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Isaiah Chapter
Eight
Isaiah 8
Chapter Contents
Exhortations and warnings. (1-8) Comfort for those who
fear God. (9-16) Afflictions to idolaters. (17-22)
Commentary on Isaiah 8:1-8
(Read Isaiah 8:1-8)
The prophet is to write on a large roll, or on a metal
tablet, words which meant, "Make speed to spoil, hasten to the prey:"
pointing out that the Assyrian army should come with speed, and make great
spoil. Very soon the riches of Damascus and of Samaria, cities then secure and
formidable, shall be taken away by the king of Assyria. The prophet pleads with
the promised Messiah, who should appear in that land in the fulness of time,
and, therefore, as God, would preserve it in the mean time. As a gentle brook
is an apt emblem of a mild government, so an overflowing torrent represents a
conqueror and tyrant. The invader's success was also described by a bird of
prey, stretching its wings over the whole land. Those who reject Christ, will
find that what they call liberty is the basest slavery. But no enemy shall
pluck the believer out of Emmanuel's hand, or deprive him of his heavenly
inheritance.
Commentary on Isaiah 8:9-16
(Read Isaiah 8:9-16)
The prophet challenges the enemies of the Jews. Their
efforts would be vain, and themselves broken to pieces. It concerns us, in time
of trouble, to watch against all such fears as put us upon crooked courses for
our own security. The believing fear of God preserves against the disquieting
fear of man. If we thought rightly of the greatness and glory of God, we should
see all the power of our enemies restrained. The Lord, who will be a Sanctuary
to those who trust in him, will be a Stone of stumbling, and a Rock of offence,
to those who make the creature their fear and their hope. If the things of God
be an offence to us, they will undo us. The apostle quotes this as to all who
persisted in unbelief of the gospel of Christ, 1 Peter 2:8. The crucified Emmanuel, who was and
is a Stumbling-stone and Rock of offence to unbelieving Jews, is no less so to
thousands who are called Christians. The preaching of the cross is foolishness
in their esteem; his doctrines and precepts offend them.
Commentary on Isaiah 8:17-22
(Read Isaiah 8:17-22)
The prophet foresaw that the Lord would hide his face;
but he would look for his return in favour to them again. Though not miraculous
signs, the children's names were memorials from God, suited to excite
attention. The unbelieving Jews were prone to seek counsel in difficulties,
from diviners of different descriptions, whose foolish and sinful ceremonies
are alluded to. Would we know how we may seek to our God, and come to the knowledge
of his mind? To the law and to the testimony; for there you will see what is
good, and what the Lord requires. We must speak of the things of God in the
words which the Holy Ghost teaches, and be ruled by them. To those that seek to
familiar spirits, and regard not God's law and testimony, there shall be horror
and misery. Those that go away from God, go out of the way of all good; for
fretfulness is a sin that is its own punishment. They shall despair, and see no
way of relief, when they curse God. And their fears will represent every thing
as frightful. Those that shut their eyes against the light of God's word, will
justly be left to darkness. All the miseries that ever were felt or witnessed
on earth, are as nothing, compared with what will overwhelm those who leave the
words of Christ, to follow delusions.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Isaiah¡n
Isaiah 8
Verse 1
[1]
Moreover the LORD said unto me, Take thee a great roll, and write in it with a
man's pen concerning Mahershalalhashbaz.
A roll ¡X
Or, a great volume, because the prophecy to be written in it was large, and God
would have it written in large and legible characters.
Pen ¡X
With such a pen as writers use.
Concerning ¡X
Concerning that thing which is signified by the name of the child, which is
here mentioned by way of anticipation.
Verse 3
[3] And I went unto the prophetess; and she conceived, and bare a son. Then
said the LORD to me, Call his name Mahershalalhashbaz.
Prophetess ¡X To
his own wife, so called, because the wife of a prophet.
Verse 4
[4] For
before the child shall have knowledge to cry, My father, and my mother, the
riches of Damascus and the spoil of Samaria shall be taken away before the king
of Assyria.
To cry ¡X To
speak and to know his parents; which is within the space of two years. And his
agrees with the other prophecy, chap. 7:16. Before the child shall know to refuse the
evil and chuse the good, which requires a longer time than to distinguish his
parents, and suits well to Shear-Jashub, who, being born some years before, was
capable of that farther degree of knowledge, as soon as this was capable of the
lower degree.
Before ¡X In
his presence, and by himself and his forces.
Verse 6
[6]
Forasmuch as this people refuseth the waters of Shiloah that go softly, and
rejoice in Rezin and Remaliah's son;
This people ¡X
The people of Israel, of whom he last spake, who rejoiced not only in their own
king, but also in the assistance of so powerful an ally as Rezin.
Shiloah ¡X
That small brook which ran by Jerusalem. Hereby he understands the munitions
and strength of the Jews, which their enemies derided.
Verse 7
[7] Now therefore, behold, the Lord bringeth up upon them the waters of the
river, strong and many, even the king of Assyria, and all his glory: and he
shall come up over all his channels, and go over all his banks:
The river ¡X Of
Euphrates, called the river, for its eminent greatness; whereby he understands
the Assyrian forces.
Glory ¡X
His numerous and puissant army.
He ¡X This great river
shall overflow its own proper channels. That is, this great monarch shall
enlarge his dominions, and add the lands of Syria and Israel to them.
Verse 8
[8] And
he shall pass through Judah; he shall overflow and go over, he shall reach even
to the neck; and the stretching out of his wings shall fill the breadth of thy
land, O Immanuel.
Reach ¡X So
that they shall be in great danger of being desired. He persists in the
metaphor of a river swelling so high as to reach to a man's neck, and be ready
to overwhelm him. Such was the danger of Judah's land, when Sennacherib took
all the fenced cities of Judah, 2 Kings 18:13, and sent his army against
Jerusalem.
Wings ¡X Of
his forces, or of the wings of his army, as they still are called.
My land ¡X Of
the land of Judah, so called because the Messiah, who is called Immanuel,
should be born there. And this is added emphatically for the consolation of
God's people, to assure them, that notwithstanding this dreadful scourge, yet
God would make a difference between Israel and Judah, and whereas Israel should
not be a people, Judah should be restored, for the sake of the Messiah, to be
the place of his birth and ministry.
Verse 9
[9]
Associate yourselves, O ye people, and ye shall be broken in pieces; and give
ear, all ye of far countries: gird yourselves, and ye shall be broken in
pieces; gird yourselves, and ye shall be broken in pieces.
Ye people ¡X
Syrians and Israelites.
All ye ¡X
Whosoever you be, who conspire against Immanuel's land.
Gird ¡X
Prepare yourselves for war.
Broken ¡X
This is repeated for the greater assurance of the thing, and the comfort of
God's people.
Verse 11
[11] For
the LORD spake thus to me with a strong hand, and instructed me that I should
not walk in the way of this people, saying,
Spake ¡X
With a vehement and more than ordinary inspiration.
In the way ¡X Of
the generality of the people of Judah; whose eminent danger and calamity he
foretells.
Verse 12
[12] Say
ye not, A confederacy, to all them to whom this people shall say, A
confederacy; neither fear ye their fear, nor be afraid.
Say not ¡X
Thou Isaiah, and my children, do not consent to this confederacy with the king
of Assyria.
Their fear ¡X
That thing which they fear, that, if they do not call in the Assyrian succours,
they shall be destroyed by those two potent kings.
Verse 13
[13]
Sanctify the LORD of hosts himself; and let him be your fear, and let him be
your dread.
Sanctify ¡X
Give him the glory of his power, and goodness, and faithfulness, by trusting to
his promises.
Let him ¡X
Let God, and not the kings of Syria and Israel be the object of your fear.
Verse 14
[14] And
he shall be for a sanctuary; but for a stone of stumbling and for a rock of
offence to both the houses of Israel, for a gin and for a snare to the
inhabitants of Jerusalem.
Sanctuary ¡X A
sure refuge to all that truly fear him, and rely upon him.
A stone ¡X An
occasion of sin and ruin, at whom they will take offence and stumble, so as to
fall and be broken.
To both ¡X To
the two kingdoms, that of the ten tribes, and that of the two tribes.
Jerusalem ¡X
Which are distinctly mentioned, as a wonderful thing, because Jerusalem was the
seat of the temple, and of God's solemn worship, where all the means of
knowledge and grace were in greatest plenty, where the thrones of civil and
ecclesiastical judicature were established, where the most wise and learned
doctors had their constant abode. And that such a place and people should
reject Immanuel when he should appear, was so strange an occurrence, that the
prediction of it was highly necessary, lest otherwise, when it came to pass, it
should shake the faith of all who did believe on him; whereas now the
accomplishment hereof was a notable confirmation of their faith.
Verse 15
[15] And
many among them shall stumble, and fall, and be broken, and be snared, and be
taken.
Many ¡X
Not all; for there shall be a remnant, as was foretold, chap. 4:2; 6:13.
Stumble ¡X At
that stone or rock, mentioned, verse 8:14. This was accomplished at the coming of the
Messiah, whom the Jews rejected to their own destruction.
Verse 16
[16] Bind
up the testimony, seal the law among my disciples.
The testimony ¡X By
the testimony and the law or doctrine, he understands one and the same thing,
as he doth also, verse 20, the word of God, and especially that which
is the main scope thereof, the doctrine of the Messiah, which, though now
professed by all the Israelites, shall be disowned by the generality of them,
when the Messiah shall come. Bind up and seal are to be understood
prophetically, declare and prophesy, that it shall be bound up and sealed.
Moreover, bind up and seal, design the same thing. Security and secrecy,
signifying, that it should certainly be fulfilled, yet withal kept secret from
the unbelieving Jews. By the disciples he means those who were taught of God.
Verse 17
[17] And
I will wait upon the LORD, that hideth his face from the house of Jacob, and I
will look for him.
Yet ¡X
Yet, notwithstanding this dreadful prophecy concerning the rejection of Israel.
Wait ¡X I
will cast my care upon him, and expect the accomplishment of his promise, in
sending the Messiah, and in conferring upon me and all believing Israelites all
his mercies and blessings.
Hideth ¡X
That now withdraws his favour and blessings, from the people of Israel.
Verse 18
[18]
Behold, I and the children whom the LORD hath given me are for signs and for
wonders in Israel from the LORD of hosts, which dwelleth in mount Zion.
Behold ¡X
These words are literally spoken by Isaiah concerning himself, but mystically
concerning Christ; and therefore they are fitly ascribed to Christ, Hebrews 2:13.
The children ¡X
His spiritual children, whom he had either begotten or brought up by his
ministry.
Wonders ¡X
Are a gazing flock, for our folly in believing God's promises.
From the Lord ¡X
Which comes to pass by the wise providence of God.
Zion ¡X
Where the temple now was, and where the Messiah was to set up his kingdom.
Verse 19
[19] And
when they shall say unto you, Seek unto them that have familiar spirits, and
unto wizards that peep, and that mutter: should not a people seek unto their
God? for the living to the dead?
And when they ¡X
The Israelites, who are fallen from God, into superstition and idolatry.
You ¡X My
children, whom the prophet arms against the common temptation.
Mutter ¡X
That speak with a low voice, as these two words signify, which they affected to
do, speaking rather inwardly in their bellies, than audibly with their mouths.
Should not ¡X
This answer the prophet puts into their mouths, doth not every nation, in cases
of difficulty, seek to their gods? Much more should we do so, that have the
only true God for our God.
For the living ¡X
That is, for living men to enquire of the living God, is proper and reasonable;
but it is highly absurd for them to forsake him, and to seek dead idols, either
to the images, or to the spirits of dead men, which are supposed to speak in
them.
Verse 20
[20] To
the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is
because there is no light in them.
To the law ¡X
Let this dispute between you and them be determined by God's word, which is
here and in many other places called the law, to signify their obligation to
believe and obey it; and the testimony, because it is a witness between God and
man, of God's will, and of man's duty.
They ¡X
Your antagonists.
No light ¡X
This proceeds from the darkness of their minds, they are blind, and cannot see.
Verse 21
[21] And
they shall pass through it, hardly bestead and hungry: and it shall come to
pass, that when they shall be hungry, they shall fret themselves, and curse
their king and their God, and look upward.
It ¡X Their own land.
Hungry ¡X
Sorely distressed, and destitute of food, and all necessaries.
Their king ¡X
Either because he doth not relieve them; or because by his foolish counsels, he
brought them into these miseries.
God ¡X
Their idol, to whom they trusted, and whom they now find unable to help them.
Look ¡X To
heaven for help.
Verse 22
[22] And
they shall look unto the earth; and behold trouble and darkness, dimness of
anguish; and they shall be driven to darkness.
Earth ¡X
Finding no help from heaven, they turn their eyes downward, looking hither and
thither for comfort.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Isaiah¡n
08 Chapter 8
Verses 1-22
Verses 1-4
Maher-shalal-hash-baz
Maher-shalal-hash-baz
Four words, or rather two sentences, form now the burden of this
message; and they are embodied in the name of a boy.
Maher-shalal,--this first sentence means that quickly shall trophies be
taken--the prophet thus seeing the army of Samaria in full and disgraceful
flight. While Hash-baz, the second, tells us about booty being taken, as the
Assyrian forces shall enter Damascus in 732 B.C., and help themselves to its
wealth. (B. Blake, B. D.)
Unconscious testimony
I. GOD MEANT
SOMETHING BY THIS CHILD.
II. GOD HAS A
MEANING OF HIS OWN WITH EVERY LIFE. (J. R. Howard.)
God¡¦s writing
God hath a large print in some of His books. Verily, He can write
a small hand too, which men can only see through the microscope of tears. (J.
Parker, D. D.)
A man¡¦s pen
They that write for men should write with a man¡¦s pen, and not
covet the pen or tongue of angels. (M. Henry.)
A help to memory
It is sometimes a good help to memory to put much matter in few
words, which serve as handles by which we take hold of more. (M. Henry.)
