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Micah Chapter
Four
Micah 4
Chapter Contents
The peace of the kingdom of Christ. (1-8) The judgments
to come upon Jerusalem, but the final triumph of Israel. (9-13)
Commentary on Micah 4:1-8
The nations have not yet so submitted to the Prince of
Peace, as to beat their swords into ploughshares, nor has war ceased. But very
precious promises these are, relating to the gospel church, which will be more
and more fulfilled, for He is faithful that has promised. There shall be a
glorious church for God set up in the world, in the last days, in the days of
the Messiah. Christ himself will build it upon a rock. The Gentiles worshipped
their idol gods; but in the period spoken of, the people will cleave to the
Lord with full purpose of heart, and delight in doing his will. The word
"halteth," describes those who walk not according to the Divine word.
The collecting the captives from Babylon was an earnest of healing, purifying,
and prospering the church; and the reign of Christ shall continue till
succeeded by the everlasting kingdom of heaven. Let us stir up each other to
attend the ordinances of God, that we may learn his holy ways, and walk in
them, receiving the law from his hands, which, being written in our hearts by
his Spirit, may show our interest in the Redeemer's righteousness.
Commentary on Micah 4:9-13
Many nations would assemble against Zion to rejoice in
her calamities. They would not understand that the Lord had collected them as
sheaves are gathered to be threshed; and that Zion would be strengthened to
beat them to pieces. Nothing has yet taken place in the history of the Jewish
church agreeing with this prediction. When God has conquering work for his
people to do, he will furnish them with strength and ability for it. Believers
should cry aloud under distresses, with the prayer of faith, not with
despondency.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Micah》
Micah 4
Verse 1
[1] But in the last days it shall come to pass, that the
mountain of the house of the LORD shall be established in the top of the
mountains, and it shall be exalted above the hills; and people shall flow unto
it.
In the last days — Or, in the latter
days, at the expiring of the seventy years captivity, near two hundred years
from Micah's time, a type of the days of the Messiah's kingdom.
The mountain — The mountain on which the temple
stood, the type of the church of Christ.
Established — Literally fulfilled when the
second temple was built by the Jews. Spiritually, when Christ established his
church by the preaching of the gospel.
Verse 2
[2] And many nations shall come, and say, Come, and let us
go up to the mountain of the LORD, and to the house of the God of Jacob; and he
will teach us of his ways, and we will walk in his paths: for the law shall go
forth of Zion, and the word of the LORD from Jerusalem.
Many nations — This was in part fulfilled when
so many proselyted servants of several nations, in love to their Jewish
masters, and more to the God of the Jews, came up with them from Jerusalem.
Come — So the Jews, released from captivity, encouraged each
other; which was a fulfilling of this prophecy in part; the conversion of the
multitude of the Gentiles to Christ, was a more eminent fulfilling of it.
To the mountain — To the temple at Jerusalem, a
type of Christ and the gospel church.
From Jerusalem — In Jerusalem is declared the only
way of worshipping God, and from thence the only law of right worship shall go
forth, when the Messiah is come.
Verse 3
[3] And he shall judge among many people, and rebuke strong
nations afar off; and they shall beat their swords into plowshares, and their
spears into pruninghooks: nation shall not lift up a sword against nation,
neither shall they learn war any more.
He — The Messiah shall act as a judge and king.
Rebuke — So Christ commissioned his apostles, to teach all
nations.
Verse 4
[4] But they shall sit every man under his vine and under
his fig tree; and none shall make them afraid: for the mouth of the LORD of
hosts hath spoken it.
They — The redeemed of the Lord, redeemed from Babylonish
captivity, the type of a greater redemption by Christ.
Shall sit — That is, they shall enjoy peace,
security and plenty. This was more fully made good in the gospel-days.
Verse 5
[5] For all people will walk every one in the name of his
god, and we will walk in the name of the LORD our God for ever and ever.
All people will walk — It is the practice of
all nations, to serve their gods.
Will walk — Seek the Lord, embrace his law
and worship.
Verse 6
[6] In that day, saith the LORD, will I assemble her that
halteth, and I will gather her that is driven out, and her that I have
afflicted;
That halteth — The Jews weakened with the hard
usage of oppressing conquerors.
Her — Captive Judah; driven out, of their own land. And
Christ will much more gather to his fold those who were captives to Satan.
Verse 7
[7] And I will make her that halted a remnant, and her that
was cast far off a strong nation: and the LORD shall reign over them in mount
Zion from henceforth, even for ever.
A remnant — Which as they are preserved for a
seed, so they take root and increase, and continue to the coming of the
Messiah.
Verse 8
[8] And thou, O tower of the flock, the strong hold of the
daughter of Zion, unto thee shall it come, even the first dominion; the kingdom
shall come to the daughter of Jerusalem.
O tower — One tower put for the whole city Jerusalem.
The strong-hold — Ophel, a strong fort, is likewise
put for the whole city.
The first dominion — The former dominion;
the government (after seventy years captivity) shall return to the former royal
family, and continue in it 'till Shiloh come. This, in the type was fulfilled,
under Zerubbabel and his successors; but the whole antitype concerns the
Messiah's kingdom.
Verse 9
[9] Now why dost thou cry out aloud? is there no king in
thee? is thy counsellor perished? for pangs have taken thee as a woman in
travail.
Now — Now I have promised such great things to you.
No king — Thou hast lost thy king Zedekiah, but thy God, thy
king is with thee.
Thy counsellor — Hast thou none among thy wise
counsellors left? Yet the Wonderful Counsellor is with thee. Messiah, the
wisdom of his father, hath the conduct of thy sufferings, deliverance and
re-establishment.
Verse 10
[10] Be in pain, and labour to bring forth, O daughter of
Zion, like a woman in travail: for now shalt thou go forth out of the city, and
thou shalt dwell in the field, and thou shalt go even to Babylon; there shalt
thou be delivered; there the LORD shall redeem thee from the hand of thine
enemies.
In pain — Thou shalt have troubles, sorrows, and dangers in the
wars against the Babylonians, and in the captivity under them.
Now — Shortly.
In the field — In their journey to Babylon they
were forced to lodge in the fields.
Delivered — By Cyrus, by Darius, and by
Artaxerxes; and this was a type of a greater deliverance.
Redeem — The Hebrew word points out a redemption by the next
kinsman, and so minds us of the Messiah, the great redeemer of the church.
Verse 11
[11] Now also many nations are gathered against thee, that
say, Let her be defiled, and let our eye look upon Zion.
Now — The time is at hand.
Defiled — Let her be polluted with blood, and let us enter, sack
and destroy her temple and palaces.
Look — With delight on her destruction.
Verse 12
[12] But they know not the thoughts of the LORD, neither
understand they his counsel: for he shall gather them as the sheaves into the
floor.
The thoughts — The design of the holy, just and
faithful God.
As the sheaves — The husbandman gathers the
sheaves into the floor to thresh them; so God in due time will bring his
enemies together, that they may be bruised, broken and destroyed.
Verse 13
[13] Arise and thresh, O daughter of Zion: for I will make
thine horn iron, and I will make thy hoofs brass: and thou shalt beat in pieces
many people: and I will consecrate their gain unto the LORD, and their substance
unto the Lord of the whole earth.
And thresh — The future strength of the church
employed in subduing her enemies, is here foretold.
Iron — This expresses the strength of the church firm as
iron, to beat down her enemies.
Brass — By this figurative speech, is the strength of Zion
expressed, treading underfoot, and breaking the power of her enemies in pieces.
And I — I, the church.
Their gain — The spoils of my conquered
enemies.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Micah》
"NEITHER SHALL THEY LEARN WAR ANYMORE"
Micah 4:1-3
INTRODUCTION
1. One of many Messianic prophecies is found in Mic 4:1-3, in which we
read that...
a. The mountain of the Lord's house will be established
b. The Word of the Lord will go forth from Jerusalem
-- Fulfillment of this wonderful age began with the spread of the
gospel and establishment of the Lord's church, or kingdom - cf.
