afresh. The
+great outlines of character do remain.
+
+(b) What is the condition of renewal?
+
+'If any man be in Christ'--how distinctly that implies something more
+than human in Paul's conception of Christ. It implies personal union
+with Him, so that He is the very element or atmosphere in which we
+live. And that union is brought about by faith in Him.
+
+(c) How does such a state of union with Christ make a man over
+again?
+
+It gives a new aim and centre for our lives. Then we live not unto
+ourselves; then everything is different and looks so, for the centre is
+shifted. That union introduces a constant reference to Him and
+contemplation of His death for us, it leads to self-abnegation.
+
+It puts all life under the influence of a new love. 'The love of Christ
+constraineth.' As is a man's love, so is his life. The mightiest
+devolution is to excite a new love, by which old loves and tastes are
+expelled. 'A new affection' has 'expulsive power,' as the new sap
+rising in the springtime pushes off the lingering withered leaves. So
+union with Him meets the difficulty arising from inclination still
+hankering after evil. It lifts life into a higher level where the
+noxious creatures that were proper to the swamps cannot live. The new
+love gives a new and mighty motive for obedience.
+
+That union breaks the terrible chain that binds us to the past. 'All
+died.' The past is broken as much as if we were dead. It is broken by
+the great act of forgiveness. Sin holds men by making them feel as if
+what has been must be--an awful entail of evil. In Christ we die to
+former self.
+
+That union brings a new divine power to work in us. 'I live, yet not I,
+but Christ liveth in me.'
+
+It sets us in a new world which yet is the old. All things are changed
+if we are changed. They are the same old things, but seen in a new
+light, used for new purposes, disclosing new relations and powers.
+Earth becomes a school and discipline for heaven. The world is
+different to a blind man when cured, or to a deaf one,--there are new
+sights for the one, new sounds for the other.
+
+All this is true in the measure in which we live in union with Christ.
+
+So no man need despair, nor think, 'I cannot mend now.' You may have
+tried and been defeated a thousand times. But still victory is
+possible, not without effort and sore conflict, but still possible.
+There is hope for all, and hope for ME.
+
+III. The completion in a perfectly renewed creation.
+
+The renovation here is only partial. Its very incompleteness is
+prophetic. If there be this new life in us, it obviously has not
+reached its fulness here, and it is obviously not manifested here for
+all that even here it is.
+
+It is like some exotic that does not show its true beauty in our
+greenhouses. The life of a Christian on earth is a prophecy by both its
+greatness and its smallness, by both its glory and its shame, by both
+its brightness and its spots. It cannot be that there is always to be
+this disproportion between aspiration and performance, between willing
+and doing. Here the most perfect career is like a half-lighted street,
+with long gaps between the lamps.
+
+The surroundings here are uncongenial to the new creatures. 'Foxes have
+holes'--all creatures are fitted for their environment; only man, and
+eminently renewed man, wanders as a pilgrim, not in his home. The
+present frame of things is for discipline. The schooling over, we burn
+the rod. So we look for an external order in full correspondence with
+the new nature.
+
+And Christ throned 'makes all things new.' How far the old is renewed
+we cannot tell, and we need not ask. Enough that there shall be a
+universe in perfect harmony with the completely renewed nature, that we
+shall find a home where all things will serve and help and gladden and
+further us, where the outward will no more distract and clog the
+spirit.
+
+Brethren, let that mighty love constrain you; and look to Christ to
+renew you. Whatever your old self may have been, you may bury it deep
+in His grave, and rise with Him to newness of life. Then you may walk
+in this old world, new creatures in Christ Jesus, looking for the
+blessed hope of entire renewal into the perfect likeness of Him, the
+perfect man, in a perfect world, where all old sorrows and sins have
+passed away and He has made all things new. Through eternity, new joys,
+new knowledge, new progress, new likeness, new service will be ours--
+and not one leaf shall ever wither in the amaranthine crown, nor 'the
+cup of blessing' ever become empty or flat and stale. Eternity will be
+but a continual renewal and a progressive increase of ever fresh and
+ever familiar treasures. The new and the old will be one.
+
+Begin with trusting to Him to help you to change a deeper blackness
+than that of the Ethiopian's skin, and to erase firier spots than stain
+the tawny leopard's hide, and He will make you a new man, and set you
+in His own time in a 'new heaven and earth, where dwelleth
+righteousness.'
+
+
+
+
+TRIUMPHANT PRAYER
+
+'O Lord, though our iniquities testify against us, do Thou it for Thy
+name's sake: for our backslidings are many; we have sinned against
+Thee. 8. O the hope of Israel, the saviour thereof in time of trouble,
+why shouldest Thou be as a stranger in the land, and as a wayfaring man
+that turneth aside to tarry for a night? 9. Why shouldest Thou be as a
+man astonied, as a mighty man that cannot save? yet Thou, O Lord, art
+in the midst of us, and we are called by Thy name; leave us not.'--JER.
+xiv. 7-9.
+
+
+My purpose now carries me very far away from the immediate occasion of
+these words; yet I cannot refrain from a passing reference to the
+wonderful pathos and picturesque power with which the long-forgotten
+calamity that evoked them is portrayed in the context. A terrible
+drought has fallen upon the land, and the prophet's picture of it is,
+if one might say so, like some of Dante's in its realism, in its
+tenderness, and in its terror. In the presence of a common calamity all
+distinctions of class have vanished, and the nobles send their little
+ones to the well, and they come back with empty vessels and drooping
+heads instead of with the gladness that used to be heard in the place
+of drawing of water. The ploughmen are standing among the cracked
+furrows, gazing with despair on the brown chapped earth, and in the
+field the very dumb creatures are sharing in the common sorrow, and the
+imperious law of self-preservation overpowers and crushes the maternal
+instincts. 'Yea, the hind also calved in the field, and forsook it,
+because there was no grass.' And on every little hilltop where cooler
+air might be found, the once untamable wild asses are standing with
+open nostrils panting for the breeze, their filmy eyes failing them,
+gazing for the rain that will not come. And then, from contemplating
+all that sorrow, the prophet turns to God with a wondrous burst of
+strangely blended confidence and abasement, penitence and trust, and
+fuses together the acknowledgment of sin and reliance upon the
+established and perpetual relation between Israel and God, pleading
+with Him about His judgments, presenting before Him the mysterious
+contradiction that such a calamity should fall on those with whom God
+dwelt, and casting himself lowly before the throne, and pleading the
+ancient name: 'Do Thou it! Leave us not.'
+
+It is to the wonderful fulness and richness of this prayer that I ask
+your attention in these few remarks. Expositors have differed as to
+whether the drought that forms its basis was a literal one, or is the
+prophet's way of putting the sore calamities that had fallen on Israel.
+Be that as it may, I need not remind you how often in Scripture that
+metaphor of the 'rain that cometh down from heaven and watereth the
+earth' is the symbol for God's divine gift of His Spirit, and how, on
+the other hand, the picture of the 'dry and thirsty land where no water
+is' is the appropriate figure for the condition of the soul or of the
+Church void of the divine presence. And I think I shall not mistake if
+I say that though we have much to make us thankful, yet you and I, dear
+brethren, and all our Churches and congregations, are suffering under
+this drought, and the merciful 'rain, wherewith Thou dost confirm Thine
+inheritance when it is weary' has not yet come as we would have it. May
+we find in these words some gospel for the day that may help us to come
+to the temper of mind into which there shall descend the showers to
+'make soft the earth and bless the springing thereof!'
+
+Glancing over these clauses, then, and trying to put them into
+something like order for our purpose, there are four things that I
+would have you note. The first is the mysterious contradiction between
+the ideal Israel and the actual state of things; the second is the
+earnest inquiry as to the cause; the third the penitent confession of
+our sinfulness; and the last, the triumphant confidence of believing
+prayer.
+
+I. First of all, then, look at the illustration given to us by these
+words of the mysterious contradiction between the ideal of Israel and
+the actual condition of things.
+
+Recur, for the sake of illustration, to the historical event upon which
+our text is based. The old prophet had said, 'The Lord thy God giveth
+thee a good land, a land full of brooks and water, rivers and depths, a
+land wherein thou shalt eat bread without scarceness, thou shalt not
+lack anything in it'; and the startling fact is, that these men saw
+around them a land full of misery for want of that very gift which had
+been promised. The ancient charter of Israel's existence was that God
+should dwell in the midst of them, and what was it that they beheld?
+'As things are,' says the prophet, 'it looks as if that perennial
+presence which Thou hast promised had been changed into visits, short
+and far between. Why shouldest Thou be as a stranger in the land, and
+as a wayfaring man, that turneth aside to tarry for a night?'
+
+Now, I suppose there are two ideas intended to be conveyed--the brief,
+transitory, interrupted visits, with long, dreary stretches of absence
+between them; and the indifference of the visitant, as a man who
+pitches his tent in some little village to-night cares very little
+about the people that he never saw before this afternoon's march, and
+will never see after to-morrow morning. And not only is it so, but,
+instead of the perpetual energy of this divine aid that had been
+promised to Israel, as things are now, it looks as if He was a mighty
+man astonied, a hero that cannot save--some warrior stricken by panic
+fear into a paralysis of all his strength--a Samson with his locks
+shorn. The ideal had been so great--perpetual gifts, perpetual
+presence, perpetual energy; the reality is chapped ground and parched
+places, occasional visitations, like vanishing gleams of sunshine in a
+winter's day, and a paralysis, as it would appear, of all the ancient
+might.
+
+Dear Christian friends, am I exaggerating, or dealing only with one set
+of phenomena, and forgetting the counterpoising ones on the other side,
+when I say, Change the name, and the story is told about us? God be
+thanked we have much that shows us that He has not left us, but yet,
+when we think of what we are, and of what God has promised that we
+should be, surely we must confess that there is the most sad, and, but
+for one reason, the most mysterious contradiction between the divine
+ideal and the actual facts of the case. Need we go further to learn
+what God meant His Church to be, than the last words that Jesus Christ
+said to us--'Lo, I am with you alway, even to the end of the world'?
+Need we go further than those metaphors which come from His lips as
+precepts, and, like all His precepts, are a commandment upon the
+surface, but a promise in the sweet kernel--'Ye are the salt of the
+earth,' 'ye are the light of the world'--or than the prophet's vision
+of an Israel which 'shall be in the midst of many people as a dew from
+the Lord'? Is that the description of what you and I are? Have not we
+to say, 'We have not wrought any deliverance in the earth, neither have
+the inhabitants of the world fallen'? 'Salt of the earth,' and we can
+hardly keep our own souls from going putrid with the corruption that is
+round about us. 'Light of the world,' and our poor candles burnt low
+down into the socket, and sending up rather stench and smoke than
+anything like a clear flame. The words sound like irony rather than
+promises, like the very opposite of what we are rather than the ideals
+towards which our lives strive. In our lips they are presumption, and
+in the lips of the world, as we only too well know, they are a not
+undeserved scoff, to be said with curved lip, 'The salt of the earth,'
+and 'the light of the world'!
+
+And look at what we are doing: scarcely holding our own numerically.
+Here and there a man comes and declares what God has done for his soul.
+But what is the Church, what are the Christian men of England, with all
+their multifarious activities, performing? Are we leavening the
+national mind? Are we breathing a higher godliness into trade, a more
+wholesome, simple style of living into society? And as for expansion,
+why, the Church at home does not keep up with the actual increase of
+the population; and we are conquering heathendom as we might hope to
+drain the ocean by taking out thimblefuls at a time. Is that what the
+Lord meant us to do? Our Father with us; yes, but oh! as a 'mighty man,
+astonied,' as He might well be, 'that cannot save' for the old, old
+reason, 'He did not many mighty works there because of their unbelief.'
+No wonder that on the other side men are saying--and it is not such a
+very presumptuous thing to say, if you have regard only to the facts
+that appear on the surface--men are saying, 'wait a little while, and
+all these organisations will come to nothing; these Christian churches,
+as they are called,' and everything that you and I regard as
+distinctive of Christianity, 'will be gone and be forgotten.' We
+believe ourselves to be in possession of an eternal light; the world
+looks at us and sees that it is like a flickering flame in a dying
+lamp. Dear brethren, if I think of the lowness of our own religious
+characters, the small extent to which we influence the society in which
+we live, of the slow rate at which the Gospel progresses in our land, I
+can only ask the question, and pray you to lay it to heart, which the
+old prophet asked long ago: 'O Thou that art named the house of Jacob,
+is the Spirit of the Lord straitened? Are these His doings? Do not my
+words do good to them that walk uprightly?' 'Why shouldest Thou be as a
+mighty man that cannot save?'
+
+II. Let me ask you to look at the second thought that I think may
+fairly be gathered from these words, namely, that this consciousness of
+our low and evil condition ought to lead to very earnest and serious
+inquiry as to its cause.
+
+The prophet having acknowledged transgression yet asks a question, 'Why
+shouldest Thou leave us? Why have all these things come upon us?' And
+he asks it not as ignorant of the answer, but in order that the answer
+may be deepened in the consciences and perceptions of those that listen
+to him, and that they together may take the answer to the Throne of
+God. There can be no doubt in a Christian mind as to the reason, and
+yet there is an absolute necessity that the familiar truth as to the
+reason should be driven home to our own consciences, and made part of
+our own spiritual experience, by our own honest reiteration of it and
+reflection upon it.
+
+'Why shouldest Thou leave us?' Now, I need not spend time by taking
+into consideration answers that other people might give. I suppose that
+none of us will say that the reason is in any variableness of that
+unalterable, uniform, ever present, ever full, divine gift of God's
+Spirit to His children. We do not believe in any arbitrary sovereignty
+that withdraws that gift; we do not believe that that gift rises and
+falls in its fulness and its abundance. We believe that the great
+reservoir is always full, and that, if ever our small tanks be empty,
+it is because there is something choking the pipe, not because there is
+anything less in the centre storehouse. We believe, if I may take
+another illustration, that it is with the seasons and the rotation of
+day and night in the religious experience as it is with them in the
+natural world. Summer and winter come and go, not because of any
+variableness in the centre orb, but because of the variation in the
+inclination of the circling satellite; day and night come not by reason
+of any 'shadow cast by turning' from the sun that revolves not at all--
+but by reason of the side that is turned to his life-giving and
+quickening beams. We believe that all the clouds and mist that come
+between us and God are like the clouds and mist of the sky, not dropped
+upon us from the blue empyrean above, but sucked up from the undrained
+swamps and poisonous fens of the lower earth. That is to say, if there
+be any change in the fulness of our possession of the divine Spirit,
+the fault lies wholly within the region of the mutable and of the
+human, and not at all in the region of the perennial and divine.
+
+Nor do we believe, I suppose, any of us, that we are to look for any
+part of the reason in failure of the adaptation of God's work and God's
+ordinances to the great work which they have to do. Other people may
+tell us, if they like--it will not shake our confidence--that the fire
+that was kindled at Pentecost has all died down to grey ashes, and that
+it is of no use trying to cower over the burnt-out embers any more in
+order to get heat out of them. They may, and do, tell us that the
+'rushing, mighty wind that filled the house' obeys the law of cycles as
+the wind of the natural universe, and will calm into stillness after a
+while, and then set in and blow from the opposite quarter. They may
+tell us, and they do tell us, that the 'river of the water of life that
+flows from the Throne of God and of the Lamb' is lost in the sands of
+time, like the streams in the great Mongolian plateau. We do not
+believe that. Everything stands exactly as it always has been in regard
+to the perennial possession of Christ's Spirit as the strength and
+resource of His Church; and the fault, dear friends, lies only here: 'O
+Lord, our iniquities testify against us; our backslidings are many; we
+have sinned against Thee.'
+
+Oh, let me urge upon you, and upon myself, that the first thing which
+we have to do is prayerfully and patiently and honestly to search after
+this cause, and not look to superficial trifles such as possible
+variations and improvements in order and machinery, and polity or
+creed, or anything else, as the means of changing and bettering the
+condition of things, but to recognise this as being the one sole cause
+that hinders--the slackness of our own hold on Christ's hand, and the
+feebleness and imperfection of our own spiritual life. Dear brethren,
+there is no worse sign of the condition of churches than the calm
+indifference and complacency in the present condition of things which
+visits very many of us; it is like a deadly malaria wherever it is to
+be found, and there is no more certain precursor of a blessed change
+than a widespread dissatisfaction with what we are, and an honest,
+earnest search after the cause. The sleeper that is restless, and
+tosses and turns, is near awakening; and the ice that cracks, and
+crumbles, and groans, and heaves, is on the point of breaking up. When
+Christian men and women are aroused to this, the startled recognition
+of how far beneath the ideal--no, I should not say how far beneath, but
+rather how absolutely opposed to, the ideal--so much of our Christian
+life and work is, and when further they push the inquiry for the cause,
+so as to find that it lies in their own sin, then we shall be near the
+time, yea, the 'set time, to favour Zion.'
+
+III. And so let me point you, in the next place--and but a word or two
+on that matter--to the consideration that the consciousness of the evil
+condition and knowledge of its cause leads on to lowly penitence and
+confession.
+
+I dwell upon that for a moment for one reason mainly. I suppose that it
+is a very familiar observation with us all that when, by God's mercy,
+any of us individually, or as communities, are awakened to a sense of
+our own departure from what He would have us be, and the feebleness of
+all our Christian work, we are very apt to be led away upon the wrong
+scent altogether, and instead of seeking improvement and revivification
+in God's order, we set up an order of our own, which is a great deal
+more pleasing to our own natural inclinations. For instance, to bring
+the thing to a practical illustration, suppose I were, after these
+remarks of mine, as a kind of corollary from them, to ask for
+volunteers for some new form of Christian work, I believe I should get
+twenty for one that I should get if I simply said, 'Brethren, let us go
+together and confess our sins before God, and ask Him not to leave us.'
+We are always tempted to originate some new kind of work, to
+manufacture a revival, to begin by bringing together the outcasts into
+the fold, instead of to begin by trying to deepen our own Christian
+character, and purifying our own hearts, and getting more and more of
+the life of God into our own spirits, and then to let the increase from
+without come as it may. The true law for us to follow is to begin with
+lowly abasement at His footstool, and when we have purged ourselves
+from faults and sins in the very act of confessing them, and of shaking
+them from us, then when we are fit for growth, external growth, we
+shall get it. But the revival of the Church is not what people fancy it
+to be so often nowadays, the gathering in of the unconverted into its
+fold--that is the consequence of the revival. The revival comes by the
+path of recognition of sin, and confession of sin, and forsaking of
+sin, and waiting before Him for His blessing and His Spirit. Let me put
+all that I would say about this matter into the one remark, that the
+law of the whole process is the old one which was exemplified on the
+day of Pentecost. 'Sanctify a fast, call a solemn assembly; gather the
+people, assemble the elders; let the bridegroom go forth of his
+chamber, and the bride out of her closet; let the priests, the
+ministers of the Lord, weep between the porch and the altar. Yea, the
+Lord will be zealous for His land, and will pity His people; and I will
+pour out My Spirit upon all flesh.' Brethren, to our knees and to
+confessions! Let us see to it that we are right in our own inmost
+hearts.
+
+IV. And so, finally, look at the wonderful way in which in this text of
+ours the prophet fuses together into one indistinguishable and yet not
+confused whole, confession, and pleading remonstrance and also the
+confidence of triumphant prayer.
+
+I cannot touch upon the various points of that as I would gladly do;
+but I must suggest one or two of them for your consideration. Look at
+the substance of his petition: 'Do Thou it for Thy name's sake.' 'Leave
+us not.' That is all he asks. He does not prescribe what is to be done.
+He does not ask for the taking away of the calamity, he simply asks for
+the continual presence and the operation of the divine hand, sure that
+God is in the midst of them, and working all things right. Let us shape
+our expectations in like fashion, not being careful to discover paths
+for Him to run in; but contented if we can realise the sweetness and
+the strength of His calming and purging presence, and willing to leave
+the manner of His working in His own hand.
+
+Then, look at what the text suggests as pleas with God, and grounds of
+confidence for ourselves. 'Do Thou it for Thy name's sake, the hope of
+Israel, the Saviour thereof in time of trouble. Thou art in the midst
+of us, we are called by Thy name.' There are three grounds upon which
+we may base our firm confidence. The one is the name--all the ancient
+manifestations of Thy character, which have been from of old, and
+remain for our perpetual strength. 'As we have heard, so have we seen
+in the city of the Lord of Hosts.' 'That which is Thy memorial unto all
+generations pledges Thee to the constant reiteration and reproduction,
+hour by hour, according to our necessity, of all the might, and the
+miracles, and the mercies of the past. Do Thou it for Thy name's sake.'
+
+And then Jeremiah turns to the throne of God with another plea--'the
+hope of Israel'--and thereby fills his mouth with the argument drawn
+from the fact that the confidence of the Church is fixed upon Him, and
+that it cannot be that He will disappoint it. 'Because Thou hast given
+us Thy name, and because Thy name, by Thy grace, has become, through
+our faith, our hope, Thou art doubly bound--bound by what Thou art,
+bound by what we expect--to be with us, our strength and our
+confidence.'
+
+And the final plea is the appeal to the perennial and essential
+relationship of God to His Church. 'We are called by Thy name'--'we
+belong to Thee. It were Thy concern and ours that Thy Gospel should
+spread in the world, and the honour of our Lord should be advanced.
+Thou hast not surely lost Thy hold of Thine own, or Thy care for Thine
+own property.' The psalmist said, 'Thou wilt not suffer him that is
+devoted to Thee to see corruption.' And what his faith felt to be
+impossible in regard to the bodily life is still more unthinkable in
+regard to the spiritual. It cannot be that that which belongs to Him
+should pass and perish. 'We are called by Thy name, and Thou, Lord, art
+in the midst of us'--not a Samson shorn of his locks; not a wayfaring
+man turning aside to delay for a night; but the abiding Presence which
+makes the Church glad.
+
+Dear brethren, calm and confident expectation should be our attitude,
+and lowly repentance should rise to triumphant believing hope, because
+God is moving round about us in this day. Thanks be to His name, there
+is spread through us all an expectation of great things. That
+expectation brings its own fulfilment, and is always God's way of
+preparing the path for His own large gifts, like the strange,
+indefinable attitude of expectation which we know filled the civilised
+world before the birth of Jesus Christ--like the breath of the morning
+that springs up before the sun rises, and says, 'The dawn; the dawn,'
+and dies away. The expectation is the precursor of the gift, and the
+prayer is the guarantee of the acceptance. Take an illustration. Those
+great lakes in Central Africa that are said to feed the Nile are filled
+with melting snows weeks and weeks before the water rises away down in
+Egypt, and brings fertility across the desert that it makes to glisten
+with greenness, and to rejoice and blossom as the rose. And so in
+silence, high up upon the mountains of God, fed by communion with
+Himself, the expectation rises to a flood-tide ere it flows down
+through all the channels of Christian organisation and activity, and
+blesses the valleys below. It is not for us to hurry the work of God,
+nor spasmodically to manufacture revivals. It is not for us, under the
+pretence of waiting for Him, to be cold and callous; but it is for us
+to question ourselves wherefore these things have come upon us, with
+lowly, penitent confession to turn to God, and ask Him to bless us. Oh,
+if we were to do this, we should not ask in vain! Let us take the
+prayer of our context, and say, 'We acknowledge, O Lord, our
+wickedness, and the iniquity of our fathers; for we have sinned against
+Thee. Are there any among the vanities of the Gentiles that can cause
+rain? or can the heavens give showers? art not Thou He, O Lord, our
+God? Therefore we will wait upon Thee.' Be sure that the old merciful
+answer will come to us, 'I will pour rivers of water upon him that is
+thirsty, and floods upon the dry ground; and I will pour My Spirit upon
+thy seed, and My blessing upon thine offspring.'