Naming children from passing events
In 1900 many a helpless infant was saddled for life with a name
drawn from South Africa, and reminiscent of certain towns and certain
individuals conquered or conquering by the might of British arms. However
patriotic we may be, we feel sympathy for these little innocents with the
reverse of euphonious names, for their trials in after days when they become
Miss Ladysmith Tomkinson and Mr. Pretorius Simpkinson, will not be light. An
additional burden for the feminine portion of this sorry community will be,
that their mere names will be as definite as a census paper and as plain as a
birth certificate, as a declaration of age. In the year 1926, Mr. William Smith
will have no need to inquire diligently the approximate age of Miss Methuen
Redvers Robinson; he will at once be able to fix the glorious year when her
presence began to usher a happy springtime into this wintry world--at least,
for him. Strange and unforeseen results may follow from the naming of the
little children from the crimsoned fields of war. But the custom of naming the
children from passing events is by no means new. The old Hebrews, with their
religious intensity, and fervent patriotism, usually found names for their
children that had a very distinct meaning and a very distinct message, quite
unlike the stolid English, who may by chance stumble upon the fact that Irene
means peace, and Theodore, the gift of God, but who never trouble themselves
overmuch about such un-English things. (W. Owen.)
Maher-shalal-hash-baz
One very distinct difference between this old Hebrew name and any
recent English battle name is this, that the latter is a cry of triumph, and
the former an announcement of trial, and in this difference there may be seen a
difference in the temper of these name makers. ¡§Let us remember the past,¡¨ say
the English, let us perpetuate our victories and immortalise them, but let
defeat be forgotten, and let the future take care of itself.¡¨ ¡§No, let us look
onward,¡¨ said the Hebrew prophet, ¡§let us face the facts, and realise that no
past victory at the Red Sea can make us conquerors now, if we lose our faith in
God.¡¨ Of course, as the result of such an utterance, Isaiah was deemed a
pessimist (as is every man who is far-seeing enough to discern the cloud in the
distance, even if it be no bigger than a man¡¦s hand, and brave enough to tell
what he has seen), and it was easy enough then, as now, and satisfactory enough
to the majority, to label him a pessimist and then ignore him! But, on the
other hand, it is not the easiest of things to listen to the men who prophesy
smoothly of continual summer, while, round them as they speak, the leaves are
falling in autumn, and the trees stripping themselves bare to face the unseen
icy wind. There is room for the cry, ¡§Maher-shalal-hash-baz!¡¨ (W. Owen.)
Verses 5-8
This people refuseth the waters of Shiloah that go softly
Consolation amidst predictions of judgment
Isaiah does not find himself surrounded merely by the very wide
circle of an incorrigible people ripe for judgment.
He does not stand alone, but is surrounded by a small band of believing
disciples who need consolation and are worthy of it. It is to these that the
promising other side of the prophecy of Immanuel belongs. Maher-shalal cannot
comfort or console them; for they know that when Assyria has done with Damascus
and Samaria the troubles of Judah are not over, but are only really about to
begin. The prophecy of Immanuel is destined to be the stronghold of the believers
in the terrible judgment time of the worldly power which was then commencing;
and to turn into the light and unfold the consolation it contained for the
believers, is the purpose of the discourses which now follow (Isaiah 8:5-12). (F. Delitzsch.)
Judgment and salvation
1. Vision of a terrible devastation of the country, north and south,
by the Assyrian.
2. The salvation and Saviour that rise to view behind the desolation Isaiah 9:1-7). (A. B. Davidson, LL. D.)
The waters of Shiloah
The waters of Shiloah took their rise on Mount Moriah, ¡§the hill
of the Lord,¡¨ the hill on which the temple was built. Indeed, the spring is
said to have risen within the very precincts of the temple, and to have
supplied its courts and cisterns with the abundant water required for its
innumerable washings and sacrifices. From the summit of the hill it now flows
gently to its base, not along any external channel however, but through a
secret tunnel which it seems to have worn for itself through the solid rock.
Its waters, therefore, flow underground, running fax before they meet the light
of day. And, when they re-emerge, they rise and flow without noise or
turbulence. They form no brawling torrent, no swift and angry stream, sweeping
away its banks and carrying havoc before it. Softly and gently they rise and
fill the pool. Softly and gently they overflow into a placid stream, a stream
that does not fail even in times of drought; a stream that quickens all it
touches into life, and reveals its presence only by the beauty and fertility
which mark its course. This is no imaginary description adapted to the
requirements of the passage before us, but a description given by a traveller
who stood on its margin and tracked its course only a few years since. And yet
how admirably it illustrates the prophet¡¦s words--¡§The waters of Shiloah that
go softly¡¨; or, as the Hebrew word also means, secretly. They do go both
secretly and softly. They flow unseen for a while; and when they emerge from
their rocky tunnel, they do not rush and fret and whiten in their course as
most hill streams do, but lapse gently on, carrying with them a belt of verdure
to the very margin of the Dead Sea. The words of Isaiah describe the waters of
Shiloah as they remain to this day. (S. Cox, D. D.)
Shiloah and the Euphrates, or mercy and judgment
The history of the Jewish nation mirrors the life of the
individual man.
I. THAT THE
MERCIES OF OUR PRESENT LIFE FLOW ¡§SOFTLY¡¨ BY AS A GENTLE STREAM.
1. They flow vivifyingly. The waters of Shiloah were the life of
Jerusalem. The stream of mercy here is our life.
2. They flow constantly. The streams of Shiloah are flowing now. The
stream of mercy is constantly rolling by us from infancy to our mortal gasp.
3. They flow softly. It rolls by us almost unheard.
II. THAT THE ABUSE
OF THIS STREAM OF MIRACLES IS AN IMMENSE CRIME. The text teaches that the crime
of the Jew in relation to his privileges was two fold:
1. Rejection. ¡§They refused the waters of Shiloah,¡¨ which means, they
refused to avail themselves of those means of national improvement and defence
which the munificent reign of Jehovah under which they lived afforded. They
refused to trust Him in their dangers.
2. Presumption. These people ¡§rejoiced in Rezin and Remaliah¡¦s son.¡¨
Their minds ever occupied by the failures and successes of wicked men, their
hope of safety rested on the confidence they had in mere worldly alliances;
they trusted in an arm of flesh. We abuse God¡¦s mercy when we allow it not to
inspire us with unshaken confidence in His protecting love and power.
III. THAT THIS CRIME
WILL BRING ON THE TUMULTUOUS RIVER OF RETRIBUTION. ¡§Behold, the Lord bringeth
up upon them the waters of the river, strong and many,¡¨ etc.
1. The abuse of mercy leads to retributive misery.
2. The streams of retributive misery stand in awful contrast with
them of mercy. (Homilist.)
Shiloah a type of Gospel grace
There are more reasons than one why Siloam, rather than the other
waters of Jerusalem, is selected by the prophet as a type of Gospel influences
and Gospel grace. It filtered clear from the temple rock,--emblem of grace in
its source,--and for a time ran its unseen course underground,--emblem of grace
in its secrecy. Then it sparkled out and along a broad band of silver, till it
reached the gardens and the vineyards, beyond, where it divided into a hundred
tiny courses that covered the sward with their shining network, and filled the
air with their gentle music,--emblem of grace in its power to refresh and
fertilise. Add to this the fact that Siloam played a part in Jewish religion,
and entered once and again into Jewish story. It was there that the temple
vessels were cleansed. There, once a year, at the Feast of Tabernacles, the
priests went in solemn procession, and fetched water in golden goblets, to pour
as an offering to the Lord. There, in later times, dwelt virtue to heal. It was
by the brink of Siloam that the impotent man lay till He of whom Siloam
testified wrought the cure he had waited so long for in vain. It was in the
waters of Siloam that the blind man washed and received his sight. And it was
close to Siloam that our Saviour most probably stood, when He spoke of a better
store than gushed from its mossy fountain, or rippled in its pebbly bed, and
uttered that greatest of all Gospel invitations, ¡§If any man thirst, let him
come unto Me, and drink.¡¨ The figure is fruitful in striking analogies,
suggesting, much as to the nature and progress of Christ¡¦s kingdom of grace
beyond the main fact of its gentleness. The Gospel of Christ as a matter that
comes not by observation,--the prime and outstanding illustration of that
gentleness of God which makes great,--an agency which pursues its peaceful
process and accomplishes itspeaceful results, not by might nor by power, but by
God¡¦s own Spirit whose operations are generally noiseless and often unseen,--is
the subject before us.
1. When we speak of the gentleness of the Gospel, it is not denied
that there may be a great deal of stir in the means and the circumstances that
precede and prepare for the Gospel. That, however, does not interfere with the
truthfulness of the figure; the figure, on the contrary, suggests it. When you
wish to dig a bed for a stream, and lead its waters through a region hitherto
dry, you must be prepared for a certain disturbance. Rocks may have to be
blasted, trees to be torn up, long accumulations to be removed, as rough places
are made smooth and crooked places plain, and a channel prepared for the
fertilising current. But the stream when it comes may flow softly all the same,
gurgling gently past the seams, of the pickaxe and the stones that the powder
has stained. The fact is, all God¡¦s saving work is gentle. He may smite like
the hammer, but He heals like the dew; His severities may crush, but it is the
gentleness that comes after that makes great.
2. Nor, in speaking of the gentleness of the Gospel, do we forget
that a great deal of stir may follow it. Most true it is that the Gospel fits a
life for outward processes of activity, expenditures of effort and of energy,
feats of work and of warfare, which may be far from being secret or noiseless.
Just so with a stream. You may have the industry and stir of the mill on its
banks, when the wheels whirl and the looms hum, as corn is bruised for man¡¦s
food, or cloth is prepared for his raiment; and you may have at the same time
the quiet of the stream that turns it, whose current flows softly, and whose
ripple is all but unheard as it steals brimming through the lush, level
meadows, or hides beneath the overarching elms. Yes, the outcome of the Gospel
may mean stir. But the Gospel itself, the secret and spring of it, that is
always as the waters of Shiloah that flow softly.
3. Nor, once more, when we speak of the gentleness and equality of
the grace and influences of the Gospel, do we fail to remember that even the
Gospel itself has its periods of quickening and enlargement. Every now and then
the stream of its influences is more copious, and the evidence of its existence
more visible and obtrusive. Again the figure fits in at this point,--for Siloam
was intermittent. Every few hours or so the calmness of its surface was broken,
the speed of its current was hastened, by a richer jet of water from its
spring. But no perception of the good to be gained at such epochs is to blind
our eyes to the fact that the blessing may exist, and exist to fertilise and
enrich at other times, when the course of God¡¦s dealings is more ordinary, and
their effects more regular and unseen. After all, the waters of Shiloah flow
softly, and, even when stillest and most secret, they are visible enough for
thirsty souls to discover their existence, abundant enough for them to dip
their pitchers, and drink. (W. A. Gray.)
The choices of life
Are we not all more or less in the position of the Jews whom
Isaiah addresses, with perils surrounding us, and with the need of protection
and assistance pressed home on us? Have we not all, too, an alternative of the
same kind presented us,--between Gospel grace and Gospel influences on the one
hand, and worldly advantages and alliances on the other,--between the waters
of. Shiloah that go softly, whose very silence and secrecy may offend us, and
the noisier rapids of earth, which attract, like the Euphrates in the prophet¡¦s
figure, only to disappoint or betray? Every man¡¦s life yields an opportunity
for choosing, and every man¡¦s life is shaped and conditioned by the choice
which he makes.
I. Let me
exemplify the alternative before us by a reference to THE EXAMPLE WE FOLLOW.
Our example has been given us. It is the example of one whose existence while
here was a living embodiment of the figure of the text It ran its course
through this earth of ours like the waters of Shiloah that go softly. The
stream of Shiloah was a picture and a prophecy of Christ. The mystery lies
wrapped in the very name, and John, the evangelist, who was ever quick in
discerning such references, and ever ready in expressing them, intends the
analogy to be marked when he says: ¡§The pool of Siloam, which is by
interpretation, Sent.¡¨ And was not the sending of Christ, to begin with, and
His life all throughout, characterised by the aspect of the text! What of His
youth? For thirty long years, His life ran its hidden course,--through a
self-restraint that may well be called marvellous, making music and greenness,
no doubt, in the mountain retreat where it flowed, but known nowhere besides;
scarcely recognised, as it seems, even there. And when solitude and secrecy had
accomplished their work, and His hour for disclosure had come, and the stream
that had hitherto hid itself took its way through the glare of publicity, as He
wrought and spoke among men, was it otherwise? Still, as before, His life, like
the waters of Shiloah, flowed softly. Take His mien and bearing among men.
Popularity did not elate Him; difficulty did not bewilder Him; insult did not
ruffle Him. He was never unquiet; He never made haste; He was never surprised.
Or take the nature of His kingdom and His sway. It was a powerful sway that He
exercised even while on earth, but how was it manifested, and to what did it
owe its might? No flaunt of banner nor beat of drum accompanied His progress.
Victor and King though He was, He did not cry nor lift up His voice in the
streets. A bruised reed He did not break; the smoking flax He did not quench.
Whatever of tumult and confusion He experienced, it was in His circumstances
and not in His life. Have you found your ideal of life in a picture of purity,
of charity, of self-restraint and self-sacrifice such as this? If your heart¡¦s
real creed is, Blessed are the rich, blessed are the joyful, blessed are the
self-aggrandising, blessed are they of whom all men speak well,--your choice is
the choice of the Jews; you have pitched by the rivers of Assyria, with their
treacherous waves for protection, and their turbid stores for supply.
II. We pass from
the examples men follow, to THE PRINCIPLES AND THE AGENCIES THEY RELY ON, and
try to illustrate how the alternative holds there. And the choice is just as
before, between such agencies as are unobtrusive and gracious, and those that
are pretentious and human; between the aids of religion and the aids of the
world. Most men have an eye to success; especially have the young; and how
often do they, in the choice of the agencies they depend on and the means they
adopt, choose wrong. The thought applies to communities and to Churches as well
as to individuals.
III. Let us apply
the principle of the text to THE MODES OF RELIGION WE ADOPT. There, too, there
is the difference between what is unobtrusive on the one hand and what is
ostentatious on the other; between what is satisfying and secure and what is
disappointing and unsafe; between what is true and what is false. ¡§The waters
of Shiloah that go softly¡¨; does not the phrase remind us--
1. Of the Gospel¡¦s simplicity.
2. Of its secrecy and noiselessness?
Phases of religion may come and go, and those who imagine that
religion is real only where its instrumentalities are special, and its outward
manifestations demonstrative, may have their hopes dashed and their faith
staggered, as they watch these manifestations disappear. But religion itself,
the kingdom which cometh not by observation, may be pursuing its quiet course,
and extending its beneficent influences notwithstanding, and that in ways and
in quarters which are unseen and unguessed of now, but which the last great day
will in due time declare. (W. A. Gray.)