Lk 24:44-47; He 12:18-24,28
2. Those willing to come to the mountain of the Lord's house...
a. Will be taught concerning the Lord's ways and walk in His paths
- Mic 4:2
b. Among the things they will learn, is not to use war anymore - Mic
4:3
3. While the ancient kingdom of Israel often resorted to war, such would
not be the case with the kingdom of the Messiah...
a. Its kingdom would be spiritual, not advanced or defended by the
use of force - Jn 18:36
b. Its citizens would learn a new way to respond to evil and handle
conflict
[In the words of Micah (and Isaiah, cf. Isa 2:1-4), "Neither Shall They
Learn War Anymore". In what way do we see this fulfilled? One way is in
the teaching of Jesus concerning...]
I. REACTING TO CONFLICT AND EVIL
A. WAYS PEOPLE ARE KNOWN TO REACT...
1. The Avenger: retaliates with force with the objective to
punish
2. The Defender: uses force only for the sake of self-
preservation
3. The Passive Resister: resists without the use of force, daring
the evil person to harm an unarmed person (e.g., Ghandi,
Martin Luther King, et al)
4. The Runner: flees from abuse, seeking to escape
5. The Helpless: unable to flee or defend, passively allows
others to mistreat them
B. HOW JESUS TAUGHT US TO REACT...
1. Consider the words of Jesus and His apostles - Lk 6:27-31; Ro
12:17-21
2. When we examine these verses carefully, we note the
following...
a. We are not being taught to:
1) Be a Passive Resister (contrary to Ghandi, King, et al)
2) Be a Runner (though Jesus does teach the principle of
fleeing elsewhere - cf. Mt 10:23)
3) Stand Helpless
b. We are being taught to:
1) React to evil in a positive way
2) To overcome evil with good
3. Jesus taught the principle of "responding to active evil will
with active good will"
a. Someone does us evil, we are to react with good
b. Note the examples used by Jesus: when someone...
1) Curses you, bless them
2) Spitefully uses you, pray for them
3) Strikes you, offer the other cheek
4) Takes your cloak, give them your tunic
5) Ask for something, give it to them
6) Take something from you, don't ask it back
-- In each case, one reacts to evil with active good will
(i.e., love)
[Thus Jesus teaches us another way to deal with conflict and respond to
evil abuse: not by using instruments of war, nor by simply remaining
passive or necessarily fleeing, but by reacting to evil with positive
expressions of good will towards the offender! Why does Jesus teach us
to do this...?]
II. REASONS TO REACT WITH ACTIVE GOOD WILL
A. TO BE DIFFERENT FROM SINNERS - Lk 6:32-34
1. It is human nature...
a. To show good will only to friends
b. To react to enemies as:
1) Avenger
2) Defender
3) Passive Resister
4) Runner
5) Helpless
2. We are called to be partakers of the divine nature - cf. 2 Pe
1:2-4
a. Putting off the old man, with its typical reaction to abuse
- Co 3:5-9
b. Putting on the new man, reacting to abuse in a new way - Co
3:10-14
-- As we do so, we become more like Christ, which leads to the
second reason...
B. TO BE LIKE GOD - Lk 6:35-36
1. God is described as:
a. Kind, even to unthankful and evil men - cf. Ro 5:8
b. Just, as will be manifest one day - cf. Ro 2:5-6
2. God expects His spiritual kingdom to demonstrate His mercy
a. By proclaiming the gospel of mercy - 1 Pe 2:9-10
b. By demonstrating mercy in our lives - Lk 6:36
3. God expects earthly governments to exercise His vengeance
a. They are His ministers to which we are to submit - Ro 13:1-3
b. They are to execute wrath on the evil doer - Ro 13:4
4. Unless we are proper representatives of the government, it is
not our place to administer justice to evildoers
a. We must leave vengeance (justice) to God - Ro 12:19
b. We must let His governmental agents execute wrath - Ro 13:4
-- With the exception of "church discipline" - cf. 1 Co 5:1-13;
2 Th 3:6-15
5. As "sons of the Highest", our duty is to show mercy, or active
good will
a. Showing kindness to our enemies - Ro 12:20
b. Refusing to be overcome by evil (i.e., brought down to their
level) - Ro 12:21
-- As we respond to evil with mercy and goodness, we are more
likely to obtain our third reason for reacting to evil in this
way...
C. TO OVERCOME EVIL - Ro 12:21
1. How can we best hope to overcome evil and change the evil
person?
a. If we react as:
1) Avenger, defender or passive resister
2) We only convince the opposition that might makes right
b. If we react as:
1) Runner or helpless
2) We may only confirm the opposition's view that we are
cowardly or weak
2. The most likely way to both overcome evil and change the evil
person is by reacting with active good will!
a. Is this not how God sought to change the world? - Ro 5:8; Jn
3:16; Ro 2:4
b. Is this not how Jesus sought to change the world? - 1 Pe
2:21-25
3. Certainly Jesus' example demonstrates a better way to handle
conflict and evil...
a. His humility and sacrificial love has motivated many to turn
from sin
b. And we are called to walk in His steps!
4. Those who do often follow Jesus' example make a powerful impact
on others:
"Kim Joon-gon has seen 2,000 out 20,000 people on Chunnam
Island murdered by the Communists. They dragged his family
to a spot where 160 people from two villages had gathered to
beat the Christians. There Kim's father and wife were beaten
to death and Kim was left for dead. When he revived and sought
safety at an acquaintance's house, he was turned over to the
Communists. Only the sudden appearance of an American ship off
the island coast saved him this time, for the Communist
soldiers hurried away to battle.
He hid out in the countryside until the South Korean army
captured the island. The Communists who had killed his wife
and father were arrested. Because it was wartime, the police
chief had authority to execute without trial. But as the chief
prepared to kill the men, Kim pleaded, "Spare them. They were
forced to kill."
The police chief showed great surprise. "It was your family
they killed! Why do you now ask for their lives?"
Kim replied quietly, "Because the Lord, whose I am and whom I
serve, would have me show mercy to them."
The Communists were spared execution because of Kim's plea.
News of his action spread among other Communist supporters in
the area. When Kim later ascended a mountain to preach to
Communists hiding out, he was not killed. Many of the
Communists became Christians, and when Kim finally left the
island there was a flourishing church of 108 members."
- Dictionary Of Illustrations, p. 188
CONCLUSION
1. We may never be called upon to manifest the power of responding to
evil with good in such a remarkable way...
a. We can begin by how we respond to personal abuses we often receive
from others
b. We can react to evil treatment even on a small scale with active
good will
1) Showing that we are different from sinners
2) Demonstrating that we are trying to be sons of the Highest
3) More likely to overcome evil and convert the sinner
2. Reacting to evil with good will does not always convert the
evildoer...
a. Jesus was crucified on the cross, enduring hostility by sinners
- He 12:2-3
b. In such cases we must commit our cause to God, as did Jesus - 1 Pe
2:21-23; 4:19
3. While physical government may step in and exercise the judgment of
God, our duty as citizens of the spiritual kingdom is to show mercy:
"Therefore be merciful, just as your Father also is merciful"
Whenever we show mercy (or active good will) in response to evil, we
fulfill one of the many promises of the Messianic age:
"Neither shall they learn war any more."
Speaking of mercy, have you accepted the invitation of God to respond to
His loving mercy through obedience to the gospel...?