+
+
+
+
+SIN'S WRITING AND ITS ERASURE
+
+'The sin of Judah is written with a pen of iron, and with the point of
+a diamond: it is graven upon the table of their heart, and upon the
+horns of your altars.'--JER. xvii. 1.
+
+'Ye are manifestly declared to be the epistle of Christ ministered by
+us, written not with ink, but with the Spirit of the living God; not in
+tables of stone, but in fleshy tables of the heart.'-2 COR. iii. 3.
+
+'Blotting out the handwriting that was against us.'---COL .ii. 14.
+
+
+I have put these verses together because they all deal with
+substantially the same metaphor. The first is part of a prophet's
+solemn appeal. It describes the sin of the nation as indelible. It is
+written in two places. First, on their hearts, which reminds us of the
+promise of the new covenant to be written on the heart. The 'red-
+leaved tablets of the heart' are like waxen tables on which an iron
+stylus makes a deep mark, an ineradicable scar. So Judah's sin is, as
+it were, eaten into their heart, or, if we might so say, tattooed on
+it. It is also written on the stone horns of the altar, with a diamond
+which can cut the rock (an illustration of ancient knowledge of the
+properties of the diamond). That sounds a strange place for the record
+of sin to appear, but the image has profound meaning, as we shall see
+presently.
+
+Then the two New Testament passages deal with other applications of the
+same metaphor. Christ is, in the first, represented as writing on the
+hearts of the Corinthians, and in the second, as taking away 'the
+handwriting contrary to us.' The general thought drawn from all is that
+sin's writing on men's hearts is erased by Christ and a new inscription
+substituted.
+
+I. The handwriting of sin.
+
+Sin committed is indelibly written on the heart of the doer.
+
+'The heart,' of course, in Hebrew means more than merely the supposed
+seat of the affections. It is figuratively the centre of the spiritual
+life, just as physically it is the centre of the natural. Thoughts and
+affections, purposes and desires are all included, and out of it are
+'the issues of life,' the whole outgoings of the being. It is the
+fountain and source of all the activity of the man, the central unity
+from which all comes. Taken in this wide sense it is really the whole
+inner self that is meant, or, as is said in one place, 'the hidden man
+of the heart.' And so the thought in this vigorous metaphor may be
+otherwise put, that all sin makes indelible marks on the whole inward
+nature of the man who does it.
+
+Now to begin with, think for a moment of that truth that everything
+which we do reacts on us the doers.
+
+We seldom think of this. Deeds are done, and we fancy that when done,
+they are done _with_. They pass, as far as outward seeming goes,
+and their distinguishable consequences in the outward world, in the
+vast majority of cases, soon apparently pass. All seems evanescent and
+irrecoverable as last year's snows, or the water that flowed over the
+cataract a century ago. But there is nothing more certain than that all
+which we do leaves indelible traces on ourselves. The mightiest effect
+of a man's actions is on his own inward life. The recoil of the gun is
+more powerful than the blow from its shot. Our actions strike inwards
+and there produce their most important effects. The river runs
+ceaselessly and its waters pass away, but they bring down soil, which
+is deposited and makes firm land, or perhaps they carry down grains of
+gold.
+
+This is the true solemnity of life, that in all which we do we are
+carrying on a double process, influencing others indeed, but
+influencing ourselves far more.
+
+Consider the illustrations of this law in regard to our sins.
+
+Now the last thing people think of when they hear sermons about 'sin'
+is that what is meant is the things that they are doing every day. I
+can only ask you to try to remember, while I speak, that I mean those
+little acts of temper, or triflings with truth, or yieldings to passion
+or anger, or indulgence in sensuality, and above all, the living
+without God, to which we are all prone.
+
+(a) All wrong-doing makes indelible marks on character. It makes its
+own repetition easier. Habit strengthens inclination. Peter found
+denying his Lord three times easier than doing it once. It weakens
+resistance. In going downhill the first step is the only one that needs
+an effort; gravity will do the rest.
+
+It drags after it a tendency to other evil. All wrong things have so
+much in common that they lead on to one another. A man with only one
+vice is a rare phenomenon. Satan sends his apostles forth two by two.
+Sins hunt in couples, or more usually in packs, like wolves, only now
+and then do they prey alone like lions. Small thieves open windows for
+greater ones. It requires continually increasing draughts, like
+indulgence in stimulants. The palate demands cayenne tomorrow, if it
+has had black pepper to-day.
+
+So, whatever else we do by our acts, we are making our own characters,
+either steadily depraving or steadily improving them. There will come a
+slight slow change, almost unnoticed but most certain, as a dim film
+will creep over the peach, robbing it of all its bloom, or some
+microscopic growth will steal across a clearly cut inscription, or a
+breath of mist will dim a polished steel mirror.
+
+(b) All wrong-doing writes indelible records on the memory, that awful
+and mysterious power of recalling past things out of the oblivion in
+which they seem to lie. How solemn and miserable it is to defile it
+with the pictures of things evil! Many a man in his later years has
+tried to 'turn over a new leaf,' and has never been able to get the
+filth out of his memory, for it has been printed on the old page in
+such strong colours that it shines through. I beseech you all, and
+especially you young people, to keep yourselves 'innocent of much
+transgression,' and 'simple concerning evil'--to make your memories
+like an illuminated missal with fair saints and calm angels bordering
+the holy words, and not an _Illustrated_ Police News. Probably
+there is no real oblivion. Each act sinks in as if forgotten, gets
+overlaid with a multitude of others, but it is there, and memory will
+one day bring it to us.
+
+And all sin pollutes the imagination. It is a miserable thing to have
+one's mind full of ugly foul forms painted on the inner walls of our
+chamber of imagery, like the hideous figures in some heathen temple,
+where gods of lust and murder look out from every inch of space on the
+walls.
+
+(c) All wrong-doing writes indelible records on the conscience. It does
+so partly by sophisticating it--the sensibility to right and wrong being
+weakened by every evil act, as a cold in the head takes away the sense
+of smell. It brings on colour-blindness to some extent. One does not
+know how far one may go towards 'Evil! be thou my good'--or how far
+towards incapacity of distinguishing evil. But at all events the
+tendency of each sin is in that direction. So conscience may become
+seared, though perhaps never so completely as that there are no
+intervals when it speaks. It may long lie dormant, as Vesuvius did, till
+great trees grow on the floor of the crater, but all the while the
+communication with the central fires is open, and one day they will
+burst out.
+
+The writing may be with invisible ink, but it will be legible one day.
+So, then, all this solemn writing on the heart is done by ourselves.
+What are you writing? There is a presumption in it of a future
+retribution, when you will have to read your autobiography, with clearer
+light and power of judging yourselves. At any rate there is retribution
+now, which is described by many metaphors, such as sowing and reaping,
+drinking as we have brewed, and others--but this one of indelible
+writing is not the least striking.
+
+Sin is graven deep on sinful men's worship.
+
+The metaphor here is striking and not altogether clear. The question
+rises whether the altars are idolatrous altars, or Jehovah's. If the
+former, the expression may mean simply that the Jews' idolatry, which
+was their sin, was conspicuously displayed in these altars, and had, as
+it were, its most flagrant record in their sacrifices. The altar was the
+centre point of all heathen and Old Testament worship, and altars built
+by sinners were the most conspicuous evidences of their sins.
+
+So the meaning would be that men's sin shapes and culminates in their
+religion; and that is very true, and explains many of the profanations
+and abominations of heathenism, and much of the formal worship of so-
+called Christianity.
+
+For instance, a popular religion which is a mere Deism, a kind of vague
+belief in a providence, and in a future state where everybody is happy,
+is but the product of men's sin, striking out of Christianity all which
+their sin makes unwelcome in it. The justice of God, punishment,
+sinfulness of sin, high moral tone, are all gone. And the very horns of
+their altars are marked with the signs of the worshippers' sin.
+
+But the 'altars' may be God's altars, and then another idea will come
+in. The horns of the altar were the places where the blood of the
+sacrifice was smeared, as token of its offering to God. They were then a
+part of the ritual of propitiation. They had, no doubt, the same meaning
+in the heathen ritual. And so regarded, the metaphor means that a sense
+of the reality of sin shapes sacrificial religion.
+
+There can be no doubt that a very real conviction of sin lies at the
+foundation of much, if not all, of the system of sacrifices. And it is a
+question well worth considering whether a conviction so widespread is
+not valid, and whether we should not see in it the expression of a true
+human need which no mere culture, or the like, will supply.
+
+At all events, altars stand as witnesses to the consciousness of sin.
+And the same thought may be applied to much of the popular religion of
+this day. It may be ineffectual and shallow but it bears witness to a
+consciousness of evil. So its existence may be used in order to urge
+profounder realisation of evil on men. You come to worship, you join in
+confessions, you say 'miserable sinners'--do you mean anything by it? If
+all that be true, should it not produce a deeper impression on you?
+
+But another way of regarding the metaphor is this. The horns of the
+altar were to be touched with the blood of propitiation. But look! the
+blood flows down, and after it has trickled away, there, deep carven on
+the horns, still appears the sin, _i.e._ the sin is not expiated by the
+sinner's sacrifice. Jeremiah is then echoing Isaiah's word, 'Bring no
+more vain oblations.' The picture gives very strikingly the
+hopelessness, so far as men are concerned, of any attempt to blot out
+this record. It is like the rock-cut cartouches of Egypt on which time
+seems to have no effect. There they abide deep for ever. Nothing that we
+can do can efface them. 'What I have written, I have written.' Pen-
+knives and detergents that we can use are all in vain.
+
+II. Sin's writing may be erased, and another put in its place.
+
+The work of Christ, made ours by faith, blots it out.
+
+(a) Its influence on conscience and the sense of guilt. The accusations
+of conscience are silenced. A red line is drawn across the indictment,
+or, as Colossians has it, it is 'nailed to the cross.' There is power in
+His death to set us free from the debt we owe.
+
+(b) Its influence on memory. Christ does not bring oblivion, but yet
+takes away the remorse of remembrance. Faith in Christ makes memory no
+longer a record which we blush to turn over, or upon which we gloat with
+imaginative delight in guilty pleasures past, but a record of our
+shortcomings that humbles us with a penitence which is not pain, but
+serves as a beacon and warning for the time to come. He who has a clear
+beam of memory on his backward track, and a bright light of hope on his
+forward one, will steer right.
+
+(c) Its influence on character.
+
+We attain new hopes and tastes. 'We become epistles of Christ known and
+read of all men,' like palimpsests, Homer or Ovid written over with the
+New Testament gospels or epistles.
+
+Christ's work is twofold, erasure and rewriting. For the one, 'I will
+blot out as a cloud their transgressions.' None but He can remove these.
+For the other, 'I will put My law into their minds and will write it on
+their hearts.' He can impress all holy desires on, and can put His great
+love and His mighty spirit into, our hearts.
+
+So give your hearts to Him. They are all scrawled over with hideous and
+wicked writing that has sunk deep into their substance. Graven as if on
+rock are your sins in your character. Your worship and sacrifices will
+not remove them, but Jesus Christ can. He died that you might be
+forgiven, He lives that you may be purified. Trust yourself to Him, and
+lean all your sinfulness on His atonement and sanctifying power, and the
+foul words and bad thoughts that have been scored so deep into your
+nature will be erased, and His own hand will trace on the page, poor and
+thin though it be, which has been whitened by His blood, the fair
+letters and shapes of His own likeness. Do not let your hearts be the
+devil's copybooks for all evil things to scrawl their names there, as
+boys do on the walls, but spread them before Him, and ask Him to make
+them clean and write upon them His new name, indicating that you now
+belong to another, as a new owner writes his name on a book that he has
+bought.
+
+
+
+
+THE HEATH IN THE DESERT AND THE TREE BY THE RIVER
+
+'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, a salt
+land and not inhabited...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. 6, 8.
+
+
+The prophet here puts before us two highly finished pictures. In the
+one, the hot desert stretches on all sides. The fierce 'sunbeams like
+swords' slay every green thing. The salt particles in the soil glitter
+in the light. No living creature breaks the melancholy solitude. It is a
+'waste land where no one came, or hath come since the making of the
+world.' Here and there a stunted, grey, prickly shrub struggles to live,
+and just manages not to die. But it has no grace of leaf, nor
+profitableness of fruit; and it only serves to make the desolation more
+desolate.
+
+The other carries us to some brimming river, where everything lives
+because water has come. The pictures are coloured by Eastern experience.
+For in those lands more than beneath our humid skies and weaker
+sunshine, the presence or absence of running water makes the difference
+between barrenness and fertility. Dipping their boughs in the sparkling
+current, and driving their roots through the moist soil, the bordering
+trees lift aloft their pride of foliage and bear fruits in their season.
+
+So, says Jeremiah, the two pictures represent two sets of men; the one,
+he who diverts from their true object his heart-capacities of love and
+trust, and clings to creatures and to men, 'making flesh his arm and
+departing from the living God'; the other, he who leans the whole weight
+of his needs and cares and sins and sorrows upon God. We can make choice
+of which shall be the object of our trust, and according as we choose
+the one or the other, the experience of these vivid pictures will be
+ours.
+
+Let me briefly, then, draw out the points of contrast in these two
+companion sketches.
+
+I. The one is in the desert, the other by the river.
+
+Underneath the pictures there lies this thought, that the direction of a
+man's trust determines the whole cast of his life, because it
+determines, as it were, the soil in which he grows. We can alter our
+habitat. The plant is fixed; but 'I saw men as trees--yes! but as 'trees
+walking.' We can walk, and can settle where we shall be rooted and
+whence we shall draw our inspiration, our confidence, our security. The
+man that chooses-for it is a matter of choice--to trust in any creature
+thereby wills, though he does not know it, that he shall dwell in a
+'salt land and not inhabited.' The man that chooses to cast his whole
+self into the arms of God, and in a paroxysm of self-distrust to realise
+the divine helpfulness and presence, that man will soon know that he is
+'planted by the river.'
+
+Now, the poor, little dusty shrub in the desert, whose very leaves have
+been modified into prickles, is fit for the desert, and is as much at
+home there as are the willows by the water-courses with their lush
+vegetation in their moist bed. But if a _man_ makes that fatal choice
+which so-many of us are making, of shutting out God from his confidence
+and his love, and squandering these upon earth and upon creatures, he is
+as fatally out of harmony with the place which he has chosen for
+himself, and as much away from his natural soil, as a tropical plant
+would be amongst the snows of Arctic glaciers, or a water-lily in the
+Sahara.
+
+Considering all that I am and need, what and where is my true home and
+the soil in which I can grow securely, and fear no evil? Brethren, there
+is only one answer to that question. The very make of a man's spirit
+points to God, and to God alone, as the natural place for him to root
+and grow in. You, I, the poorest and humblest of men, will never be
+right, never feel that we are in our native soil, and compassed with the
+appropriate surroundings, until we have laid our hearts and our hands on
+the breast of God, and rested ourselves on Him. Not more surely do gills
+and fins proclaim that the creature that has them is meant to roam
+through the boundless ocean, nor the anatomy and wings of the bird
+witness more plainly to its destination to soar in the open heavens than
+the make of your spirits testifies that God, and none less or lower, is
+your portion. We are built for God, and unless we recognise and act upon
+that conviction, we are like the prickly shrub in the desert, whatever
+good may be around us; and if we do recognise and act upon it, whatever
+parched ground may seem to stretch on all sides, there will be soil
+moist enough for us to draw refreshment and vitality from it.
+
+If that be so, brethren, what insanity the lives of multitudes of us
+are! As well might bees try to suck honey from a vase of wax flowers as
+we to draw what we need from creatures, from ourselves, from visible and
+material things.
+
+What would you business men think of some one who went and sold out all
+his stock of Government or other sound securities, and then flung the
+proceeds down a hole in South Africa, out of which no gold will ever
+come? He would be about as wise as are the people who fancy that these
+hearts of theirs will ever be at home except they find a home in God.
+
+Where else will you find love that will never fail, nor change, nor die?
+Where else will you find an object for the intellect that will yield
+inexhaustible material of contemplation and delight? Where else
+infallible direction for the will? Where else shall weakness find
+unfailing strength, or sorrow, adequate consolation, or hope, certain
+fulfilment, or fear, a safe hiding-place? Nowhere besides. Oh! then,
+brethren, do, I beseech you, turn away your heart's confidence and love
+from earth and creatures; for until the roots of your life go down into
+God, and you draw your life from Him, you are not in your right soil.
+
+II. The one can take in no real good; the other can fear no evil.
+
+One verse of our text says, 'He shall not see when good cometh'; the
+other one, according to our Authorised Version, 'He shall not see when
+heat cometh.' But a very slight alteration of one word in the original
+gives a better reading, which is adopted in the Revised Version, where
+we have, 'and shall not fear when heat cometh.' That alteration is
+obviously correct, because there follows immediately a parallel clause,
+'and shall not be careful'--or anxious--'in the year of drought.' In
+both these clauses the metaphor of the tree is a little let go; and the
+man who is signified by it comes rather more to the front than in the
+remainder of the picture. But that is quite natural.
+
+So look at these two simple thoughts for a moment. He whose trust is set
+upon creatures is thereby disabled from recognising what is his highest
+good. His judgment is perverted. _There_ is the explanation of the fact
+that men are contented with the partial and evanescent blessedness that
+may be drawn from human loves and companionship and material things. It
+is because they have gone blind, and the false direction of their
+confidence, has put out their eyes. And if any of my hearers are living
+careless about God, and all that comes from Him, and perfectly contented
+with that which they find in this visible, diurnal sphere, that is not
+because they have the good which they need, but because they do not know
+that good when they see it, and have lost the power of discerning what
+is really for their benefit and blessedness.
+
+There is nothing sadder in this world than the conspiracy into which men
+seem to have entered to ignore the highest good, and to profess
+themselves contented with the lowest. I remember a rough parable of
+Luther's--the roughness of which may be pardoned for the force and
+vividness of it--which bears on this matter. He tells how a company of
+swine were offered all manner of dainty and refined foods, and how, with
+a unanimous swinish grunt, they answered that they preferred the warm,
+reeking 'grains' from the mash-tub. The illustration is coarse, but it
+is not an unfair representation of the choice that some of us are
+making.
+
+'He cannot see when good cometh.' God comes, and I would rather have
+some more money. God comes, and I prefer some woman's love. God comes,
+and I would rather have a prosperous business. God comes, and I prefer
+beer. So I might go the whole round. The man that cannot see good when
+it is there before his face, because the false direction of his
+confidence has blinded his eyes, cannot open his heart to it. It comes,
+but it does not come in. It surrounds him, but it does not enter into
+him. You are plunged, as it were, in a sea of possible felicity, which
+will be yours if your heart's direction is towards God, and the
+surrounding ocean of blessedness has as little power to fill your heart
+as the sea has to enter some hermetically sealed flask, dropped into the
+middle of the Atlantic. 'He cannot see when good cometh.' Blind, blind,
+blind! are multitudes of us.
+
+Turn to the other side. 'He shall not fear when heat cometh,' which is
+evil in those Eastern lands, 'and shall not be careful in the year of
+drought.' The tree, that sends its roots towards a river that never
+fails, does not suffer when all the land is parched. The man who has
+driven his roots into God, and is drawing from that deep source what is
+needful for his life and fertility, has no occasion to dread any evil,
+nor to gnaw his heart with anxiety as to what he is to do in parched
+days. Troubles may come, but they do not go deeper than the surface. It
+may be all cracked and caked and dry, 'a thirsty land where no water
+is,' and yet deep down there may be moisture and coolness.
+
+Faith, which is trust, and fear are opposite poles. If a man has the
+one, he can scarcely have the other in vigorous operation. He that has
+his trust set upon God does not need to dread anything except the
+weakening or the paralysing of that trust; for so long as it lasts it is
+a talisman which changes evil into good, the true philosopher's stone
+which transmutes the baser metals into gold; and, so long as it lasts,
+God's shield is round him and no evil can befall him.
+
+Brethren, if our trust is in God, it is unworthy of it and of us to
+fear, for all things are His, and there is no evil in evil as men call
+it, so long as it does not draw away our hearts from our Father and our
+Hope. Therefore, he that fears let him trust; he that trusts let him not
+be afraid. He that sets his heart and anchors his hopes of safety on any
+except God, let him be afraid, for he is in a very stern world, and if
+he is not fearful he is a fool.
+
+So the direction of our trust, if it is right, shuts all real evil out
+from us, and if it is wrong, shuts us out from all real good.
+
+III. The one is bare, the other clothed with the beauty of foliage.
+
+The word which is translated 'heat' has a close connection with, if it
+does not literally mean, 'naked' or 'bare.' Probably, as I have said, it
+designates some inconspicuously leaved desert shrub, the particular
+species not being ascertainable or a matter of any consequence. Leaves,
+in Scripture, have a recognised symbolical meaning. 'Nothing but leaves'
+in the story of the fig-tree meant only beautiful outward appearance,
+with no corresponding outcome of goodness of heart, in the shape of
+fruit. So I may venture here to draw a distinction between leafage and
+fruit, and say that the one points rather to a man's character and
+conduct as lovely in appearance, and in the other as morally good and
+profitable.
+
+This is the lesson of these two clauses--misdirected confidence in
+creatures strips a man of much beauty of character, and true faith in
+God adorns a soul with a leafy vesture of loveliness. Now, I have no
+doubt that there start up in your minds at once two objections to that
+statement: first, that a great many godless men do present fair and
+attractive features of character; and secondly, that a great many
+Christian men do not. I admit both things frankly, and yet I say that,
+for the highest good, the perfect crowning beauty of any human
+character, this is needed, that it should cling to God. 'Whatsoever
+things are lovely and of good report' lack their supreme excellence, the
+diamond on the top of the royal crown, the glittering gold on the summit
+of the campanile, unless there is in them a distinct reference to God.
+
+I believe that I am speaking to some who would not profess themselves to
+be religious men, and who yet are truly desirous of cultivating in their
+character the Fair and the Good. To them I would venture to say--
+brethren, you will never be so completely, so refinedly, so truly,
+graceful as you might be, unless the roots of your character 'are hid
+with Christ in God.'
+
+ 'A servant with this clause
+ Makes drudgery divine,'
+
+said good old George Herbert. And any act, however humble, on which the
+light from God falls, will gleam with a lustre else unattainable, like
+some piece of broken glass in the furrows of a ploughed field.
+
+Sure I am that if we Christian people had a deeper faith, we should have
+fairer lives. And I beseech you, my fellow-believers in Jesus Christ,
+not to supply the other side with arguments against Christianity, by
+showing that it is possible for a man to say and to suppose that he sets
+his heart on God, and yet to bear but little leafage of beauty or grace
+of character. Goodness is beauty; beauty is goodness. Both are to be
+secured by communion and union with Him who is fairer than the children
+of men. Dip your roots into the fountain of life--it is the fountain of
+beauty as well as of life, and your lives will be green.
+
+IV. Lastly, the one is sterile, the other fruitful.