¡§By cool Siloam¡¦s shady rill¡¨
Not only because of their usefulness had the waters of Shiloah
endeared themselves to the heart of Israel. There were other and more hallowed
associations which they suggested.
I. The waters of
Shiloah represented to the Jew the idea of FATHERLAND. Both Israel and Judah
were in danger of forgetting the true ideal of patriotism which David had
fostered, and were fast degenerating into a spurious imitation of it, a mere
feverish militarism. How are we to translate this message into the English of
the twentieth century? Does it not mean that the springs of our national
greatness are not the matters which bulk most largely in our newspapers, are
not the doings of courts and kings, of diplomatists and statesmen, of generals
and armies, though these have an influence on a nation¡¦s destiny, and often one
not to be despised? But far more important are the more unobtrusive factors of
a nation¡¦s greatness; its care for the moral nurture and intellectual equipment
of its children, its fostering of the arts and sciences and industrial
training, the quality of its manufactures and the honesty of its commerce, its
care for the moral and material condition of the workmen who produce its
wealth, the freedom of its subjects, the equity of its laws, the purity and loftiness
of its literature, the respect for religion, for home, for marriage
bonds,--these are the things that make a nation great, though they are as ¡§the
waters of Shiloah that go softly¡¨ little seen and regarded The penalty for
refusing these softly flowing waters of Shiloah is obvious to Isaiah¡¦s mind.
The instinct of the statesman in him, apart from any predictive faculty, would
be quite sufficient to show him the inevitable end of such fatuity. The king of
Assyria, at first invited to interfere in Judah¡¦s interest, would be sure
finally to interfere in his own, and both Israel and Judah, weakened by mutual
jealousy and strife, and by internal dissensions, would fall an easy prey. So
do God¡¦s retributive providences ever fall on the nation which forgets the true
sources of its greatness, relies on the arm of flesh while inward corruption is
working unheeded at its vitals, forsakes an enlightened patriotism which
strives to be great for a spurious one which labours to appear so.
II. These waters of
Shiloah suggested to the Jew, not only his Fatherland, but his RELIGION. It was
a sacred stream, for it rose in a spur of Mount Zion, near the temple. And at
the Feast of Tabernacles, on ¡§the last great day of the feast,¡¨ a priest
brought water from the Pool of Siloam in a golden vessel, and poured it on the
altar amid the rejoicings of the people. It was on this annual occasion that
the Immanuel prophesied by Isaiah stood and cried, ¡§If any man thirst, let him
come unto Me and drink.¡¨ Judah, in Isaiah¡¦s time, was fast deserting the
religion so closely associated with this stream. Such apostasy from God brings
its own retribution before long, whether on the nation or the individual that
practises it. Some such loosening of moral fibre is often seen, not only in the
man who loses his hold on religion itself, but who loses his loyalty to the
Church which nurtured him.
III. The waters of
Shiloah also represented to the Jew the sanctities of HOME, and the prophet
here reproves him because he had rejected these sanctities and beauties of
religious family life for polygamy and foul idolatry, which broke up the
family, and embittered and destroyed its hallowed relationships. The word
¡§home¡¨ is one in which we English have a special heritage. Be careful where you
go outside the home for your enjoyments. Do not cast aside the healthful
restraints of home, and reject those quiet waters, lest there rise upon you
¡§the waters of the river, strong and many,¡¨ remorse and unavailing repentance,
self-contempt, lost character, and a hopeless future. (C. A. Healing, B. A.)
God¡¦s gentle care
The brook which flowed by the base of Mount Zion, and down by the
side of the temple-covered Moriah, was an emblem of the help and defence which
the God of Zion and of the temple supplied to His people in Jerusalem. And it
was no angry or noisy torrent, but water that flowed softly. So for communities
and individuals now who trust in Him, there is a quiet but most potent
protection from the Lord. Let us show this in the case of an individual.
I. TROUBLE
WITHOUT. Say that gloom or pain, or both together, fall upon you. Your heart,
like that of the king and people referred to by the prophet Isaiah, is agitated
¡§as the trees of the wood are moved with the wind.¡¨ You seek God in your
affliction: you hearken to His prophets; you look to Him for deliverance. And
from some unexpected quarter help arises. Your burden is lightened; your
disaster is retrieved. Do not call it good fortune. You do well to seize what
helps and remedies are brought within your reach; but give the glory to God. It
is His secret will, His noiseless care that has been your true defence. You are
not hurt because of ¡§the waters of Shiloah that go softly.¡¨
II. TROUBLE WITHIN.
The spiritual life is invaded and endangered by unseen foes and spiritual
wickednesses; and against such adversaries the appeal to God may still be
made--¡§Strive Thou, O Lord, with those that strive with me: fight Thou against
them that fight against me.¡¨ In such cases of spiritual temptation, God knows
how to help. But do not look for any mere show of power. It is the enemy that
¡§comes in like a flood.¡¨ Yet far greater than the power of the enemy is the
power of Him who is to His people as cool Siloam¡¦s shady rill.¡¨ Fussy
Christians are feeble. The calm and strong are they who trust God simply and
fully, and are content with ¡§the waters that go softly.¡¨ The Lord will beautify
the meek with salvation. In new covenant faith and privilege we are come to
Mount Zion, and to the city of the living God the heavenly Jerusalem. It
becomes us to be calm, because that Living One is our defence. (D. Fraser,
D. D.)
The Jewish temptation to a false trust
All the Hebrew prophets, and Isaiah among them, use the kingdoms
of Syria and of Assyria as types of the great world power, of those external
forces of every kind in which it is our constant temptation to trust rather
than in the Maker of heaven and earth. To the Jewish people, dwelling in their
scattered village communities, with their self-elected judges and leaders--to
this people, who were held together by religious rather than by political ties,
the vast organised despotisms beyond their borders were a strangely impressive
and terrible spectacle. It is impossible to read the inspired prophecies and
chronicles without perceiving that the national imagination was dominated, that
it was now attracted and now daunted, by the immense power of these great
instruments of conquest and oppression; without perceiving that in the minds
both of prophets and of the people these despotisms came to stand for all the
hostile and seductive forces of that world which is without God and even
opposes itself against Him. (S. Cox, D. D.)
A virtual renunciation of the Consolation of Israel
In preferring the alliance of Syria and Assyria to the help of
God, these men were virtually renouncing their special prerogative, the
peculiar hope and consolation of Israel For just as those ancient despotisms
were prophetic types of the forces of the outward world, so the son of Isaiah
was a type of the true Immanuel, and the waters of Shiloah a type of the
quickening and cleansing ministry of Him who was sent of God to take away the
sin of the world. To refuse the waters of Shiloah for the sake of Rezin and
Remaliah¡¦s son, to pay so little heed to the promises and significance of the
birth of Immanuel, was virtually, therefore, to reject the God whom they
professed to worship, and to renounce the hope to which they had been called.
It was to prefer man to God. It was to be conformed to the world, and alienated
from the Christ. (S. Cox, D. D.)
Choice and its consequences
If we refuse gracious ministries we must encounter judicial
judgment. (J. Parker, D. D.)
Wise and unwise choices
Let us be vest pleased with the waters of Shiloah, that go softly,
for rapid streams are dangerous. (M. Henry.)
Christ the true Shiloah
No sooner has St. John told us (John 9:1-41) that Jesus declared Himself
to be ¡§sent¡¨ of the Father, than he also tells us that Siloam means ¡§sent¡¨; the
implication being that just as Christ was sent, so also the waters of Siloam
were sent by God, and were His gift to the world. The commentators are agreed
that the apostle adds this parenthesis in order to teach us that the cleansing,
healing spring, which gave sight to the blind and kept the temple pure, was a
symbol of the Messiah and of His cleansing and enlightening ministry. He tells
us that Siloam meant ¡§sent of God¡¨ in order that we may recognise in Christ the
true Siloam - Him by whose virtue the sick are healed and the service of God is
sanctified. So that, in fine, to refuse the waters of Shiloah that go softly,
and to dread or to glory in Rezin and Remaliah¡¦s son, is, in the last resort,
to put our trust in the forces of this visible and passing world, instead of
trusting in Christ, the Sent One of God and the Saviour of the world. A very
beautiful and suggestive meaning is thus reached. For the passage, so obscure
at first, sets Christ before us--
I. AS THE SENT ONE
OF GOD, the true Siloam. He is the Fountain of Life in the spiritual temple.
II. IN THE MIGHT OF
HIS GENTLENESS. The waters of Shiloah go softly, secretly. In like manner,
Jesus did not strive nor cry, nor make a home in the streets. His course
through life, like that of the sacred hill stream, was to be traced by the
blessings He shed around Him, the added life and fruitfulness He carried to
prepared and fertile hearts, the new life and fruitfulness He carried to barren
hearts.
III. AS REJECTED BY
HIS OWN. They refused the waters of Shiloah--refused them precisely because
they ran softly. Had Jesus come to reveal His power instead of to display His
mercy, blazing fierce wrath upon His enemies and smiting hostile nations to the
earth, the Jews would probably have received Him and rejoiced in Him. But He
came not with observation. (S. Cox, D. D.)
For the Lord spake thus to me
God¡¦s overpowering hand
The hand is the absolute Hand which, when it is laid upon a man,
overpowers all his perception, feeling, and thinking.
(F. Delitzsch, D. D.)
¡§With strength of hand¡¨
(Isaiah 8:11):--That is, seizing him and
casting him into the prophetic trance (2 Kings 3:15; Ezekiel 1:3; Ezekiel 3:14; Ezekiel 8:1). (Prof. S. R. Driver, D.
D.)
Warning and encouragement
The cry in Judah had been, ¡§There is a conspiracy against us, a
formidable combination, which can only be met by a counter-alliance with
Assyria¡¨ (such appears to be the best interpretation of this difficult verse):
Isaiah and his little circle of adherents had been warned not to join in it,
not to judge of the enterprise, or probable success, of Rezin and Pekah, by the
worldly and superficial estimate of the masses. A truer guide for action had
been revealed to them. ¡§Do not,¡¨ such is the lesson which he has been taught,
¡§do not follow the common people in their unreasonable alarm¡¨ (verse 12):
¡§Jehovah of hosts, Him shall ye count holy; and let Him be your fear, and Him
your dread,¡¨ i.e., in modern phraseology, ¡§Do not be guilty of a
practical abandonment of Jehovah; do not sacrifice principle to expediency. If
you do not lose faith, ¡§He will be for you a sanctuary¡¨ (verse 14), i.e., (apparently)
He will be as a sanctuary protecting the territory in which it is situated, and
securing for those who honour it safety and peace; ¡§but¡¨ (it is ominously
added) ¡§a cause of stumbling and ruin to both the houses of Israel,¡¨ to you of
Judah not less than to those of Ephraim, to whom alone you think that the
warning can apply. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D. D.)
Principle and expediency
Translated into modem language, the prophet¡¦s lesson is this--that
those who in a time of difficulty and temptation sacrifice principle to
expediency, sad abandon the clear path of duty for a course which may seem to
lead to some greater immediate advantage, must not be surprised if the penalty
which they ultimately have to pay be a severe one. (Prof. S. R. Driver, D.
D.)
Verses 12-14
Neither fear ye their fear.
Sanctify the Lord of hosts Himself
Sanctifying the Lord
To sanctify Jehovah is in mind and in practice to recognise Him as
the holy God, the Lord who is absolute, free from the limitations which hinder
all other beings from carrying their wills into full operation; and to believe
with the whole heart that God can and does govern all things according to the
counsel of His own will, and that what He determines does certainly come to
pass, however probabilities and appearances may be against the belief. (Sir
E. Strachey, Bart.)
God should be a sailor¡¦s supreme regard
Isaiah¡¦s--or rather the Divine--policy was one of non-alliance and
non-intervention. It did not forbid kindly commercial and literary intercourse
with foreign nations. On the contrary, it ever looked hopefully forward to a
time when all kings and their subjects should acknowledge Jehovah, and flow
into His house. It was a policy of justifiable and absolute trust in the
protecting care of the living God, who holds the nations in the hollow of His
hand. It was a policy of the highest and truest patriotism, because it first
insisted on the internal purification of the nation from sin and disobedience,
from idolatry, drunkenness, oppression of the poor, unrighteous trading, luxury
and lust, from hypocrisies and shams of ceremonial religion; and then, upon the
uselessness and irrationality of standing armies and warlike weapons. (F.
Sessions.)
The true remedy against fear
I. SPEAK AGAINST
GIVING WAY TO FEAR. In periods of alarm the reports that are spread always much
outstrip the truth. Fear is a very inventive passion; it creates to itself many
causes of alarm which have no existence, and greatly magnifies those which
really exist.
II. POINT OUT THE
PROPER AND ONLY SUFFICIENT REMEDY AGAINST DISQUIETUDE. There is no rationality
in being free from fear, or relieved from fear, otherwise than by true piety
towards God. ¡§Sanctify the Lord of hosts Himself,¡¨ etc.
III. SHOW HOW
COMPLETE THIS RELIEF OUGHT TO BE. And in doing this, I shall place before you a
few passages of Holy Scripture showing what is proposed to you, what may be
hoped for and ought to be aspired after. ¡§The name of the Lord is a strong
tower,¡¨ etc. The perfections of God are our never-failing resource and
security. ¡§Come, My people, enter into thy chambers,¡¨ etc. (Isaiah 26:20). ¡§Be careful for nothing,¡¨
etc. ¡§Cast thyburden on the Lord,¡¨ etc. Thou shalt keep him in perfect peace,
etc. They that trust in the Lord shall be as Mount Zion,¡¨ etc. (J. Scott, M.
A.)
The fear of God
I. THE WHOLE
SUBJECT OF GODHEAD IS ONE OF AWE, and if of awe, then ¡§dread.¡¨ The more you
know of God, the more you feel the unfathomableness of the mystery of Godhead.
And all mystery is awe. It is a rule of our being, that we must tremble when we
stand on the margin of the unknown. Therefore they who know most of God will
most ¡§fear,¡¨ not His anger, but simply His amazing greatness.
II. THE SENSE OF
MERCY AND BENEFITS HEAPED UPON US HAS AN OVERWHELMING INFLUENCE UPON THE MIND.
Do not you know what it is to tremble at a danger when you have escaped it,
much more than you did when you encountered it? That is exactly the ¡§fear¡¨ and
the ¡§dread¡¨ of a pardoned sinner. It is the contemplation of a thundercloud
which has rolled over your head.