--《Executable
Outlines》
04 Chapter 4
Verses 1-7
Verses 1-5
The mountain of the house of the Lord shall be established in the
top of the mountains
The moral grandeur of the Christian Church
The gift of prophecy would have been to its possessor a source of
the most exquisite misery if it had been restricted only to the dark passages
of human history. But the future had a bright side as well as a dark, and it
was as cheering to contemplate the former as it was dismal to apprehend the
latter. As the sorrows of the prophets were greater, their joys also were
higher than those of ordinary mere In the chapter immediately preceding the
text the prophet had announced the future desolation of Zion and Jerusalem. The
sins of her priests and princes, he foresaw, would attain such a height of
aggravation that the very day itself would, in a manner, be dark over them. But
as in the ashes of winter the husbandman can read the glories of spring, the
prophetic eye could discern in the ruin of one city the establishment of
another more glorious by far. Seine goes on to expatiate with rapture on the
glory that was to follow. By “last days” are meant the times of the Messiah,
or, in other words, the Christian era. The meaning is, that the Christian dispensation
would be the last of all, and that no other economy would be after it. It was
an economy that was to last until the end of time. In these “last days” it is
foretold by the prophet that “the mountain of the Lord’s house shall be
established on the top of the mountains, and exalted above the hills.” In a
mountainous region, among the multitude of hills that rise one above another in
sublimity and grandeur, there is generally one that proudly and preeminently
lifts its head above them all. It is seen from a greater distance than any of
the others, and towers in glorious majesty over the heights which are allied to
it. Under this bold and significant image, the prophet exhibits to us the moral
grandeur and elevation of the Christian Church. It was, like the loftiest of
mountains in an extensive range, to be visible from afar. A house, or temple,
was to be reared on its summit. The Christian religion would surpass every
other in majesty, and look down triumphantly on every other system of worship.
This prophecy is fulfilled in part. Where is there a creed or system of
theology that can compare with it? In the Gospel there is prominence, there is
attractiveness, there is conspicuity. The hill of Calvary is more illustrious
than the mountains of any land. He who was lifted up there, draws towards Him
the eyes of many nations. The language of the prophet implies that, before this
mountain could be exalted, there must be a shaking of the hills around. The
prediction is to receive its full and perfect accomplishment in days still
future--in, if we may so speak, the latest of the last days. Then indeed shall
the mountain of the Lord’s house rise sublimely above all the hills. There is
reason, too, for believing, that just as at the first propagation of the Gospel,
so likewise at its universal diffusion, there shall be a series of great and
momentous changes in the political world. The great battle of contending
principles must be fought out--the old warfare between sense and spirit must be
renewed--and a period of intense misery must precede the final adjustment of
the question. Nevertheless, truth which is mighty must prevail. At the close of
the first verse the prophet intimates the triumph of the Gospel, and the
immense number of its converts. “People shall flow unto it.” The metaphor
signifies that the triumph of the Gospel would be sure and certain, though it
looked like a physical impossibility. The nations of the earth are not only
compared to a river, but to a river flowing upward. To a certain extent this part
of the prophecy has already been accomplished. The success of the Gospel
hitherto in the world has been like the flowing of a river up a hill. Nothing,
humanly speaking, could have been pronounced more improbable than the
conversion of the nations to Christianity. It is the religion of purity; and
the hearts of men are naturally unclean. It is the religion of benevolence and
peace; but the spirit that is in men lusteth to envy. It is the religion of
principle; and the heart of man is naturally disposed to content itself with
forms. It were a curious enough question whether the age in which we ourselves
live is an approximation to that glorious period of which the prophet speaks.
But we dare not with certainty affirm it. While we rejoice in the symptoms of
good, it becomes us, before pronouncing a positive judgment on the matter, to
tremble at so many prognostications of evil. We may take warning against any
fanatical use of this doctrine. The passage is not to be understood literally.
The very terms of it intimate as much. The ultimate establishment of Messiah’s
throne will not interfere with the forms and modes of earthly government. There
will be liberty and equality and fraternity. It will not be the grossly
misnamed liberty, equality, and fraternity of infidel and republican France. It
will be a liberty, not from the salutary restraints of government, but from
Satan and the tyranny of evil passions. An equality, not of spoil, plunder, and
substance, but of principle and unity of spirit. A fraternisation, not of
robbery, under the mask of communism, but of love and generosity, and of men
preferring one another in honour. (J. L. Adamson.)
A vision of the latter-day glories
The prophets frequently described what they saw with spiritual
eyes after the form or fashion of something which could be seen by the eye of
nature. The Church will be like a high mountain, for she will be preeminently
conspicuous. I believe that at this period the thoughts of men are more engaged
upon the religion of Christ than upon any other. The Christian religion has
become more conspicuous now than ever it was. The Church will become awful and
venerable in her grandeur. There is something awfully grand in a mountain, but
how much more so in such a mountain as is described in our text, which is to be
exalted above all hills, and above all the highest mountains of the earth. Now
the Church is despised; the infidel barketh at her. But the day shall come when
the Cross shall command universal homage. The day is coming when the Church shall
have absolute supremacy. Now she has to fight for her existence. The day is
coming when she shall be so mighty that there shall be nought left to compete
with her. Here is the meaning of the text, the Church growing and rising up
till she becomes conspicuous, venerable, and supreme. But how is this to be
done? Three things will ensure the growth of the Church.
1. The individual exertion of every Christian. We shall indeed see
something more than natural agency, but this is to contribute to it.
2. The Church has within her a living influence. This must expand and
grow.
3. The great hope of the Church is the second advent of Christ. When
He shall come, then shall the mountain of the Lord’s house be exalted above the
hills. We know not when Jesus may come. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The established Church
Such is the established Church predicted in ancient prophecy.
Compare the similar prophecy in Isaiah
2. In the chapter immediately preceding this passage God denounces
the severest and most unsparing judgments upon a guilty people. The text is
couched in the language of promise. In order to cheer those on whom God was
about to pour many and merited judgments, He gives them--not a precept, which
would only depress them; not another threatening, for that might overwhelm
them; not an invitation, for that they might not be able to obey--but a
promise, causing the future to unbosom rays of light for the comfort of the
present. From this prophecy, see that the last days of the Gospel are predicted
as the brightest. Divisions and discords have been the history of the visible
Church from its cradle downwards to the present hour. Notice the epithet. The
Church of Christ is here called “a mountain.” This symbol is taken from the
fact that the sacred site of the temple at Jerusalem was a mountain--Mount
Moriah. It suggests that the Church of Christ shall be exalted above all the
obstructions or impediments of the world; principalities and powers bending
before it. Notwithstanding then all the difficulties, discords, divisions, heresies,
Schisms, errors, misconstruction, and misapprehensions that prevail amid the
Church of God, not one of them is retarding in the least degree the ultimate
and glorious outburst. The Church is beautifully and suitably symbolised by a
mountain. A mountain is a fixed and stable thing. In Scripture strength and
stability are represented by mountains. A mountain most suitably represents the
varied climacterics of the Church of Christ, from this circumstance, that it is
sometimes covered with clouds, and thereby involved in darkness, and swept by
the hurricane, while at other times it basks and spreads its bosom before the
uninterrupted and meridian sunbeams. This is precisely the history of the
Church. A mountain is a place of safety or retreat. The true Church becomes a
place of retreat, in which there is found the Rock of Ages, and the shadow of
those wings beneath which there is safety. A mountain is a source of streams
and rivulets. The dews descend from heaven upon it; those dews collect into
streams, which irrigate and refresh the valley below. The Church of Christ is
the great preserver of the earth. A mountain is the spot, standing on which we
can see to the greatest distance. In this is shadowed one of the great
functions which the Church of Christ is meant to discharge, namely, to enable
the believer to see the Sun of Righteousness more clearly and distinctly. A
mountain was selected in the ancient economy for those who sounded the trumpet
of jubilee. And the “acceptable year of the Lord” ought to be proclaimed in the
pulpits of every true and apostolic Church. It is predicted that this mountain
“shall be established in the top of the mountains.” “Establishment” is not to
be understood as popularly applied to certain modern Churches. The passage does
not mean that the Church is established or built upon Peter. There cannot be
two foundations. If Christ be the foundation, there can be no room for another;
whatever comes next must be laid upon the foundation, and must be part of the
superstructure, and not the foundation. The Church is established on Christ,
the Rock of Ages. This is a tried foundation. It is Called “precious.” It is
called a living rock, and the cornerstone. This foundation is an everlasting
foundation. (John Cumming, A. M.)