+
+I admit, as before, that this statement often seems to be contradicted,
+both by the good works of godless men, and by the bad works of godly
+ones. But for all that, I would urge you to consider that the only works
+of men worth calling 'fruit,' if regard is had to their capacities,
+relations, and obligations, are those done as the outcome and
+consequence of hearts trusting in the Lord. The rest of the man's
+activities may be busy and multiplied, and, from the point of view of a
+godless morality, many may be fair and good; but if we think of him as
+being destined, as his chief end, 'to glorify God, and (so) to enjoy Him
+for ever,' what correspondence between such a creature and acts that are
+done without reference to God can there ever be? They are not worth
+calling 'fruit.' At the most they are 'wild grapes,' and there comes a
+time when they will be tested and the axe laid to the root of the trees,
+and these imperfect deeds will shrivel up and disappear.
+
+Trust will certainly be fruitful. In so saying we are upon Christian
+ground, which declares that the outcome of faith is conduct in
+conformity with the will of Him in whom we trust, and that the
+productive principle of all good in man is confidence in God manifest to
+us in Jesus Christ.
+
+So we have not to begin with work; we have to begin with character.
+'Make the tree good,' and its fruit will be good. Faith will give power
+to bring forth such fruit; and faith will set agoing the motive of love
+which will produce it. Thus, dear brethren, we come back to this--the
+prime thing about a man is the direction which his trust takes. Is it to
+God? Then the tree is good; and its fruit will be good too. If you will
+trust yourselves to 'God manifest in the flesh,' to Jesus Christ and His
+work for you and in you, then you will be as if 'planted by the rivers
+of water,' you will be able to receive into yourselves, and will
+receive, all good, and be masters of all evil, will exhibit graces of
+character else impossible, and will bring forth 'fruit that shall
+remain.' Separated from Him we are nothing, and can bring forth nothing
+that will stand the light of that last moment.
+
+Brother, turn your trust to that dear Lord, and then you will have your
+'fruit unto holiness, and the end shall be everlasting life,' when the
+transplanting season comes, and they that have been 'planted in the
+house of the Lord' below shall 'flourish in the courts of our God'
+above, and grow more green and fruitful, beside the 'river of the water
+of life that proceedeth from the throne of God and of the Lamb.'
+
+
+
+
+A SOUL GAZING ON GOD
+
+'A glorious high throne from the beginning is the place of our
+sanctuary.'--JER. xvii. 12.
+
+
+I must begin by a word or two of explanation as to the language of this
+passage. The word 'is' is a supplement, and most probably it ought to be
+omitted, and the verse treated as being, not a statement, but a series
+of exclamations. The next verse runs thus, 'O Lord! the hope of Israel,
+all that forsake Thee shall be ashamed'; and the most natural and
+forcible understanding of the words of my text is reached by connecting
+them with these following clauses: 'O Lord! the hope of Israel,' and,
+regarding the whole as one long exclamation of adoring contemplation, 'A
+glorious throne,' or '_Thou_ glorious throne, high from the beginning;
+the place of our sanctuary, O Lord! the hope of Israel.'
+
+I. If we look at the words so, we have here, to begin with, a wonderful
+vision of what God is.
+
+'A glorious throne,' or, as the original has it, 'a throne of glory,'--
+which is not quite the same thing--' high from the beginning, the place
+of our sanctuary.' There are three clauses. Now they all seem to me to
+have reference to the Temple in Jerusalem, which is taken, by a very
+natural figure of speech, as a kind of suggestive description of Him who
+is worshipped there. There is the same kind of use of the name of a
+place to stand for the person who occupies or inhabits it, in many
+familiar phrases. For instance, 'The Sublime Porte' is properly the name
+of a lofty gateway which belonged to the palace in Constantinople, and
+so has come to mean the Turkish Government if Government it can be
+called. So we talk of the 'Papal See' having done this or that, and
+scarcely remember that a 'see' is a bishop's seat, or, again, the
+decision of 'the Chair' is final in the House of Commons. Or, if you
+will accept a purely municipal parallel, if any one were told that 'the
+Town Hall' had issued a certain order, he would know that our
+authorities, the Mayor and Corporation, had decreed so and so. So, in
+precisely the same way here, the prophet takes the outward facts of the
+Temple as symbolising great and blessed spiritual thoughts of the God
+that filled the Temple with His own lustre.
+
+'A glorious throne'--that is grand, but that is not what Jeremiah
+means--'A throne of glory' is the true rendering. And to what does that
+refer? Now, in the greater number of cases, you will find that in the
+Old Testament, where 'glory' is ascribed to God, the word has a very
+distinct and specific meaning, viz. the light which was afterwards
+called the 'Shekinah,' and dwelt between the cherubim, and was the
+symbol of the divine presence and the assurance that that presence would
+be self-revealing and would manifest Himself to His people. So here the
+throne on which glory rests is what we call the _mercy-seat_ within the
+veil, where, above the propitiatory table on which once a year the High
+Priest sprinkled the blood of sacrifice, and beneath which were shut up
+the tables of the covenant which constituted the bond between God and
+Israel, shone the Light in the midst of the darkness of the enclosed
+inner shrine, the token of the divine presence. The throned glory, the
+glory that reigns and rules as King in Israel, is the idea of the words
+before us. It is the same throne that a later writer in the New
+Testament speaks of when he says, 'Let us come boldly to the Throne of
+Grace.' For that light of a manifested divine presence was no malign
+lustre that blinded or slew those who gazed upon it, but though no eye
+but that of the High Priest dared of old to look, yet he, the
+representative and, as it were, the concentration of the collective
+Israel, could stand, unshrinking and unharmed, before that piercing
+light, because he bore in his hand the blood of sacrifice and sprinkled
+it on the mercy-seat. So was it of old, but now we all can draw near,
+through the rent veil, and wall rejoicingly in the light of the Lord.
+His glory is grace; His grace is glory.
+
+This, then, is the first of Jeremiah's great thoughts of God, and it
+means--'The Lord God omnipotent reigneth,' there is none else but He,
+and His will runs authoritative and supreme into all corners of the
+universe. But it is 'glory' that is throned. That is equivalent to the
+declaration that our God has never spoken in secret, in the dark places
+of the earth, nor said to any seeking heart, 'Seek ye My face in vain.'
+For the light which shone in that Holy Place as His symbol, had for its
+message to Israel the great thought that, as the sun pours out its
+lustre into all the corners of its system, so He, by the self-
+communication which is inherent in His very nature, manifests Himself to
+every gazing eye, and is a God who is Light, 'and in whom is no darkness
+at all.'
+
+But reigning glory is also redeeming grace. For the light of the bright
+cloud, which is the glory of the Lord, shines still, with no thunder in
+its depths, nor tempests in its bosom, above the mercy-seat, where
+spreads the blood of sprinkling by which Israel's sins are all taken
+away. Well may the prophet lift up his heart in adoring wonder, and
+translate the outward symbol into this great word, 'The throne of glory;
+Jehovah, the hope of Israel.'
+
+Then the next clause is, I think, equally intelligible by the same
+process of interpretation--' High from the beginning.' It was a piece of
+the patriotic exaggeration of Israel's prophets and psalmists that they
+made much of the little hill upon which the Temple was set. We read of
+the 'hill of the Lord's house' being 'exalted above the tops of the
+mountains.' We read of it being a high hill, 'as the hill of Bashan.'
+And though to the eye of sense it is a very modest elevation, to the eye
+of faith it was symbolical of much. Jeremiah felt it to be a material
+type, both of the elevation and of the stable duration of the God whom
+he would commend to Israel's and to all men's trust. 'High from the
+beginning,' separated from all creatural limitation and lowness, He
+whose name is the Most High, and on whose level no other being can
+stand, towers above the lowness of the loftiest creature, and from that
+inaccessible height He sends down His voice, like the trumpet from
+amidst the darkness of Sinai, proclaiming, 'I am God, and there is none
+beside Me.' Yet while thus 'holy'--that is, separate from creatures--He
+makes communion with Himself possible to us, and draws near to us in
+Christ, that we in Christ may be made nigh to Him.
+
+And the loftiness involves, necessarily, timeless and changeless Being;
+so that we can turn to Him, and feel Him to be 'the same yesterday, and
+to-day, and for ever.' No words are needed, and no human words are
+anything but tawdry attempts to elaborate, which only result in
+weakening, these two great thoughts. 'High--from the beginning.'
+
+The last of this series of symbols, even more plainly than the other
+two, refers originally to the Temple upon the hill of Zion; and
+symbolically, to the God who filled the Temple. He is 'the place of our
+sanctuary.' That is as though the prophet would point, as the wonderful
+climax of all, to the fact that He of whom the former things were true
+should yet be accessible to our worship; that, if I might so say, our
+feet could tread the courts of the great Temple; and we draw near to Him
+who is so far above the loftiest, and separate from all the
+magnificences which Himself has made, and who yet is 'our sanctuary,'
+and accessible to our worship.
+
+Ay! and more than that--'Lord! Thou hast been our _dwelling-place_ in
+all generations.' In old days the Temple was more than a place of
+worship. It was a place where a man coming had, according to ancient
+custom, guest rights with God; and if he came into the Temple of the
+Most High as to an asylum, he dwelt there safe and secure from avengers
+or foes.
+
+'The place of our sanctuary,' then, declares that God Himself, like some
+ancestral dwelling-place in which generation after generation of fathers
+and children have abode, whence they have been carried, and where their
+children still live, is to all generations their home and their
+fortress. The place of our sanctuary implies access to the inaccessibly
+High, communion with the infinitely Separate, security and abode in God
+Himself. He that dwelleth in God dwelleth in peace. These, then, are the
+points of the prophet's vision of God.
+
+II. Note, further, the soul rapt in meditation and this vision of God.
+
+To me, this long-drawn-out series of linked clauses without grammatical
+connection, this succession of adoring exclamations of rapture, wonder,
+and praise, is very striking. It suggests the manner in which we should
+vivify all our thoughts of God, by turning them into material for devout
+reverence; awe-struck, considering meditation. There is nothing told us
+in the Bible about God simply in order that we may know it. It is all
+meant to be fuel to the fire of our divine affection; to kindle in us
+the sentiments of faith and love and rapturous adoration. It is easy to
+know the theology of the Old and the New Testaments, and a man may
+rattle over the catalogue of the divine 'attributes,' as they are
+called, with perfect accuracy, and never be a hair the better for
+knowing all of them. So I urge, on you and on myself, the necessity of
+warming our thoughts and kindling our conceptions of what God is until
+they melt us into fluidity and adoration and love.
+
+I believe that there are few things which we Christian people more lack
+in this generation, and by the lack of which we suffer more, than the
+comparative decay of the good old habit of frequent and patient
+meditation on the things that we most surely believe. We are so busy in
+adding to our stock of knowledge, in following out to their latest
+consequence the logical effects of our Christianity, and in defending
+it, or seeking to be familiar with the defences, against modern
+assaults, or in practical work on its behalf, that the last thing that a
+great many of us do is to feed upon the truth which we know already. We
+should be like ruminant animals who first crop the grass--which, being
+interpreted, means, get Scripture truth into our heads--and then chew
+the cud, which being interpreted is, then put these truths through a
+second process by meditation on them, so that they may turn into
+nourishment and make flesh. 'He that eateth Me,' said Jesus Christ (and
+He used there the word which is specially applied to rumination), 'shall
+live by Me.' It does us no good to know that God is 'the Throne of
+Glory, high from the beginning, the place of our sanctuary,' unless we
+turn theology into devotion by meditation upon it. 'Suffer the word of
+exhortation '--in busy, great communities like ours, where we are all
+driven so hard, there is need for some voices sometimes to be lifted up
+in pressing upon Christian people the duty of quiet rumination upon the
+truths that they have.
+
+III. We may see in our text, further, the meditative soul going out to
+grasp God thus revealed, as its portion and hope.
+
+As I have already said, the text is best understood as part of a series
+of exclamations which extends into the following verse. If we take
+account of the whole series, and regard the subsequent part of it as led
+up to, by the part which is our text, we get an important thought as to
+what should be the outcome of the truths concerning God, and of our
+meditative contemplation of them.
+
+My relation to these truths is not exhausted even when I have meditated
+upon them, and they have touched me into a rapture of devotion. I can
+conceive that to have been done, and yet the next necessary step not to
+have been taken. What is that step? The next verse tells us, when it
+goes on to exclaim, 'O Lord! _the hope of Israel_.' I must cast myself
+upon Him by faith as my only hope, and turn away from all other
+confidences which are vain and impotent. So we are back upon that
+familiar Christian ground, that the bond which knits a man to God, and
+by which all that God is becomes that man's personal property, and
+available for the security and the shaping of his life, is the simple
+flinging of himself into God's arms, in sure and certain trust. Then,
+every one of these characteristics of which I have been speaking will
+contribute its own special part to the serenity, the security, the
+godlikeness, the blessedness, the righteousness, the strength of the man
+who thus trusts.
+
+But such confidence which makes all these things my own possessions,
+which makes Him 'a throne of glory,' to which I have access; which makes
+Him a place in which I dwell by this exercise of personal faith; which
+makes Him my hope, has for its other side the turning away from all
+other grounds of confidence and security. The subsequent context tells
+us how wise it is thus to turn away, and what folly it is to make
+anything else our hope except that 'throne of glory.' 'They that depart
+from Me shall be written in the earth,' because 'they have forsaken the
+Lord, the fountain of living waters.' If we say, 'O Lord! Thou art my
+hope,' we shall have the 'anchor of the soul, sure and steadfast, which
+entereth within the veil,' and fixes on Him who is within it, the
+throned Grace between the cherubim, our Brother and our Hope. So we may
+dwell in God, and from the secure height of our house look down serenely
+on impotent foes, and never know the bitterness of vain hopes, nor
+remove from the safe asylum of our home in God.
+
+
+
+
+TWO LISTS OF NAMES
+
+'They that depart from Me shall be written in the earth'--JER. xvii. 13.
+'Rejoice that your names are written in heaven.'--LUKE x. 20.
+
+
+A name written on earth implies that the bearer of the name belongs to
+earth, and it also secondarily suggests that the inscription lasts but
+for a little while. Contrariwise, a name written in heaven implies that
+its bearer belongs to heaven, and that the inscription will abide.
+
+We find running throughout Scripture the metaphor of books in which
+men's names are written. Moses thought of a book which God has written,
+and in which his name was enrolled. A psalmist speaks of the 'book of
+the living,' and Isaiah of those who are 'written among the living in
+Jerusalem.' Ezekiel threatens the prophets who speak lies in Jehovah's
+name that they 'shall not be written in the writing of the house of
+Israel.' The Apocalypse has many references to the book which is
+designated as 'the Lamb's book of life,' and which is opened at the
+final judgment along with the books in which each man's life-history is
+written, and only 'they who are written in the Lamb's book of life'
+enter into the city that comes down out of heaven.
+
+I. The principle on which the two lists are made up.
+
+It is commonly supposed that the idea of unconditional predestination is
+implied in the writing of the names in the book of life. There is
+nothing in the figure itself to lead to that, and the text from Jeremiah
+suggests, on the contrary, that the voluntary attitude of men to God
+determines their being or not being inscribed in the book of heaven,
+since it is 'they who depart from God' whose 'names are written on
+earth.'
+
+Then, since in the New Testament the book of life is called 'the
+Lamb's,' we are led to think of Christ as writing in it, and hence of
+our faith in Him as being the condition of enrolling our names.
+
+II. The significance of the lists.
+
+They are lists of the living and of the dead.
+
+True life is in fellowship with God. The other is the register of the
+burials in a graveyard.
+
+They are lists of the citizens of two cities.
+
+The idea is that the one class have relations and affinities with the
+celestial, are 'fellow-citizens with the saints,' and have heaven as
+their metropolis, their mother city. Therefore they are but as aliens
+here, and should not wish to be naturalised. The other class are
+citizens of the earthly, belonging to the present, with all their
+thoughts and desires bounded by this visible diurnal sphere.
+
+They are lists of those who shall be forgotten, and their works
+annihilated, and of those who shall be remembered and their work
+crowned.
+
+The names written on earth are swiftly obliterated, like a child's
+scrawl on the sand which is washed away by the next tide, or covered up
+by the next storm that blows about the sand-hills. What a contrast is
+that of the names written on the heavens, high up above all earthly
+mutations!
+
+In one sense oblivion soon seizes on us all. In another none of us is
+ever forgotten by God, but good and bad alike live in His thought. Still
+this idea of a special remembrance has place, as suggesting that,
+however unnoticed or forgotten on earth, God's children live in the true
+'Golden Book.' Their names are in the book of life. 'Of so much fame, in
+heaven expect the meed.' Ay, and as, too, suggesting how brief after all
+is the honour that comes from men.
+
+Also, there will be annihilation or perpetuation of their life's work.
+Nothing lasts but the will of God. Men who live godless lives are
+engaged in true Sisyphean labour. They are running counter to the whole
+stream of things, and what can be left at the end but frustrated
+endeavours covered with a gloomy pall?
+
+Is your life to be wasted?
+
+They are lists of those who are accepted in judgment, and of those who
+are not.
+
+Rev. xx. 12, 15; xxi. 27.
+
+The books of men's lives are to be opened, and also the book of life.
+What is written in the former can only bring condemnation. If our names
+are written in the latter, then He will 'confess our names before His
+Father and the holy angels.' And He will joyfully inscribe them there if
+we say to Him, like the man in _Pilgrim's Progress_, 'Set down my name.'
+He will write them not only there, but on the palms of His hands and the
+tablets of His heart.
+
+
+
+
+YOKES OF WOOD AND IRON
+
+'Go and tell Hananiah, saying, Thus saith the Lord; Thou hast broken the
+yokes of wood; but thou shalt make for them yokes of iron.'--JER.
+xxviii. 13.
+
+
+I suppose that I had better begin by a word of explanation as to the
+occasion of this saying. One king of Judah had already been carried off
+to Babylon, and the throne refilled by his brother, a puppet of the
+conquerors. This shadow of a king, with the bulk of the nation, was
+eager for revolt. Jeremiah had almost single-handed to stem the tide of
+the popular wish. He steadfastly preached submission, not so much to
+Nebuchadnezzar as to God, who had sent the invaders as chastisement. The
+lesson was a difficult one to learn, and the people hated the teacher.
+In the Jerusalem of Jeremiah's day, as in other places and at other
+times, a love of country which is not blind to its faults and protests
+against a blatant militarism, was scoffed at as 'unpatriotic,' 'playing
+into the hands of the enemy,' 'seeking peace at any price,' whilst an
+insane eagerness to rush to arms without regard to resources or
+righteousness was called a 'spirited foreign policy.' So Jeremiah had
+plenty of enemies.
+
+He had adopted a strange way of enforcing his counsel, which would be
+ridiculous to-day, but was natural and impressive then and there. He
+constantly for months went about with an ox-yoke on his neck, as a
+symbol of the submission which he advocated. One day, in the temple,
+before a public assembly, a certain Hananiah, a member of the opposite
+faction, made a fierce attack on the prophet and his teaching, and
+uttered a counter-prophecy to the effect that, in two years, the foreign
+invasion would be at an end, and all would be as it used to be. Our
+prophet answered very quietly, saying in effect, 'I hope to God that it
+may be true; the event will show.' And then Hananiah, encouraged by his
+meekness, proceeded to violence, tore the yoke off his shoulders and
+snapped it in two, reiterating his prophecy. Then Jeremiah went away
+home.
+
+Soon after, the voice which he knew to be God's, and not his own
+thoughts, spoke within him, and gave a much sharper answer. God
+declared, through Jeremiah, the plain truth that, for a tiny kingdom
+like Judah to perk itself up in the face of a world-conquering power
+like Babylon, could only bring down greater severity from the conqueror.
+And then he declared that Hananiah, for rebellion--not against Babylon,
+but against God, the true King of Israel--would be taken from the earth.
+He died in a couple of months.
+
+My text forms the first word of this divine message. I have nothing more
+to do with its original application. It gives a picturesque setting to a
+very impressive and solemn truth; very familiar, no doubt, but none the
+less because of its familiarity needing to be dinned into people's ears.
+It is that to throw off legitimate authority is to bind on a worse
+tyranny. To some kind of yoke all of us must bend our necks, and if we
+slip them out we do not thereby become independent, but simply bring
+upon ourselves a heavier pressure of a harder bondage. The remainder of
+my remarks will simply go to illustrate that principle in two or three
+cases of ascending importance. I begin at the bottom.
+
+I. We have the choice between the yoke of law and the iron yoke of
+lawlessness.
+
+We all know that society could not be held together without some kind of
+restraints upon what is done, and some stimulus to do what is apt to be
+neglected. Even a band of brigands, or a crew of pirates, must have some
+code. I have read somewhere that the cells in a honeycomb are circles
+squeezed by the pressure of the adjacent cells into the hexagonal shape
+which admits of contiguity. If they continued circles there would be
+space and material lost, and no complete continuity. So, in like manner,
+you cannot keep five men together without some mutual limitations which
+are shaped into a law. Now, as long as a man keeps inside it, he does
+not feel its pressure. A great many of us, for instance, who are in the
+main law-abiding people, do not ever remember that there is such a thing
+as restrictions upon our licence, or as obligations to perform certain
+duties; for we never think either of taking the licence or of shirking
+the duties. The yoke that is accepted ceases to press. Once let a man
+step outside, and what then? Why, then, he is an outlaw; and the rough
+side of the law is turned to him, and all possible terrors, which people
+within the boundary have nothing to do with, gather themselves together
+and frown down upon him. The sheep that stops inside the pasture is
+never torn by the barbed wires of the fence. If you think of the life of
+a criminal, with all its tricks and evasions, taking 'every bush to be
+an officer,' as Shakespeare says; or as the first of the brood who was
+the type of them all said, 'Every man that seeth me shall kill me': if
+you think of the sword that hangs over the head of every law-breaker,
+and which he knows is hanging by a hair; if you think of men in
+counting-houses who have manipulated the books of the firm, and who
+durst not be away from their desks for a day lest all should come to
+light; and if you think of the punishment that follows sooner or later,
+you will see that it is better to bear the light yoke of the law than
+the heavy yoke of crime. Some men buy their ruin very dearly.
+
+So much for the individual. But there is another aspect of this same
+principle on which I venture to say a word, although it is only a word,
+in passing. I do not suppose that there are many of my hearers who are
+likely to commit overt breaches of the law. But there are a great many
+of us who are apt to neglect the obligations of citizenship. In a
+community like ours, laziness, fastidiousness, absorption in our own
+occupations, and a number of other more or less reputable reasons, tempt
+many to stand aloof from the plain imperative obligations of every
+citizen in a free country. Every man who thus neglects to do his part
+for the common weal does his part in handing over the rule of the
+community to the least worthy. You will find--as you see in some
+democratic countries to-day, where the cultivated classes, and the
+classes with the sternest morality, have withdrawn in disgust from the
+turmoil--the mob having the upper hand, the least worthy scrambling into
+high places, and the community suffering, and bearing a heavier yoke, by
+reason of the unwillingness of some to bear the yoke and do the duty of
+a citizen. Vice lifts up its head, morality is scouted, self-interest is
+pursued unblushingly, and the whole tone of public opinion is lowered.
+Christian men and women, remember that you are members of a community,
+and you bear the yoke of responsibility therefore; and if you do not
+discharge your obligation, then you will have a heavier burden still to
+bear.
