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1
Chronicles Chapter Four
1 Chronicles 4
Chapter Contents
Genealogies.
In this chapter we have a further account of Judah, the
most numerous and most famous of all the tribes; also an account of Simeon. The
most remarkable person in this chapter is Jabez. We are not told upon what
account Jabez was more honourable than his brethren; but we find that he was a
praying man. The way to be truly great, is to seek to do God's will, and to
pray earnestly. Here is the prayer he made. Jabez prayed to the living and true
God, who alone can hear and answer prayer; and, in prayer he regarded him as a
God in covenant with his people. He does not express his promise, but leaves it
to be understood; he was afraid to promise in his own strength, and resolved to
devote himself entirely to God. Lord, if thou wilt bless me and keep me, do
what thou wilt with me; I will be at thy command and disposal for ever. As the
text reads it, this was the language of a most ardent and affectionate desire,
Oh that thou wouldest bless me! Four things Jabez prayed for. 1. That God would
bless him indeed. Spiritual blessings are the best blessings: God's blessings
are real things, and produce real effects. 2. That He would enlarge his coast.
That God would enlarge our hearts, and so enlarge our portion in himself, and
in the heavenly Canaan, ought to be our desire and prayer. 3. That God's hand
might be with him. God's hand with us, to lead us, protect us, strengthen us,
and to work all our works in us and for us, is a hand all-sufficient for us. 4.
That he would keep him from evil, the evil of sin, the evil of trouble, all the
evil designs of his enemies, that they might not hurt, nor make him a Jabez
indeed, a man of sorrow. God granted that which he requested. God is ever ready
to hear prayer: his ear is not now heavy.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on 1 Chronicles》
1 Chronicles 4
Verse 1
[1] The
sons of Judah; Pharez, Hezron, and Carmi, and Hur, and Shobal.
The sons —
The posterity: for only Pharez was his immediate son. But they are all
mentioned here only to shew Shobal's descent from Judah.
Verse 9
[9] And Jabez was more honourable than his brethren: and his mother called his
name Jabez, saying, Because I bare him with sorrow.
Honourably —
For courage, and for fervent piety. She records this, that it might be a
memorandum to herself, to be thankful to God as long as she lived, for bringing
her through that sorrow: and a memorandum to him, that she bore him into a vale
of tears, in which he might expect few days and full of trouble. And the sorrow
in his name might serve to put a seriousness upon his spirit.
Verse 10
[10] And
Jabez called on the God of Israel, saying, Oh that thou wouldest bless me
indeed, and enlarge my coast, and that thine hand might be with me, and that
thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me! And God granted him
that which he requested.
Called —
When he was undertaking some great and dangerous service.
Enlarge —
Drive out these Canaanites, whom thou hast commanded us to root out.
Grieve —
That it may not oppress and overcome me: more is understood than is expressed.
He useth this expression in allusion to his name, which signifies grief.
And God granted, … —
Prospered him remarkably in his undertakings, in his studies, in his worldly
business, and in his conflicts with the Canaanites.
Verse 12
[12] And
Eshton begat Bethrapha, and Paseah, and Tehinnah the father of Irnahash. These
are the men of Rechah.
Rechab —
From these are sprung the present inhabitants of Rechab, a town not elsewhere
mentioned.
Verse 14
[14] And Meonothai begat Ophrah: and Seraiah begat Joab, the father of the
valley of Charashim; for they were craftsmen.
Father — Of
the inhabitants of the valley.
Verse 21
[21] The
sons of Shelah the son of Judah were, Er the father of Lecah, and Laadah the
father of Mareshah, and the families of the house of them that wrought fine
linen, of the house of Ashbea,
Shelah —
Having treated of the posterity of Judah by Pharez, and by Zara, he now comes
to his progeny by Shelah.
Verse 22
[22] And
Jokim, and the men of Chozeba, and Joash, and Saraph, who had the dominion in
Moab, and Jashubilehem. And these are ancient things.
Had dominion —
Which they ruled in the name and for the use of the kings of Judah, to whom
Moab was subject from David's time.
Ancient things —
The sense is those blessed times are long since past. Our ancestors had the
dominion over the Heathen, but their degenerate posterity are slaves in
Chaldea, were they are employed as potters or gardeners, or in other servile
works.