A missionary discourse
II. A description
of the Church. Such phrases as “the mountain of the Lord’s house,” and “Zion,”
signify, in such connection as this, the Church of God. The visible Church has,
from “the beginning, always had an existence; but its boundaries have generally
been very limited, and its situation has often been very obscure. But the
Church shall be conspicuous to all; as on the top of the mountains. She shall
be exalted above the hills. And philosophy, idolatry, superstition, and errors,
shall no longer obstruct her view, or obscure her glory. And she shall be
established. She has been tossed about by Commotions. One day she shall be no
longer oppressed by persecutions, or disturbed by the arm of human power.
II. A disposition
in all towards the Church. “All nations shall flow into it.” Their movements
shall he characterised by friendly cooperation. By a definite and sacred
object. By proper intentions and correct views. By right dispositions. By
confidence in the excellency of the Divine instructions.
III. The blessings
resulting from these circumstances. Taught from above, then, nations generally
will own the authority of God, acknowledge His right to judge, and submit to
His laws.
IV. The period of
these great events, “In the last days.” The Church of God has had her days; and
these days have been somewhat commensurate with the progress of time, and with
the limited or more extended population of the earth. Day of patriarchal Church
was a day of small things. But patriarchs and prophets spoke of another day, of
other days, which they called the “last days.” Evidently the prophet referred
to the days of the Gospel. Improvement--
1. Let our spirits be cheered though so few have hitherto embraced
real Christianity.
2. We may well be excited to renewed exertions in rendering Divine
truth conspicuous to all.
3. Let this prospect call forth the gratitude of all who already
participate in the blessings of redemption. (Sketches of Four Hundred
Sermons.)
The law of the Spirit
Pentecost is the culminating point of Divine revelation. This
great event is the focus of all prophecy. The text is not exhausted in its
reference to Israel, but stretches forward to the renovation of mankind in the
Church by the Holy Ghost.
I. The law of the
Spirit is an universal law. Adapted to all men, in all circumstances, and in
all times. Because it is the announcing of eternal principles, accompanied with
Divine power to enforce them.
II. Hence its
preeminence over all laws. It absorbs and expresses the truth of all other
laws. All nations recognise it as something higher, deeper, more complete than
their previous revelation or religion.
III. Mark its
effects.
1. In judgment (verse 3). It is the conviction of right and wrong,
good and evil. It is the conviction that right will be maintained and
vindicated, and wrong put down. This must be the foundation of all real moral
and spiritual life.
2. In producing obedience (verse 2). Not mere conviction, but
submission.
3. In working love. The real root of obedience. Leading men to mutual
respect, and to a care for each other’s good.
4. In producing safety and security, This can never be fully attained
by mere external law and restrictive measures. The best laws will be obeyed
only when men’s hearts are in harmony with their requirements. The true way to
safety is by the spirit of love and mutual consideration. The great lesson of
Pentecost is this,--When love is universal, discord of acts and words and
purpose will cease. (William R. Clark, M. A.)
The promise of God regarding. His Church
The sin of the Church had necessitated frequent denunciations and
words of warning on the part of God. He had been speaking very tempestuously to
His people; He now exhibits the gentler aspects of His character. There is a
pause--a calm after tempest; and the sweet birds of promise troop forth with
their notes of peace and gladness.
I. The Church’s
hope. “In the last days.” etc. Who can interpret these words? Not the man of
mere dates. The world has not seen its brightest day yet. The light is still
struggling--not meridian glory. This world has a rich promise hidden in its
heart, like the snow drops of winter--anticipatory of spring. Death is now in
the majority. It shall not always be so. The Church, like youth, lives in
hope--of brighter days to come--of what it is to be. Thou livest in the
infinitive mood!
II. The Church’s
revival. “And many nations shall come, and say, Come, and let us go up to the
mountain of the Lord . . . and He will teach us of His ways, and we will walk
in His paths,” etc. (Micah 4:2-3). Then shall the Church
illustrate the fulness of meaning contained in the Saviour’s words: “I am come
that they might have life, and that they might have it more abundantly.” Souls
shall be enfranchised, and know the liberty of infinitude, etc.
III. The Church’s
security. “They shall sit every man under his vine, and under his fig tree; and
none shall make them afraid” (Micah 4:4). The history of human progress
has been written in fear. “For fear of the Jews” the disciples had to move
about cautiously, and assemble in quiet and concealed places. Not until “the
doors were shut” could they worship with any sense of security. And through all
subsequent ages the history of religious progress has thus been illustrated. In
the fastnesses of the wilderness and fissures of the rocks, the low murmurings
of sacred song have been heard by God alone, “for fear” of the persecuting
hand; as in the days of the Covenanters, Lollards, and others. But behold, the
days come--“the last days”--when doors shall be no longer shut, when bolts
shall be all withdrawn, every gate thrown wide open, and no barrier intervene
between the soul and its perfected liberty.
IV. The
improbability of all this. Looked at in the light of the present state of the
world, this bright perspective is a dream--an extravaganza--insanity’s wild
vision. Look at the corruption of the world; look at a Church dying of doctrine;
and see whether such a future be probable. Apart from “the Word of the Lord “it
is not; but the mouth of the Lord of hosts hath spoken it” (Micah 4:4). What are the improbabilities
of a frozen river, or field, in winter? Shall the waters ever flow again, or
the field wave its ears of corn again? Yes. What is the guarantee? “The mouth
of the Lord” that says: “seed time and harvest, summer and winter, shall not
cease.” The text speaks of a life flowing upwards “all people shall flow unto
it”--to the “top of the mountains.” Who ever heard of water flowing upwards, or
fire burning downwards? You say to one unacquainted with electricity: “I can
send a message to a friend in India, and get an answer in the course of an hour
or two.” “How utterly absurd,” is the reply. There are laws that defy
gravitation; a life sublimer than science, and more eloquent than music.
Sceptical science says: “This thing cannot be.” Faith says: “It shall be, for
the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.” (Joseph Parker, D. D.)
The Gospel age
The “last days” means the times of the Messiah.
I. The true
religion on the Gospel age will become a great power. The temple was the
greatest thing in the religion of the Jews; it was the “mountain” in their
scenery. The true religion is to become a mountain. The true religion, where it
exists, is the biggest thing. It is either everything or nothing.
II. The true
religion of the Gospel age will become universally attractive. “And people
shall flow unto it.” “This is a figurative expression, denoting that they shall
be converted to the true religion. It indicates that they shall come in
multitudes, like the flowing of a mighty river. The idea of the flowing of the
nation, as of the movement of many people towards an object like a broad stream
on the tides of the ocean, is one that is very grand and sublime” (Barnes). In
this period the social element will be brought into full play in connection
with true religion,
1. They will study its laws, in order to obey them. “He will teach us
His ways, and we will walk in His paths.”
2. They will study its laws at the fountain head. “For the law shall
go forth of Zion, and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem.”
III. The true
religion of the Gospel age will become powerful to terminate all wars.
1. Here is the destruction of war. “Beat their swords into
ploughshares, and their spears into pruning hooks.”
2. Here is the establishment of peace. “Shall sit every man under his
vine and under his fig tree.” Most incredible must this prediction have
been to the men of Micah’s time; but it will be accomplished, for the mouth of
the Lord of hosts hath spoken it. If He has spoken it and it does not come to
pass, it must be for one of three reasons--
Mountain top religion
The true way to conquer temptations is not to fight them in
detail, but to go up into a loftier region where they cease to be temptations.
How is it that grown men do not like the sweetmeats that used to tempt them
when they were children? They have outgrown them. Then outgrow the temptations
of the world! How is it that there are no mosquitoes nor malaria on the
mountain tops? They cannot rise above the level of the swamps by the river. Go
up to the mountain top, and neither malaria nor mosquito will follow
you,--which, being interpreted, is, live near Jesus Christ and keep your hearts
and minds occupied with Him, and you will dwell in a region high above the
temptations which buzz and sting, which infest and slay on the lower levels. (A.