III. REVERENCE IS
THE GREAT LESSON WHICH OUR AGE HAS TO LEARN. Be suspicious of the love which is
without awe. Remember that our best acquaintance with God only shows us more
the immensity of the fields of thought which no mind can traverse.
IV. ¡§HE SHALL BE
FOR A SANCTUARY.¡¨ Do you recoil at the idea of dreading God? That which makes
the dread makes the hiding place. To those who fear, He shall be for a
sanctuary.
1. To a Jewish mind, the first idea of the sanctuary would be refuge.
2. The sanctuary of safety becomes the home of peace. ¡§Lord, Thou
hast been our dwelling place in all generations.¡¨
3. God is the fountain of your holiness. The Shechinah shines you
become familiar with the precincts of that holy you catch some of its rays, and
reflect its glory. (J. Vaughan.)
Fear
I. AN EVIL
PRACTICE PROHIBITED. ¡§Fear not their fear, neither be afraid.¡¨ Sinful fears are
apt to drive the best men into sinful compliances and indirect shifts to help
themselves. Their fear may be understood two ways--
1. Subjectively. A fear that enslaved them in bondage of spirit, a
fear that is the fruit of sin, a sin in its own nature, the cause of much sin
to them, and a just punishment of God upon them for their other sins.
2. Effectively. Let not your fear produce in you such mischievous
effects as their fear doth; to make you forget God, magnify the creature,
prefer your own wits and policies to the almighty power and never-failing
faithfulness of God.
II. AN EFFECTUAL
REMEDY PRESCRIBED. ¡§Sanctify the Lord of hosts Himself,¡¨ etc. The fear of God
will swallow up the fear of man, a reverential awe and dread of God will
extinguish the slavish fear of the creature, as the sunshine puts out fire, or
as one fire fetches out another. When the Dictator ruled at Rome, then all
other officers ceased; and so, in a great measure, will all other fears, where
the fear of God is dictator in the heart.
III. A SINGULAR
ENCOURAGEMENT PROPOSED. ¡§He shall be for a sanctuary.¡¨ (J. Flavel.)
Fear and it, remedy
I. THE BEST MEN
ARE TOO APT TO BE OVERCOME WITH SLAVISH FEARS IN TIMES OF IMMINENT DISTRESS AND
DANGER.
II. THE FEAR OF GOD
IS THE MOST EFFECTUAL MEANS TO EXTINGUISH THE SINFUL FEAR OF MAN AND TO SECURE
US FROM DANGER. (J. Flavel.)
Different kinds of fear
There is a threefold fear in man, namely--
I. NATURAL, of which
all are partakers that partake of the common nature. It is the trouble or
perturbation of mind, from the apprehension of approaching evil or impending
danger.
1. To this natural fear it pleased our Lord Jesus Christ to subject
Himself in the days of His flesh (Mark 14:33).
2. This fear creates great trouble and perturbation in the mind; in
proportion to the danger is the fear, and in proportion to the fear, the
trouble and distraction of the mind; if the fear be exceedingly great, reason
is displaced.
3. Evil is the object of fear, and the greater the evil is the
stronger the fear must needs be; therefore the terrors of an awakened and
terrified conscience must be allowed to be the greatest of terrors, because in
that case a man hath to do with a great and terrible God, and is scared with
apprehensions of His infinite and eternal wrath, than which no evil is or can
be greater.
4. Yet evil, as evil, is rather the object of hatred than of fear. It
must be an imminent or near approaching evil that provokes fear.
5. All constitutions and tempers admit not the same degrees of fear.
II. SINFUL. Not
only our infelicity but our fault. The sinfulness of it lies in five things.
1. In the spring and cause of it, which is unbelief (chap. 30:15-17).
2. In the excess and immoderacy of it; for it may be truly said of
our fears, as the philosopher speaks of waters, it is hard to keep them within
bounds.
3. In the inordinacy of it. To exalt the power of any creature by our
fears, and give it such an ascendancy over us as if it had an arbitrary and
absolute dominion over us, or over our comforts, to do with them what it
pleased--this is to put the creature out of its own class and rank into the
place ofGod. To trust in any creature as if it had the power of a God to keep
us, or to fear any creature, as if it had the power of a God to hurt us, is
exceedingly sinful (Matthew 10:28).
4. In the distracting influence it hath upon the hearts of men,
whereby it discomposes and unfits them for the discharge of their duties. Under
an extraordinary fear both grace and reason, like the wheels of a watch, wound
above its due height, stand still, and have no motion at all.
5. In the power it hath to dispose and incline men to the use of
sinful means to put by their danger, and to cast them into the hands and power
of temptation (Proverbs 29:25; Isaiah 57:11). There is a double lie
occasioned by fear, one in words and another in deeds; hypocrisy is a lie done,
a practical He, and our Church history abounds with sad examples dissimulation
through fear.
III. RELIGIOUS. This
is our treasure, not our torment; the chief ornament of the soul; its beauty
and perfection. It is the natural passion sanctified, and thereby changed and
baptized into the name and nature of a spiritual grace. This fear is prescribed
as an antidote against sinful fears; it devours carnal fears, as Moses¡¦ serpent
did those of the enchanters.
1. It is planted in the soul as a permanent and fixed habit; it is
not of the natural growth and production of man¡¦s heart, but of supernatural
infusion and implantation (Jeremiah 32:40).
2. It puts the soul under the awe of God¡¦s eye. It is the reproach of
the servants of men to be eye servants, but it is the praise and honour of
God¡¦s servants to be so.
3. This respect to the eye of God inclines them to perform and do
whatsoever pleaseth Him and is commanded by Him; hence, fearing God and working
righteousness, are linked together (Acts 10:35; Genesis 22:12).
4. This fear engageth, and in some degree enableth, the soul in which
it is, to avoid whatsoever is displeasing to God (Job 2:3). (J. Flavel.)
The use of natural fear
If fear did not clap its fetters upon the wild and boisterous
lusts of men, they would certainly bear down all milder motives, and break
loose from all bonds of restraint. Men would become like the fishes of the sea
(Habakkuk 1:14), where the greater swallow
up a multitude of the smaller fry alive at one gulp; power and opportunity to
do mischief would measure out to men their lot and inheritance, and
consequently all societies must disband and break up. It is the law and fear of
punishment that keeps the world in order; men are afraid to do evil because
they are afraid to suffer it. If the severest penalties in the world were
annexed to, or appointed by, the law, they could signify nothing to the ends of
government without fear. This is that tender, sensible power or passion on
which threatenings work, and so brings men under moral government and restraint
(Romans 13:3-4). (J. Flavel.)
The use of sinful fear
The Lord knows how to overrule this in His providential government
of the world to His own wise and holy purposes. And He does so--
1. By making it HIS scourge to punish His enemies. If men will not
fear God they shall fear men. There is scarce a greater torment to be found in
the world than for a man to be his own tormentor, and his mind made a rack and
engine of torture to his body. It is a dreadful threatening which is recorded
in Deuteronomy 28:65-67. When fear hath once
seized the heart, you may see death¡¦s colours displayed in the face.
2. By fear God punishes His enemies in hell.
3. Providence makes use of the slavish fears and terrors of wicked
men to scatter them, when they are combined and confederated against the people
of God (Psalms 78:55, and Joshua 24:11-12. See also Psalms 9:20). (J. Flavel.)
The use of religious fear
1. By this fear the people of God are excited to and confirmed in the
way of duty (Ecclesiastes 12:13; Jeremiah 32:40).
2. Another excellent use of this fear is, to preserve the purity and
peace of our consciences by preventing grief and guilt therein (Proverbs 16:6; Genesis 39:9; Nehemiah 5:15).
3. A principal use of this fear is, to awaken us to make timely
provisions for future distresses, that whensoever they come, they may not come
by way of surprise upon us (Hebrews 11:7; Proverbs 14:16). (J. Flavel.)
The causes of sinful fear
I. The sinful
fears of most good men spring out of their IGNORANCE all darkness disposes to
fear, but none like intellectual darkness. You read Song of Solomon 3:8) how Solomon¡¦s
lifeguard had every man his sword upon his thigh, ¡§because of fear in the
night.¡¨ The night is the frightful season, in the dark every bush is a bear; we
sometimes smile by day to see what silly things those were that scared us in
the night. So it is here; were our judgments but duly informed, how soon would
our hearts be quieted! There is a fivefold ignorance out of which fears are
generated.
1. Ignorance of God. Ignorance and inconsiderateness lay at the root
of the fears expressed in Isaiah 40:27.
2. Ignorance of men. Did we consider men as they are in the hand of
our God we should not tremble at them as we do.
3. Ignorance of ourselves and the relation we have to God (IsaGe
15:1; Nehemiah 6:11). O that we could, without
vanity, but value ourselves duly according to our Christian dignities and
privileges, which, if ever it be necessary to count over and value, it is in
such times of danger, when the heart is so prone to sinking fears.
4. Ignorance of our dangers and troubles. We are ignorant of--
5. Especially ignorance and inconsiderateness of the covenant of
grace.
II. Another cause
of sinful fear is GUILT UPON THE CONSCIENCE. No sooner had Adam defiled and
wounded his conscience with guilt, but he trembles and hides himself (Proverbs 28:1; Isaiah 33:14). To this wounded and
trembling conscience is opposed the spirit of a sound mind 2 Timothy 1:7). An evil conscience
foments fears and terrors three ways.
1. By aggravating small matters. So it was with Cain (Genesis 4:14), ¡§Every one that meets me
will slay me.¡¨ Now every child was a giant in his eye, and anybody he met his
over-match.
2. By interpreting all doubtful cases in the worst sense that can be
fastened upon them. If the swallows do but chatter in the chimney, Bessus
interprets it to be a discovery of his crime; that they are telling tales of
him and saying, Bessus killed a man.
3. A guilty conscience can and often does create fears and terrors
out of nothing at all (Psalms 53:5).
III. No less is the
sin of UNBELIEF the real and proper cause of most distracting fears (Matthew 8:26). Fear is generated by
unbelief, and unbelief strengthened by fear, as in nature there is an
observable circular generation, vapours begetting showers and showers new
vapours.
1. Unbelief weakens the assenting act of faith, and thereby cuts off
from the soul, in a great measure, its principal relief against danger and
troubles Hebrews 11:27).
2. Unbelief shuts up the refuges of the soul in the Divine promises,
and by leaving it without those refuges, must needs leave it in the hand of
fears and terrors.
3. Unbelief makes men negligent in providing for troubles before they
come, and so brings them by way of surprises upon them.
4. Unbelief leaves our dearest interests and concerns in our own
hands; it commits nothing to God, and consequently must needs fill the heart
with distracting fears when imminent dangers threaten us (1 Peter 4:19; 2 Timothy 1:12; Proverbs 16:3).
IV. Many of our
fears are raised by THE PROMISCUOUS ADMINISTRATION OF PROVIDENCE in this world
(Ecclesiastes 9:2; Ezekiel 21:3; Habakkuk 1:13). The butcheries of the
Albigenses, Waldenses, etc.
1. We are apt to consider that the same race and kind of men that
committed these outrages upon our brethren are still in being, and that their
malice is not abated in the least degree. Cain¡¦s club is to this day carried up
and down the world, stained with the blood of Abel, as Bucholtzer speaks.
2. We know also that nothing hinders the execution of their wicked
purposes against us but the restraints of providence.
3. We find that God hath many times let loose these lions upon His
people. The best men have suffered the worst things.
4. We are conscious how far short we come in holiness of those
excellent persons who have suffered these things, and therefore have no ground
to expect more favour from providence than they found. The revolving of such
considerations in our thoughts and mixing our own unbelief with them, creates a
world of fears, even in good men, till, by resignation of all to God, and
acting faith upon His promises (Romans 8:28; Ps Isaiah 27:8; Revelation 7:17), we do, at last, recover
our hearts out of the hands of our fears again, and compose them to a quiet and
sweet satisfaction in the wise and holy pleasure of our God.
V. OUR IMMODERATE
LOVE OF LIFE AND THE COMFORTS AND CONVENIENCES THEREOF may be assigned as a
proper and real ground and cause of our sinful fears, when the dangers of the
times threaten the one or the other (Revelation 12:11; Acts 20:24-25).
1. Life is the greatest and nearest interest men naturally have in
this world, and that which wraps up all other inferior interests in itself (Job 2:4; Genesis 25:32).
2. That which endangers life must, in the eyes of the natural man, be
the greatest evil that can befall him.
3. Though death be terrible in any shape, yet a violent death by the
hands of cruel and merciless men is the most terrible form that death can
appear in.
VI. Many of our
sinful fears flow from THE INFLUENCES OF SATAN upon our phantasies. By putting
men into such frights he weakens their hands in duty, as is plain from his
attempt this way upon Nehemiah (Nehemiah 6:13), and if he prevail there,
he drives them into the snares and traps of his temptations, as the fisherman
and fowler do the birds and fishes in their nets, when once they have frighted
them out of their coverts. (J. Flavel.)
Effects of slavish and inordinate fear
I. DISTRACTION OF
MIND IN DUTY (Luke 1:74).
1. Hereby Satan will cut off the freedom and sweetness of our
communion with God in duties.
2. So distracting fears cut off the soul from the reliefs it might
otherwise draw from the promises.
3. We lose the benefit and comfort of all our past experiences (Isaiah 51:12-13).
II. DISSIMULATION
AND HYPOCRISY. Abraham (Genesis 20:2; Genesis 20:11); Genesis 26:7); Peter (Matthew 26:69, etc.)
1. By these falls and scandals religion is made contemptible in the
eyes of the world.
2. It greatly weakens the hands of others, and proves a sore
discouragement to them in their trials, to see their brethren faint for fear,
and ashamed to own their principles.
3. It will be a terrible blow and wound to our own consciences.
III. THE
STRENGTHENING OF TEMPTATION IN TIMES OF DANGER Proverbs 29:25). Aaron (Exodus 32:1-35) ; David (1 Samuel 21:12). It was fear that
prevailed with Origen to yield so far as he did in offering incense to the
idol, the consideration of which fact brake his heart to pieces.
1. Sinful fear drives men out of their place and duty.
2. Fear is usually the first passion in the soul that parleys with
the enemy, and treats with the tempter about terms of surrender. ¡§The castle
that parleys is half won¡¨ (French proverb), e.g., Spira.
3. Fear makes men impatient of waiting God¡¦s time and method of
deliverance, and so drives the soul into the snare of the next temptation.