+
+I need not remind you, I suppose, of how this same thesis--that we have
+to choose between the yoke of law and the iron yoke of lawlessness--is
+illustrated in the story of almost all violent revolutions. They run the
+same course. First a nation rises up against intolerable oppression,
+then revolution devours its own children, and the scum rises to the top
+of the boiling pot. Then comes, in the language of the picturesque
+historian of the French Revolution, the type of them all--then comes at
+the end 'the whiff of grapeshot' and the despot. First the government of
+a mob, and then the tyranny of an emperor, crush the people that shake
+off the yoke of reasonable law. That is my first point.
+
+II. Let me take a higher illustration;--we have to choose between the
+yoke of virtue and the iron yoke of vice.
+
+We are under a far more spiritual and searching law than that written in
+any statute-book, or administered by any court. Every man carries within
+his own heart the court, the tribunal; the culprit and the judge. And
+here too, if law is not obeyed, the result is not liberty, but the
+slavery of lawlessness.
+
+No man can ponder his own nature and make without feeling that on every
+fibre of him is stamped a great law which he is bound to obey, and that
+on every fibre of him is impressed the necessity of part of his nature
+coercing, restraining, or spurring other parts of it. For, if we take
+stock of ourselves, what do we find? The broad basis of the pyramid, as
+it were, is laid in the faculties nearest the earth, the appetites which
+are inseparable from our corporeal being, and these know nothing about
+right or wrong, but are utterly blind to such distinctions. Put a loaf
+before a hungry man, and his mouth waters, whether the loaf belongs to
+himself or whether it is inside a baker's window.
+
+Then above these, as the next course of the pyramid, there are other
+desires, sentiments, affections, and emotions, less grossly sensuous
+than those of which I have been speaking, but still equally certain to
+be excited by the presence of their appropriate object, without any
+consideration of whether law is broken or kept in securing of it. Above
+these, which are, so to speak, branded on their very foreheads with the
+iron of slavery, stand certain faculties which are as clearly anointed
+to rule as the others are intended to serve. There is reason or
+intelligence, which is evidently meant to be eyes to these blind
+instincts and emotions of desire, and there is what we call the power of
+will, that stands like an engine-driver with his hand upon the lever
+which will either stop the engine or accelerate its revolutions. It says
+to passions and desires 'Go!' and they go; and, alas! it sometimes says
+'Halt!' and they will not halt. Then there is conscience, which brings
+to light for every man something higher than himself. A great
+philosopher once said that the two sublimest things in the universe were
+the moral law and the starry heavens; and that law 'I ought' bends over
+us like the starry heavens with which he associated it. No man can
+escape from the pressure of duty, and on every man is laid, by his very
+make, the twofold obligation, first to look upwards and catch the
+behests of that solemn law, and then to turn his eyes and his strength
+inwards and coerce or spur, as the case may be, the powers of his
+nature, and rule the kingdom within himself.
+
+Now, as long as a man lets the ruling parts of his nature guide the
+lower faculties, he feels comparatively no pressure from the yoke. But,
+if he once allows beggars to ride on horseback whilst princes walk--
+sense and appetite and desire, and more or less refined forms of
+inclination, to take the place which belongs only to conscience
+interpreting duty--then he has exchanged the easy yoke for one that is
+heavy indeed.
+
+What does a man do when, instead of loyally accepting the conditions of
+his nature, and bowing himself to serve the all-embracing and all-
+penetrating law of duty, he sets up inclination of any sort in its
+place? What does he do? I will tell you. He unships the helm; he flings
+compass and sextant overboard; he fires up the furnaces, and screws down
+the safety-valve, and says, 'Go ahead!' And what will be the end of
+that, think you? Either an explosion or a crash upon a reef; and you may
+take your choice of which is the better kind of death--to be blown up or
+to go down. Keep within the law of conscience, and let it govern all
+inclinations, and most of all the animal part of your nature; and you
+will feel little pressure, and no pain, from the yoke. Shake it off, and
+there is fulfilled in the disobedient man the threatening of my text,
+which rightly translated ought to be, 'Thou hast broken the yokes of
+wood, and thou _hast_ made instead of them yokes of iron.'
+
+For do you think it will be easy to serve the base-born parts of your
+nature, when you set them on the throne and tell them to govern you? Did
+you never hear of such a thing as a man's vices getting such a hold on
+him that, when his weakened will tried to shake them off, they laughed
+in his face and said, 'Here we are still'? Did you never hear of that
+other solemn truth--and have you never experienced how true it is?--that
+no man can say, 'I will let my inclination have its fling this once'?
+There are never 'this onces.' or very, very seldom. When you are
+glissading down a snowy Alpine slope, you cannot stop when you like,
+though you strike your alpenstock ever so deep into the powdery snow. If
+you have started, away you must go. God be thanked! the illustration
+does not altogether apply, for a man can stop if he will repent, but he
+cannot stop unless he does. Did you never hear that a teaspoonful of
+narcotic to-day will have to be a tablespoonful in a week or two, to
+produce the same effect? Are there not plenty of men who have said with
+all the force that a weakened will has left in it, 'I will never touch a
+drop of drink again, as long as I live, God helping me'?--and they have
+gone down the street, and they have turned in, not at the first or the
+second public-house, but at the fourth or the fifth. Ah! brother, 'they
+promised them liberty, but they are the servants of corruption.' Fix
+this in your minds. 'He that committeth sin is the slave of sin,' of the
+sin that he commits. Do not put off the easy yoke of obedience to
+conscience and duty, or you will find that there is an iron one, with
+many a sharp point in its unpolished surface rubbing into your skin and
+wounding your shoulders. 'It's wiser to be good than bad. It's safer to
+be meek than fierce.' 'Thou hast broken the yokes of wood'; it is not
+difficult to do that; 'thou hast made instead of them yokes of iron.'
+That is my second point.
+
+III. Lastly, we have the choice between the yoke of Christ and the iron
+yoke of godlessness.
+
+You may think that to be a very harsh saying, and much too vehement an
+antithesis. Let me vindicate it according to my own belief in a sentence
+or two. It seems to me that for civilised and cultivated Europe at this
+day, the choice lies between accepting Jesus Christ as the _Revealer_ of
+God, or wandering away out into the wastes of uncertainty, or as they
+call it nowadays, agnosticism and doubt. I believe myself, and I venture
+to state it here--though there is not time to do more than state
+it--that no form of what is now called Theism, which does not accept the
+historic revelation of God in Jesus Christ as the 'master-light of all
+our seeing,' will ever be able to sustain itself permanently in the face
+of present currents of opinion. If you do not take Christ for your
+Teacher, you are handed over either to the uncertainty of your own
+doubts, or to pinning your faith to some man and enrolling yourself as a
+disciple who is prepared to swallow down whole whatsoever the rabbi may
+say, and so giving to him what you will not give to Jesus; or else you
+will sink back into utter indolence and carelessness about the whole
+matter; or else you will go and put your belief and your soul into the
+hands of a priest, and shut your eyes and open your mouth and take
+whatever tradition may choose to send you. The one refuge from all
+these, as I believe, is to go to Him and learn of Him, and so take His
+yoke upon your shoulders.
+
+But, let me say further, it is better to obey Christ's _commandments_
+than to set ourselves against them. For if we will take His will for our
+law, and meekly assume the yoke of loyal and loving obedience to Him,
+the door into an earthly paradise is thrown open to us. His yoke is
+easy, not because its prescriptions and provisions lower the standard of
+righteousness and morality, but because love becomes the motive; and it
+is always blessed to do that which the Beloved desires. When 'I will'
+and 'I ought' cover exactly the same ground, then there is no kind of
+pressure from the yoke. Christ's yoke is easy because, too, He gives the
+power to obey His commandments. His burden is such a burden (as I think
+one of the old fathers puts it) as sails are to a ship or wings to a
+bird. They add to the weight, but they carry that which carries them. So
+Christ's yoke bears the man that bears it. It is easy, too, because
+'in,' and not only after or for, 'keeping of it there is great reward';
+seeing that He commands nothing which is not congruous with the highest
+good, and bringing along with it the purest blessing. Instead of that
+yoke, what has the world to offer, or what do we get to dominate us, if
+we cast off Christ? Self, the old anarch self, and that is misery. To be
+self-ruled is to be self-destroyed.
+
+There is no need that I should remind you of how it is better to accept
+Christ's _providences_ than to kick against them. Sorrow to which we
+submit loses all its bitterness and much of its sadness. Kicking against
+the affliction makes its sharp point penetrate our limbs. The bird that
+will dash itself against the wires of its cage beats itself all bloody
+and torn. Let us take the providence and it ceases to be hard.
+
+One last word;--we all carry an iron yoke upon our shoulders. For, hard
+as it is for us preachers to get our friends that listen to us to
+believe and realise it, 'We all have sinned and come short of the glory
+of God.' That yoke is on us all. And I, for my part, believe that no man
+by his own efforts can cast it off, but that the attempt to do so often
+brings greater strength to the sins that we seek to cast out, just as
+the more you mow the grass, the thicker and the stronger it grows. So I
+come with the great message which Jesus Christ Himself struck as the
+keynote and prelude of His whole ministry, when in the synagogue He
+said, 'The Spirit of the Lord God is upon Me ... to preach deliverance
+to the captives, and the opening of the prison to them that are bound.'
+He, and He only, will break every yoke and let the oppressed go free.
+And then He addresses us, after He has done that, with the immortal
+words, the sweetness of whose sound, sweet as it is, is less than the
+sweetness of their sense: 'Take My yoke upon you ... and ye shall find
+rest to your souls.' Oh, brother! will you not answer, 'O Lord! truly I
+am Thy servant. Thou hast loosed my bonds, and thereby bound me for ever
+to wear Thy yoke'; as the slave clings to his ransomer, and delights to
+serve him all the days of his life?
+
+
+
+
+WHAT THE STABLE CREATION TEACHES
+
+'If those ordinances depart from before Me, saith the Lord, then the
+seed of Israel also shall cease from being a nation before Me for
+ever.'--JER. xxxi. 36.
+
+
+This is the seal of the new covenant, which is to be made in days future
+to the prophet and his contemporaries, with the house of Israel and of
+Judah. That new covenant is referred to in Hebrews as the fundamental
+law of Christ's kingdom. Therefore we have the right to take to
+ourselves the promises which it contains, and to think of 'the house of
+Israel' and 'the seed of Jacob' as including us, 'though Abraham be
+ignorant of us.'
+
+The covenant and its pledge are equally grand. The very idea of a
+covenant as applied to God is wonderful. It is meant to teach us that,
+from all the infinite modes of action possible to Him, He has chosen
+One; that He has, as it were, marked out a path for Himself, and
+confined the freedom of His will and the manifold omnipotences of His
+power to prescribed limits, that He has determined the course of His
+future action. It is meant to teach us, too, the other grand thought
+that He has declared to us what that course is, not leaving us to learn
+it piecemeal by slow building up of conclusions about His mind from His
+actions as they come forth, but inversely telling us His mind and
+purpose in articulate and authentic words by which we are to interpret
+each successive work of His. He makes known His purposes. 'Before they
+spring forth I tell you of them.'
+
+It is meant to teach us, too, that He regards Himself as bound by the
+declaration which He has made, so that we may rest secure on this strong
+foundation of His faithfulness and His truth, and for all doubts and
+fears find the sufficient cure in His own declaration: 'My covenant will
+I not break nor alter the thing that is gone out of My lips.' No wonder
+that the dying king found the strength of his failing heart in the
+thought, 'He hath made with me an everlasting covenant, ordered in all
+things and sure.'
+
+The weighty promises of this solemn bond of God's cover the whole ground
+of our spiritual necessities--forgiveness of sins, true, personal,
+direct acquaintance with God, an intercommunion of mutual possession
+between Him who is ours and us who are His, and an inward sanctification
+by which His precepts shall coincide with our desires. These are the
+blessings which He binds Himself to bestow.
+
+And of this transcendent pact, the seal and guarantee is worthy. God
+descends to ratify a bond with man. By it He binds Himself to give all
+possible good for the soul. And to confirm it heaven and earth are
+called in. He points us to all that is august, stable, immense,
+inscrutable in the works of His hands, and bids us see there His pledge
+that He will be a faithful, covenant-keeping God. Sun, moon and stars,
+heaven, earth and sea--'ye are My witnesses,' saith the Lord.
+
+God's unchangeable love is the true lesson from the stable regularity of
+the universe. The tone in which Scripture speaks of external nature in
+all its parts is very remarkable, altogether peculiar. It does not take
+the aesthetic or the scientific, but the purely religious point of view.
+
+I. The facts. All nature is directly the effect of God's will and power.
+'He giveth,' 'He divideth' (v. 35).
+
+The physical universe presents a spectacle of stable regularity.
+
+This regularity is the consequence of sovereign, divine will. These
+ordinances are not laws of _nature_, but of God.
+
+II. The use commonly made of the facts.
+
+Ordinary unthinking worldliness sees nothing noticeable in them because
+they come uniformly. Earthquakes startle, but the firmness of the solid
+earth attracts no observation. God is thought to speak in the
+extraordinary, but most men do not hear His voice in the normal.
+
+Scientific godlessness formularises this tendency into a system, and
+proclaims that laws are everything and God a mere algebraical _x_.
+
+III. The lesson which they are meant to teach.
+
+God's works are a revelation of God.
+
+There is nothing in effect which is not in cause, and the stability of
+these ordinances carries our thoughts back to an unchanging Ordainer.
+
+They witness to His constancy of purpose or will. His acts do not come
+from caprice, nor are done as experiments, but are the stable expression
+of uniform and unchanging will.
+
+They witness to His unfailing energy of power, which 'operates unspent'
+and is to-day as fresh as at creation's birth.
+
+They witness to a single end pursued through all changes, and by all
+varieties of means. Darkness and light, sun rising and setting, storm
+and sunshine, summer and winter, all serve one end. As a horizontal
+thrust may give rise to opposite circular motions which all issue in
+working out an onward progress, so the various dealings of Providence
+with us are all adapted to 'work together,' and that 'for good.'
+
+They witness that life, joy, beauty, flow from obedience.
+
+Thus, then, these ordinances in their stability are witnesses. But they
+are inferior witnesses. The noblest revelation of the divine
+faithfulness and unchangeable purpose of good is in Jesus. And these
+witnesses will one day pass. Even now they have their changes, slow and
+unmarked by a short-lived man. Stars burn out, there have been violent
+convulsions, shocks and shatterings in the heavens, and a time comes, as
+even physical science predicts, when 'the heavens shall vanish away like
+smoke, and the earth shall wax old like a garment,' but that to which
+they witnessed shall endure, 'My salvation shall be for ever, and My
+righteousness shall not be abolished.' The created lights grow dim and
+die out, but in 'the Father of lights' is 'no variableness, neither
+shadow that is cast by turning.'
+
+Hence we see what our confidence should be. It should stand firm and
+changeless as the Covenant, and we should move in our orbits as the
+stars and hearken to the voice of His word as do they. Let us see to it
+that we have faith to match His faithfulness, and that our confidence
+shall be firmer than the mountains, more stable than the stars.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT THE IMMENSE CREATION TEACHES
+
+'If heaven above can be measured, and the foundations of the earth
+searched out beneath, I will also cast off all the seed of Israel for
+all that they have done, saith the Lord.'--JER. xxxi. 37.
+
+In the former sermon we considered the previous verse as presenting the
+stability of creation as a guarantee of the firmness of God's gracious
+covenant. Now we have to consider these grand closing words which bring
+before us another aspect of the universe as a guarantee for another side
+of God's gracious character. The immensity of creation is a symbol of
+the inexhaustibleness of the forgiving love of God.
+
+I. A word or two as to the fact here used as a symbol of the divine
+long-suffering.
+
+The prophet had very likely no idea at all beyond the ordinary one that
+presents itself to the senses--a boundless vault above an endless plain
+on which we stand, deep, sunless foundations, the Titanic substructions
+on which all rests, going down who knows where, resting on who knows
+what. We may smile at the rude conception, but it will be well for us if
+we can get as vivid an impression of the fact as He had.
+
+We thankfully avail ourselves of modern science to tell us something
+about the dimensions of this awful universe of ours. We learn to know
+that there are millions of miles between these neighbour orbs, that
+light which has been travelling for thousands of years may not yet have
+fallen on some portion of the mighty whole, that the planetary masses of
+our system are but tiny specks in the whole, that every fresh stride
+which astronomical observation takes but opens up new nebulae to be
+resolved, where suns and constellations and systems are dwarfed by
+distance into hazy brightness which hardly deserves the name of light.
+We know all this, and can find all about the distances in any book. So
+much for space. Then the geologist comes to bewilder us still more, with
+extension in time.
+
+But while all this may serve to give definiteness to the impression,
+after all, perhaps, it is the eye alone, as it gazes, that really feels
+the impression. Astronomy is really a very prosaic science.
+
+II. The effects which this immensity often produces on men.
+
+Very commonly in old days it led to actual idolatry, bowing down before
+these calm, unreachable brightnesses. In our days it too often leads to
+forgetting God altogether, and not seldom to disbelief that man can be
+of any account in such a universe. We are told that the notions of a
+covenant, a redemption, or that God cares about us are presumptuous. We
+all know the talk of men who are so modestly conscious of their own
+insignificance that they rebuke God for saying that He loves us, and
+Christians for believing Him.
+
+III. The true lesson.
+
+The immensity of the material universe is for us a symbol of the
+infinity of God's long-suffering love.
+
+The creation proceeds from a greater Creator. That gigantic and
+overwhelming magnitude, that hoary and immemorial age, that complicated
+and innumerable multitude of details, what less can they show than ONE
+Eternal and Infinite?
+
+The immense suggests the infinite.
+
+Granted that you cannot from the immense creation rise logically to the
+Infinite Creator, still the facts that the soul conceives that there is
+an infinite God, and is conscious of the spontaneous evoking of that
+thought by the contemplation of the immeasurable, are strong reasons for
+believing that it is a legitimate process of thought which hears the
+name of God thundered from the far-off depths of the silent heavens. The
+heavens cannot be measured, no plummet can reach to the deep foundations
+of the earth. We are surrounded by a universe which to our apprehensions
+is boundless. How much more so from expansions of our conceptions of
+celestial magnitudes since Jeremiah's days, and what is to be the lesson
+from that? That we are insignificant atoms in this mighty whole? that
+God is far away from us? that the material stretches so far that perhaps
+there is nothing beyond?
+
+The thought of faith is that the material immensity teaches me my God's
+infinity, and especially His inexhaustible patience with us sinners. It
+teaches us the unfathomed depths of His gracious heart, and the abysses
+of His mysterious providence, and the unbounded sweep of His long-
+suffering forgiveness. His forgiving forbearance reaches further than
+the limits of the heavens. Not till these can be measured will it be
+exhausted, and the seed of Israel cast off for what they have done.
+
+He, the Infinite Father, above all creation, mightier than it, is our
+true home, and living in Him we have an abode which can never be
+'dissolved,' and above us stretch far-shining glories, unapproached
+masses of brightness, nebulae of blessedness, spaces where the eye fails
+and the imagination faints. All is ours, our eternal possession, the
+inexhaustible source of our joy. Astronomers tell of light which has
+been travelling for millenniums and has not yet reached this globe; but
+what is that to the flashing glories which through eternity shall pour
+on us from Him? So, then, our confidence should be firm and
+inexhaustible.
+
+God has written wondrous lessons in His creation. But they are
+hieroglyphs, of which the key is lost, till we hear Christ and learn of
+Him. God has set His glories in the heavens and the earth is full of His
+mercy, but these are lesser gifts than that which contains them all and
+transcends them all, even His Son by whom He made the worlds, and--
+mightier still--by whom He redeemed man. God has written His mercy in
+the heavens and His faithfulness in the clouds, but His mercy and His
+faithfulness are more commended to us in Him who was before all things,
+and of whom it is written: 'As a vesture shalt Thou fold them up, but
+Thou art the same and Thy years shall not fail.' God has confirmed the
+covenant of His love to us by the faithful witnesses in the heavens, but
+the love shall abide when they have perished. The heavens bend above us
+all, and over the head of every man the zenith stands. Every spot of
+this low earth is smiled upon by that serene apocalypse of the loving
+will of God. No lane is so narrow and foul in the great city, no spot is
+so bare and lonely in the waste desert, but that thither the sunlight
+comes, and there some patch of blue above beckons the downcast eye to
+look up. The day opens its broad bosom bathed in light, and shows the
+sun in the heavens, the Lord of light, to preach to us of the true
+light. The night opens deeper abysses and fills them with stars, to
+preach to us how fathomless and immense His loving kindnesses and tender
+mercy are. They are witnesses to thee, dear friend, whatsoever thy
+heart, whatsoever thy sins, whatsoever thy memories. No iniquity can
+shut out God's forgiving love. You cannot build out the heavens. He will
+not be sent away; you cannot measure, you cannot conceive, you cannot
+exhaust, His pardoning love. No storms disturb that serene sky. It is
+always there, blazing down upon us unclouded with all its orbs. Trust
+Christ; and then as years roll on, you will find that infinite love
+growing ever greater to your loving eyes, and through eternity will move
+onwards in the happy atmosphere and boundless heaven of the
+inexhaustible, deep heart and changeless love of God.
+
+
+
+
+A THREEFOLD DISEASE AND A TWOFOLD CURE.
+
+'I will cleanse them from all their iniquity, whereby they have sinned
+against Me; and I will pardon all their iniquities, whereby they have
+sinned, and whereby they have transgressed against Me.'--JER. xxxiii. 8.
+
+
+Jeremiah was a prisoner in the palace of the last King of Judah. The
+long, national tragedy had reached almost the last scene of the last
+act. The besiegers were drawing their net closer round the doomed city.
+The prophet had never faltered in predicting its fall, but he had as
+uniformly pointed to a period behind the impending ruin, when all should
+be peace and joy. His song was modulated from a saddened minor to
+triumphant jubilation. In the beginning of this chapter he has declared
+that the final struggles of the besieged will only end in filling the
+land with their corpses, and then, from that lowest depth, he soars in a
+burst of lyrical prophecy conceived in the highest poetic style. The
+exiles shall return, the city shall be rebuilt, its desolate streets
+shall ring with hymns of praise and the voices of the bridegroom and the
+bride. The land shall be peopled with peaceful husbandmen, and white
+with flocks. There shall be again a King upon the throne; sacrifices
+shall again be offered. 'In those days, and at that time, will I cause
+the branch of righteousness to grow up unto David.... In those days
+shall Judah be saved, and Jerusalem shall dwell safely; and this is the
+name wherewith she shall be called, the Lord our righteousness.' That
+fair vision of the future begins with the offer of healing and cure, and
+with the exuberant promise of my text. The first thing to be dealt with
+was Judah's sin; and that being taken away, all good and blessing would
+start into being, as flowerets will spring when the baleful shadow of
+some poisonous tree is removed. Now, my text at first reading seems to
+expend a great many unnecessary words in saying the same thing over and
+over again, but the accumulation of synonyms not only emphasises the
+completeness of the promise, but also presents different aspects of that
+promise. And it is to these that I crave your attention in this sermon.
+The great words of my text are as true a gospel for us--and as much
+needed by us, God knows!--as they were for Jeremiah's contemporaries;
+and we can understand them better than either he or they did, because
+the days that were to come then have come now, and the King who was to
+reign in righteousness is reigning to-day, and His Name is Christ. My
+object now is, as simply as I can, to draw your attention to the two
+points in this text: a threefold view of our sad condition, and a
+twofold bright hope.
+
+Now for the first of these. There is here--
+
+I. A threefold view of the sad condition of humanity.