Maclaren, D. D.)
The Saviour’s kingdom
The world has always had its dreams of a Golden Age. A
better state of things than that which exists, has been felt to be not only
possible, but normal, and so men have reasoned that what ought to be, either
has been in the old time, or will be in the new. Either as a memory or a hope,
this idea has done much to reconcile men to the confusion and contradictions of
life. To the vagueness and mist of that human dream Scripture gives the
sharpness and substance of fact. It speaks with positiveness. The Golden Age
has not passed. Humanity is on the way to the realisation of its long hope. The
Scripture idea, however, differs from the human in the importance which it
attaches to the spiritual element. The transformations in society, which must
precede the ushering in of the golden age, are moral, not material. Betterment
of laws, advance in knowledge, multiplication of industrial arts, increase of
wealth--these things cannot transfigure humanity. It is the established and recognised
sovereignty of Christ and His truth on which the desired blessed ness depends.
It is important to emphasise this truth at the present time, when religion is
depreciated in the popular estimate. There is a prevalent idea that it is weak
and on the wane. It has recently been said that “fifty years hence no one will
go to church except for culture.” Note that the function of religion is not
limited to the regeneration of a single man. It works through the individual,
upon the organic life of the race. And it employs varied methods. Sometimes it
sparks on the surface of history; sometimes it works out of sight. There is a
river in Kentucky that, after unrolling its silver thread through leagues of
verdant meadows, suddenly disappears. The earth swallows it up. But though lost
to view, its flow is not checked. It channels its way through the hidden rocks;
it hollows out the vast halls and the glittering galleries of the Mammoth Cave.
It springs the arches of that grandest of cathedrals, and inlays the rocky roof
with stars, after the pattern of the heavens. The sculpture of the silent
waters outstrips the skill of human artists. The weird and the beautiful, the
quaint and the sublime are clustered in groupings, whose impressiveness is
eloquent of the wonder workings of the Divine hand. So Christ’s religion has
its epochs of disappearance from the surface of life. But it works
nevertheless, works persistently, works mightily. Divine truth never comes to a
standstill. In sight, or out of sight it is forever busy. Standing at the
easement of prospect, let us note some of the glories of the coming kingdom.
1. The acknowledged supremacy of the Christian Church (Micah 4:1).
2. A universal desire to know and obey the truth (Micah 4:1-2). Till now, religious truth
has had to be carried to men and pressed upon their attention.
3. An adjustment of international relations on the basis of
righteousness (Micah 4:3). The two forces which men have
always used for the regulation of international affairs, are diplomacy and war.
The cunning of intrigue or the edge of the sword is employed to untangle or cut
every knot of dispute. By and by righteousness shall be both the basis and
substance of the international code.
4. Safety of life and property secured by individual piety (Micah 4:4-5). One principal office of
organised society is to surround with safeguards the individual man. Barbarism
is every man for himself; communism is the rule of the caprice or frenzy of a
mob; civilisation is the effort of all for the good of each; and yet the
efficient agent in these widely diverse types of society is the same,--brute
force. In the coming kingdom individual character is to be the security of
society.
5. The elimination of the elements of weakness in society (Micah 4:6-7). What is to be done with the
dependent and dangerous classes? What society cannot do, God can, and by and by
He will. The value of such an outlook as has been now attempted is
incalculable. It gives men the inspiration of a great expectation; composure of
mind in the midst of discouragements; and the true ideal of life. This blessed
consummation, whether near or far off, is not so near but what it needs our help;
it is not so far off but what we can make ourselves felt as a force in it. We
need to clothe our selves in workman’s garments, not in the ascension robes of
those who sit down and dream about the second advent. (Monday Club Sermons.)
The golden age
“But in the latter days it shall come to pass” The prophet lifts
his eyes away to the latter days to gain refreshment in his present toil. He
feasts his soul upon the golden age which is to be, in order that he may serve
himself in his immediate service. Without the anticipation of a golden age he
would lose his buoyancy, and the spirit of endeavour would go out of his work.
Our visions always determine the quality of our tasks. Our dominant thought
regulates our activities. What pattern am I working by? What golden age have I
in my mind? What do I see as the possible consummation of my labours? There is
your child at home. You are ministering to him in your daily attention and
service. What is your pattern in the mind? What sort of a man do you see in
your boy? How would you fill up this imperfect phrase concerning him, “In the
latter days it shall come to pass”? Have you ever painted his
possibilities? If you have no clear golden age for the boy your training will
be un certain, your discipline will be a guesswork and a chance. Our vision of
possibilities helps to shape the actuality. There is the scholar in the school.
When a teacher goes to his class, be it of boys or girls, what kind of men or
women has he in his eye? Surely we do not go to work among our children in
blind and good humoured chance? We are the architects and builders of their
characters, and we must have some completed conception even before we begin our
work. I suppose the architect sees the finished building in his eye even before
he takes a pencil in his hand, and certainly long before the pick and the spade
touch the virgin soil. That boy who gives the teacher so much trouble,
restless, indifferent, bursting with animal vitality, how is he depicted as man
in your chamber of imagery? Do you only see him as he is? Little, then, will be
your influence to make him what he might be. Let me assume that your work is
among the outcasts. When you go to court and alley, or to the elegant house in
the favoured suburb, and find men and women, sunk in animalism, trailing the
robes of human dignity in unamiable mire, how do you see them with the eyes of
the soul? “In the latter days it shall come to pass . . . ” What? To the eye of
sense they are filthy, offensive, repellant. What like are their faces, and
what sort of robes do they wear in the vision of the soul? Are we dealing with
the “might-be” or only with the thing that is? Sir Titus Salt was pacing the
docks at Liverpool and saw great quantities of dirty, waste material lying in
unregarded heaps. He looked at the unpromising substance, and in the mind’s eye
saw finished fabrics and warm and welcome garments; and ere long the power of
the imagination devised ministeries for converting the outcast stuff into
refined and finished robes. We must look at all our waste material in human
life and see the vision of the “might-be.” Surely this was the Master’s way! He
is always calling the thing that is by the name of its “might-be.” “Thou art
Simon,” a mere hearer; “Thou shalt be called Peter,” a rock. To the woman of
sin, the outcast child of the city, He addressed the gracious word “daughter,”
and spoke to her as if she were already a child of the golden age; her weary
heart leapt to the welcome speech. And so we have got to come to our work with
visions of the latter days. I am not surprised, therefore, that all great
reformers and all men and women who have profoundly influenced the life and
thought of their day have been visionaries, having a clear sight of things as
they might be, feeling the cheery glow of the light and heat of the golden age.
In the latter days the spiritual is to have emphasis above pleasure, money,
armaments. In whatever prominence these may be seen, they are all to be
subordinate to the reverence and worship of God. Military prowess and money
making and pleasure seeking are to be put in their own place, and not to be
permitted to leave it. First things first! In the beginning God.” This is the
first characteristic of the golden age. “And many nations shall come and say:
Come and let us go up to the mountain of the Lord and to the house of the God
of Jacob, and he will teach us His ways, and we will walk in His paths.” Then
the second characteristic of the golden age is that people are to find their
confluence and unity in common worship. The brotherhood is to be discovered in
spiritual communion. We are not to find profound community upon the river of
pleasure or in the ways of business or in the armaments of the castle. These
are never permanently cohesive. Pleasure is more frequently divisive than
cohesive. No, it is in the mountain of the Lord’s house the peoples will
discover their unity and kinship. It is in the common worship of the one Lord.
“And they shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into
pruning hooks.” Then the third characteristic of the golden age is to be the
conversion of merely destructive force into positive and constructive
ministries. No energy is to be destroyed; it is all to be transfigured. The
sword is to become a ploughshare; the weapon of destruction an implement of
culture. After the Franco-German war many of the cannon balls were remade into
church bells. One of our manufacturers in Birmingham told me only a week ago
that he was busy turning the empty bases of the shells used in the recent war
into dinner gongs! That is the suggestion we seek in the golden age: all
destructive forces are to be changed into helpful ministries. Tongues that
speak nothing but malice are to be turned into instructors of wisdom. All men’s
gifts and powers and all material forces are to be used in the employment of
the kingdom of God. “They shall sit every man under his vine and under his fig
tree.” There is to be a distribution of comforts. Life’s monotony is to be
broken up. Sweet and winsome things are to be brought into the common life.