IV. PUSILLANIMITY
AND COWARDICE. You find it joined frequently in the Scriptures with
discouragement (Deuteronomy 1:21; Deuteronomy 20:3, etc.).
V. APOSTASY. It is
not so much from the fury of our enemies without, as from our fears within,
that temptations become victorious over us Matthew 24:9-10).
VI. GREAT BONDAGE
OF SPIRIT. Sinful fear makes death a thousand times more terrible than it would
otherwise be (Hebrews 2:16).
1. Such a bondage as this destroys all the comfort and pleasure of
life.
2. It destroys our spiritual comforts.
3. It deprives us of the manifold advantages we might gain by the
calm and composed meditations of our own death. (J. Flavel.)
The security of the righteous under national calamity
I. A CAUTION (Isaiah 8:12).
1. It will be necessary to explain the emotion against which the
caution is directed. Taking the caution in its comprehensive import, it is
addressed to men, not to submit the government of the soul to the influence of
excessive terror, arising from the approach of temporal calamity and distress.
It is an universal disposition, among the children of men, in the prospect of
evil, to admit such fears and such emotions as these. The thought, for example,
of national distresses, such as those which were now about to be poured out on
the people of Israel; the thought of personal trials in the common relations of
life, from domestic distress, from disease, from bereavement and death, are
causes that often inspire the emotion we contend against, as existing in former
ages, and which we are aware is often witnessed now.
2. We must consider also, the reasons on which the propriety of this
caution is founded.
II. A
RECOMMENDATION. ¡§Sanctify,¡¨ or select and set apart, ¡§the Lord of hosts
Himself; and let Him,¡¨ so selected and set apart, ¡§be your fear, and let Him be
your dread.¡¨
1. In this recommendation there is a call upon man to honour Jehovah,
by recognising the presence and the action of His perfections in the various
calamitous visitations which He permits or sends. His knowledge, His power, His
holiness, His justice, His wisdom--
2. Here is a call upon men to honour Jehovah by repenting of their
past transgressions, and by devoting themselves to a practical obedience to His
commandments. It is remarkable to observe, especially in the Old Testament, how
often the fear of God is connected with repentance, and with obedience to God.
3. Here is a call upon men to honour Jehovah by resorting and
trusting to His mercy, as that which will grant spiritual blessings, and give
final salvation to their souls.
III. A PROMISE. ¡§He
shall be for a sanctuary.¡¨ The ordinary meaning which is ascribed to the word
¡§sanctuary¡¨ is simply a place of religious worship; in this case, however, as
in many others of the sacred writings, it signifies a place of religious
worship, devoted also as a place where endangered persons may receive security.
Amongst the heathen, religious temples were places of refuge; and when men
endangered by misfortune or even crime ran within the threshold of the place
called holy there was no possibility of grasping the offender; so long as he
remained in the sanctuary he was safe. So it was amongst the Jews. When it is
said that ¡§God shall be for a sanctuary,¡¨ it is intended that God shall be as a
holy building where men endangered by temporal calamity may find shelter and
repose. The instances are singularly numerous in which God is presented in the
character of a refuge (Psalms 18:1-2; Psalms 46:1; Psalms 46:11; Proverbs 18:10; Isaiah 4:6; Isaiah 26:1; Isaiah 26:3; Isaiah 26:20).
1. God shelters those who resort to Him as their sanctuary from the
perturbation of slavish fear. The fear of God is strictly what is called an
expulsive emotion; it banishes from the mind of man a vast quantity of other
modifications of feeling, from which he could derive only sorrow and anguish
and pain (Proverbs 14:26).
2. The Lord of hosts shelters those who resort to Him as their
sanctuary from temporal judgments. There is provided, on behalf of the
righteous, a remarkable exemption from those temporal calamities and judgments
which God inflicts upon men directly as the consequence of sin. And if it
sometimes does happen that the righteous suffer in those judgments as well as
the wicked, it is not because of failure in the promises of God, but because
the righteous will not come out and be separate. If a man will stay in Sodom
when God has threatened to devour it with fire, the man who so stays must be
destroyed. But when there is a separation from all the ungodly confederacies of
the world, and a solemn and determinative sanctification to the Lord, by
causing Him to be our fear and dread, the Scriptures plainly state that there
shall, as the result, be an exemption from all those calamities which fall upon
the world for sin (Ezekiel 9:4-6).
3. With regard to those calamities which are the common allotments of
life, we are not to say that from these there is an exemption; they must suffer
death in its most sudden, and its most awful power. But there is a Spirit that
¡§guides the whirlwind and that rides upon the storm¡¨; there is a hand of mercy
in these calamities of providence, transforming them into a new class of
blessings.
4. The Lord of hosts shelters those who resort to Him as their
sanctuary from the perils and perdition of final ruin. (James Parsons.)
The Lord a sanctuary
I. THE DUTY.
¡§Sanctify the Lord of hosts,¡¨ etc.
II. THE PROMISE.
¡§He shall be for a sanctuary.¡¨ Consider the preciousness of this promise in the
time when all human help will be vain. We refer to the last day, when Christ
shall come ¡§to judge both the quick and the dead.¡¨ (W. Horwood.)
The true sanctuary, and how to get there
I. THIS PASSAGE
TELLS US WHAT TO DO WITH OUR NATURAL FEARS. God is in the believer¡¦s life as He
is not in the life of another. He has come to him in the wilderness to be his guide,
into the storm to be his pilot, into the battle to be his captain. All
difficulties are nothing before Divine wisdom, all opposition nothing against
Divine strength. The Christian¡¦s great danger is unbelief or unfaithfulness to
God, which would make him lose for a time the means of safety and victory. He
is like one closely following a guide in the darkness over pathless mountains,
whose one concern is to keep him in sight who will thus secure to him a safe
and successful journey; and again he k like a child who does not burden himself
with any cares, but that of pleasing the father whose love and power have
supplied all his need in the past and will supply all in the future. It is thus
that the Christian fears his foes, only as the possible causes of the one
misfortune of estrangement from his God. The treacherousness of his own heart
and the subtlety of those enemies who are ever seeking to break the union which
makes him too strong for them, exercise his thoughts and his feelings, but all
in relation to God, so that He alone may be truly said to be the fear of HIS
people. All this is true for a Church as it is true for the individual
Christian.
II. THIS PASSAGE
TEACHES US WHAT IS, OR SHOULD BE, TO US TRULY HOLY.
III. THIS PASSAGE
OFFERS THE MOST EXALTED NOTION OF A SANCTUARY. Man dwelling in God is the
realisation of our happiness and of the Divine glory. It speaks to all of
purity, safety, peace, but it speaks of much more, according to the spiritual
capacity of those to whom it is made known. But few among the thousands of
Israel knew anything of abiding in that house of God, which, whether they knew
it or not, represented Jehovah Himself.
Most of them visited it at intervals more or less rare, and left
to the priestly family the duty and privilege of regarding it as their home.
And in this the great mass of professors are aptly represented by the nation of
Israel. They seek the Divine sanctuary as a house of defence or a place for
pardon, when specially pressed by trouble or a sense of sin; but, if they would
be Christians indeed, they should remember that the Church of Christ is the
spiritual priesthood; that the members of it are expected to ¡§offer the
sacrifice of praise continually¡¨; that to do this they must ¡§dwell in God,¡¨
they must ¡§abide in Christ¡¨; and that no less close and no less constant union
than this can be natural to faith which has learnt that ¡§we are members of His
body, of His flesh, and of His bones.¡¨
IV. THIS PASSAGE
PREPARES US FOR WHAT OTHERWISE WOULD HAVE SEEMED INCONSISTENT WITH THE
BLESSEDNESS IT SPEAKS OF--the sight of others stumbling at that which has
become our glory, finding Jehovah Himself to be a rock of offence. How is this?
A very simple law will answer. We stumble through ignorance. It is not what we
know, but what we do not know that offends us. The rock of offence is a thing
misunderstood, for which our philosophy had not prepared us. Now nothing is
more misunderstood than goodness among the bad, than God among those who have
fallen from the knowledge of Him. He Himself has said, ¡§My thoughts are not
your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways.¡¨ This stumbling of the natural
mind at God may be seen in all His manifestations. Men deny His government
because they do not see in it what they think worthy of His hand; they grumble
or rage at His distribution of goods; they reject or explain away His
revelations of the future; and, above all, they refuse to believe in salvation
through His crucified Christ. But in all this they are fulfilling His sure Word
of prophecy, and while they continue to exhibit the depravity of fallen man,
and so the riches of Divine grace, they do not prevent humble, believing souls
from sanctifying God in their hearts and proving Him to be their sanctuary. (J.
F. B. Tinling, B. A.)
The fear of God steadying the soul in worldly loss
Augustine relates a very pertinent and memorable story of
Paulinus, Bishop of Nola, who was a very rich man both in goods and grace: he
had much of the world in his hands, but little of it in his heart; and it was
well there was not, for the Goths, a barbarous people, breaking into that city,
like so many devils, fell upon the prey; those that trusted to the treasures
which they had were deceived and ruined by them, for the rich were put to
tortures to confess where they had hid their monies. This good bishop fell into
their hands, and lost all he had, but was scarce moved at the loss, as appears
by his prayer, which my anther relates thus: Lord, let me not be troubled for
my gold and silver: Thou knowest it is not my treasure; that I have laid up in
heaven, according to Thy command. I was warned of this judgment before it came,
and provided for it; and where all my interest lies, Lord, Thou knowest. (J.
Flavel.)
The fear of God delivers from the fear of death
Mr. Bradford, when the keeper¡¦s wife same running into his chamber
suddenly, with words able to have put most men in the world into a trembling
posture: ¡§Oh, Mr. Bradford! I bring you heavy tidings; tomorrow you must be
burned, and your chain is now buying¡¨! he put off his hat, and said, ¡§Lord, I
thank Thee; I have looked for this a great while, it is not terrible to me; God
make me worthy of such a mercy.¡¨ (J. Flavel.)
True courage
The following prayer was found in the desk of a schoolboy after
his death: ¡§O God, give me courage to fear none but Thee.¡¨ (Sunday School
Chronicle.)
The exaggerations of guilty fear
The rules of fear are not like the rules in arithmetic, where many
nothings make nothing, but fear can make something out of nothing. (J.
Flavel.)
Verse 14
And He shall be for a sanctuary
Sanctuary in God
I suppose that what all of us mourn over most in a bustling age,
is a loss of sacredness in life.
We have no wish to secure the false-sacred--that which is merely ascetic; nor
that which is merely solemn-sacred--the dull monotony of darkened church or
gloomy retreat. We naturally say, if this is God¡¦s world; if civil and civic
duties, social and relative responsibilities, are all God-ordained ones, it is
likely, at least, that here, we may be able to secure a heavenly citizenship
amid earthly cares and customs. God will not call us to the wear and worry, the
strain and temptation, of a life in the world, and leave our souls without
sacred home and spiritual retreat in Himself. How often this idea recurs in the
sacred writings. God is our refuge and rest--our hiding place, our dwelling
place.
I. THE SACREDNESS
THAT A REVERENT HEART DESIRES. Our Lord lived and worked amongst men, dined
with the Pharisee, dwelt with the quiet family at Bethany, consecrated the
marriage feast, and went to the publican¡¦s home. We, too, may secure sacredness
for our lives.
II. THE SACREDNESS
THAT MAKES SANCTUARY IN GOD HIMSELF. This is so beautiful: He shall be for a
sanctuary. He whom wicked men dread and flee from--flee from, indeed, because
He is a sanctuary; for, as of old, darkness cannot dwell with light, nor
irreverence with reverence, nor mammon worship with devotion to God. We may
carry very bad hearts into very beautiful places. Place is easily made
unsacred. But the Divine nature must be spiritual Into fellowship with God
there can enter nothing that is false or worldly or vile.
1. Sanctuary in a person. Yes; for even here, in this dim sphere of
earthly friendship, our best sanctuaries, apart from our Saviour Himself, have
been those who bear His likeness, and who do His will. If asked where the
fountains of our reverence have been best nourished, and where the noble
thoughts that make us men indeed, have been most wondrously fed, we should
think of friends that have received us into the sanctuary of their love and
friendship, and helped to diminish the dross of our character and to brighten
the gold of our faith.
2. We abide in Him who says, ¡§I am He that liveth, and was dead, and
behold I am alive for evermore.¡¨ And if by His own Divine nature He is a
sanctuary, He is so by experience too. He has been tempted in all points as we
are, yet without sin. ¡§He suffered, being tempted.¡¨
III. THE SACREDNESS
OF ALL THE FUTURE DAYS. ¡§He shall be.¡¨ Names vary concerning what God is to
suit need and experience. We translate the want, and then God¡¦s name is
translated to meet it. I am hungry, He is Bread; I am thirsty, He is Water; I
am faint, He is Wine; I am heated in the way, He is a Rock Shadow in the weary
land. We can suppose, therefore, that the word ¡§sanctuary¡¨ meets special wants.
Life is not always a seeking for a refuge, but it is so especially at certain
times and in strange and desolate experiences. In 1 ooking forward, therefore,
ourselves to life¡¦s future seasons, we see what the soul within us cannot do in
itself, and what nature can never perfectly be to any of us. Christ, and He
alone, will be now and forever--a sanctuary.
IV. THE SACREDNESS
OF PERSONAL LIFE IN GOD. We cannot say, as mediaevalism said, Enter the Church
and be saved. We want to obey God¡¦s sweet will--to seek more and more for union
with Himself through Christ Jesus. (W. M. Statham.)
Bind up the testimony
¡§Bind up the testimony¡¨
There is evidently a reference in the text to wares or merchandise
which are very valuable, and which must be bound up and sealed, to preserve
them from being injured or lost, and to convey them in safety to those to whom
they belong.
The meaning of the text is, that we should, by searching the Scriptures, and by
the guidance of the Holy Spirit, ascertain what truths and duties are contained
in them, and carefully preserve and maintain these like that which is bound up
and sealed. In acting in accordance with the instructions given in the text,
the once bearers of the Church should take the lead, to encourage and direct
the people of Christ; and His people must concur with them in binding up the
testimony and sealing the law. Brad up the testimony, seal the law among, or
along with, My disciples.
I. IN WHAT MANNER
the testimony must be bound up, and the law sealed, among Christ¡¦s disciples.
1. By their faith in His Word.
2. By their profession of the faith.
3. By obeying the truth.
4. By suffering for the truth.
5. By religious covenanting.
II. FOR WHAT ENDS
the testimony is bound up and the law sealed among Christ¡¦s disciples.