+
+Observe the recurrence of the same idea in our text in different words:
+'Their iniquity whereby they have sinned against Me.' ... 'Their
+iniquity whereby they have sinned, and whereby they have transgressed
+against Me.' You see there are three expressions which roughly may be
+taken as referring to the same ugly fact, but yet not meaning quite the
+same--'iniquity, or iniquities, sin, transgression.' These three all
+speak of the same sad element in your experience and mine, but they
+speak it from somewhat different points of view, and I wish to try to
+bring out that difference for you.
+
+Suppose that three men were to describe a snake. One of them fixes his
+attention on its slimy coils, and describes its sinuous gliding
+movements. Another of them is fascinated by its wicked beauty, and talks
+about its livid markings and its glittering eye. The third thinks only
+of the swift-darting fangs, and of the poison-glands. They all three
+describe the snake, but they describe it from different points of view;
+and so it is here. 'Iniquity,' 'sin,' 'transgression' are synonyms to
+some extent, but they do not cover the same ground. They look at the
+serpent from different points of view.
+
+First, a sinful life is a twisted or warped life. The word rendered
+'iniquity,' in the Old Testament, in all probability literally means
+something that is not straight, but is bent, or, as I said, twisted or
+warped. That is a metaphor that runs through a great many languages. I
+suppose 'right' expresses a corresponding image, and means that which is
+straight and direct; and I suppose that 'wrong' has something to do with
+'wrung'--that which has been forcibly diverted from a right line. We all
+know the conventional colloquialism about a man being 'straight,' and
+such-and-such a thing being 'on the straight.' All sin is a twisting of
+the man from his proper course. Now there underlies that metaphor the
+notion that there is a certain line to which we are to conform. The
+schoolmaster draws a firm, straight line in the child's copybook; and
+then the little unaccustomed hand takes up on the second line its
+attempt, and makes tremulous, wavering pot-hooks and hangers. There is a
+copyhead for us, and our writing is, alas! all uneven and irregular, as
+well as blurred and blotted. There is a law, and you know it. You carry
+in yourself--I was going to say, the standard measure, and you can see
+whether when you put your life by the side of that, the two coincide. It
+is not for me to say; I know about my own, and you may know about yours,
+if you will be honest. The warped life belongs to us all.
+
+The metaphor may suggest another illustration. A Czar of Russia was once
+asked what should be the course of the railway from St. Petersburg to
+Moscow, and he took up a ruler and drew a straight line upon the chart,
+and said, 'There; that is the course.' There is a straight road marked
+out for us all, going, like the old Roman roads, irrespective of
+physical difficulties in the contour of the country, climbing right over
+Alps if necessary, and plunging down into the deepest valleys, never
+deflecting one hairsbreadth, but going straight to its aim. And we--what
+are we? what are 'our crooked, wandering ways in which we live,' by the
+side of that straight path? This very prophet has a wonderful
+illustration, in which he compares the lives of men who have departed
+from God to the racing about in the wilderness of a wild dromedary,
+'entangling her ways,' as he says, crossing and recrossing, and getting
+into a maze of perplexity. Ah, my friend, is that not something like
+your life? Here is a straight road, and there are the devious footpaths
+that we have made, with many a detour, many a bend, many a coming back
+instead of going forward. 'The labour of the foolish wearieth every one
+of them, because he knoweth not how to go to the city.' All sin is
+deflection from the straight road, and we are all guilty of that.
+
+Let me urge you to consult the standard that you carry within
+yourselves. If you never have done it before, do it now; or, better,
+when you are alone by yourselves. It is easy to imagine that a line is
+straight. But did you ever see the point of a needle under a microscope?
+However finely it is polished, and apparently tapering regularly, the
+scrutinising investigation of the microscope shows that it is all rough
+and irregular. What would a builder do if he had not a T-square and a
+level? His wall would be ever so far out, whilst he thought it perfectly
+perpendicular. And remember that a line at a very acute angle of
+deflection only needs to be carried out far enough to diverge so widely
+from the other line that you could put the whole solar system in between
+the two. The smallest departure from the line of right will end, unless
+it is checked, away out in the regions of darkness beyond. That is the
+lesson of the first of the words here.
+
+The second of them, rendered in our version 'sin,' if I may recur to my
+former illustration, looks at the snake from a different point of view,
+and it declares that all sin misses the aim. The meaning of the word in
+the original is simply 'that which misses its mark.' And the meaning of
+the prevalent word in the New Testament for 'sin' means, in accordance
+with the ethical wisdom of the Greek, the same thing. Now, there are two
+ways in which that thought may be looked at. Every wrong thing that we
+do misses the aim, if you consider what a man's aim ought to be. We have
+grown a great deal wiser than the Puritans nowadays, and people make
+cheap reputations for advanced thought by depreciating their theology.
+We have not got beyond the first answer of the Shorter Catechism, 'Man's
+chief end is to glorify God, and to enjoy Him for ever.' That is the
+only aim which corresponds to our constitution, to our circumstances. A
+palaeontologist will pick up part of a skeleton embedded in the rocks,
+and from the study of a bone or two will tell you whether that creature
+was meant to swim, or to fly, or to walk; whether its element was sea,
+or sky, or land. Our destination for God is as plainly stamped on heart,
+mind, will, practical powers, as is the destination of such a creature
+deducible from its skeleton. 'Whose image and superscription hath it?'
+God's, stamped deep upon us all. And so, brother, whatever you win,
+unless you win God, you have missed the aim. Anything short of knowing
+Him and loving Him, serving Him, being filled and inspired by Him, is
+contrary to the destiny stamped upon us all. And if you have won God,
+then, whatever other human prizes you may have missed, you have made the
+best of life. Unless He is yours, and you are His, you have made a miss,
+and if I might venture to add, a mess, of yourself and of your life.
+
+Then there is another side to this. The solemn teaching of this word is
+not confined to that thought, but also opens out into this other, that
+all godlessness, all the low, sinful lives that so many of us live, miss
+the shabby aim which they set before themselves. I do not believe that
+any men or women ever got as much good, even of the lowest kind, out of
+a wrong thing as they expected to get when they ventured on it. If they
+did, they got something else along with it that took all the gilt off
+the gingerbread. Take the lowest kind of gross evil--sins of lust or of
+drunkenness. Well, no doubt the physical satisfaction desired is
+secured. Yes; and what about what comes after, in addition, that was not
+aimed at? The drunkard gets his pleasurable oblivion, his desired
+excitement. What about the corrugated liver, the palsied hand, the
+watery eye, the wrecked life, the broken hearts at home, and all the
+other accompaniments? There is an old Greek legend about a certain
+messenger that came to earth with a box, in which were all manner of
+pleasant gifts, and down at the bottom was a speckled pest that, when
+the box was emptied, crawled out into the sunshine and infected the
+land. That Pandora's box is like 'the good things' that sin brings to
+men. You gain, perhaps, your advantage, and you get something that
+spoils it all. Is not that your experience? I do not deny that you may
+satisfy your lower desires by a godless life. I know only too well how
+hard it is to get people to have higher tastes, and how all we ministers
+of religion are spending our efforts in order to win people to love
+something better than the world can give them. I also know that, if I
+could get to the very deepest recess of your hearts, you would admit
+that pleasures or advantages that are complete, that is to say, that
+satisfy you all round, and that are lasting, and that can front
+conscience and God who is at the back of conscience, are not to be won
+on the paths of sin and godlessness.
+
+There is an old story that speaks of a knight and his company who were
+travelling through a desert, and suddenly beheld a castle into which
+they were invited and hospitably welcomed. A feast was spread before
+them, and each man ate and drank his fill. But as soon as they left the
+enchanted halls, they were as hungry as before they sat at the magic
+table. That is the kind of food that all our wrongdoing provides for us.
+'He feedeth on ashes,' and hungers after he has fed. So, dear friends,
+learn this ancient wisdom, which is as true today as it ever was; and be
+sure, of this, that there is only one course in this world which will
+give a man true, lasting satisfaction; that there is only one life, the
+life of obedience to and love of God, about which, at the end, there
+will not need to be said, 'This their way is their folly.'
+
+And now, further, there is yet another word here, carrying with it
+important lessons. The expression which is translated in our text
+'transgressed,' literally means 'rebelled.' And the lesson of it is,
+that all sin is, however little we think it, a rebellion against God.
+That introduces a yet graver thought than either of the former have
+brought us face to face with. Behind the law is the Lawgiver. When we do
+wrong, we not only blunder, we not only go aside from the right line,
+but also we lift up ourselves against our Sovereign King, and we say,
+'Who is the Lord that we should serve Him? Our tongues are our own. Who
+is Lord over us? Let us break His bands asunder, and cast away His cords
+from us.' There are crimes against law; there are faults against one
+another. Sins are against God; and, dear friends, though you do not
+realise it, this is plain truth, that the essence, the common
+characteristic, of all the acts which, as we have seen, are twisted and
+foolish, is that in them we are setting up another than the Lord our God
+to be our ruler. We are enthroning ourselves in His place. Do you not
+feel that that is true, and that in some small thing in which you go
+wrong, the essence of it is that you are seeking to please yourself, no
+matter what duty--which is only a heathen name for God--says to you?
+
+Does not that thought make all these apparently trivial and
+insignificant deeds terribly important? Treason is treason, no matter
+what the act by which it is expressed. It may be a little thing to haul
+down a union-jack from a flagstaff, or to tear off a barn-door a
+proclamation with the royal arms at the top of it, but it may be
+rebellion. And if it is, it is as bad as to turn out a hundred thousand
+men in the field, with arms in their hands. There are small faults,
+there are trivial crimes; there are no small sins. An ounce of arsenic
+is arsenic, just as much as a ton; and it is a poison just as surely.
+
+Now I have enlarged perhaps unduly on this earlier part of my subject,
+and can but briefly turn to the second division which I suggested,
+viz.:--
+
+II. The twofold bright hope which shines through this darkness.
+
+'I will cleanse ... I will pardon.'
+
+If sin combines in itself all these characteristics that I have touched
+upon, then clearly there is guilt, and clearly there are stains; and the
+gracious promise of this text deals with both the one and the other.
+
+'I will pardon.' What is pardon? Do not limit it to the analogy of a
+criminal court. When the law of the land pardons, or rather when the
+administrator of the law pardons, that simply means that the penalty is
+suspended. But is that forgiveness? Certainly it is only a part of it,
+even if it is a part. What do you fathers and mothers do when you
+forgive your child? You may use the rod or you may not, that is a
+question of what is best for the child. Forgiveness does not lie in
+letting him off the punishment; but forgiveness lies in the flowing to
+the child, uninterrupted, of the love of the parent heart, and that is
+God's forgiveness. Penalties, some of them, remain--thank God for it!
+'Thou wast a God that forgavest them, though Thou tookest vengeance of
+their inventions,' and the chastisement was part of the sign of the
+forgiveness. The great penalty of all, which is separation from God, is
+taken away; but the essence of that pardon, which it is my blessed work
+to proclaim to all men, is, that in spite of the prodigal's rags and the
+stench of the sty, the Father's love is round about him. It is round
+about you, brother.
+
+Do you need pardon? Do you not? What does conscience say? What does the
+sense of remorse that sometimes blesses you, though it tortures, say?
+There are tendencies in this generation, as always, but very strong at
+present, to ignore the fact that all sin must necessarily lead to
+tremendous consequences of misery. It does so in this world, more or
+less. A man goes into another world as he left this one, and you and I
+believe that 'after death is the judgment.' Do you not require pardon?
+And how are you to get it? 'Himself bore our sins in His own body on the
+tree.' Jesus Christ, the Son of God, died that the loving forgiveness of
+God might find its way to every heart, and might take all men to its
+bosom, whilst yet the righteousness of God remained untarnished. I know
+not any gospel that goes deep enough to touch the real sore place in
+human nature, except the gospel that says to you and me and all of us,
+'Behold the Lamb of God that taketh away the sin of the world.'
+
+But forgiveness is not enough, for the worst results of past sin are the
+habits of sin which it leaves within us; so that we all need cleansing.
+Can we cleanse ourselves? Let experience answer. Did you ever try to
+cure yourself of some little trick of gesture, or manner, or speech? And
+did you not find out then how strong the trivial habit was? You never
+know the force of a current till you try to row against it. 'Can the
+Ethiopian change his skin?' No; but God can change it for him. So,
+again, we say that Jesus Christ who died for 'the remission of sins that
+are past,' lives that He may give to each of us His own blessed life and
+power, and so draw us from our evil, and invest us in His good. Dear
+brother, I beseech you to look in the face the fact of your rebellion,
+of your missing your aim, of your perverted life, and to ask yourself
+the question, 'Can I deal either with the guilt of the past, or with the
+imperative tendency to repeated sin in the future?' You may have your
+leprous flesh made 'like the flesh of a little child.' You may have your
+stained robe washed and made lustrous 'white in the blood of the Lamb.'
+Pardon and cleansing are our two deepest needs. There is one hand from
+which we can receive them both, and one only. There is one condition on
+which we shall receive them, which is that we trust in Him, 'Who was
+crucified for our offences, and lives to hallow us into His own
+likeness.'
+
+
+
+
+THE RECHABITES
+
+'The sons of Jonadab the son of Rechab have performed the commandment of
+their father, which he commanded them; but this people have not
+hearkened unto Me.'--JER. xxxv. 16.
+
+
+The Rechabites had lived a nomad life, dwelling in tents, not practising
+agriculture, abstaining from intoxicants. They were therein obeying the
+command of their ancestor, Jonadab. They had been driven by the
+Babylonian invasion to take refuge in Jerusalem, and, no doubt, were a
+nine days' wonder there, with their strange ways. Jeremiah seized on
+their loyalty to their dead ancestor's command as an object-lesson, by
+which he put a still sharper edge on his rebukes. The Rechabites gave
+their ancestral law an obedience which shamed Judah's disobedience to
+Jehovah. God asks from us only what we are willing to give to one
+another, and God is often refused what men have but to ask and it is
+given. The virtues which we exercise to each other rebuke us, because we
+so often refuse to exercise them towards God.
+
+I. Men's love to men condemns their lovelessness towards God.
+
+These Rechabites witnessed to the power of loyal love to their ancestor.
+Think of the wealth of love which we have all poured out on husbands,
+wives, parents, children, and of the few drops that we have diverted to
+flow towards God. What a full flood fills the one channel; what a
+shrunken stream the other!
+
+Think of the infinitely stronger reasons for loving God than for loving
+our dearest.
+
+II. Men's faith in men condemns their distrust of God.
+
+However you define faith, you find it abundantly exercised by us on the
+low plane of earthly relations. Is it belief in testimony? You men of
+business regulate your course by reports of markets on the other side of
+the world, and in a hundred ways extend your credence to common report,
+with but little, and often with no examination of the evidence. 'If we
+believe the witness of men, the witness of God is greater.' And how do
+we treat it? We are ready to accept and to act on men's testimony; we
+are slow to believe God's, and still slower to act on it, and to let it
+mould our lives.
+
+Is faith the realising of the unseen? We exercise it in reference to the
+earthly unseen; we are slow to do so in reference to the heavenly things
+which are invisible.
+
+Is faith the act of trust? Life is impossible without it. Not only is
+commerce a great system of credit, but no relations of life could last
+for a day without mutual confidence. We depend on one another, like a
+row of slightly built houses that help to hold each other up. These
+earthly exercises of trust should make it easier for us to rise to
+trusting God as much as we do each other. They ought to reveal to us the
+heavenly things. For indeed our human trust in one another should be a
+sample and shadow of our wise trust in the adequate Object of trust.
+
+III. Men's obedience to human authority condemns their rebellion against
+God.
+
+Jonadab's commandment evoked implicit obedience from his descendants for
+generations. Side by side in man's strange nature, with his self-will
+and love of independence, lies an equally strong tendency to obey and
+follow any masterful voice that speaks loudly and with an assumption of
+authority. The opinions of a clique, the dogmas of a sect, the habits of
+a set, the sayings of a favourite author, the fashions of our class--all
+these rule men with a sway far more absolute than is exercised on them
+by the known will of God. The same man is a slave to usurped authority
+and a rebel against rightful and divine dominion.
+
+Whether we consider the law of God in its claims or its contents, or its
+ultimate object, it is worthy of entire obedience. And what does it
+receive?
+
+God asks from us only what we willingly give to men. Even the qualities
+and acts, such as love, trust, obedience, which as exercised towards men
+give dignity and beauty and strength, rise up in judgment to condemn us.
+There is a sense in which Augustine's often-denounced saying that they
+are 'splendid vices' is true, for they are turned in the wrong
+direction, and very often their being directed so completely towards men
+and women is the reason why they are not directed towards God, who alone
+deserves and alone can satisfy and reward them. Then they become sins
+and condemn us.
+
+
+
+
+JEREMIAH'S ROLL BURNED AND REPRODUCED
+
+'Then took Jeremiah another roll, and gave it to Baruch ... who wrote
+therein ... all the words of the book which Jehoiakim king of Judah had
+burned in the fire, and there were added besides unto them many like
+words.'--JER. xxxvi. 32.
+
+
+This story brings us into the presence of the long death agony of the
+Jewish monarchy. The wretched Jehoiakim, the last king but two who
+reigned in Jerusalem, was put on the throne by the King of Egypt, as his
+tributary, and used by him as a buffer to bear the brunt of the
+Babylonian invasion. He seems to have had all the vices of Eastern
+sovereigns. He was covetous, cruel, tyrannous, lawless, heartless,
+senseless. He was lavishing money on a grand palace, built with cedar
+and painted in vermilion, when the nation was in its death-throes. He
+had neither valour nor goodness, and so little did he understand the
+forces at work in his times that he held by the rotten support of Egypt
+against the grim power of Babylon, and of course, when the former was
+driven like chaff before the assault of the latter, he shared the fate
+of his principal, and Judaea was overrun by Babylon, Jerusalem captured,
+and the poor creature on the throne bound in chains to be carried to
+Babylon, but, as would appear, discovered by Nebuchadnezzar to be
+pliable enough to make it safe to leave him behind, as his vassal. His
+capture took place but a few months after the incident with which I am
+dealing now. It would appear probable that the confusion and alarm of
+the Babylonian assault on Egypt had led to a solemn fast in Jerusalem,
+at which the nation assembled. Jeremiah, who had been prophesying for
+some thirty years, and had already been in peril of his life from the
+godless tyrant on the throne, was led to collect, in one book, his
+scattered prophecies and read them in the ears of the people gathered
+for the fast. That reading had no effect at all on the people. The roll
+was then read to the princes, and in them roused fear and interested
+curiosity, and kindly desire for the safety of Jeremiah and Baruch, his
+amanuensis. It was next read to the king, and he cut the roll leaf by
+leaf and threw it on the brasier, not afraid, nor penitent, but enraged
+and eager to capture Jeremiah and Baruch. The burnt roll was reproduced
+by God's command, 'and there were added besides ... many like words.'
+
+I. The love of God necessarily prophesying evil.
+
+As a matter of fact, the prophets of the Old Testament were all prophets
+of evil. They were watchmen seeing the sword and giving warning. No one
+ever spoke more plainly of the penalties of sin than did Christ. The
+authoritative revelation of the consequences of wrongdoing is an
+integral part of the gospel.
+
+It is not the highest form of appeal. It would be higher to say, 'Do
+right because it is right; love Christ because Christ is lovely.' The
+purpose of such an appeal is to prepare us for the true gospel. But the
+appeal to a reasonable self-love, by warnings of the death which is the
+wages of sin, is perfectly legitimate. Dehortations from sin on the
+ground of its consequences is part of God's message.
+
+Further, the warning comes from love. Punishment must needs follow on
+sin. Even His love must compel God to punish, and to warn before He
+does. Surely that is kind. His punishments are made known beforehand
+that we may be sure that caprice and anger have no part in inflicting
+them, but that they are the settled order of an inviolable law, and
+constitutional procedure of a just kind. Whether is it better to live
+under a despot who smites as he will, or under a constitutional king
+whose code is made public.
+
+Surely it is needful to have clearly set forth the consequences of sin,
+in view of the sophistries buzzing round us all and nestling in our own
+hearts, of the deceitfulness of sin, of siren voices whispering, 'Ye
+shall not surely die.'
+
+God's prophecies of evil are all conditional. They are sent on purpose
+that they may not be fulfilled.
+
+II. The loving warnings disregarded and disliked. Jehoiakim's behaviour
+is very human and like what we all do. We see the same thing repeated in
+all similar crises. Cassandra. Jewish prophets. Christ. English
+Commonwealth. French Revolution. Blindness to all signs and hostility to
+the men that warn.
+
+We see it in the attitude to the gospel revelation. The Scripture
+doctrine of punishment always rouses antagonism, and in this day revolts
+men. There is much in present tendencies to weaken the idea of future
+retribution. Modern philanthropy makes it hard sometimes to administer
+even human laws. The feeling is good, but this exaggeration of it bad.
+It is a reaction to some extent against an unchristian way of preaching
+Christian truth, but even admitting that, it still remains true that an
+integral part of the Christian revelation is the revelation of death as
+the wages of sin.
+
+We see the same recoil of feeling operating in individual cases. How
+many of you are quite indifferent to the preaching of a judgment to
+come, or only conscious of a movement of dislike! But how foolish this
+is! If a man builds a house on a volcano, is it not kind to tell him
+that the lava is creeping over the side? Is it not kind to wake, even
+violently, a traveller who has fallen asleep on the snow, before
+drowsiness stiffens into death?
+
+III. The impotent rejection and attempted destruction of the message.
+
+The roll is destroyed, but it is renewed. You do not alter facts by
+neglecting them, nor abrogate a divine decree by disbelieving it. The
+awful law goes on its course. It is not pre-eminent seamanship to put
+the look-out man in irons because he sings out, 'Breakers ahead.' The
+crew do not abolish the reef _so_, but they end their last chance of
+avoiding it, and presently the shock comes, and the cruel coral tears
+through the hull.
+
+IV. The neglected message made harder and heavier.
+
+Every rejection makes a man more obdurate. Every rejection increases
+criminality, and therefore increases punishment. Every rejection brings
+the punishment nearer.
+
+The increased severity of the message comes from love.
+
+Oh, think of the infinite 'treasures of darkness' which God has in
+reserve, and let the words of warning lead you to Jesus, that you may
+only hear and never experience the judgments of which they warn. Give
+Christ the roll of judgment and He will destroy it, nailing it to His
+cross, and instead of it will give you a book full of blessing.
+
+
+
+
+ZEDEKIAH
+
+'Zedekiah the son of Josiah reigned as king ... whom Nebuchadnezzar king
+of Babylon made king'--JER. xxxvii. 1.