Dinginess and want are both to be banished. There is to be a little beauty for
everybody, something of the vine and the fig tree. There is to be a little ease
for everybody, time to sit down and rest. To every mortal man there is to be
given a little treasure, a little leisure, and a little pleasure. “And none
shall make them afraid.” And they are not only to have comfort, but the added
glory of peace. The gift of the vine and fig tree would be nothing if peace
remained an exile. And now mark the beautiful final touches in this prophet’s
dream: “I will assemble her that halteth, and I will gather her that is driven
out and her that is afflicted.” They are all to be found in God’s family. “Her
that halteth,” the child of “ifs” and “buts” and fears and indecision, she
shall lose her halting and obtain a firm and confident step. “And her that is
driven out,” the child of exile, the self-banished son or daughter, the outcast
by reason of sin; they shall all be home again. “He gathereth together the
outcasts.” And along with these there is to come “her that is afflicted,” the
child of sorrows. The day of grief is to be ended, mourning shall be the thing
of the preparatory day which is over; “He shall wipe away all tears from their
eyes, and sorrow and sighing shall flee away. (J. H. Jowett, M. A.)
He will teach us of His
ways--
Gaining knowledge of God
They do not go to God because they know Him, but that they may
know Him. They are drawn by a mighty impulse towards Him. Howsoever attracted,
they come, not making bargains with God what they should be taught, that He
should reveal to them nothing transcending reason, nothing exceeding or
contradicting their notions of God; they do not come with reserves, that God
should not take away this or that error, or should not disclose anything of His
incomprehensibleness. They come in holy simplicity, to learn whatever He will
condescend to tell them; in holy confidence, that He, the infallible truth,
will teach them infallibly. They say “of His ways,” for all learning is by
degrees, and all which all creatures could learn in all eternity falls
infinitely short of His truth and holiness. Nay, in all eternity, the highest
creature which He has made, and which He has admitted most deeply into the
secrets of His wisdom will be as infinitely removed as ever from the full
knowledge of His wisdom and His love. For what is finite, enlarged, expanded,
accumulated to the utmost degree possible, remains finite still. It has no
proportion to the infinite. But even here, all growth in grace implies growth
in knowledge. The more we love God, the more we know of Him; and with increased
knowledge of Him come higher perceptions of worship, praise, thanksgiving, of
the character of faith, hope, charity, of our outward and inward acts and
relations to God, the unboundedness of God’s love to us, and the manifoldness
of the ways of pleasing Him, which, in His love, He has given us. St. Paul was
ever learning in intensity what he knew by revelation. “The way of life to Godwards
is one, in that it looketh to one end, to please God: but there are many tracks
along it, as there are many modes of life”; and each several grace is a part of
the way to God. (E. B. Pusey, D. D.)
The law shall go forth of
Zion, and the Word of the Lord from Jerusalem--
Christianity--its nature, diffusion, and effects
Immortality, guilt, and danger, are intuitions of our common
nature always felt to possess arresting attractive power. Unprepared to throw
away the hope of immortality, the question arises: how can we forecast its
issues, or determine its conditions? Whither shall we turn for light and
guidance? The revelations of Christianity are alone able to solve the mystery.
The Bible is the book and the gift of God. The Christian revelation was not intended
merely or mainly to gratify the intellectual curiosity and enrich the mind of
man, but so to change his nature and reverse his moral condition as to
establish him in the final virtue and happiness of heaven. The portion of
prophecy now claiming attention relates to the entire of the Christian
dispensation.
1. Some of the more distinguishing elements and attributes of the
Gospel denominated in our subject, with distinctive significance, the law and
Word of Jehovah.
2. The extent of the provisions of the Gospel, and its corresponding
publication. Glance at a few of its provisional adaptations.
3. The agency and means by the operation and instrumentality of which
the Gospel was to go forth from the place of its first publication, and,
disdaining all locality, diffuse itself among the nations. Providence will
prepare the way. Divine influence will prepare the heart. Divine truth--the
Bible--shall be the grand exclusive instrument. The spread of the Gospel will
receive its direction from the purposes, and its impulse from the energy of
heaven, while the pulpit, press, social intercourse, and the force of example,
shall secure its acceleration.
4. What will be the effect of the whole? An incalculable enlargement
of the Church, both in extent and influence--a boundless multiplication of its
numbers and blessings. Consider also its more distinctive influence upon--
Christianity is identified with the growth and the glory of the
ages. Her work cannot be retarded. The indestructible elements of
rejuvenescence and immortality found in the Gospel will secure the triumph and
multiply the conquests of Christianity, until the empire of sin is destroyed,
and death is swallowed up in victory. It is reserved for Christianity to
realise the fable of the bird of Jove; grasping the thunder of heaven in her
hand, and spreading her wings from sunrise to the oceans of the West, she
throws her shadow over the world; and the laurels of peaceful triumph and
imperishable glory shall encircle her brow when the wreath of the Caesars shall
only be remembered as the badge of crime. (Bishop H. B. Bascom, D. D.)
And He shall judge among
many people, etc.
International Christianity
The time of which the prophet speaks has evidently not yet
arrived. Let us assume that what the prophet saw was a real purpose of the
Lord, a purpose which might be worked out gradually or suddenly, quickly or
after a long interval, but distinct in its character and practical in its
effects--that peace amongst the nations was, and therefore is, in the counsels
of the eternal God. Looking at the prophecy in this light, we ought not to be
slow to admit that a very real progress has been made towards the prophet’s
goal. Compare what the world is now with what it was before Christ came, and
the difference as regards the peaceable enjoyment of life is immense; and the
improvement is everywhere associated with Christian civilisation. History does
not leave us without hope, or mock the encouragement to be drawn from such
prophecies as those we are considering. In this prophecy the peace is set forth
as a result produced by an antecedent cause. The nations are described as
agreeing together to go up to the house of the God of Jacob, that He may teach
them His ways, and that they may walk in His paths. In modem words, it is through
an increasing prevalence of the authority of justice, through the growth of an
international sentiment recognising Christian obligations that international
peace is to be looked for. We need not wonder that the prospect of universal
peace is still remote, when we consider how slow a progress has been made in
international morality. There must be a morality between nations as well as a
morality between persons. A biblical ideal of true concord amongst the nations
has been beckoning on mankind through the ages, though men have been slow to
pay it due homage. But it is probably in accordance with the laws of appointed
development that the sentiment of international obligation should be of late
growth. Family duty seems to come first. Some think that duty to the clan, or
larger family, takes precedence even of that. Then follows duty to the chief,
or sovereign, or nation, and to fellow members of the same community. Personal
duty towards persons of a different race and country and tongue is felt later
and less strongly. But perhaps that which waits to the last to be felt is the
duty of a nation as a body to other national branches of the great family of
man. The theory of international duty is not altogether a simple matter. A man
is certainly not so free to give up the interests of his country as he is to
give up his own private interests. Our country is a sacred name, including
nearly all that is dear to us. Is patriotism selfish? No. But there may be a
selfish taint in it. Experience and the common sense of mankind bear witness
that it is not impossible to reconcile the due moral sentiment of the small
circle with the due moral sentiment of the larger. A man may love his family,
and yet feel that it would be a shame to him to push its interests to the detriment
of other families of his people. A man may be ardently patriotic, and may not
the less wish well to other countries. In all moral perplexities resulting from
an apparent conflict of obligations, our wisdom is to go forward tentatively
and in faith, following after the better ideal, yielding to the nobler
instinct. Micah lifts us up to the higher international atmosphere towards
which we ought to aspire. He shows us nations persuaded and constrained into
mutual peace by a common reverence for the righteous and merciful God. These
nations have been chastened by the judgments and rebukes of God, so that they
have learnt not to abuse their strength for wrong doing, but to use it rather
for the righting of the injured and the help of the weak. (J. Llewelyn Davies,
M. A.)
An emblem of peace
Upon the plains of Waterloo there stands a great bronze lion,
forged from the captured guns of Britain’s foes in 1815. The beast’s mouth is
open, and seems snarling through his teeth over the battlefield. When I saw it
last, one spring noonday, a bird had built its nest right in the lion’s mouth,
twining the twigs of the downy bed where the fledglings nestled around the very
teeth of the metal monster, and from the very jaws of the bronze beast the
chirp of the swallows seemed to twitter forth timidly the tocsin of peace. It
was the audacity of hope. May it be prophetic!