1. For their preservation.
2. For their transmission to posterity. (Original Secession
Magazine.)
Divine revelation
It is a great instance of God¡¦s care of His Church and love to it,
that He hath lodged in it the invaluable treasure of Divine revelation.
1. It is a testimony and a law.
2. This testimony and law are bound up and sealed, for we are not to
add to them or diminish from them.
3. They are lodged as a sacred depositum in the hands of the
disciples (2 Timothy 1:13-14). (M. Henry.)
Verse 17
And I will wait upon the Lord
Waiting upon the Lord
In the practice of this becoming resolution, Jehovah is the object
of--
1.
Intense
desire.
2. Diligent attention.
3. Earnest expectation.
4. Constant dependence.
In this all-important exercise, humility and hope, patience and
perseverance, are happily combined with an agreeable serenity of mind, which
stands in direct opposition to turbulence of spirit and uneasy emotions of
soul. It cheeks every opposite passion, and preserves the mind in a pleasing
tranquillity, satisfied with the sovereign good pleasure of God, and attentive
to the diligent improvement of all the means appointed for attaining the end in
view. In every change, affliction, and trial it disposes wholly to rely upon
God, for all the blessings He hath promised to bestow, in the season He sees
most proper to confer them. Hence, in the last clause of this verse, the same
resolution is thus expressed, ¡§I will look for Him.¡¨ (R. Macculloch.)
Waiting on the Lord in desertion and gloom
I. THE
CHARACTERISTIC APPELLATION OF JEHOVAH. ¡§The God who hideth Himself.¡¨
II. THE IMPLIED
MYSTERIOUSNESS OF HIS DEALINGS WITH HIS PEOPLE.
III. THE RESOLVE OF
THE BELIEVER UNDER THIS VISITATION. (G. Smith, D. D.)
Verse 18
Behold, I and the children whom the Lord hath given me
Names as signs
The Hebrews, like most Eastern races, were very quick to see the omen
in the nomen, the sign or portent in the name.
(¡§Niger¡¨ in Expositor.)
Isaiah and his children as signs
If one of these names implied judgment, three of them implied
mercy. The omen in the name ¡§Speed-spoil Hasten-booty¡¨ was doubtless full of
terror; for the Assyrians were the most fierce and cruel race of ancient times,
and would sweep through the land like a destructive storm; but, if this one
name was so terribly ominous and suggestive, all the others speak of an
untiring and inalienable compassion. ¡§Shear-jashub¡¨ predicted that God would
bring back a faithful remnant even from the cruel bondage of Assyria;
¡§Immanuel¡¨ assured them that God would be with them in all their perils and reverses;
while the name of Isaiah himself pointed to the end of all Jehovah¡¦s dealings
with them--¡§salvation¡¨ from all evil. (¡§Niger¡¨ in Expositor.)
Christian nurture
There are some things which if we can give them place and power in
our own lives, win lucre great influence in enabling us to carry through our
work as parents to a blessed issue of success.
I. FAITHFULNESS.
The meaning of this word is explained by the resolve of the Psalmist when he
says: ¡§I will behave myself wisely in a perfect way; I will walk within my
house with a perfect heart.¡¨ Always when we try to do good to others we are
thrown back upon ourselves; we are reminded that high work must have fit
instruments, and that our influence is likely to be as our character is. As the
man is so will be his strength. This is peculiarly the case as between us and
our children. They know us much better than others, are much nearer to us, see
us more clearly. For our children¡¦s sakes we are bound to be the best we may.
Nothing that we can say or do will have half the force of that invisible and
almost irresistible power which comes right from our souls, and goes at once
and straight into theirs. This power, issuing from the depths of our own being,
is an involuntary thing on our part. We cannot make it this or that by an act
of will. This sincerity on our part ought to take as one of its forms a firm,
steady family rule--an exercise of wise parental authority. On the other hand,
parents mar their own influence, hinder their prayers, and injure their children,
although they are very far from meaning it, by over-indulgence. They never
command--never rule calmly and firmly--all is softness, liberty, or even
license. Such parents tell us in defence of their system: ¡§It is not for us to
command; our best influence is, as has been said, that of personal character;
if that be not right, commands from us will be of little use.¡¨ On the same
principle it might be said that God does not need to command; that He only
needs to reveal to His creatures what He is, and they will love and serve Him.
He has revealed Himself to us. And yet this same God, this Father of mercies,
commands, legislates, and duly brings penalty upon those who do not obey. Law
and love, these make the whole revelation of God.
II. TENDERNESS. A
mother¡¦s tenderness! It is one of the continual wonders of the world. It is
really a greater thing than a father¡¦s constancy, a soldier¡¦s courage, or a
patriot¡¦s love. Yet the world is full of it.
III. Such feelings
will lead to PRAYER. In prayer for our children we are putting ourselves in the
line of God¡¦s laws. ¡§Bring them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.¡¨
It is not our nurture, it is His, and in prayer we cast it over on Him.
IV. We are thus
naturally led to the last word--HOPEFULNESS. We ought to cherish a feeling of
cheerful confidence in God as to the result of our endeavours for our
children¡¦s good. Discouragement, and despondency even, will come to us soon
enough, and darkly enough, if we will permit them. (A. Raleigh, D. D.)
¡§I and the children¡¨
Turn to the New Testament and the text will be no mystery to you;
its key hangs on its proper nail (Hebrews 2:18). We have evidence that it
is our Lord who speaks, and speaks of His people as His children. This clue we
will follow. The context sets forth, as is most common throughout the whole of
Scripture, the different results which follow from the appearance of the
Saviour. He is rejected by many, and accepted by others.
I. Here is A
REMARKABLE RELATIONSHIP. Jesus is called a Father. This is not according to
precise theology, or according to the more formal doctrinal statements of
Scripture.
1. Still, the title of Father is very applicable to our Lord Jesus
Christ for many reasons.
2. Now, let us see whether there is not much of teaching in this
metaphor by which we are called children of the Lord Jesus. The expression
denotes--
II. A SPONTANEOUS
AVOWAL ¡§Behold I,¡¨ etc.
1. The Lord owns His children Sometimes they are ashamed to own Him;
and He might always be ashamed to own them, but He never is.
2. He glories in them as being God¡¦s gift to Him. ¡§Whom Thou hast
given Me¡¨; as if they were something more than ordinary children.
3. He challenges inspection. ¡§Behold! look at them, for they are
meant to be looked at; they are set ¡¥for signs and wonders¡¦ throughout all
generations.¡¨
4. And do notice again--for it affects my mind much more powerfully
than I can express, ¡§Behold, I and the children.¡¨ I can understand a mother speaking
thus about herself and children, but for Christ the Lord of glory to unite His
glorious name with those of such poor worms of the dust is very wonderful. Now,
if Jesus owns us so lovingly, let us always own Him: and if Christ takes us
into partnership--¡§I and the children¡¨--let us reply, ¡§Christ is all.¡¨ Let Him
stand first with us; and let our name be forever joined with His name.
III. A COMMON
FUNCTION. Christ and His people ¡§are for signs and for wonders in Israel from
the Lord of hosts which dwelleth in Mount Zion.¡¨ Both Christ and His people are
set for a purpose.
1. They are to be ¡§signs and wonders¡¨ by way of testimony.
2. By way of marvel. Genuine Christians will generally be reckoned by
the world to be singular people.
3. When the believer¡¦s testimony for good becomes marvel, it is not
wonderful if he afterwards becomes an object of contempt. Hold on, brother t
and hold out to the end; be humbly and quietly faithful Do not try to be a
wonder, but be a wonder. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Children have a mission
Infancy is the perpetual Messiah which comes to the arms of men
and pleads with them to return to Paradise. (R. W. Emerson.)
Verse 19-20
And when they shall say unto you, Seek unto them that have
familiar spirits
Wizards
Wizards and ¡§they that have familiar spirits,¡¨ are what we should
now call ¡§mediums,¡¨ through whom the dead speak.
(A. B. Davidson, D. D.)
Wizards that peep and mutter
¡§Peep¡¨ (i.e., chirp) and ¡§mutter¡¨ refer to the faint voice,
like that of a little bird, which antiquity ascribed to the shades of the
departed: ¡§The sheeted dead did squeak and gibber in the streets of Rome¡¨ (see Isaiah 29:4). The LXX suggests that the
voice of the ghost was imitated by ventriloquism, which is not unlikely. (Prof.
J. Skinner, D. D.)
Religion and superstition
Religion and superstition contrasted (Isaiah 8:19-20). (Prof. J. Skinner, D.
D.)
Should not a people seek
unto their God?--
Gripping old truths and seeing new visions
We must learn to recognise the friends and foes of our life even
when they are presented to us in an Oriental and old-world dress.
I. WE HAVE HERE A
PLEA FOR THE LIBERTY AND INDEPENDENCE OF THE LIVING PRESENT. ¡§On behalf of the
living should they seek unto the dead?¡¨ Such is the sarcastic question that the
disciples of the great prophet are required to ask the people when the latter
desire to resort to wizards and witches to help them out of their straits. The
retort goes much further than merely striking a blow at the silly superstition
of seeking by enchantment to bring back and question the shades of the dead. It
contains a principle which lies at the very foundation of the world¡¦s
development,--a principle the reverent recognition of which will enable us to
work out unfettered the full mission of our lives, and give us unbounded faith
in the future of the race which Christ has come to redeem. Every new generation
has its own special mission to fulfil; it is a new life charged with the duty
of working out its own salvation. It is a new stage in the manifestation of the
Divine through the human. The living present claims for itself a dignity and a
mission, and, if we are lax in upholding the former, we are likely to fall
short of fulfilling the latter. There is a way of worshipping the past, and of
appealing to it which puts the present in chains, or, at least, compels it to
be stationary. Has human life in very deed exhausted the thought of God? Surely
the very history of the past itself ought to teach us the essential liberty and
power of life. What epochs of the past are those that call forth our highest
admiration and homage! Not such a period as that of the middle Ages when the
living fortified and entrenched themselves in the sepulchres of the dead; but
rather such times as those of the Lutheran reformation, when men felt the holy
freedom of their own life, cast away the swathings of the past, and fearlessly
took a new step in the name of God. I believe that God reigns through the rich
movements of life, and not through traditional and external fetters. Given an
earnest generation, awake to the responsibilities of its own life, and I can
trust God to direct the flowing tide to a sacred shore. We cannot assert that
an active and earnest generation will not make any mistakes. Every age has its
own peculiar dangers, the vices which are the excess of its virtues. There are
shallow lives that lose their gravity with the slightest movement, and dash
themselves into thin vapour around the deeper movement of the time. And there
are the men that pride themselves upon being fearless spirits in the realm of
thought; which often means that they take advantage of a new movement to rush
into one-sided and extreme conclusions upon the most precarious
basis--conclusions which a truer judgment will anon reverse or correct. And
even the most earnest and reliable spirits find it difficult to discover the
golden mean between the bondage of the old and the violence of the new.
II. THAT THE TRUE
LIFE OF THE PRESENT CAN BE ATTAINED ONLY BY LIVING CONTACT WITH THE LIVING GOD.
The prophet¡¦s message has not ended with the declaration that life is
essentially movement and a force, having a Divine right to cast off the
encrusting forms of the dead past. In order to prevent this awful liberty from
being abused, and this vast movement from being misdirected, he must supply it with
a guiding Spirit, and a directing force. It is a dangerous thing for men to
become suddenly conscious of a vast and unused power unless they at the same
time feel the grip of the eternal principles along which this power should
move. Every movement of life presupposes an appointed orbit, without which it
runs wild, and ends in a crash. The prophet, therefore, directs the people to
root and ground their liberty in living contact with God--¡§Should not a people
seek unto their God?¡¨ In examining, therefore, any particular case of movement
in the moral and religious sphere it is all-important to inquire whether it
exhibits the living energy of the Divine life in the human, whether it enriches
men with a profounder apprehension of the beating, quickening life of God here
in our very midst; in fine, whether the movement is marked with the sacred
brand of living contact with the living God. Every true life movement brings
God nearer--never drives Him further away. Let us apply this test in one
particular and crucial case--the great question of the inspiration of the Holy
Scriptures. Perhaps our formal deflations may undergo a slight change; but of
this I feel sure--that it will never be necessary or rational for me to accept
a theory of inspiration which will make the Bible less Divine than I hold it to
be at present. There is no truly onward movement which is not also upward.
Life¡¦s true mission is fulfilled and life¡¦s true path pursued, only in
proportion as a people seek to their God.
III. So we are led
to our last thought: THAT THE TRUTHS WHICH WERE THE ESSENTIAL BASIS OF THE BEST
LIFE OF THE PAST MUST BE THE BASIS OF THE ENLARGING LIFE OF THE PRESENT. ¡§To
the law and to the testimony. If they speak not according to this word, surely
there is no morning for them.¡¨ So the cycle of thought is completed. True
progress and true conservatism are not opposed to one another, but are rather
supplementary. The only true liberty is that which runs along the lines of
eternal law. The world was not begun yesterday, and we have not been deputed to
lay its foundations anew. So Isaiah¡¦s last position is not only consistent with
his first; it is necessarily involved in it. The living, says the prophet, need
not consult the shades of the dead, for they have a living God to guide them
and to give them ever larger supplies of power. True; but God is one. He does
not change with each new generation. The great principles by which He ennobles
human life are well known, for they have been writ large in His
self-manifestations in the past. God will not reveal Himself in the present to
those that are too blind to recognise His glory as revealed in the past. God
has revealed Himself to the world long ago. If we would have more light in the
present, we must be true to the radiance that lights up the history of the
past. (J. Thomas, M. A.)
God to be sought by nations
The history of our own coronary coincides with the record which
the Holy Spirit has given of the history of Judah and of Israel, in
illustrating the important fact that God in the dispensations of His
providence, deals with nations in their collective capacity according to their
faithfulness in His service. The condition of Judah in the time of Isaiah
demanded this remonstrance. There prevailed much of avowed irreligion and immorality.
I. IN WHAT MANNER
CAN WE PERSONALLY INFLUENCE THE CHARACTER AND CONDUCT OF THE NATION AT LARGE?