+
+
+Zedekiah was a small man on a great stage, a weakling set to face
+circumstances that would have taxed the strongest. He was a youth at his
+accession to the throne of a distracted kingdom, and if he had had any
+political insight he would have seen that his only chance was to adhere
+firmly to Babylon, and to repress the foolish aristocracy who hankered
+after alliance with the rival power of Egypt. He was mad enough to form
+an alliance with the latter, which was constructive rebellion against
+the former, and was strongly reprobated by Jeremiah. Swift vengeance
+followed; the country was ravaged, Zedekiah in his fright implored
+Jeremiah's prayers and made faint efforts to follow his counsels. The
+pressure of invasion was lifted, and immediately he forgot his terrors
+and forsook the prophet. The Babylonian army was back next year, and the
+final investment of Jerusalem began. The siege lasted sixteen months,
+and during it, Zedekiah miserably vacillated between listening to the
+prophet's counsels of surrender and the truculent nobles' advice to
+resist to the last gasp. The miseries of the siege live for ever in the
+Book of Lamentations. Mothers boiled their children, nobles hunted on
+dunghills for food. Their delicate complexions were burned black, and
+famine turned them into living skeletons. Then, on a long summer day in
+July came the end. The king tried to skulk out by a covered way between
+the walls, his few attendants deserted him in his flight, he was caught
+at last down by the fords of the Jordan, carried prisoner to
+Nebuchadnezzar at Riblah away up in the north beyond Baalbec, and there
+saw his sons slain before his eyes, and, as soon as he had seen that
+last sight, was blinded, fettered, and carried off to Babylon, where he
+died. His career teaches us lessons which I may now seek to bring out.
+
+I. A weak character is sure to become a wicked one.
+
+Moral weakness and inability to resist strong pressure was the keynote
+of Zedekiah's character. There were good things in him; he had kindly
+impulses, as was shown in his emancipation of the slaves at a crisis of
+Jerusalem's fate. Left to himself, he would at least have treated
+Jeremiah kindly, and did rescue him from lingering death in the foul
+dungeon to which the ruffian nobility had consigned him, and he provided
+for his being at least saved from dying of starvation during the siege.
+He listened to him secretly, and would have accepted his counsel if he
+had dared. But he yielded to the stronger wills of the nobles, though he
+sometimes bitterly resented their domination, and complained that 'the
+king is not he that can do anything against you.'
+
+Like most weak men, he found that temptations to do wrong abounded more
+than visible inducements to do right, and he was afraid to do right, and
+fancied that he was compelled by the force of circumstances to do wrong.
+So he drifted and drifted, and at last was smashed to fragments on the
+rocks, as all men are who do not keep a strong hand on the helm and a
+steady eye on the compass. The winds are good servants but bad masters.
+If we do not coerce circumstances to carry us on the course which
+conscience has pricked out on the chart, they will wreck us.
+
+II. A man may have a good deal of religion and yet not enough to mould
+his life.
+
+Zedekiah listened to the prophet by fits and starts. He was eager to
+have the benefit of the prophet's prayers. He liberated the slaves in
+Jerusalem. He came secretly to Jeremiah more than once to know if there
+were any message from God for him. Yet he had not faith enough nor
+submission enough to let the known will of God rule his conduct,
+whatever the nobles might say.
+
+Are there not many of us who have a belief in God and a general
+acquiescence in Christ's precepts, who order our lives now and then by
+these, and yet have not come up to the point of full and final
+surrender? Alas, alas, for the multitudes who are 'not far from the
+kingdom,' but who never come near enough to be actually _in_ it! To be
+not far from _is_ to be out of, and to be out of is to be, like
+Zedekiah, blinded and captived and dead in prison at last.
+
+III. God's love is wonderfully patient.
+
+Jeremiah was to Zedekiah the incarnation of God's unwearied pleadings.
+During his whole reign, the prophet's voice sounded in his ears, through
+all the clamours and cries of factions, and mingled at last with the
+shouts of the besiegers and the groans of the wounded, like the
+sustained note of some great organ, persisting through a babel of
+discordant noises. It was met with indifference, and it sounded on. It
+provoked angry antagonism and still it spoke. Violence was used to
+stifle it in vain. And it was not only Jeremiah's courageous pertinacity
+that spoke through that persistent voice, but God's unwearied love,
+which being rejected is not driven away, being neglected becomes more
+beseeching, 'is not easily provoked 'to cease its efforts, but 'beareth
+all' despite, and hopeth for softened hearts till the last moment before
+doom falls.
+
+That patient love pleads with each of us as persistently as Jeremiah did
+with Zedekiah.
+
+IV. The long-delayed judgment falls at last.
+
+With infinite reluctance the divine love had to do what God Himself has
+called 'His strange work.' Divine Justice travels slowly, but arrives at
+last. Her foot is 'leaden' both in regard to its tardiness and its
+weight. There is no ground in the long postponement of retribution for
+the fond dream that it will never come, though men lull themselves to
+sleep with that lie. 'Because sentence against an evil work is not
+executed speedily, therefore the heart of the sons of men is thoroughly
+set in them to do evil.' But the sentence will be executed. The pleading
+love, which has for many returning autumns spared the barren tree and
+sought to make it fit to bear fruit, does not prevent the owner saying
+at last to his servant with the axe in his hand, 'Now! thou shalt cut it
+down.'
+
+
+
+
+THE WORLD'S WAGES TO A PROPHET
+
+'And it came to pass, that when the army of the Chaldeans was broken up
+from Jerusalem for fear of Pharaoh's arm, 12. Then Jeremiah went forth
+out of Jerusalem to go into the land of Benjamin, to separate himself
+thence in the midst of the people. 13. And when he was in the gate of
+Benjamin, a captain of the ward was there, whose name was Irijah, the
+son of Shelemiah, the son of Hananiah; and he took Jeremiah the prophet,
+saying, Thou fallest away to the Chaldeans. 14. Then said Jeremiah, It
+is false; I fall not away to the Chaldeans. But he hearkened not to him:
+so Irijah took Jeremiah, and brought him to the princes. 15. Wherefore
+the princes were wroth with Jeremiah, and smote him, and put him in
+prison in the house of Jonathan the scribe: for they had made that the
+prison. 16. When Jeremiah was entered into the dungeon, and into the
+cabins, and Jeremiah had remained there many days; 17. Then Zedekiah the
+king sent, and took him out: and the king asked him secretly in his
+house, and said, Is there any word from the Lord? And Jeremiah said,
+There is: for, said he, thou shalt be delivered into the hand of the
+king of Babylon. 18. Moreover, Jeremiah said unto king Zedekiah, What
+have I offended against thee, or against thy servants, or against this
+people, that ye have put me in prison? 19. Where are now your prophets
+which prophesied unto you, saying, The king of Babylon shall not come
+against you, nor against this land? 20. Therefore hear now, I pray thee,
+O my lord the king: let my supplication, I pray thee, be accepted before
+thee; that thou cause me not to return to the house of Jonathan the
+scribe, lest I die there. 21. Then Zedekiah the king commanded that they
+should commit Jeremiah into the court of the prison, and that they
+should give him daily a piece of bread out of the bakers' street, until
+all the bread in the city were spent. Thus Jeremiah remained in the
+court of the prison.'--JER. xxxvii. 11-21.
+
+
+SOME sixteen years had passed since Jehoiakim had burned the roll,
+during all of which the slow gathering of the storm, which was to break
+over the devoted city, had been going on, and Jeremiah had been vainly
+calling on the people to return to Jehovah. The last agony was now not
+far off. But there came a momentary pause in the siege, produced by the
+necessity of an advance against a relieving army from Egypt, which
+created fallacious hopes in the doomed city. It was only a pause. Back
+came the investing force, and again the terrible, lingering process of
+starving into surrender was resumed. Our text begins with the raising of
+the siege, and extends to some point after its resumption. It needs
+little elucidation, so clearly is the story told, and so natural are the
+incidents; but perhaps we shall best gather its instruction if we look
+at the three sets of actors separately, and note the hostile
+authorities, the patient prophet and prisoner, and the feeble king. The
+play of these strongly contrasted characters is full of vividness and
+instruction.
+
+I. We have that rough 'captain of the ward,' who laid hands on the
+prophet at the gate on the north side of the city, leading to the road
+to the territory of Benjamin. No doubt there was a considerable exodus
+from Jerusalem when the Assyrian lines were deserted, and common
+prudence would have facilitated it, as reducing the number of mouths to
+be fed, in case the siege were renewed; but malice is not prudent, and,
+instead of letting the hated Jeremiah slip quietly away home to
+Anathoth, and so getting rid of his prophecies and him, Irijah ('the
+Lord is a beholder') arrested him on a charge of meditating desertion to
+the enemy. It was a colourable accusation, for Jeremiah's constant
+exhortation had been to 'go out to the Chaldeans,' and so secure life
+and mild treatment. But it was clearly false, for the Chaldeans were for
+the moment gone, and the time was the very worst that could have been
+chosen for a contemplated flight to their camp.
+
+The real reason for the prophet's wish to leave the city was only too
+simple. It was to see if he could get 'a portion'--some of his property,
+or perhaps rather some little store of food--to take back to the
+famine-scourged city, which, he knew, would soon be again at
+starvation-point. There appears to have been a little company of
+fellow-villagers with him, for 'in the midst of the people' (v. 12) is
+to be construed with 'to go into the land of Benjamin.' The others seem
+to have been let pass, and only Jeremiah detained, which makes the
+charge more evidently a trumped-up excuse for laying hands on him.
+Jeremiah calls it in plain words what it was--'a lie'--and protests his
+innocence of any such design. But the officious Irijah knew too well how
+much of a feather in his cap his getting hold of the prophet would be,
+to heed his denials, and dragged him off to the princes.
+
+Sixteen years ago 'the princes' round Jehoiakim had been the prophet's
+friends; but either a new generation had come with a new king, or else
+the tempers of the men had changed with the growing misery. Their
+behaviour was more lawless than the soldiers' had been. They did not
+even pretend to examine the prisoner, but blazed up at once in anger.
+They had him in their power now, and did their worst, lawlessly
+scourging him first, and then thrusting him into 'the house of the
+pit'--some dark, underground hole, below the house of an official, where
+there were a number of 'cells'--filthy and stifling, no doubt; and there
+they left him. What for?
+
+The charge of intended desertion was a mere excuse for wreaking their
+malice on him. They hated Jeremiah because he had steadily opposed the
+popular determination to fight, and had foretold disaster. Add to this
+that he had held up a high standard of religion and morality to a
+corrupt and idolatrous people, and his 'unpopularity' is sufficiently
+explained.
+
+Would that the same causes did not produce the same effects now!
+Individuals still think an honest rebuke of their faults an insult, and
+a plain statement of their danger a sign of ill-feeling. Try to warn a
+drunkard or a profligate by telling him of the disease and misery which
+will dog his sins, or by setting plainly before him God's law of purity
+and sobriety, and you will find that the prophet's function still brings
+with it, in many cases, the prophet's doom. But still more truly is this
+the case with masses, whether nations or cities. A spurious patriotism
+resents as unpatriotic the far truer love of country which sets a
+trumpet to its mouth to tell the people their sins. In all democratic
+communities, whether republican or regal in their form of government, a
+crying evil is flattery of the masses, exalting their virtues and
+foretelling their prosperity, while hiding their faults and slurring
+over the requirements of morality and religion, which are the
+foundations of prosperity. What did England do with her prophets? What
+did America do with hers? What wages do they get to-day? The men who
+dare to tell their countrymen their faults, and to preach temperance,
+peace, civic purity, personal morality, are laid hold of by the Irijahs
+who preside over the newspapers, and are pilloried as deserters and half
+traitors at heart.
+
+II. We see the patient, unmoved prophet. One flash of honest indignation
+repels the charge of deserting, and then he is silent. 'As a sheep
+before her shearers is dumb, so he opened not his mouth.' It is useless
+to plead before lawless violence. A silent martyr eloquently condemns an
+unjust judge. So, without opposition or apparent remonstrance, Jeremiah
+is cast into the foul den where he lies for 'many days,' patiently
+bearing his fate, and speaking his complaint to God only. How long his
+imprisonment lasted does not appear; but the context implies that during
+it the siege was resumed, and that there was difficulty in procuring
+bread. Then the king sent for him secretly.
+
+Zedekiah's temper at the time will be considered presently. Here we have
+to do with Jeremiah's answer to his question. In it we may note, as
+equally prominent and beautifully blended, respect, submission,
+consciousness of peril and impending death, and unshaken boldness. He
+knew that his life was at the disposal of the capricious, feeble
+Zedekiah. He bows before him as his subject, and brings his
+'supplication'; but not one jot of his message will he abate, nor smooth
+down its terribleness an atom. He repeats as unfalteringly as ever the
+assurance that the king of Babylon will take the city. He asserts his
+own innocence as regards king and courtiers and people; and he asks the
+scornful question what has become of all the smooth-tongued prophets of
+prosperity, as if he were bidding the king look over the city wall and
+see the tokens of their lies and of Jeremiah's truth in the investing
+lines of the all but victorious enemy.
+
+Such a combination of perfect meekness and perfect courage, unstained
+loyalty to his king, and supreme obedience to his God, was only possible
+to a man who lived in very close communion with Jehovah, and had learned
+thereby to fear none less, because he feared Him so well, and to
+reverence all else whom He had set in places of reverence. True courage,
+of the pattern which befits God's servants, is ever gentle. Bluster is
+the sign of weakness. A Christian hero--and no man will be a Christian
+as he ought to be, who has not something of the hero in him--should win
+by meekness. Does not the King of all such ride prosperously 'because of
+truth and meekness,' and must not the armies which follow Him do the
+same? Faithful witnessing to men of their sins need not be rude, harsh,
+or self-asserting. But we must live much in fellowship with the Lord of
+all the meek and the pattern of all patient sufferers and faithful
+witnesses, if we are ever to be like Him, or even like His pale shadow
+as seen in this meek prophet. The fountains of strength and of patience
+spring side by side at the foot of the cross.
+
+III. We have the weak Zedekiah, with his pitiable vacillation. He had
+been Nebuchadnezzar's nominee, and had served him for some years, and
+then rebelled. His whole career indicates a feeble nature, taking the
+impression of anything which was strongly laid on it. He was a king of
+putty, when the times demanded one of iron. He was cowed by the
+'princes.' Sometimes he was afraid to disobey Jeremiah, and then afraid
+to let his masters know that he was so. Thus he sends for the prophet
+stealthily, and his first question opens a depth of conflict in his
+soul. He did believe that the prophet spoke the word of Jehovah, and yet
+he could not muster up courage to follow his convictions and go against
+the princes and the mob. He wanted another 'word' from Jehovah, by which
+he meant a word of another sort than the former. He could not bring his
+mind to obey the word which he had, and so he weakly hoped that perhaps
+God's word might be changed into one that he would be willing to obey.
+Many men are, like him, asking, 'Is there any word from the Lord?' and
+meaning, 'Is there any change in the condition of receiving His favour?'
+
+He had interest enough in the prophet to interfere for his comfort, and
+to have him put into better quarters in the palace and provided with a
+'circle' (a round loaf) of bread out of Baker Street, as long as there
+was any in the city--not a very long time. But why did he do so much,
+and not do more? He knew that Jeremiah was innocent, and that his word
+was God's; and what he should have done was to have shaken off his
+masterful 'servants,' followed his conscience, and obeyed God. Why did
+he not? Because he was a coward, infirm of purpose, and therefore
+'unstable as water.'
+
+He is another of the tragic examples, with which all life as well as
+scripture is studded, of how much evil is possible to a weak character.
+In this world, where there are so many temptations to be bad, no man
+will be good who cannot strongly say 'No.' The virtue of strength of
+will may be but like the rough fence round young trees to keep cattle
+from browsing on them and east winds from blighting them. But the fence
+is needed, if the trees are to grow. 'To be weak is to be miserable,'
+and sinful too, generally. 'Whom resist' must be the motto for all
+noble, God-like, and God-pleasing life.
+
+
+
+
+THE LAST AGONY
+
+'In the ninth year of Zedekiah king of Judah, in the tenth month, came
+Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon and all his army against Jerusalem, and
+they besieged it. 2. And in the eleventh year of Zedekiah, in the fourth
+month, the ninth day of the month, the city was broken up. 3. And all
+the princes of the king of Babylon came in, and sat in the middle gate,
+even Nergal-sharezer, Samgar-nebo, Sarse-chim, Rab-saris,
+Nergal-sharezer, Rab-mag, with all the residue of the princes of the
+king of Babylon. 4. And it came to pass, that when Zedekiah the king of
+Judah saw them, and all the men of war, then they fled, and went forth
+out of the city by night, by the way of the king's garden, by the gate
+betwixt the two walls: and he went out the way of the plain. 5. But the
+Chaldeans' army pursued after them, and overtook Zedekiah in the plains
+of Jericho; and when they had taken him, they brought him up to
+Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon to Riblah in the land of Hamath, where he
+gave judgment upon him. 6. Then the king of Babylon slew the sons of
+Zedekiah in Riblah before his eyes: also the king of Babylon slew all
+the nobles of Judah. 7. Moreover he put out Zedekiah's eyes, and bound
+him with chains, to carry him to Babylon. 8. And the Chaldeans burned
+the king's house, and the houses of the people, with fire, and brake
+down the walls of Jerusalem. 9. Then Nebuzar-adan the captain of the
+guard carried away captive into Babylon the remnant of the people that
+remained in the city, and those that fell away, that fell to him, with
+the rest of the people that remained. 10. But Nebuzar-adan the captain
+of the guard left of the poor of the people, which had nothing, in the
+land of Judah, and gave them vineyards and fields at the same time.'--
+JER. xxxix. 1-10.
+
+
+Two characteristics of this account of the fall of Jerusalem are
+striking,--its minute particularity, giving step by step the details of
+the tragedy, and its entire suppression of emotion. The passionless
+record tells the tale without a tear or a sob. For these we must go to
+the Book of Lamentations. This is the history of God's judgment, and
+here emotion would be misplaced. But there is a world of repressed
+feeling in the long-drawn narrative, as well as in the fact that three
+versions of the story are given here (chap, lii., 2 Kings xxv.). Sorrow
+curbed by submission, and steadily gazing on God's judicial act, is the
+temper of the narrative. It should be the temper of all sufferers. 'I
+was dumb, I opened not my mouth; because thou didst it.' But we may note
+the three stages in the final agony which this section distinguishes.
+
+I. There is the entrance of the enemy. Jerusalem fell not by assault,
+but by famine. The siege lasted eighteen months, and ended when 'all the
+bread in the city was spent.' The pitiful pictures in Lamentations fill
+in the details of misery, telling how high-born women picked garbage
+from dung-heaps, and mothers made a ghastly meal of their infants, while
+the nobles were wasted to skeletons, and the little children piteously
+cried for bread. At length a breach was made in the northern wall (as
+Josephus tells us, 'at midnight'), and through it, on the ninth day of
+the fourth month (corresponding to July), swarmed the conquerors,
+unresisted. The commanders of the Babylonians planted themselves at 'the
+middle gate,' probably a gate in the wall between the upper and lower
+city, so securing for them the control of both.
+
+How many of these fierce soldiers are named in verse 3? At first sight
+there seem to be six, but that number must be reduced by at least two,
+for Rab-saris and Rab-mag are official titles, and designate the offices
+(chief eunuch and chief magician) of the two persons whose names they
+respectively follow. Possibly Samgar-Nebo is also to be deducted, for it
+has been suggested that, as that name stands, it is anomalous, and it
+has been proposed to render its first element, _Samgar_, as meaning
+_cup-bearer_, and being the official title attached to the name
+preceding it; while its second part, _Nebo_, is regarded as the first
+element in a new name obtained by reading _shashban_ instead of
+Sarsechim, and attaching that reading to Nebo. This change would bring
+verse 3 into accord with verse 13, for in both places we should then
+have Nebo-shashban designated as chief of the eunuchs. However the
+number of the commanders is settled, and whatever their names, the point
+which the historian emphasises is their presence there. Had it come to
+this, that men whose very names were invocations of false gods ('Nergal
+protect the king,' 'Nebo delivers me' if we read 'Nebo-shashban,' or 'Be
+gracious, Nebo,' if Samgar-nebo) should sit close by the temple, and
+have their talons fixed in the Holy City?
+
+These intruders were all unconscious of the meaning of their victory,
+and the tragedy of their presence there. They thought that they were
+Nebuchadnezzar's servants, and had captured for him, at last, an
+obstinate little city, which had given more trouble than it was worth.
+Its conquest was but a drop in the bucket of his victories. How little
+they knew that they were serving that Jehovah whom they thought that
+Nebo had conquered in their persons! How little they knew that they were
+the instruments of the most solemn act of judgment in the world's
+history till then!
+
+The causes which led to the fall of Jerusalem could be reasonably set
+forth as purely political without a single reference to Israel's sins or
+God's judgment; but none the less was its capture the divine punishment
+of its departure from Him, and none the less were Nergal-sharezer and
+his fellows God's tools, the axes with which He hewed down the barren
+tree. So does He work still, in national and individual history. You
+may, in a fashion, account for both without bringing Him in at all; but
+your philosophy of either will be partial, unless you recognise that
+'the history of the world is the judgment of the world.' It was the same
+hand which set these harsh conquerors at the middle gate of Jerusalem
+that sent the German armies to encamp in the Place de la Concorde in
+Paris; and in neither case does the recognition of God in the crash of a
+falling throne absolve the victors from the responsibility of their
+deeds.
+
+II. We have the flight and fate of Zedekiah and his evil advisers (vs.
+4-7). His weakness of character shows itself to the end. Why was there
+no resistance? It would have better beseemed him to have died on his
+palace threshold than to have skulked away in the dark between the
+shelter of the 'two walls.' But he was a poor weakling, and the curse of
+God sat heavy on his soul, though he had tried to put it away.
+Conscience made a coward of him; for he, at all events, knew who had set
+the strangers by the middle gate. Men who harden heart and conscience
+against threatened judgments are very apt to collapse, when the threats
+are fulfilled. The frost breaks up with a rapid thaw.
+
+Ezekiel (Ezek. xii. 12) prophesied the very details of the flight. It
+was to be 'in the dark,' the king himself was to 'carry' some of his
+valuables, they were to 'dig through' the earthen ramparts; and all
+appears to have been literally fulfilled. The flight was taken in the
+opposite direction from the entrance of the besiegers; two walls, which
+probably ran down the valley between Zion and the temple mount, afforded
+cover to the fugitives as far as to the south city wall, and there some
+postern let them out to the king's garden. That is a tragic touch. It
+was no time then to gather flowers. The forlorn and frightened company
+seems to have scattered when once outside the city; for there is a
+marked contrast in verse 4 between 'they fled' and 'he went.' In the
+description of his flight Zedekiah is still called, as in verses 1 and
+2, the king; but after his capture he is only 'Zedekiah.'
+
+Down the rocky valley of the Kedron he hurried, and had a long enough
+start of his pursuers to get to Jericho. Another hour would have seen
+him safe across Jordan, but the prospect of escape was only dangled
+before his eyes to make capture more bitter. Probably he was too much
+absorbed with his misery and fear to feel any additional humiliation
+from the mighty memories of the scene of his capture; but how solemnly
+fitting it was that the place which had seen Israel's first triumph,
+when 'by faith the walls of Jericho fell down,' should witness the
+lowest shame of the king who had cast away his kingdom by unbelief! The
+conquering dead might have gathered in shadowy shapes to reproach the
+weakling and sluggard who had sinned away the heritage which they had
+won. The scene of the capture underscores the lesson of the capture
+itself; namely, the victorious power of faith, and the defeat and shame
+which, in the long-run, are the fruits of an 'evil heart of unbelief,
+departing from the living God.'
+
+That would be a sad march through all the length of the fair land that
+had slipped from his slack fingers, up to far-off Riblah, in the great
+valley between the Lebanon and the anti-Lebanon. Observe how, in verses
+5 and 6, the king of Babylon has his royal title, and Zedekiah has not.
+The crown has fallen from his head, and there is no more a king in
+Judah. He who had been king now stands chained before the cruel
+conqueror. Well might the victor think that Nebo had overcome Jehovah,
+but better did the vanquished know that Jehovah had kept his word.