Verse 23
[23]
These were the potters, and those that dwelt among plants and hedges: there
they dwelt with the king for his work.
There are — He
seems to oppose their present servitude to their former glory, and to shew
their mean spirits that had rather tarry among the Heathen to do their drudgery,
than return to Jerusalem to serve God and enjoy their freedom.
The king — Of
Babylon: esteeming it a greater honour to serve that earthly monarch in the
meanest employments, than to serve the king of kings in his temple.
Verse 27
[27] And
Shimei had sixteen sons and six daughters; but his brethren had not many
children, neither did all their family multiply, like to the children of Judah.
Of Judah —
The tribe of Simeon did not increase proportionably to the tribe of Judah in
which they dwelt; as appears by those two catalogues, Numbers 1:22; 26:14, which is to be ascribed to God's curse
upon them, delivered by the mouth of holy Jacob, Genesis 49:5-7, and signified by Moses's neglect
of them when he blessed all the other tribes.
Verse 31
[31] And
at Bethmarcaboth, and Hazarsusim, and at Bethbirei, and at Shaaraim. These were
their cities unto the reign of David.
Their cities —
Several of these cities though given to Simeon by Joshua, yet through the sloth
or cowardice of that tribe, were not taken from the Philistines, until David's
time, who took some of them; and, the Simeonites having justly forfeited their
right to them by their neglect, gave them to his own tribe. For it is evident
concerning Ziklag, one of them, that it was in the Philistines hands in David's
time, and by them given to him, and by him annexed to the tribe of Judah, 1 Samuel 27:6.
Verse 40
[40] And
they found fat pasture and good, and the land was wide, and quiet, and
peaceable; for they of Ham had dwelt there of old.
Fat pasture, … —
Those who thus dwelt (as we do) in a fruitful country, and whose land is wide
and quiet and peaceable, have reason to own themselves indebted to that God,
who appoints the bounds of our habitation.
Of Ham —
The Canaanites, who descended from Ham. And accordingly these words contain a
reason, why they went and possessed this place, because it was not in the hands
of their brethren of Judah, but in the possession of that people which they had
authority to expel.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on 1 Chronicles》
04 Chapter 4
Verses 1-43
The sons of Judah.
Survey of the genealogy
I. How great the
obscurity of most men!
II. What folly to
seek place and power only here!
III. How needful to
secure renown hereafter! “Rejoice that your names are written in heaven,” said
the dying Haller, when friends congratulated him on the honour of receiving a
visit from the Emperor Joseph II. (James Wolfendale.)
Verses 1-43
The sons of Judah.
Survey of the genealogy
I. How great the
obscurity of most men!
II. What folly to
seek place and power only here!
III. How needful to
secure renown hereafter! “Rejoice that your names are written in heaven,” said
the dying Haller, when friends congratulated him on the honour of receiving a
visit from the Emperor Joseph II. (James Wolfendale.)
Verse 9-10
And Jabez was more honourable than his brethren.
Jabez
We know
nothing whatsoever of the Jabez here commemorated beyond what we find in these
two verses. But this is enough to mark him out as worthy, in no ordinary
degree, of being admired and imitated. There is a depth and a comprehensiveness
in the registered prayer of this unknown individual--unknown except from that
prayer--which should suffice to make him a teacher of the righteous in every
generation. Let us now take the several parts of the text in succession,
commenting upon each and searching out the lessons which may be useful to
ourselves. The first verse contains a short account of Jabez; the second is occupied
by his prayer. Now there is no denying that we are short-sighted beings, so
little able to look into the future that we constantly miscalculate as to what
would be for our good, anticipating evil from what is working for benefit, and
reckoning upon benefit from that which may prove fraught with nothing but evil.
How frequently does that which we have baptized with our tears make the
countenance sunny with smiles! how frequently, again, does that which we have
welcomed with smiles wring from us tears! We do not know the particular reasons
which influenced the mother of Jabez to call him by that name, a name which
means “sorrowful.” We are merely told, “His mother called his name Jabez,
saying, Because I bare him with sorrow.” Whether it were that she brought forth
this son with more than common anguish, or whether, as it may have been, the
time of his birth were the time of her widowhood, the mother evidently felt but
little of a mother’s joy, and looked on her infant with forebodings and fears.