The nation is made up of the aggregate of its individual members. Each person,
therefore, may justly consider his own character and conduct in a two-fold
view: as it affects himself, and as it affects the whole country. The influence
of each distinct member on the whole community, as contributing to the
formation of its character, whether for good or for evil, is a subject of deep
importance. In this respect, indeed, the more prominent the station in which a
man is placed, the greater is his responsibility. But the religious character
of the nation does not rest with these alone: piety or impiety in all other men
of influence, of wealth, of talent, are likewise the constituent parts of the
nation¡¦s excellence or the nation¡¦s, guilt, while they are also productive of a
corresponding character in the various subordinate ranks of life. Nor is there
any single person, however subordinate his station, who does not in the same
manner contribute towards the formation of the general character of the nation
of which he constitutes a part.
II. IN WHAT DOES
THIS SEEKING UNTO GOD CONSIST? Nations and individuals seek unto the Lord--
1. By applying to Him for true knowledge and instruction (verse 20; John 5:39).
2. By taking refuge in Him as their confidence and hope.
3. By following His guidance as to their character and conduct. (J.
Hill, B. D.)
The duty of seeking unto God
I. THE REASONS WHY
WE OUGHT TO SEEK UNTO OUR GOD.
1. We should seek to Him for light and guidance in perplexity and
doubt. No state is more painfully trying to man than to have the mind tossed
and agitated like a bark on the stormy waves, without chart and compass. There
is an eager impatience in such a state, which lays men open to imposition. They
become the easy dupes of crafty deceivers. Hence magicians and necromancers, in
an age of ignorance and credulity, gamed such an ascendency over the vulgar.
You have read what history records of the oracles of Greece, and the sibyls of
Italy. But a superstition, very similar, prevailed over all Asia, and at times
penetrated into Judea. Now all such practices were dishonouring and forsaking
Jehovah. The mind of a sincere believer may, both on points of faith and
practice, be in a state of doubt and suspense. And to whom should he look, but
to the Father of lights who can scatter every cloud?
2. For support and consolation in sorrow and distress (Job 5:8; Psalms 50:15).
3. For protection and defence amidst difficulties and dangers.
4. For strength to fit us for all the active duties of life and
religion.
II. HOW WE ARE TO
SEEK UNTO OUR GOD.
1. By diligently and impartially consulting His revealed will in the
Holy Scriptures.
2. By constantly and seriously frequenting the public ordinances of
His house.
3. By carefully marking and observing the openings and leadings of
Providence. ¡§In particular cases,¡¨ says Mr. Newton, ¡§the Lord opens and shuts
for His people, breaks down walls of difficulty which obstruct their path, or
hedges up their way with thorns, when they are in danger of going wrong, by the
dispensations of His providence. They know that their concernments are in His
hand; they are willing to follow whither and when He leads, but they are afraid
of going before Him.¡¨
4. By offering up humble sad earnest petitions at the throne of His
heavenly grace. (Essex Congregational Remembrancer.)
From light to darkness: from darkness to light
(Isaiah 8:18-22; Isaiah 9:2):--The experience of Israel is
here described in three pictures, eachmarking a distinct stage in that
experience--
I. ISRAEL
REJECTING THE LIGHT. The prophet comes with a Divine message to his people. The
people will not believe--
1. From inability, being unused to exercise simple trust in God.
2. From pride, for the mingling of judgment with mercy in Isaiah¡¦s
message offends them.
3. Disbelieving Isaiah, and finding no help in human wisdom, they
turn like Saul in his extremity, with the proverbial credulity of unbelief, to
the oracles of necromancy. The old watchword, of religion, ¡§To the law and to
the testimony!¡¨ ¡§Should not a people, seek unto their God?¡¨ are forgotten. ¡§For
those who act thus,¡¨ says Isaiah, ¡§there is no morning dawn,¡¨ for they wilfully
turn from the light.
II. A TIME COMES
WHEN ISAIAH¡¦S WARNINGS ARE FULFILLED. Calamity, famine, distress drive the
people to despair. Them is no voice of hope from their wizards and soothsayers.
Haunted by the memory of the time when the watchword of faith might have saved
them, they feel that they have grieved the Spirit and He is gone! ¡§Hardly
bestead and hungry they pass through the land and curse their king and their
God.¡¨
III. IN THE MIDST OF
THEIR DESPAIR THEY LOOK UPWARDS, SCARCE KNOWING WHY. All other helpers failing,
they direct towards heaven a despairing glance, as if hardly daring to think of
God¡¦s help, and then at last light shines through the gloom.
IV. SUCH ALSO MAY
BE THE EXPERIENCE OF AN INDIVIDUAL SOUL. First, the Divine warning is despised,
and the Word of God neglected, set aside as a worn-out superstition. The voice
of religion seems to have lost its hold upon such a soul. Then all manner of
refuges are tried, alliance with the world power--immersion in secular
business; the superstition of unbelief, agnosticism, etc. All in their turn
fail to alleviate the weary heartache which prompts the cry, ¡§Who will show us
any good?¡¨ The whole universe seems out of joint, and the soul hardly bestead
and hungry curses its king and its God, the whole order of things in the world,
and every form of religion the fake and the true. At length, in very despair,
as if feeling it is no use, ¡§for me there is no morning dawn;¡¨ the soul looks
upwards. The darkness is past, the true light now shineth, the soul that walked
in darkness and the shadow of death sees the salvation of the Lord. (Hugh H.
Currie, B. D.)
Superstition
In the years which preceded the French Revolution, Cagliostro was
the companion of princes--at the dissolution of paganism, the practisers of
curious arts, the witches and the necromancers, were the sole objects of
reverence in the known world; and so before the Reformation, archbishops and
cardinals saw an inspired prophetess in a Kentish servant girl; Oxford heads of
colleges sought out heretics with the help of astrology; Anne Boleyn blessed a
bason of rings, her royal fingers pouring such virtue into the metal that no
disorder could resist it; Wolsey had a magic crystal, and Thomas Cromwell,
while in Wolsey¡¦s household, ¡§did haunt to the company of a wizard.¡¨ These
things were the counterpart of a religion which taught that slips of paper,
duly paid for, could secure indemnity for sin. (A. Freud)
Verse 20
To the law and to the testimony
The written Word of God the only standard of truth
I.
CONSIDER
THE PRINCIPLE LAID DOWN IN THE TEXT, namely, that we are to take the
Scriptures, the inspired Word of ¡§the true and living God,¡¨ as the only
standard of truth.
II. SEE HOW SADLY
THE CHURCH OF ROME, BOTH IN DOCTRINE AND PRACTICE, HAS DEPARTED FROM THIS
PRINCIPLE. At the Council of Trent, where the Pope, bishops, and other
ecclesiastics were assembled, in the middle of the sixteenth century, to put
into definite form the articles of their Church, it was unanimously decreed,
that traditions should be received as ¡§of equal authority with the Scriptures¡¨:
and at the same Council it was also agreed to make all the books, apocryphal as
well as others, ¡§of equal authority.¡¨ The reason of their adding traditions to
the Scriptures is given by Pope Plus IV, in these words: ¡§all saving truth is
not contained in the Holy Scriptures, but partly in the Scripture and partly in
unwritten traditions; which whosoever doth not receive with like piety and
reverence as he doth the Scriptures, is accursed.¡¨ We have a reasonable
instance of their readiness to set aside the Bible, in order to establish their
own opinions at the Council of Augsburg. It was there that the Protestant
confession of faith, drown: Up by Melanchthon, was presented to the Emperor.
After the reading of it, the Duke of Bavaria, who was on the Popish side, asked
Eckius, one of his party, whether he could overthrow the doctrines contained in
it, by the Holy Scripture. ¡§No (replied Eckius), we cannot by the Holy
Scriptures, but we may by the fathers.¡¨
III. SEE HOW THE
ACTING ON THIS PRINCIPLE, IN OPPOSITION TO THE CHURCH OF ROME, LED TO THE REFORMATION,
and produced those blessed consequences which we are now reaping the advantage
of. It is not a little remarkable that the art of printing, about the year
1450, very greatly contributed to the work which followed. It revived the study
of classical literature; and thus the Bible, which even clergymen and others
acquainted with learning, had been very little used to read before, was now
studied by them; and it was that that led in the first instance to a discovery
that the religion in which their fathers had been brought up could not be
proved by the New Testament.
IV. TEST THE
REFORMED RELIGION BY THIS SCRIPTURAL RULE, AND PROVE THEREBY THE SOUNDNESS OF
ITS PRINCIPLES. The Reformation has not founded a new Church, it has corrected
an old one; and the religion which we now profess is the religion of primitive
Christianity. See, in our sixth article, how the Church of England places
herself on the ground of the Scriptures. She says, against the Church of Rome,
that ¡§Holy Scripture containeth all things necessary to salvation, so that
whatever is not read therein, nor may be proved thereby, is not to be required
of any man that it should be believed as an article of faith, or be thought
requisite or necessary to salvation.¡¨ (W. Curling, M. A.)
Holy Scripture, without tradition, man¡¦s sufficient guide to
salvation
This passage embodies the truth that in the difficulties and
questions that arise in the Christian Church, and which are frequently
presented to the mind of Christian persons, the Holy Scriptures are the last
appeal to which the Christian shall have recourse. This subject branches out
into a vast variety of inquiries; but we shall consider it in connection with
the sixth article of our Church of England.
I. THE AFFIRMATIVE
PROPOSITION which asserts the sufficiency of Holy Scripture in all things
requisite or necessary to salvation To men who have read the Holy Scriptures,
it will seem strange that there ever should have arisen a question, as to their
sufficiency in things requisite to salvation. They see that the Holy Scriptures
are large and full, that they develop innumerable truths of mighty
magnitude--that they unfold mysteries beyond the grasp of the human
intellect--that they propound a series of the most pure and hallowing
precepts--that they narrate the history of God¡¦s dealings with His people, so
far as they are known to human knowledge--and that they enter upon an ample
detail of all those things which God hath revealed of His future purposes for
mankind. They see that the Scriptures unfold the fall of man, God¡¦s purpose to
save a people to Himself, God¡¦s love in the gift of His Son Jesus Christ in
order to save them, the incarnation of the Word, the atonement of the Cross,
the resurrection and triumph over death, the ascension into heaven, the descent
of the Holy Ghost, the judgment of the last day, and the everlasting glories
that shall follow. They see that the Holy Scriptures contain all this; and
still further, that they contain all those rules and principles that should
govern man in his duty to God and in his duty to his fellow man, and entering
rote such detail of relative duties, of husbands and wives, parents and
children, masters and servants, princes and subjects, that every honest man,
from the monarch to the peasant, shall find in the Holy Scriptures a sufficient
guide and enlightener in the duties of a Christian life. But in the spirit of
the words of our text, let us ¡§to the law and to the testimony.¡¨ Let us take
counsel of our God, and ask of Him in the record of His own Word, whether the
Holy Scriptures be sufficient unto salvation (Deuteronomy 11:16-21; Deuteronomy 31:11; Deuteronomy 13:12; Psalms 119:9-11; Isaiah 8:20; Luke 1:1-4; John 5:39; John 20:30-31, Acts 17:10-12; 2 Timothy 3:14-17). The Romanists
reply to these Scriptures in a body by stating that they prove too much,
inasmuch as they prove either that the Old Testament Scriptures are sufficient,
or that one or more Gospels are sufficient for our salvation. We reply, that,
if this be true, then, a fortiori, if a part of the Scriptures contain
sufficient unto salvation, the whole of the Scriptures as a matter of course
must be admitted to contain all things necessary to salvation.
II. THE NEGATIVE
PROPOSITION in the article, namely, that ¡§whatsoever is not read in Holy
Scripture, nor may he proved thereby, is not to be required of any man, that it
should be believed as an article of the faith, or thought requisite or
necessary to salvation.¡¨ The position upon which the Romanists have erected
their whole system has been, that besides the written Word them is also an
unwritten word--that besides the Holy Scriptures them is another vehicle for
conveying religious truth, and that other vehicle they have named tradition.
The nature of tradition is this. They state that our Lord Jesus Christ taught
many things to His apostles and disciples, which they did not commit to writing
in the sacred Scriptures, but, instead of committing them to writing, they
committed them by oral communication to those men whom they appointed as
bishops throughout the Church universal; they add that those bishops have in a
similar manner communicated these doctrines and practices to the bishops and
priests that wore to come after them, and that thus there is a mass of floating
doctrine and practice pervading the Church universal, partly written in the
books of Romish priests and partly deposited in the breasts of Romish bishops.
There are certain difficulties and objections to this system.
1. A historical objection derived from the history of God¡¦s dealings
with His people. The original revelation made to our first parents, being
dependent upon tradition, soon became corrupted and lost. And this inefficacy
of tradition is the more remarkable, when we consider that the life of man in
the ante-diluvian world was extended far beyond the life of man in the
post-diluvian world. Nor is this the whole of the historical argument or
objection against tradition, because after the waters of the deluge had rolled
away, the first fact that is narrated is that man had so lost the knowledge of
the true God again, that he built the tower of Babel; and the next fact we read
is that the world was so sunk in ignorance that it was necessary that God
should choose Abraham and elect one family to Himself, in order that in that
family He might take certain steps, by which to secure forever the remembrance
of His name in the earth.
2. A Scriptural objection. This is founded upon a conversation
narrated in the Gospel history (Mark 7:1-9). Our Lord states that His
disciples were justified in rejecting the traditions of the elders because they
made the law of God of none effect.
3. An objection arising out of the nature of tradition. With the most
anxious desire only to speak the truth, the best men will sometimes vary in
their narrative of facts--there is a defect in human memory; there is in the
colouring of the minds of men, and there is in the degree of knowledge or
ignorance of various men, that which leads to their varying more or less in
their statements of fact. Now, if this be the ease in reference to fact, how
much more is it the case in reference to abstract doctrines! In order to show
that this difficulty still more exists in reference to doctrine, we have but to
reflect how few there are in the world, who agree in all things precisely in
the same views of doctrine. We regard, therefore, everything that is purely
traditionary as necessarily unsound. (M. H. Seymour, M. A.)
The rule of faith
There is a strong tendency in man to flee from the voice of his
Maker. Whey should any of us be afraid to hear the voice of God, or to have
either our principles or actions judged by His Word Conscience makes us afraid;
it tells us that neither the one nor the other will square with the Divine law.
Therefore, man forsakes the Word of his God and has recourse to those who will
speak to him ¡§peace, peace, when there is no peace¡¨ (Isaiah 8:19).
I. OUR POSITION
is, that Holy Scripture is the only standard whereby to judge of controversies
in matters of faith.
II. We now proceed
to ESTABLISH THIS POSITION. It is proved by a two-fold line of
argument,--negative, by denying the claims put forward on behalf of the
addition to this rule; positive, by bringing evidence in favour of the rule
itself.