+
+Cruelty and expediency dictated the savage massacre and mutilation which
+followed. The death of Zedekiah's sons, and of the nobles who had
+scoffed at Jeremiah's warnings, and the blinding of Zedekiah, were all
+measures of precaution as well as of savagery. They diminished the
+danger of revolt; and a blind, childless prisoner, without counsellors
+or friends, was harmless. But to make the sight of his slaughtered sons
+the poor wretch's last sight, was a refinement of gratuitous delight in
+torturing. Thus singularly was Ezekiel's enigma solved and harmonised
+with its apparent contradictions in Jeremiah's prophecies: 'Yet shall he
+not see it, though he shall die there' (Ezek. xii. 13).
+
+Zedekiah is one more instance of the evil which may come from a weak
+character, and of the evil which may fall on it. He had good impulses,
+but he could not hold his own against the bad men round him, and so he
+stumbled on, not without misgivings, which only needed to be attended to
+with resolute determination, in order to have reversed his conduct and
+fate. Feeble hands can pull down venerable structures built in happier
+times. It takes a David and a Solomon to rear a temple, but a Zedekiah
+can overthrow it.
+
+III. We have the completion of the conquest (vs. 8-10). The first care
+of the victors was, of course, to secure themselves, and fires and
+crowbars were the readiest way to that end. But the wail in the last
+chapter of Lamentations hints at the usual atrocities of the sack of a
+city, when brutal lust and as brutal ferocity are let loose. Chapter
+lii. shows that the final step in our narrative was separated from the
+capture of the city by a month, which was, no doubt, a month of nameless
+agonies, horrors, and shame. Then the last drop was added to the bitter
+cup, in the deportation of the bulk of the inhabitants, according to the
+politic custom of these old military monarchies. What rending of ties,
+what weariness and years of long-drawn-out yearning, that meant, can
+easily be imagined. The residue left behind to keep the country from
+relapsing into waste land was too weak to be dangerous, and too cowed to
+dare anything. One knows not who had the sadder lot, the exiles, or the
+handful of peasants left to till the fields that had once been their
+own, and to lament their brethren gone captives to the far-off land.
+
+Surely the fall of Jerusalem, though all the agony is calmed ages ago,
+still remains as a solemn beacon-warning that the wages of sin is death,
+both for nations and individuals; that the threatenings of God's Word
+are not idle, but will be accomplished to the utmost tittle; and that
+His patience stretches from generation to generation, and His judgments
+tarry because He is not willing that any should perish, but that for all
+the long-suffering there comes a time when even divine love sees that it
+is needful to say 'Now!? and the bolt falls. The solemn word addressed
+to Israel has application as real to all Christian churches and
+individual souls: 'You only have I known of all the inhabitants of the
+earth; therefore I will punish you for your iniquities.'
+
+
+
+
+EBEDMELECH THE ETHIOPIAN
+
+'For I will surely deliver thee, and thou shalt not fall by the sword,
+but thy life shall be for a prey unto thee: because thou hast put thy
+trust in Me, saith the Lord.'--JER. xxxix. 18.
+
+
+Ebedmelech is a singular anticipation of that other Ethiopian eunuch
+whom Philip met on the desert road to Gaza. It is prophetic that on the
+eve of the fall of the nation, a heathen man should be entering into
+union with God. It is a picture in little of the rejection of Israel and
+the ingathering of the Gentiles.
+
+I. The identity in all ages of the bond that unites men to God.
+
+It is a common notion that faith is peculiar to the New Testament. But
+the Old Testament 'trust' is identical with the New Testament 'faith,'
+and it is a great pity that the variation in translation has obscured
+that identity. The fact of the prominence given to law in the Old
+Testament does not affect this. For every effort to keep the law must
+have led to consciousness of imperfection, and that consciousness must
+have driven to the exercise of penitent trust. The difference of degrees
+of revelation does not affect it, for faith is the same, however various
+the contents of the creed.
+
+Note further the personal object of Faith--'in ME.' The object of Faith
+is not a proposition but a Person. That Person is the same in the Old
+Testament and in the New. The Jehovah of the one is the God in Christ of
+the other. Consequently faith must be more than intellectual assent, it
+must be voluntary and emotional, the act of the whole man, 'the
+synthesis of the reason and the will.'
+
+II. The contrast of a formal and real union with God.
+
+The king, prophets, priests, the whole nation, had an outward connection
+with Him, but it meant nothing. And this foreigner, a slave, perhaps not
+even a proselyte, a eunuch, had what the children of the covenant had
+not, a true union with God through Faith.
+
+Judaism was not an exclusive system, but was intended to bring in the
+nations to share in its blessings. Outward descent gave outward place
+within the covenant, but the distinction of real and formal place there
+was established from the beginning. What else than this is the meaning
+of all the threatenings of Deuteronomy? What else did Isaiah mean when
+he called the rulers in Jerusalem 'Rulers of Sodom'? Here the fates of
+Ebedmelech and of Zedekiah illustrate both sides of the truth. The
+danger of trusting in outward possession and of thinking that God's
+mercy is our property besets all Churches. Organisations of Christianity
+are necessary, but it is impossible to tell the harm that formal
+connection with them has done. There is only one bond that unites men to
+God--personal trust in Him as 'in Christ reconciling the world to
+Himself.'
+
+III. The possibility of exercising uniting faith even in most
+unfavourable circumstances.
+
+This Ebedmelech had everything against him. The contemptuous exclusion
+of him from any share in the covenant might well have discouraged him.
+The poorest Jew treated him as a heathen dog, who had no right even to
+crumbs from the table spread for the children only. He was plunged into
+a sea of godlessness, and saw examples enough of utter carelessness as
+to Jehovah in His professed servants to drive him away from a religion
+which had so little hold on its professed adherents. The times were
+gloomy, and the Jehovah whom Judah professed to worship seemed to have
+small power to help His worshippers. It would have been no wonder if the
+conduct of the people of Jerusalem had caused the name of Jehovah to be
+blasphemed by this Gentile, nor if he had revolted from a religion that
+was alleged to be the special property of one race, and that such a
+race! But he listened to the cry of his own heart, and to the words of
+God's prophet, and his faith pierced through all obstacles--like the
+roots of some tree feeling for the water. He found the vitalising
+fountain that he sought, and His name stands to all ages as a witness
+that no seeking heart, that longs for God, is ever balked in its search,
+and that a faith, very imperfect as to its knowledge, may be so strong
+as to its substance that it unites him who exercises it with God, while
+the possessors of ecclesiastical privileges and of untarnished and
+full-orbed orthodox knowledge have no fellowship with Him.
+
+IV. The safety given by such uniting faith.
+
+To Ebedmelech, escape from death by the besiegers' swords was promised.
+To us a more blessed safety and exemption from a worse destruction are
+assured. 'The life which is life indeed' may be ours, and shall
+assuredly be ours, if our trust knits us to Him who is the Life, and who
+has said 'He that liveth and believeth in Me shall never die.'
+
+
+
+
+GOD'S PATIENT PLEADINGS
+
+'I sent unto you all my servants the prophets, rising early and sending
+them, saying, Oh, do not this abominable thing that I hate.'--JER. xliv.
+4.
+
+
+The long death-agony of the Jewish kingdom has come to an end. The
+frivolous levity, which fed itself on illusions and would not be sobered
+by facts, has been finally crushed out of the wretched people. The
+dreary succession of incompetent kings--now a puppet set up by Egypt,
+now another puppet set up by Babylon, has ended with the weak Zedekiah.
+The throne of David is empty, and the long line of kings, which numbered
+many a strong, wise, holy man, has dwindled into a couple of captives,
+one of them blind and both of them paupers on an idolatrous monarch's
+bounty. The country is desolate, the bulk of the people exiles, and the
+poor handful, who had been left by the conqueror, flitting like ghosts,
+or clinging, like domestic animals, to their burnt homes and wasted
+plains, have been quarrelling and fighting among themselves, murdering
+the Jewish ruler whom Babylon had left them, and then in abject terror
+have fled _en masse_ across the border into Egypt, where they are living
+wretched lives. What a history that people had gone through since they
+had lived on the same soil before! From Moses to Zedekiah, what a story!
+From Goshen till now it had been one long tragedy which seems to have at
+last reached its fifth act. Nine hundred years have passed, and this is
+the issue of them all!
+
+The circumstances might well stir the heart of the prophet, whose
+doleful task it had been to foretell the coming of the storm, who had
+had to strip off Judah's delusions and to proclaim its certain fall, and
+who in doing so had carried his life in his hand for forty years, and
+had never met with recognition or belief.
+
+Jeremiah had been carried off by the fugitives to Egypt, and there he
+made a final effort to win them back to God. He passed before them the
+outline of the whole history of the nation, treating it as having
+accomplished one stadium--and what does he find? In all these days since
+Goshen there has been one monotonous story of vain divine pleadings and
+human indifference, God beseeching and Israel turning away--and now at
+last the crash, long foretold, never credited, which had been drawing
+nearer through all the centuries, has come, and Israel is scattered
+among the people.
+
+Such are the thoughts and emotions that speak in the exquisitely tender
+words of our text. It suggests--
+
+I. God's antagonism to sin.
+
+II. The great purpose of all His pleadings.
+
+III. God's tender and unwearied efforts.
+
+IV. The obstinate resistance to His tender pleadings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+I. God's antagonism to sin.
+
+It is the one thing in the universe to which He is opposed. Sin is
+essentially antagonism to God. People shrink from the thought of God's
+hatred of sin, because of--
+
+An underestimate of its gravity. Contrast the human views of its
+enormity, as shown by men's playing with it, calling it by half-jocose
+names and the like, with God's thought of its heinousness.
+
+A false dread of seeming to attribute human emotions to God. But there
+is in God what corresponds to our human feelings, something analogous to
+the attitude of a pure human mind recoiling from evil.
+
+The divine love must necessarily be pure, and the mightier its energy of
+forth-going, the mightier its energy of recoil. God's 'hate' is Love
+inverted and reverted on itself. A divine love which had in it no
+necessity of hating evil would be profoundly immoral, and would be
+called devilish more fitly than divine.
+
+II. The great purpose of the divine pleadings.
+
+To wean from sin is the main end of prophecy. It is the main end of all
+revelation. God must chiefly desire to make His creatures like Himself.
+Sin makes a special revelation necessary. Sin determines the form of it.
+
+III. God's tender and unwearied efforts.
+
+'Rising early' is a strong metaphor to express persistent effort. The
+more obstinate is our indifference, the more urgent are His calls. He
+raises His voice as our deafness grows. Mark, too, the tenderness of the
+entreaty in this text, 'Oh, do not this abominable thing that I hate!'
+His hatred of it is adduced as a reason which should touch any heart
+that loves Him. He beseeches as if He, too, were saying, 'Though I might
+be bold to enjoin thee' that which is fitting, 'yet for love's sake I
+rather beseech thee.' The manifestation of His disapproval and the
+appeal to our love by the disclosure of His own are the most powerful,
+winning and compelling dehortations from sin. Not by brandishing the
+whip, not by a stern law written on tables of stone, but by unveiling
+His heart, does God win us from our sins.
+
+IV. The obstinate resistance to God's tender pleadings.
+
+The tragedy of the nation is summed up in one word, 'They hearkened
+not.'
+
+That power of neglecting God's voice and opposing God's will is the
+mystery of our nature. How strange it is that a human will should be
+able to lift itself in opposition to the Sovereign Will! But stranger
+and more mysterious and tragic still is it that we should choose to
+exercise that power and find pleasure, and fancy that we shall ever find
+advantage, in refusing to listen to His entreaties and choosing to flout
+His uttered will.
+
+Such opposition was Israel's ruin. It will be ours if we persist in it.
+'If God spared not the natural branches, neither will He spare thee.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SWORD OF THE LORD
+
+'O thou sword of the Lord, how long will it be ere thou be quiet? put up
+thyself into thy scabbard, rest, and be still. 7. How can it be quiet,
+seeing the Lord hath given it a charge?'--JER. xlvii. 6, 7.
+
+
+The prophet is here in the full tide of his prophecies against the
+nations round about. This paragraph is entirely occupied with
+threatenings. Bearing the cup of woes, he turns to one after another of
+the ancestral enemies of Israel, Egypt and Philistia on the south and
+west, Moab on the south and east, then northwards to Ammon, south to
+Edom, north to Damascus, Kedar, Hagor, Elam, and finally to the great
+foe--Babylon. In the hour of Israel's lowest fortunes and the foe's
+proudest exultation these predictions are poured out. Jeremiah stands as
+if wielding the sword of which our text speaks, and whirls and points
+the flashing terror of its sharpened edge against the ring of foes. It
+turns every way, like the weapon of the angelic guard before the lost
+paradise, and wherever it turns a kingdom falls.
+
+In the midst of his stern denunciations he checks himself to utter this
+plaintive cry of pity and longing. A tender gleam of compassion breaks
+through the heart of the thunder-cloud. It is very beautiful to note
+that the point at which the irrepressible welling up of sweet waters
+breaks the current of his prophecy is the prediction against Israel's
+bitterest, because nearest, foe, 'these uncircumcised Philistines.' He
+beholds the sea of wrath drowning the great Philistine plain, its rich
+harvests trampled under foot by 'stamping of hoofs of his strong ones,'
+and that desolation wrings from his heart the words of our text. I take
+them to be spoken by the prophet. That, of course, is doubtful. It may
+be that they are meant to give in a vivid dramatic form the effect of
+the judgments on the sufferers. They recognise these as 'the sword of
+the Lord.' Their only thought is an impatient longing that the judgments
+would cease,--no confession of sin, no humbling of them selves, but
+only--'remove Thy hand from us.'
+
+And the answer is either the prophet's or the divine voice; spoken in
+the one case to himself, in the other to the Philistines; but in either
+setting forth the impossibility that the sweeping sword should rest,
+since it is the instrument in God's hand, executing His charge and
+fulfilling His appointment.
+
+I. The shrinking from the unsheathed sword of the Lord.
+
+We may deal with the words as representing very various states of mind.
+
+They may express the impatience of sufferers. Afflictions are too often
+wasted. Whatever the purpose of chastisement, the true lesson of it is
+so seldom learned, even in regard to the lowest wisdom it is adapted to
+teach. In an epidemic, how few people learn to take precautions, such as
+cleanliness or attention to diet! In hard times commercially, how slow
+most are to learn the warning against luxury, over-trading, haste to be
+rich! And in regard to higher lessons, men have a dim sense sometimes
+that the blow comes from God, but, like Balaam, go on their way in spite
+of the angel with the sword. It does not soften, nor restrain, nor drive
+to God. The main result is, impatient longing for its removal.
+
+The text may express the rooted dislike to the thought and the fact of
+punishment as an element in divine government. This is a common phase of
+feeling always, and especially so now. There is a present tendency, good
+in many aspects, but excessive, to soften away the thought of
+punishment; or to suppose that God's punishments must have the same
+purposes as men's. We cannot punish by way of retribution, for no
+balance of ours is fine enough to weigh motives or to determine
+criminality. Our punishments can only be deterrent or reformatory, but
+this is by reason of our weakness. He has other objects in view.
+
+Current ideas of the love of God distort it by pitting it against His
+retributive righteousness. Current ideas of sin diminish its gravity by
+tracing it to heredity or environment, or viewing it as a necessary
+stage in progress. The sense of God's judicial action is paralysed and
+all but dead in multitudes.
+
+All these things taken together set up a strong current of opinion
+against any teaching of punitive energy in God.
+
+The text may express the pitying reluctance of the prophet.
+
+Jeremiah is remarkable for the weight with which 'the burden of the
+Lord' pressed upon him. The true prophet feels the pang of the woes
+which he is charged to announce more than his hearers do.
+
+Unfair charges are made against gospel preachers, as if they delighted
+in the thought of the retribution which they have to proclaim.
+
+II. The solemn necessity for the unsheathing of the sword.
+
+The judgments must go on. In the text the all-sufficient reason given is
+that God has willed it so. But we must take into account all that lies
+in that name of 'Lord' before we understand the message, which brought
+patience to the heart of the prophet. If a Jewish prophet believed
+anything, he believed that the will of the Lord was absolutely good.
+Jeremiah's reason for the flashing sword is no mere beating down human
+instincts, by alleging a will which is sovereign, and there an end. We
+have to take into account the whole character of Him who has willed it,
+and then we can discern it to be inevitable that God should punish evil.
+
+His character makes it inevitable. God's righteousness cannot but hate
+sin and fight against it. To leave it unpunished stains His glory.
+
+God's love cannot but draw and wield the sword. It is unsheathed in the
+interests of all that is 'lovely and of good report.' If God is God at
+all, and not an almighty devil, He must hate sin. The love and the
+righteousness, which in deepest analysis are one, must needs issue in
+punishment. There would be a blight over the universe if they did not.
+
+The very order of the universe makes it inevitable. All things, as
+coming from Him, must work for His lovers and against His enemies, as
+'the stars in their courses fought against Sisera.'
+
+The constitution of men makes it inevitable. Sin brings its own
+punishment, in gnawing conscience, defiled memories, incapacity for
+good, and many other penalties.
+
+It is to be remembered that the text originally referred to retribution
+on nations for national sins, and that what Jeremiah regarded as the
+strokes of the Lord might be otherwise regarded as political
+catastrophes. Let us not overlook that application of the principles of
+the text. Scripture regards the so-called 'natural consequences' of a
+nation's sins as God's judgments on them. The Christian view of the
+government of the world looks on all human affairs as moved by God,
+though done by men. It takes full account of the responsibility of men
+the doers, but above all, recognises 'the rod and Him who hath appointed
+it.' We see exemplified over and over again in the world's history the
+tragic truth that the accumulated consequences of a nation's sins fall
+on the heads of a single generation. Slowly, drop by drop, the cup is
+filled. Slowly, moment by moment, the hand moves round the dial, and
+then come the crash and boom of the hammer on the deep-toned bell. Good
+men should pray not, 'Put up thyself into thy scabbard,' but, 'Gird Thy
+sword on Thy thigh, O thou most mighty... on behalf of truth and
+meekness and righteousness.'
+
+III. The sheathing of the sword.
+
+The passionate appeal in the text, which else is vain, has in large
+measure its satisfaction in the work of Christ.
+
+God does not delight in punishment. He has provided a way. Christ bears
+the consequence of man's sin, the sense of alienation, the pains and
+sorrows, the death. He does not bear them for Himself. His bearing them
+accomplishes the ends at which punishment aims, in expressing the divine
+hatred of sin and in subduing the heart. Trusting in Him, the sword does
+not fall on us. In some measure indeed it still does. But it is no
+longer a sword to smite, but a lancet to inflict a healing wound. And
+the worst punishment does not fall on us. God's sword was sheathed in
+Christ's breast. So trust in Him, then shall you have 'boldness in the
+day of judgment.'
+
+
+
+
+THE KINSMAN-REDEEMER
+
+'Their Redeemer is strong; the Lord of Hosts is His name: He shall
+thoroughly plead their cause.'--JER. l. 34.
+
+
+Among the remarkable provisions of the Mosaic law there were some very
+peculiar ones affecting the next-of-kin. The nearest living blood
+relation to a man had certain obligations and offices to discharge,
+under certain contingencies, in respect of which he received a special
+name; which is sometimes translated in the Old Testament 'Redeemer,' and
+sometimes 'Avenger' of blood. What the etymological signification of the
+word may be is, perhaps, somewhat doubtful. It is taken by some
+authorities to come from a word meaning 'to set free.' But a
+consideration of the offices which the law prescribed for the 'Goel' is
+of more value for understanding the peculiar force of the metaphor in
+such a text as this, than any examination of the original meaning of the
+word. Jehovah is represented as having taken upon Himself the functions
+of the next-of-kin, and is the Kinsman-Redeemer of His people. The same
+thought recurs frequently in the Old Testament, especially in the second
+half of the prophecies of Isaiah, and it were much to be desired that
+the Revised Version had adopted some means of showing an English reader
+the instances, since the expression suggests a very interesting and
+pathetic view of God's relation to His people.
+
+I. Let me state briefly the qualifications and offices of the kinsman-
+redeemer, _'the Goel.'_
+
+The qualifications may be all summed up in one--that he must be the
+nearest blood relation of the person whose Goel he was. He might be
+brother, or less nearly related, but this was essential, that of all
+living men, he was the most closely connected. That qualification has to
+be kept well in mind when thinking of the transference of the office to
+God in His relation to Israel, and through Israel to us.
+
+Such being his qualification, what were his duties? Mainly three. The
+first was connected with property, and is thus stated in the words of
+the law, 'If thy brother be waxen poor, and sell some of his possession,
+then shall his _kinsman_ that is next unto him come, and shall redeem
+that which his brother hath sold' (Lev. xxv. 25, R. V.). The Mosaic law
+was very jealous of large estates. The prophet pronounced a curse upon
+those who joined 'land to land, and field to field... that they may be
+alone in the midst of the earth.' One great purpose steadily kept in
+view in all the Mosaic land-laws was the prevention of the alienation of
+the land from its original holders, and of its accumulation in a few
+hands. The idea underlying the law was that of the tribal or family
+ownership--or rather occupancy, for God was the owner and Israel but a
+tenant--and not individual possession. That thought carries us back to a
+social state long since passed away, but of which traces are still left
+even among ourselves. It was carried out thoroughly in the law of Moses,
+however imperfectly in actual practice. The singular institution of the
+year of Jubilee operated, among other effects, to check the acquisition
+of large estates. It provided that land which had been alienated was to
+revert to its original occupants, and so, in substance, prohibited
+purchase and permitted only the lease of land for a maximum term of
+fifty years. We do not know how far its enactments were a dead letter,
+but their spirit and intention were obviously to secure the land of the
+tribe to the tribe for ever, to keep the territory of each distinct, to
+discourage the creation of a landowning class, with its consequent
+landless class, to prevent the extremes of poverty and wealth, and to
+perpetuate a diffused, and nearly uniform, modest wellbeing amongst a
+pastoral and agricultural community, and to keep all in mind that the
+land was 'not to be sold for ever, for it is Mine,' saith the Lord.
+
+The obligation on the next-of-kin to buy back alienated property was
+quite as much imposed on him for the sake of the family as of the
+individual.
+
+The second of his duties was to buy back a member of his family fallen
+into slavery. 'If a stranger or sojourner with thee be waxen rich, and
+thy brother be waxen poor beside him, and sell himself unto the
+stranger... after that he is sold, he may be redeemed; one of his
+brethren may redeem him.' The price was to vary according to the time
+which had to elapse before the year of Jubilee, when all slaves were
+necessarily set free. So Hebrew slavery was entirely unlike the thing
+called by the same name in other countries, and by virtue of this power
+of purchase at any time, which was vested in the nearest relative, taken
+along with the compulsory manumission of all 'slaves' every fiftieth
+year, came to be substantially a voluntary engagement for a fixed time,
+which might be ended even before that time had expired, if compensation
+for the unexpired term was made to the master.
+
+It is to be observed that this provision applied only to the case of a
+Hebrew who had sold himself. No other person could sell a man into
+slavery. And it applied only to the case of a Hebrew who had sold
+himself to a foreigner. No Jew was allowed to hold a Jew as a slave. 'If
+thy brother be waxen poor with thee, and sell himself unto thee, thou
+shalt not make him to serve as a bondservant: as an hired servant, and
+as a sojourner, he shall be with thee.' (Lev. xxv. 39, R. V.).