Perhaps it could hardly have been her own bodily suffering which made her
fasten on the boy a dark and gloomy appellation, for, the danger past, she
would rather have given a name commemorative of deliverance, remembering “no
more her anguish for joy that a man was born into the world.” Indeed, when
Rachel bare Benjamin she called his name Benoni, that is, “the son of my
sorrow”; but then it was “as her soul was in departing, for she died.” We may
well, therefore, suppose that the mother of Jabez had deeper and more lasting
sorrows to register in the name of her boy than those of the giving him birth.
And whatsoever may have been the cause, whether domestic affliction or public
calamity, we may consider the woman as having bent in bitterness over her
new-born child, having only tears to give him as his welcome to the world, and
feeling it impossible to associate with him even a hope of happiness. She had
probably looked with different sentiments on her other children. She had
clasped them to her breast with all s mother’s gladness. But with Jabez it was
all gloom; the mother felt as if she could never be happy again: this boy
brought nothing but an accession of care. And yet the history of the family is
gathered into the brief sentence, “Jabez was more honourable than his
brethren.” Nothing is told us of his brethren, except that they were less
honourable than himself; they, too, may have been excellent, and perhaps as
much is implied, but Jabez took the lead, and whether or not the youngest in years,
surpassed every other in piety and renown. Oh, if the mother lived to see the
manhood of her sons, how strangely must the name Jabez, a name probably given
in a moment of despondency and faithlessness, have fallen on her earl She may
then have regretted the gloomy and ominous name, feeling as though it
reproached her for having yielded to her grief, and allowed herself to give way
to dreary forebodings. It may have seemed to her as a standing memorial of her
want of confidence in God, and of the falseness of human calculations. And is
not this brief notice of the mother of Jabez full of warning and admonition to
ourselves? How ready are we to give the name Jabez to persons or things which,
could we but look into God’s purpose, or repose on His promise, we might regard
as designed to minister permanently to our security and happiness. “All these
things,” said the patriarch Jacob, “are against me,” as one trial after another fell to
his lot. And yet, as you all know, it was by and through these gloomy dealings
that a merciful God was providing for the sustenance of the patriarch and his
household, for their support and aggrandisement in a season of extraordinary
pressure. Thus it continually happens in regard of ourselves. We give the
sorrowful title to that which is designed for the beneficent end. Judging only
by present appearances, allowing our fears and feelings rather than our faith
to take the estimate or fix the character of occurrences, we look with gloom on
our friends and with melancholy on our sources of good. Sickness, we call it
Jabez, though it may be sent to minister to our spiritual health; poverty, we
call it Jabez, though coming to help us to the possession of heavenly riches;
bereavement, we call it Jabez, though designed to graft us more closely into
the household of God. Oh for a better judgment! or rather, oh for a simpler
faith! We cannot, indeed, see the end from the beginning, and therefore cannot
be sure that what rises in cloud will set in vermilion and gold; but we need
not take upon ourselves to give the dark name, as though we could not be
deceived in regard of the nature. Let us derive this lesson from the concise
but striking narrative in the first verse of our text. Let us neither look
confidently on what promises best, nor despairingly on what wears the most
threatening appearance. God often wraps up the withered leaf of disappointment
in the bright purple bud, and as often unfolds the golden flower of enjoyment
in the nipped and blighted shoot. Experience is full of evidence that there is
no depending on appearances. If, in a spirit of repining or unbelief, you brand
as Jabez what may be but a blessing in disguise, no marvel if sometimes, in
just anger and judgment, He allow the title to prove correct, and suffer not
this Jabez, this child born in sorrow, to become to you as otherwise it might,
more honourable, more profitable than any of its brethren. But let us now turn
to the prayer of Jabez. We ought not to examine the prayer without pausing to
observe to whom it is addressed. It is not stated that Jabez called on God, but
on “the God of Israel.” There are few things more significant than the
difference in the manner in which God is addressed by saints under the old and
under the new dispensation. Patriarchs pray to God as the God of their fathers;
apostles pray to Him as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In both forms of
address there is an intimation of the same fact, that we need something to
encourage us in approaching unto God; that exposed as we are to His just wrath
for our sins, we can have no confidence in speaking to Him as to absolute
Deity. There must be something to lean upon, some plea to urge, otherwise we
can but shrink from the presence of One so awful in His gloriousness. We must,