Verse 5
For all people will walk every one in the name of his God, and we will
walk in the name of the Lord our God forever and ever
Every nation its God
That this chapter contains a prophecy of the glorious times of the
Gospel is the general opinion of all Christian interpreters.
Some things are foretold in it which have never been accomplished in the times
of the Jewish Church.
1. That there shall be a general confluence to the true religion and
worship of God.
2. That this great and conspicuous society of the Church shall enjoy
peace and tranquillity.
3. That internal zeal and devotion shall accompany all this external
glory and happiness. That all these would admirably become the Christian Church
cannot be doubted.
I. All nations and
people generally have some god and religion or other. Atheism is contrary to
the common sense of mankind. It will be very hard, if not impossible, to find
any nation or people that have lived without a God.
II. All those
nations and people that have any belief of a god, have also some devotion, and
pay some remarkable reverence towards the deity. The nature and notion of God
is so great that it cannot ordinarily miss of affecting men with the greatest
seriousness. If any man acknowledges the true God, and has ripe notions of Him,
he then apprehends a mighty majesty, invested with infinite power, wisdom,
justice, and goodness. He that can think of such a God without a religious
reverence must have either something below a human folly, or beyond a human
hardiness.
III. The greater the
god, and the truer the religion, the more ought to be the devotion. It is most
genuine, natural, and reasonable, that the best religion should be attended
with the greatest devotion, and the most holy lives. Show--
1. The excellency of our principles, and how much the religion which
we profess is better than any other. Represent four things
IV. With the more
ardent zeal and devotion we should treat the true God and the true religion.
1. We ought to be more steadfast and unmovable in our religion than
other people are.
2. We ought to outstrip them in good life, in zeal and fervency, as
much as we do in our principles and advantages. (J. Goodman, D. D.)
The great resolve
“The name of the Lord is a strong tower.” We invite you to “go
about Zion, tell the towers thereof.” The various towers of this great
spiritual fortress are nothing else than the titles and attributes with which,
in His own inspired volume, God has seen meet to make Himself known.
I. Jehovah-Tsidkenu;
the Tower of righteousness. Any shelter we can rear is a tower of sand--a
citadel of bulrushes--that will leave us naked and defenceless in that solemn
hour which is to try every man’s work, and every man’s righteousness, of what
sort it is. Christ hath finished transgression, and made an end of sin, and
made reconciliation for iniquity, and brought in everlasting righteousness. To
attempt aught of our own by way of supplement or addition to the merits of the
Divine surety, would be to seek to gild refined gold, or holding up the taper
to help the sunlight.
II. Jehovah-Shalom;
the Lord my peace. This spiritual tower of peace stands side by side with the
tower of righteousness. “The work of righteousness shall be peace.” “Having
made peace, through the blood of His Cross.” What a repose this Gospel peace
gives amid all the petty troubles of life! It “keeps the heart,” as in a
citadel or garrison. A calm elevation is imparted to the present, and the
future can be contemplated undismayed. All that belongs to the Christian; his
duties; his engagements; his very cares and difficulties are softened and
mellowed with this calm tranquillity; just as in nature the setting sun
transforms and metamorphoses the whole landscape into gold.
III. Jehovah-Shammah;
the Tower of the Divine presence. God is everywhere. It is a blessed thing for
the believer to bear constantly about with him the realised sense of the Divine
nearness, and it is his peculiar privilege and prerogative to do so. He is the
living God in nature and in providence, guiding and supervising all. But there
is a nobler and preeminent sense in which His covenant people can flee into
this strong tower. Walking in the name of their God, they can say, “The Lord of
hosts is with us.” “Our fellowship with the Father and with His Son Jesus
Christ.”
IV. Jehovah-Nissi;
the Tower of defence. We are still in an enemy’s country. He that is for us is
greater than all that can be against us. The Lord is our defence.
V. Jehovah-Jireh;
the Tower of trust. A conquering army must keep near its supplies. And the
Christian has His promises of assured help. Each apparently capricious turn in
life’s way, all its accidents and incidents are the appointments of infinite
wisdom; and “they that know Thy name, shall put their trust in Thee.” Trust is
a staff not for level plains and smooth highways. It is the alpenstock, the
pilgrim prop for the mountaineer, for the rugged ascent, for the slippery path,
for the glacier crevasse. God is a rich, sure, willing, and wise Provider.
VI. Jehovah-Rophi;
the Tower of healing. He proclaims as His name, “I am the Lord that healeth
thee.” He is the true “healing tree,” which, cast into your bitterest Marsh
pool, will make its waters sweet. (J. R. Macduff, D. D.)
Heathen zeal and Christian lukewarmness
The survey of missions under their most glorious aspects may keep
men from considering them under less striking, but not less important points of
view. Missions, whether successful or unsuccessful, so far as the conversion of
pagans is concerned, return one hundredfold multiplied to the land whence they
sprang,--return in demonstration of human corruption, and of the need of a
Mediator; and of the truth and power of the Gospel,--return in a stimulus to
self-examination, in incentive to prayer, and in warning against caring for
others, and neglecting ourselves. It is a very peculiar use which may be said
to be made of missions in our text. The heathen are surveyed not as abandoning
their falsehood and superstition, but as adhering to them with the greatest
earnestness and tenacity. From this steadfastness of the heathen the argument
is drawn for making the resolve, “And we will walk in the name of our Lord God
forever and ever.” If the pagan adheres to what is false, we will cleave to
what is true. The tenacity with which false deities are adhered to, does but
set in stronger light the fickleness of the professed servants of the true.
What the missionary ascertains is not that idolaters refuse to add to the
number of their idols, but only that they will not exchange their idols. If
they admit new, they nevertheless adhere to the old. Shall the pagan adhere to
his idols, because they were the idols of his fathers; and shall we virtually
revolt from that God whom our ancestors served, and whose truth, though at the
cost of substance and life, they handed down to us as the most precious
possession? We may change our gods, if we will, yielding to the opposition of
science, falsely so called; we may burn incense before images, which the
madness of speculation would set up, when reason is too proud to bow meekly to
revelation. In either case we should be “changing our glory for that which
cannot profit.” Our God is the God of the Bible, a God who has revealed Himself
through His Son, Jesus Christ, providing through His obedience and death for
our pardon and life. We ask the missionaries this question, Has a people ceased
to “walk in the name of its god”? They have as yet nothing very encouraging to
answer. There are cases of individual conversion. The missionary report is a
report of adhering to error, and opposition to truth. What inferences are to be
drawn from this report--inferences reproachful to ourselves, or containing
lessons which it may become us to study and apply with the utmost diligence?
The gist of the text is, that the tenacity with which the heathen adhere to
their idols, helps to condemn, or display in its atrociousness, the conduct of
the Jew, or the Christian, who shall renounce or be cold in the service of his
Creator and Redeemer. (Henry Mevill, B. D.)
Man’s religious nature
It is trite to say that man has a religious nature. This verse
suggests the wrong and the right development of this nature.
I. The wrong
development. Idolatry. Polytheism proper is, and generally has been, the most
popular religion in the world. Whence comes polytheism? The one great cause,
which comprehends all others, is depravity. Which--
1. Involves moral corruption. What are heathen gods, as a rule, but
the deification of the lower passions and vices of mankind?