+
+The last of the offices of the kinsman-redeemer was that of avenging the
+blood of a murdered relative. If a man were stricken to death, it became
+a solemn obligation to exact life for life, and the blood-feud incumbent
+on all the family was especially binding on the next-of-kin. The
+obligation shocks a modern mind, accustomed to relegate all punishment
+to the action of law which no criminal thinks of resisting. But customs
+and laws are unfairly estimated when the state of things which they
+regulated is forgotten or confused with that of today. The law of
+blood-feud among the Hebrews was all in the direction of restricting the
+wild justice of revenge, and of entrusting it to certain chosen persons
+out of the kindred of the murdered man. The savage vendetta was too
+deeply engrained in the national habits to be done away with altogether.
+All that was for the time possible was to check and systematise it, and
+this was done by the institution in question, which did not so much put
+the sword into the hand of the next-of-kin as strike it out of the hand
+of all the rest of the clan.
+
+These, then, were the main parts of the duty of the Goel, the kinsman-
+redeemer--buying back the alienated land, purchasing the freedom of the
+man who had voluntarily sold himself as a slave, and avenging the
+slaying of a kinsman.
+
+II. Notice the grand mysterious transference of this office to Jehovah.
+
+This singular institution was gradually discerned to be charged with
+lofty meaning and to be capable of being turned into a dim shadowing of
+something greater than itself. You will find that God begins to be
+spoken of in the later portions of Scripture as the Kinsman-Redeemer. I
+reckon eighteen instances, of which thirteen are in the second half of
+Isaiah. The reference is, no doubt, mainly to the great deliverance from
+captivity in Egypt and Babylon, but the thought sweeps a much wider
+circle and goes much deeper down than these historical facts. There was
+in it some dim feeling that though God was separated from them by all
+the distance between finitude and infinitude, yet they were nearer to
+Him than to any one else; that the nearest living relation whom these
+poor persecuted Jews had was the Lord of Hosts, beneath whose wings they
+might come to trust. Therefore does the prophet kindle into rapture and
+triumphant confidence as he thinks that the Lord of Hosts, mighty,
+unspeakable, high above our thoughts, our words, or our praise, is
+Israel's Kinsman, and, therefore, their Redeemer. How profound a
+consciousness that man was made in the image of God, and that, in spite
+of all the gulf between finite and infinite, and the yet deeper gulf
+between sinful man and righteous God, He was closer to a poor struggling
+soul than even the dearest were, must have been at all events dawning on
+the prophet who dared to think of the Holy One in the Heavens as
+Israel's Kinsman. No doubt, he was dwelling mostly on historical outward
+deliverances wrought for the nation, and his idea of Israel's kinship to
+God applied to the people, not to individuals, and meant chiefly that
+the nation had been chosen for God's. But still the thought must have
+been felt to be great and wonderful, and some faint apprehension of the
+yet deeper sense in which it is true that God is the next-of-kin to
+every soul and ready to be its Redeemer, would no doubt begin to be
+felt.
+
+The deepening of the idea from a reference to external and national
+deliverances, and the large, dim hopes which clustered round it, may be
+illustrated by one or two significant instances. Take, for example, that
+mysterious and very beautiful utterance in the Book of Job, where the
+man, in the very depth of his despair, and just because there is not a
+human being that has any drop of pity for him, turns from earth, and
+striking confidence out of his very despair, like fire from flint, sees
+there his Kinsman-Redeemer. 'I know that my Redeemer liveth.' Men may
+mock him, friends may turn against him, the wife of his bosom may tempt
+him, comforters may pour vitriol instead of oil into his wounds, yet he,
+sitting on his dunghill there, poverty-stricken and desolate, knows that
+God is of kin to him, and will do the kinsman's part by him. The very
+metaphor implies that the divine intervention which he expects is to
+take place after his death. It was a dead man whose blood the Goel
+avenged. Thus the view which sees in the subsequent words a hope,
+however dim and undefined, of an experience of a divine manifestation on
+his behalf beyond the grave is the only one which gives its full force
+to the central idea of the passage, as well as to the obscure individual
+expressions. Most strikingly, then, he goes on to say, carrying out the
+allusion, 'and that he shall stand at the last upon the dust.' Little
+did it boot the murdered man, lying there stark, with the knife in his
+bosom, that the murderer should be slain by the swift justice of his
+kinsman-avenger, but Job felt that, in some mysterious way, God would
+appear for him, after he had been laid in the dust, and that he would
+somehow share in the gladness of His manifestation--for he believes that
+'without his flesh' he will see God, 'whom I shall see for myself, and
+mine eyes shall behold, and not another.' Large and mysterious hopes are
+gathering round the metaphor, which flash some light into the darkness
+of the grave, and give to the troubled soul the assurance that when life
+with all its troubles is past, and flesh has seen corruption, the inmost
+personal being of every man who commits his cause to God will behold Him
+coming forth his Kinsman-Redeemer.
+
+Another illustration of the hopes which gathered round this image is
+found in the great psalm which prophesies of the true King of Peace, in
+language too wide for any poetical licence to warrant if intended only
+to describe a Jewish king (Ps. lxxii. 14). The universal dominion of
+this great King is described in terms which, though they may be partly
+referred to the Jewish monarchy at its greatest expansion, sweep far
+beyond its bounds in exulting anticipation that 'all kings shall fall
+down before Him, all nations shall serve Him.' The reason for this
+world-wide dominion is not military power, as was the case with the
+warrior kings of old, who bound nations together for a little while in
+an artificial unity with iron chains, but His dominion is universal,
+'_for_ He shall deliver the needy when he crieth,...He shall _redeem_
+their souls from oppression and violence, and precious shall their blood
+be in His sight.' Two of the functions of the Kinsman-Redeemer are here
+united. He buys back slaves from their tyrannous masters, and He avenges
+their shed blood. And because His Kingdom is a kingdom of gentle pity
+and loving help, because He is of the same blood with His subjects, and
+brings liberty to the captives, therefore it is universal and
+everlasting. For the strongest thing in all the world is love, and He
+who can staunch men's wounds, and will hear their cries and help them,
+will rule them with authority which conquerors cannot wield.
+
+This universal King, the kinsman and the sovereign of all the needy, is
+not God. A human figure is rising before the prophet-psalmist's eye,
+whose meekness as well as His majesty, and whose kingdom as well as His
+redeeming power, seem to pass beyond human limits. Divine offices seem
+to be devolved on a man's shoulders. Dim hopes are springing which point
+onwards. So that great psalm leads us a step further.
+
+III. See the perfect fulfilment of this divine office by the man Christ
+Jesus.
+
+Job's anticipation and the psalmist's rapturous vision are fulfilled in
+the Incarnate Word, in whom God comes near to us all and makes Himself
+kindred to our flesh, that He may discharge all those blessed offices,
+of redeeming from slavery, of recovering our alienated inheritance, and
+of guarding our lives, which demand at once divine power and human
+nearness. Christ is our Kinsman. True, the divine nature and the human
+are nearly allied, so that even apart from the Incarnation, men may feel
+that none is so truly and closely akin to them as their Father in Heaven
+is. But how much more blessed than even that kinship is the
+consanguinity of Christ, who is doubly of kin to each soul of man, both
+because in His true manhood He is bone of our bone and flesh of our
+flesh, and because in His divinity He is nearer to us than the closest
+human kindred can ever be. By both He comes so near to us that we may
+clasp Him by our faith, and rest upon Him, and have Him for our nearest
+friend, our brother. He is nearer to each of us than our dearest is. He
+loves us with the love of kindred, and can fill our hearts and wills,
+and help our weakness in better, more inward ways than all sympathy and
+love of human hearts can do. Between the atoms of the densest of
+material bodies there is an interspace of air, as is shown by the fact
+that everything is compressible if you can find the force sufficient to
+compress it. That is to say, in the material universe no particle
+touches another. And so in the spiritual region, there is an awful film
+of separation between each of us and all others, however closely we may
+be united. We each live on our own little island in the deep, 'with
+echoing straits between us thrown.' We have a solemn consciousness of
+personality, of responsibility unshared by any, of a separate destiny
+parting us from our dearest. Arms may be twined, but they must be
+unlinked some day, and each in turn must face the awful solitude of
+death, as each has really faced that scarcely less awful solitude of
+life, alone. But 'he that is joined to the Lord is one spirit,' and our
+kinsman, Christ, will come so near to us, that we shall be in Him and He
+in us, one spirit and one life. He is your nearest relation, nearer than
+husband, wife, parent, brother, sister, or friend. He is nearer to you
+than your very selves. He is your better self. That is His qualification
+for His office.
+
+Because He is man's kinsman, He buys back His enslaved brethren. The
+bondage from which 'one of His brethren' might 'redeem' the Israelite
+was a voluntary bondage into which he had sold himself. And such is our
+slavery. None can rob us of our freedom but ourselves. The world and the
+flesh and the devil cannot put their chains on us unless our own wills
+hold out our hands for the manacles.
+
+And, alas! it is often an unsuspected slavery. 'How sayest thou, ye
+shall be made free. We were never in bondage to any man,' boasted the
+angry disputants with Christ. And if they had lifted up their eyes they
+might have seen from the Temple courts in which they stood, the citadel
+full of Roman soldiers, and perhaps the golden eagles gleaming in the
+sunshine on the loftiest battlements. Yet with that strange power of
+ignoring disagreeable facts they dared to assert their freedom. 'Never
+in bondage to any man!'--what about Egypt, and Assyria, and Babylon? Had
+there never been an Antiochus? Was Rome a reality? Did it lay no yoke on
+them? Was it all a dream?
+
+Some of us are just as foolish, and try as desperately to annihilate
+facts by ignoring them, and to make ourselves free by passionately
+denying that we are slaves. But 'he that committeth sin is the slave of
+sin.' That sounds a paradox. I am master of my own actions, you may say,
+and never freer than when I break the bonds of right and duty and choose
+to do what is contrary to them, for no reason on earth but because I
+choose. That is liberty, emancipation from the burdensome restraints
+which your narrow preaching about law and conscience would impose. Yes,
+you are masters of your actions, and your sinful actions very soon
+become masters of you. Do we not know that that is true? You fall into,
+or walk into a habit, and then it gets the mastery of you, and you
+cannot get rid of it. Whosoever sets his foot upon that slippery
+inclined plane of wrongdoing, after he has gone a little way,
+gravitation is too much for him and away he goes down the hill.
+'Whosoever committeth sin is the slave of sin.' Did you ever try to kill
+a bad habit, a vice? Did you find it easy work? Was it not your master?
+You thought that a chain no stronger than a spider's web was round your
+wrist till you tried to break it; and then you found it a chain of
+adamant. Many men who boast themselves free are 'tied and bound with the
+cords of their sins.'
+
+Dreaming of freedom, you have sold yourself, and that 'for nought.' Is
+that not true, tragically true?
+
+What have you made out of sin? Is the game worth the candle? Will it
+continue to be so? Ye shall be redeemed without money, for Jesus Christ
+laid down His life for you and me, that by His death we might receive
+forgiveness and deliverance from the power of sin. And so your Kinsman,
+nearer to you than all else, has bought you back. Do not refuse the
+offered emancipation, but 'if thou mayest be made free, use it rather.'
+Be not like the spiritless slaves, for whose servile choice the law
+provided, who had rather remain bond than go out free. Surely when
+Christ calls you to liberty, you will not turn from Him to the tyrannous
+masters whom you have served, and, like the Hebrew slave, let them
+fasten you to their door-posts with their awl through your ear. Do you
+hug your chains and prefer your bondage?
+
+Your Kinsman-Redeemer brings back your squandered inheritance, which is
+God. God is the only possession that makes a man rich. He alone is worth
+calling 'my portion.' It is only when we have God in our hearts, God in
+our heads, God in our souls, God in our life--it is only when we love
+Him, and think about Him, and obey Him, and bring our characters into
+harmony with Him, and so possess Him--it is only then that we become
+truly rich. No other possession corresponds to our capacities so as to
+fill up all our needs and satisfy all our being. No other possession
+passes into our very substance and becomes inseparable from ourselves.
+So the mystical fervour of the psalmist's devotion spoke a simple prose
+truth when he exclaimed, 'The Lord is the portion of mine inheritance
+and of my cup.'
+
+We have squandered our inheritance. We have sinned away fellowship with
+God. We have flung away our true wealth, 'wasted our substance in
+riotous living.' And here is our Elder Brother, our nearest relative,
+who has always been with the Father; but who, instead of grudging the
+prodigals their fatted calf and their hearty welcome when they come
+back, has Himself, by the sacrifice of Himself, won for them the
+inheritance, its earnest in the possession of God's spirit here and its
+completion in the broad fields of 'the inheritance of the saints in
+light,' the entire fruition and possession of the divine in the life to
+come. 'If children, then heirs, heirs of God and joint heirs with
+Christ.'
+
+Your Kinsman-Redeemer will keep your lives under His care, and be ready
+to plead your cause. 'He that touches you, touches the apple of Mine
+eye.' 'He reproved kings for their sake, saying, Touch not Mine
+anointed.' Not in vain does the cry go up to Him, 'Avenge, O Lord, Thy
+slaughtered saints,'--and if no apparent retribution has followed, and
+if often His servant's blood seems to have been shed in vain, still we
+know that it has often been the seed of the Church, and that He who puts
+our tears into His bottle will not count our blood less precious in His
+sight. So we may rest confident that our Kinsman-Redeemer will charge
+Himself with pleading our cause and intervening in our behalf, that He
+will compass us about with His protection, and that we are knit so close
+to Him that our woes and foes are His, and that we cannot die as long as
+He lives.
+
+So, dear brethren, be sure of this, that if only you will take Christ
+for your Saviour and brother, your Helper and Friend, if only you will
+rest yourself upon that complete sacrifice which He has made for the
+sins of the world, He will give you liberty, and restore your lost
+inheritance, and your blood shall be precious in His sight, and He will
+keep His hand around you and preserve you; and finally will bring you
+into His home and yours. 'In Him we have redemption through His blood,'
+and He comes to every one of you now, even through my poor lips, with
+His ancient word of merciful invitation: 'Behold! I have blotted out as
+a cloud thy sins and as a thick cloud thy transgressions. Turn unto Me,
+for I have redeemed thee.'
+
+
+
+
+'AS SODOM'
+
+'Zedekiah was one and twenty years old when he began to reign, and he
+reigned eleven years in Jerusalem. And his mother's name was Hamutal the
+daughter of Jeremiah of Libnah. 2. And he did that which was evil in the
+eyes of the Lord, according to all that Jehoiakim had done. 3. For
+through the anger of the Lord it came to pass in Jerusalem and Judah,
+till he had cast them out from his presence, that Zedekiah rebelled
+against the king of Babylon. 4. And it came to pass, in the ninth year
+of his reign, in the tenth month, in the tenth day of the month, that
+Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon came, he and all his army, against
+Jerusalem, and pitched against it, and built forts against it round
+about. 5. So the city was besieged unto the eleventh year of king
+Zedekiah. 6. And in the fourth month, in the ninth day of the month, the
+famine was sore in the city, so that there was no bread for the people
+of the land. 7. Then the city was broken up, and all the men of war
+fled, and went forth out of the city by night by the way of the gate
+between the two walls, which was by the king's garden; (now the
+Chaldeans were by the city round about) and they went by the way of the
+plain. 8. But the army of the Chaldeans pursued after the king, and
+overtook Zedekiah in the plains of Jericho; and all his army was
+scattered from him. 9. Then they took the king, and carried him up unto
+the king of Babylon to Riblah in the land of Hamath; where he gave
+judgment upon him. 10. And the king of Babylon slew the sons of Zedekiah
+before his eyes: he slew also all the princes of Judah in Riblah. 11.
+Then he put out the eyes of Zedekiah; and the king of Babylon bound him
+in chains, and carried him to Babylon, and put him in prison till the
+day of his death.'--JER. lii. 1-11.
+
+
+This account of the fall of Jerusalem is all but identical with that in
+2 Kings xxv. It was probably taken thence by some editor of Jeremiah's
+prophecies, perhaps Baruch, who felt the appropriateness of appending to
+these the verification of them in that long-foretold and disbelieved
+judgment.
+
+The absence of every expression of emotion is most striking. In one
+sentence the wrath of God is pointed to as the cause of all; and, for
+the rest, the tragic facts which wrung the writer's heart are told in
+brief, passionless sentences, which sound liker the voice of the
+recording angel than that of a man who had lived through the misery
+which he recounts. The Book of Lamentations weeps and sobs with the
+grief of the devout Jew; but the historian smothers feeling while he
+tells of God's righteous judgment.
+
+Zedekiah owed his throne to 'the king of Babylon,' and, at first, was
+his obedient vassal, himself going to Babylon (Jer. li. 59) and swearing
+allegiance (Ezek. xvii. 13). But rebellion soon followed, and the
+perjured young king once more pursued the fatal, fascinating policy of
+alliance with Egypt. There could be but one end to that madness, and, of
+course, the Chaldean forces soon appeared to chastise this presumptuous
+little monarch, who dared to defy the master of the world. Our narrative
+curtails its account of Zedekiah's reign, bringing into strong relief
+only the two facts of his following Jehoiakim's evil ways, and his
+rebellion against Babylon. But behind the rash, ignorant young man, it
+sees God working, and traces all the insane bravado by which he was
+ruining his kingdom and himself to God's 'wrath,' not thereby
+diminishing Zedekiah's responsibility for his own acts, but declaring
+that his being 'given over to a reprobate mind' was the righteous divine
+punishment for past sin.
+
+An eighteen months' agony is condensed into three verses (Jer. lii. 4-
+6), in which the minute care to specify dates pathetically reveals the
+depth of the impression which the first appearance of the besieging army
+made, and the deeper wound caused by the city's fall. The memory of
+these days has not faded yet, for both are still kept as fasts by the
+synagogue. We look with the narrator's eye at the deliberate massing of
+the immense besieging force drawing its coils round the doomed city,
+like a net round a deer, and mark with him the piling of the mounds, and
+the erection on them of siege-towers. We hear of no active siege
+operations till the final assault. Famine was Nebuchadnezzar's best
+general. 'Sitting down they watched' _her_ 'there,' and grimly waited
+till hunger became unbearable. We can fill up much of the outline in
+this narrative from the rest of Jeremiah, which gives us a vivid and
+wretched picture of imbecility, divided counsels, and mad hatred of
+God's messenger, blind refusal to see facts, and self-confidence which
+no disaster could abate. And, all the while, the monstrous serpent was
+slowly tightening its folds round the struggling, helpless rabbit. We
+have to imagine all the misery.
+
+The narrative hurries on to its close. What widespread and long-drawn-
+out privation that one sentence covers: 'The famine was sore in the
+city, so that there was no bread for the people'! Lamentations is full
+of the cries of famished children and mothers who eat the fruit of their
+own bodies. At last, on the memorable black day, the ninth of the fourth
+month (say July), 'a breach was made,' and the Chaldean forces poured in
+through it. Jeremiah xxxix. 3 tells the names of the Babylonian officers
+who 'sat in the middle gate' of the Temple, polluting it with their
+presence. There seems to have been no resistance from the enfeebled,
+famished people; but apparently some of the priests were slain in the
+sanctuary, perhaps in the act of defending it from the entrance of the
+enemy. The Chaldeans would enter from the north, and, while they were
+establishing themselves in the Temple, Zedekiah 'and all the men of war'
+fled, stealing out of the city by a covered way between two walls, on
+the south side, and leaving the city to the conqueror, without striking
+a blow. They had talked large when danger was not near; but braggarts
+are cowards, and they thought now of nothing but their own worthless
+lives. Then, as always, the men who feared God feared nothing else, and
+the men who scoffed at the day of retribution, when it was far off, were
+unmanned with terror when it dawned.
+
+The investment had not been complete on the southern side, and the
+fugitives got away across Kedron and on to the road to Jericho, their
+purpose, no doubt, being to put the Jordan between them and the enemy.
+One can picture that stampede down the rocky way, the anxious looks cast
+backwards, the confusion, the weariness, the despair when the rush of
+the pursuers overtook the famine-weakened mob. In sight of Jericho,
+which had witnessed the first onset of the irresistible desert-hardened
+host under Joshua, the last king of Israel, deserted by his army, was
+'taken in their pits,' as hunters take a wild beast. The march to
+Riblah, in the far north, would be full of indignities arid of physical
+suffering. The soldiers of that 'bitter and hasty' nation would not
+spare him one insult or act of cruelty, and he had a tormentor within
+worse than they. 'Why did I not listen to the prophet? What a fool I
+have been! If I had only my time to come over again, how differently I
+would do!' The miserable self-reproaches, which shoot their arrows into
+our hearts when it is too late, would torture Zedekiah, as they will
+sooner or later do to all who did not listen to God's message while
+there was yet time. The sinful, mad past kept him company on one hand;
+and, on the other, there attended him a dark, if doubtful, future. He
+knew that he was at the disposal of a fierce conqueror, whom he had
+deeply incensed, and who had little mercy. 'What will become of me when
+I am face to face with Nebuchadnezzar? Would that I had kept subject to
+him!' A past gone to ruin, a present honey-combed with gnawing remorse
+and dread, a future threatening, problematical, but sure to be penal--
+these were what this foolish young king had won by showing his spirit
+and despising Jeremiah's warnings, It is always a mistake to fly in the
+face of God's commands. All sin is folly, and every evildoer might say
+with poor Robert Burns:
+
+ 'I backward cast my e'e
+ On prospects drear!
+ An' forward, tho' I canna see,
+ I guess an' fear.'
+
+Nebuchadnezzar was in Riblah, away up in the north, waiting the issue
+of the campaign. Zedekiah was nothing to him but one of the many
+rebellious vassals of whom he had to make an example lest rebellion
+should spread, and who was especially guilty because he was
+Nebuchadnezzar's own nominee, and had sworn allegiance. Policy and his
+own natural disposition reinforced by custom dictated his barbarous
+punishment meted to the unfortunate kinglet of the petty kingdom that
+had dared to perk itself up against his might. How little he knew that
+he was the executioner of God's decrees! How little the fact that he was
+so, diminished his responsibility for his cruelty! The savage practice
+of blinding captive kings, so as to make them harmless and save all
+trouble with them, was very common. Zedekiah was carried to Babylon, and
+thus was fulfilled Ezekiel's enigmatical prophecy, 'I will bring him to
+Babylon,... yet shall he not see it, though he shall die there' (Ezek.
+xii. 13).
+
+The fall of Jerusalem should teach us that a nation is a moral whole,
+capable of doing evil and of receiving retribution, and not a mere
+aggregation of individuals. It should teach us that transgression does
+still, though not so directly or certainly as in the case of Israel, sap
+the strength of kingdoms; and that to-day, as truly as of old,
+'righteousness exalteth a nation.' It should accustom us to look on
+history as not only the result of visible forces, but as having behind
+it, and reaching its end through the visible forces, the unseen hand of
+God. For Christians, the vision of the Apocalypse contains the ultimate
+word on 'the philosophy of history.' It is 'the Lamb before the Throne,'
+who opens the roll with the seven seals, and lets the powers of whom it
+speaks loose for their march through the world. It should teach us God's
+long-suffering patience and loving efforts to escape the necessity of
+smiting, and also God's rigid justice, which will not shrink from
+smiting when all these efforts have failed.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Expositions of Holy Scripture
+by Alexander Maclaren
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