1. The negative evidence.
2. The positive evidence.
III. I proceed now
to notice A FEW OBJECTIONS that are brought against our position.
1. ¡§If the Scripture be your rule of faith, there could be no rule of
faith, consequently no faith and therefore no salvation, until the canon of
Scripture was complete. But for sixty years after the death of Christ the canon
was not complete; therefore for sixty years after the death of Christ there
could have been no salvation in the Church of God.¡¨ This plausible; but the
reply is simple. We will try the soundness of the argument upon their own
principles. If Scripture and tradition be, as they say, their rule of faith,
there could not have been a rule of faith until this one was complete. The
argument is as good one way as the other. The sophism lies in this,--that,
because God may give more light at any particular period, therefore there was
no adequate light before!
2. It is objected that controversies cannot be determined by our rule
of faith. But, if the Word of God be not competent or sufficient to decide
controversies, we ask one simple question--How, then, shall the controversies
concerning the Church be determined?
3. ¡§The Scriptures are (say they) difficult and liable to be
misunderstood and perverted.¡¨ We may say the same respecting Scripture and
tradition. ¡§But,¡¨ says Dr. Milner, ¡§we have an unerring judge of controversy¡¨ (i.e.,
they bring in the infallibility of their Church)
¡§to decide in the matter, and he must be understood.¡¨ But how can he be
understood! We must, as Chillingworth remarks, have an infallible interpreter
to expound his interpretation, and so on ad infinitum. But this
infallible interpreter has never yet spoken. Then, further, if Scripture be so
difficult, the interpretation of the judge is not less so; for the decrees of
councils and popes cannot possibly be more intelligible than those writings
which were read in the hearing of men, women, and children; than the sermons
which were addressed by our blessed Lord to the simple and ignorant; than that
Word of which we read that it is so plain that a wayfaring man, though a fool,
shall not err therein. (J. R. Page, M. A.)
The Word of God the only rule of faith and practice
When men are in some measure impressed with the nature and
importance of the end for which they have been made, and when they see that
this end respects matters which do not come under the cognisance of their
senses and observation, that it has reference mainly to God and to eternity,
they will naturally inquire whether any certain rule of standard exists which,
when rightly used, and faithfully followed, may guide them to the attainment of
this end. Writings possessed of such a character, proceeding from such a
source, and resting on such an authority, it must, of course, be most important
for us to know, that we may be enabled rightly to apply them for our direction.
There are many who profess to regard the Scriptures of the Old and New
Testaments as containing a revelation of God¡¦s will, and of course us being so
far a rule to guide us in matters connected with our highest interests, who yet
deny that they constitute the only rule to direct us how we may glorify and
enjoy God. There are other rules which they would exalt to a co-ordinate place
with the Word of God.
1. If the Bible be the Word of God, we have no need of any other
rule. The Bible is able to make men wise unto salvation.
2. The attempts which have been made to set up other rules as co-ordinate
with the Word of God, have generally had the effect of superceding practically
the sacred Scriptures; and this constitutes a fair and legitimate presumption
against them.
I. THE APOCRYPHAL
BOOKS are certain writings composed in the interval between the time of Malachi
and our Saviour¡¦s appearance in the flesh. They were not written in the Hebrew
language, like the books of the Old Testament Scriptures, and exist only in
Greek. The Jewish Church never acknowledged them as inspired; and when the apostle
says (Romans 3:2), ¡§that unto the Jews were
committed the oracles of God,¡¨ he seems to intimate, not merely that the
possession of the sacred oracles was conferred on them as a privilege, but that
the custody and preservation of them was imposed upon them as a duty, so that
they being, as it were, the authorised depositories of the oracles of God,
their testimony as to their authenticity is to be regarded as essentially
important, if not of itself absolutely conclusive. The authority of these books
was not in any instance acknowledged, directly or by implication, by our
Saviour or His apostles, while they plainly acknowledged the authority of the
Law, the Psalms, and the Prophets, the three classes into which the Jews
usually distributed the canonical Scriptures. There is not a vestige of
evidence that these books were composed by men who wrote under the inspiration
of the Holy Ghost, or that their authors were regarded in that light by any of
their contemporaries. There are not a few statements in these books which, by
no skill and learning, can be reconciled with each other, and which, therefore,
cannot have proceeded from one and the same Spirit of truth.
II. The Church of
Rome further professes to receive and venerate APOSTOLICAL TRADITIONS with
equal piety and reverence as the written Word. In support of the authority of
tradition, Papists commonly refer to the injunction of the apostle (2 Thessalonians 2:15), ¡§to hold fast
the traditions which they had been taught, whether by word, or by his epistle.¡¨
Of course, it was the duty of the Thessalonians to hold fast all that they had
been taught by the apostle, whether orally or by writing. And our answer to
Papists, when they urge from this passage the authority of tradition, is just
this, that if the Church of Rome will put us in the same situation with regard
to her pretended traditions as the Thessalonians were in regard to the
traditions to which the apostle refers; i.e., if she will give us as
good evidence as the Thessalonians had that these traditions really came from
an apostle, and were delivered by him as public instruction to the Churches, we
will implicitly submit to them, but not otherwise.
III. Let us now
advert to the claims which some who call them selves rational Christians put
forth in behalf of HUMAN REASON, to be received along with the Word of God as a
rule of faith and practice. Men are certainly bound to exercise their reason
most fully upon a matter so momentous as the end for which they were made. It
is by their reason alone that they come into contact with truth, so as to
discover, to apprehend, and to establish it. When the Bible is pressed upon
their attention, as containing a revelation from God, they are bound to bring
their whole faculties to bear upon the examination of the evidence on which its
claim to that character rests, and to come to a clear and decided determination
upon that point. If they come to the conclusion that the Bible does contain a
revelation from God, then they are further bound to use their reason in
discovering the meaning and import of its statements, and in ascertaining from
them what is the standard of belief and practice which they ought to follow.
And here in right reason the province of reason ends. There can be no more
satisfactory reason for believing any doctrine, no more conclusive evidence
that it is true, than the fact that God has revealed it. This is a position to
which the reason of every rational man assents, and it plainly supersedes the
mere unaided efforts of our own reason upon any point on which God has made
known to us His will. Men have no right to regard their own reason as the
measure or standard of truth, or to suppose that they are capable of
discovering much, by its unaided efforts, in regard to an infinite God and an
invisible world. (W. Cunningham.)
Is conscience the supreme rule of life?
There is, indeed, another notion very prevailing in the present
day, which seems to hold up conscience as the supreme rule by which men ought
to be guided in regard to religion, although it has scarcely been propounded as
a distinct and definite doctrine. This is evidently a mere fallacy, although we
fear it produces extensively very injurious affects. When men talk of their own
conscience as being the rule which they are bound to follow, they can mean by
their conscience only the opinion which they sincerely entertain, and seem to
forget that while, in a certain sense, they may be bound to follow their own
conscientious convictions, and while it is undoubtedly true that God alone is
Lord of the conscience, that is, is alone entitled to exercise jurisdiction
over their opinions, or to require them to believe and act in a certain way
merely because they are so required, it may still be a question, whether their
conscience is well or ill informed, whether the opinions they conscientiously
entertain are well or ill founded. Now this very obvious consideration shows
that there must be a higher standard than conscience by which men should try
all their opinions, however conscientiously they are held, and that therefore
conscience cannot be regarded as a standard of opinion and practice in any such
sense as to interfere with the supreme and exclusive authority of the Word of
God, or to release men from the obligation to regulate their whole opinions and
practice by its statements. (W. Cunningham.)
Search the Scriptures
I. Permit me to
urge upon you THE BRINGING CERTAIN THINGS ¡§TO THE LAW AND TO THE TESTIMONY.¡¨
1. The ideas engendered in you by your early training.
2. The preachers of the Gospel.
3. There is another class of men. These men are their own preachers;
they believe no one but themselves.
4. Just do the same with all books that you read.
II. THE GOOD
EFFECTS that you will derive from a careful study of the law and testimony of
God.
1. Unless you study the Word of God you will not be competent to
detect error.
2. When you are in a matter of dispute you will be able to speak very
confidently.
3. Search the Scriptures, because in so doing you win get a rich
harvest of blessing to your own soul.
III. OTHER REASONS.
Many false prophets are gone forth into the world. There is a solemn danger of
being absolutely misled. Read your Bibles to know what the Bible says about
you. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The evils resulting from false principle of morality
There are three erroneous principles of morality prevalent among
ourselves, expediency, honour, and custom.
1. Expediency, borrowed from the storehouse of sceptical philosophy,
and placed, by its wisest defenders, as nearly as might be done, on a Christian
foundation, pronounces that an action is right or wrong according as it tends
to promote or to diminish general happiness. Whatever is expedient is right.
Every moral precept is subject to exceptions. And of the expediency of
regarding or disregarding the precept every man is in every case to judge for
himself.
2. Honour, as a principle of action, refers to the estimation of the
class of society in which the individual moves, and especially to the
sentiments of the higher ranks, whose opinions will ever be of the most
preponderating influence. Its concern respecting moral actions is limited to
such as are useful in fashionable intercourse: and is particularly bestowed on
those which have somewhat of splendour, commonly of false splendour, in their
exterior appearance.
3. Custom is the general guide of those persons who give little
thought to the investigation of principles, and take their moral opinions upon
trust from others. No one of these is the Scriptural standard of conduct. They
all depart from ¡§the law and the testimony.¡¨ ¡§They speak not according to this
word¡¨: therefore ¡§there is no tight in them.¡¨ Let us now advert to their
effects.
I. One effect will
be this: THE MORALITY PRODUCED WILL BE UNCERTAIN AND VARIABLE. From a survey of
the variable morality produced by these false principles of morals, turn to the
morality of the Scriptures. Behold it firm, consistent, immutable: not
committing its precepts to the jurisdiction of man, and investing him with a
dispensing power to suspend or to abrogate them at his discretion; but
commanding him universally to be faithful in obeying them, and to leave
consequences with God.
II. Another effect
of the erroneous principles under examination is, that THE MORALITY PRODUCED IS
LOW IN DEGREE. From the view of the debased morality originating in false
principles direct your eyes again to the Word of God. Behold the morality which
it teaches, worthy of Him, suited to man I Behold it manifesting itself by its
holiness to be a transcript of the holiness of God! Behold it as a branch of
that ¡§godliness,¡¨ which ¡§has the promise of the life that now is, as well as of
that which is to come¡¨: behold it conducing to the happiness of men, present no
less than future. Behold it not partially confining its benefits to select
classes of society; but with outspread arms showering them down upon all.
Behold it displaying from age to age its hallowed truths, uncorrupt, unsullied,
as the source from which it flows. Behold it exemplified in the fulness
of perfection, by, Him who is the cornerstone of Christian morality; by the
incarnate Son of God, even by Him who was ¡§God manifest in the flesh.¡¨
III. THE MISCHIEF
PRODUCED BY FALSE PRINCIPLES OF MORALITY WILL BE BEYOND MEASURE EXTENSIVE. it
is on moral dispositions and moral conduct that these principles operate. And
it is in the government of moral dispositions, and in the exercise of them in
moral actions, that much of the employment of life consists. If religion be
weakened in one point, it is weakened in all points, it is endangered in all.
Ii then you are anxious, in discharging the duties of morality,¡¨ faithfully¡¨ to
follow the. Divine commandments, and to tread in the steps of your Lord,
¡§search the Scriptures. By them shall every moral deed be tried at last: by
them let it be directed now. (T. Gisborne.)
The best guide book
When Sir David Wilkie was setting out for an artistic tour in the
Holy Land, he was asked what guide book he was taking with him. He held out the
Bible, saying, ¡§This is the best guide book.¡¨ We are pilgrims to the heavenly
Canaan. What guide book will be so helpful to us as the Bible? It will shed
light on our way. (Gates of Imagery.)
The Bible and superstition
After Henry the Eighth¡¦s rupture with the Pope the following order
was issued, to counteract if possible¡¨ the advance of sacerdotal superstition:
Every parson or proprietary of every parish church within this realm, shall
provide a book of the whole Bible, both in Latin and in English, and lay the
same in the choir, for every man that will to read and look therein; and shall
discourage no man from reading any part of the Bible, but rather comfort,
exhort, and admonish every man to read the same, as the very Word of God and
the spiritual food of man¡¦s soul.¡¨ (H. O. Mackey.)
Verse 21-22
And they shall pass through it, hardly bestead and hungry
Unsanctified suffering
I.
SIN
LEADS TO SUFFERING.
II. THERE IS IN
SUFFERING NO SANCTIFYING POWER. It may harden men in iniquity.
III. SUFFERING DOES
NOTHING IN ITSELF TO ABATE GOD¡¦S ANGER AGAINST SINNERS. Nothing will turn away
that anger but a genuine repentance Isaiah 9:13). (R. A. Bertram.)
Nemesis
He reads the doom of those that seek to familiar spirits, and
regard not God¡¦s law and testimony. There shall not only be no light to them,
no comfort; or prosperity, but they may expect all horror and misery.
1. The trouble they feared shall come upon them. They shall pass to
and fro in the land, unfixed, unsettled, and driven from place to place by the
threatening power of an invading enemy.
2. They shall be very uneasy to themselves, by their discontent and
impatience under their trouble.
3. They shall be very provoking to all about them, nay, to all above
them. When they find all their measures broken, and themselves at their wits¡¦
end, they will forget all the rules of duty and decency, and will treasonably
curse their king, and blasphemously curse their God.
4. They shall abandon themselves to despair, and, which way soever
they look, shall see no probability of relief. They shall look upward, out
heaven shall frown upon them; they shall look to the earth, but what comfort
can that yield to those whom God is at war with? (M. Henry.)
Hardly bestead
Embarrassed with difficulties, oppressed with anxieties,
distressed with bitter reflections and desponding thoughts, not knowing what to
do or whither to go. (R. Macculloch.)
Hungry
Destitute not only of necessary provision |or their personal
support, but of the Word of the Lord, which is the nourishment of the soul Amos 8:11-12). (R. Macculloch.)
Fretfulness
Through hunger and poverty is indeed a great calamity, yet
fretfulness of spirit is a still greater one; and when both are united, it is evident
that the mind is as empty of spiritual good as the body is of necessary
provision. (R. Macculloch.)
No good without God
Them that go away from God, go out of the way of all good. (M.
Henry.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n