2. Involves carnality. Hence they want a god they can see and handle
and touch.
3. Involves thoughtlessness. Polytheism cannot stand reasoning.
II. The right
development. What is that? Practical monotheism. “We will walk in the name of
the Lord our God forever and ever.”
1. This is rational. The one God is the sum total of all moral
properties, the Proprietor of all resources, and the Bestower of all existences
and all the blessings therewith. What can be more rational than to walk in His
way?
2. This is obligatory. No man is bound to walk in the name of an
idol; nay, he is commanded not to. But every man is bound to walk in the name
of the Lord--bound on the ground of His supreme excellence, His relations to
man, and the obligation springing therefrom.
3. This is blessed. To walk in His name is to walk through sunny
fields abounding with all beauty and fruitfulness. (Homilist.)
Verses 6-8
The Lord shall reign over them in Mount Zion
The blessing of the ingathered ones
I.
The
character of the assembly.
1. The halt.
2. The banished.
3. The afflicted.
From this gather the ruined condition of man.
II. Their gracious
advancement and honour. “I will make her that halteth a remnant.” A remnant is
a small quantity or number. A definitive or proportioned remnant. An eternally
saved remnant. A gathered or collected remnant. A prosperous or happy remnant.
A holy and righteous remnant. An opposed remnant. Yet finally a successful
remnant. “And her that was cast far off a strong nation.” Strong by reason of
its situation; its fortifications; its judicious and good laws; its military
skill; its ruler’s wisdom. Consequently a blessed nation. “And the Lord shall
reign over them in Mount Zion from henceforth forever.” They are made
submissive to Christ. Christ reigns in the Church generally. He reigns in the
Church’s officers. He reigns in the Church members. He reigns in the
understandings of His people. He reigns in their will, subduing them. He reigns
in their hearts. This reign is by the power of Divine grace.
III. Their positive
and infallible security (Micah 4:8). Represented by a flock of
sheep, denotive of feebleness, and liability to danger. But Christ is their
tower of defence. A high and lofty tower, and a strong and safe tower. “The
stronghold of the daughter of Zion.” By the word daughter is meant the Church.
This stronghold denotes that we have enemies. It is a hiding place for the
Lord’s prisoners. “Unto thee shall it come, even the first dominion.” An
eternally decreed dominion, over sin, Satan, the world, death. “The kingdom
shall come to the daughter of Jerusalem.” The kingdom of God’s power; grace;
glory. Improvement--
1. This subject teaches us man’s total depravity and utter
helplessness.
2. It also further proves that our salvation is entirely of grace.
3. It evinces the final security of all true believers. (T. B.
Baker.)
The moral monarchy of Christ in the world
Whether the subject of these verses is the restoration of the Jews
after the Babylonish Captivity or the gathering of men by Christ into a grand
spiritual community, is a question on which there has been considerable
discussion among biblical scholars, and, therefrom, should preclude anything
like dogmatism on either side.
I. It embraces
amongst its subjects the most wretched and scattered of men. “In that day,
saith the Lord, will I assemble [gather] her that halteth [that which limpeth],
and I will gather her that is driven out [that which was thrust out], and her
that [which] I have afflicted; and I will make her that [that which] halted
[limps] a remnant, and her that [that which] was cast off a strong nation: End
the Lord shall reign over them in Mount Zion from henceforth, even forever.”
Christ was sent to the lost sheep of the house of Israel (Matthew 10:6), and His invitation was to
all that are “weary” and “heavy laden.” The Church of Christ from the beginning
has comprised those who were the most afflicted, the most scattered, and the
most distressed of mankind.
1. Christ’s moral monarchy knows nothing of favouritism. Every soul
to Him is a matter of profound practical interest.
2. Christ’s moral monarchy is remedial in its design. It brings all
the miserable together in order to rid them of their sorrows.
II. It establishes
itself as the guardian of men forever. “And thou, O tower of the flock, the
stronghold of the daughter of Zion,” etc. The watchtower spoken of by Isaiah is
most likely the tower here referred to by Micah. Flock tower is a good
expression, inasmuch as it indicates the watchfulness of Christ as a moral
Shepherd, the great Shepherd of souls. What a Guardian, what a “Bishop of
souls” is Christ!
1. He knows all His sheep.
2. He has ample provision for all His sheep.
3. He has power to protect all His sheep. Thank God this moral
kingdom is established on our earth. Because it is moral, men have the power of
resisting it. (Homilist.)
Prophecies relative to the Jewish nation
The Jewish nation, when restored, will be the most glorious of the
nations of the earth. There is, in this passage, a comparison instituted
between the glory of other nations; and it is stated that her glory shall be
superior to that of all others.
I. Reasons drawn
from the nature of national glory. The glory of the Jewish nation cannot be
what is generally considered as the glory of nations.
1. Because the glory of common nations is inseparable from
unrighteousness. Self is the moving power of the machine, interest and vanity
form its mainspring.
2. Because it leads to war and bloodshed, to wretchedness and misery.
3. Because it may consist with infidelity.
II. Reasons drawn
from what is revealed respecting the Jews.
1. Because the Jews, when brought back to their own land, will be a
righteous nation.
2. It will be a peaceful, happy nation.
3. A nation of faithful worshippers of the one only living and true
God. What then will be her glory? It will consist in righteousness, penitence,
godliness, purity, and devotion.
Lessons--
1. A political lesson. The duty of the Christian is submission to the
powers that be, patiently waiting for the time when righteousness alone shall
prevail.
2. A religious lesson. How should this subject enhance the importance
of being snatched out of the vortex of this present state, and of becoming so
established as to be able to sing, by anticipation, the songs of joy which are
here set to be sung by the ransomed of the Lord in Zion. (Hugh M’Neile.)
Verses 8-13
Verses 9-13
The Lord shall redeem thee from the hand of thine enemies
The moral regeneration of the world
I. The state of
mankind requires it. “Is there no king in thee? is thy counsellor perished?” It
was more serious for the Jewish people to be deprived of a king than for any
other people, for their king was theocratic, he was supposed to be the Voice
and vicegerent of God. The prophet means to say, that when the Chaldeans would
come and carry them away, they would have no king and no counsellors. Now, men
in an unregenerate state--
1. Have no king. A political ruler is to man, as a spiritual
existent, only a king in name. He does not command the moral affections, rule
the conscience, or legislate for the inner and primal springs of all activity.
Such a king is the deep want of man, he wants some one to be enthroned on his
heart, to whom his conscience can render homage. No man in an unregenerate
state has such a king; he has gods many and lords many, of a sort, but none to
rule him, and to bring all the powers of his soul into one harmonious channel
of obedience.
2. Have no counsellor. Society abounds with counsellors who proffer
their advice; but some of them are wicked, most of them worthless, few, if any,
satisfactory, that is, to conscience. What the soul wants, is not the mere book
counsellor,--though it be the Bible itself,--but the spirit of that book, the
spirit of reverence, love, Christlike trust.
3. Have no ease. “Pangs have taken thee as a woman in travail.” The
unregenerate soul is always liable to consternation, remorse, it often writhes
in agony. “There is no peace, saith my God, for the wicked.” Now, moral
regeneration brings the man a true King, a true Counsellor, a true Peace--a
peace “that passeth all understanding.”
II. It is opposed
by formidable antagonists. The nations referred to are those that composed the
army of Nebuchadnezzar. What formidable opponents there are to the conversion
of man!
1. The depraved elements of the soul. Unbelief, selfishness,
carnality, etc.
2. The corrupt influence of society. Custom, fashion, amusements,
pleasures!
III. It is
guaranteed by the Word of Almighty God. The enemies of the Jews were utterly
ignorant of God’s purpose to deliver His people from Babylonish Captivity.
1. Man in ignorance fights against God’s purpose.
2. Man, in fighting against God’s purpose, brings ruin on himself.
The nations thought to ruin Christianity in its infancy, but it
was victorious over them! (Homilist.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》