then, have some title with which to address God--some title which, interfering
not with His majesty or His mysteriousness, may yet place Him under a character
which shall give hope to the sinful as they prostrate themselves before Him. We
need not say that under the gospel dispensation this title should be that which
is used by St. Paul, “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Having such a
Mediator through whom to approach, there is no poor supplicant who may not come
with boldness to the mercy-seat. But under earlier dispensations, when the mediatorial office
was but imperfectly made known, men had to seize on other pleas and
encouragements; and then it was a great thing that they could address God as
you continually find Him addressed, as the God of Israel, the God of their
fathers, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob. The title assured them
that God was ready to hear prayer and to answer it. They went before God,
thronged, as it were, with remembrances of mercies bestowed, deliverances
vouchsafed, evils averted: how could they fear that God was too great to be
addressed, too occupied to reply, or too stern to show kindness, when they bore
in mind how He had shielded their parents, hearkened to their cry, and proved
Himself unto them “a very present help” in all time of trouble? Ah, and though,
under the new dispensation, “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” be the great
character under which God should be addressed by us in prayer, there is no need
for our altogether dropping the title, the God of our fathers. It might often
do much to cheer a sorrowful heart, and to encourage a timid, to address God as
the God of our fathers--the God in whom my parents trusted. And what did Jabez
pray for? for great things--great, if you suppose him to have spoken only as an
heir of the temporal Canaan, greater if you ascribe to him acquaintance with
the mercies of redemption. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.” Lay the
emphasis on that word “indeed.” Many things pass for blessings which are not;
to as many more we deny, though we ought to give the character. There is a
blessing in appearance which is not also a blessing in reality; and conversely,
the reality may exist where the appearance is wanting. The man in prosperity
appears to have, the man in adversity to be without a blessing--yet how often
does God bless by withholding! And Jabez goes on, “That Thou wouldest enlarge
my coast.” He probably speaks as one who had to win from the enemy his portion
of the promised land. He knew that, as the Lord said to Joshua, “there remained
yet very much land to be possessed”; it was not, then, necessarily as a man
desirous of securing to himself a broader inheritance, it may have been as one
who felt jealous that the idolater should still defile what God had set apart
for His people, that he entreated the enlargement of his coast. And a Christian
may use the same prayer; he, too, has to ask that his coast may be enlarged.
Who amongst us has yet taken possession of one-half the territory assigned him
by God? Our privileges as Christians, as members of an apostolical Church, as
heirs of the kingdom of heaven, how are these practically under-valued, how
little are they realised, how sluggishly appropriated! What districts of
unpossessed territory are there in the Bible! how much of that blessed book has
been comparatively unexamined by us! We have our favourite parts, and give only
an occasional and cursory notice to the rest. How little practical use do we
make of God’s promises! What need, then, for the prayer, “Oh that Thou wouldest
enlarge my coast”! I would not be circumscribed in spiritual things. I would
not live always within these narrow bounds. There are bright and glorious
tracts beyond. It is a righteous covetousness, this for an enlargement of
coast; for he has done little, we might almost say nothing, in religion, who
can be content with what he has done. It is a holy ambition, this which pants
for an ampler territory. But are we only to pray? are we not also to struggle,
for the enlargement of our coasts? Indeed we are: observe how Jabez proceeds,
“And that Thine hand might be with me.” He represents himself as arming for the
enlargement of his coast, but as knowing all the while that “the battle is the
Lord’s.” There is one more petition in the prayer of him who, named with a dark
and inauspicious name, yet grew to be “more honourable than his brethren”:
“That Thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” “Shall we
receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?” Jabez prayed
not for the being kept from evil, but kept from the being grieved by evil. And
there is a vast difference between the being visited by evil and grieved by
evil. He is grieved by evil who does not receive it meekly and submissively, as
the chastisement of his heavenly Father. He is grieved by evil whom evil injures,
in place of benefits--which latter is always God’s purpose in His permission or
appointment. He is grieved by evil whom it drives into sin, and to whom,
therefore, it furnishes cause of bitter repentance. You see, then, that Jabez
showed great spiritual discernment in casting his prayer into this particular
form. We, too, should pray, not absolutely that God would keep us from evil,
but that He would so keep it from us, or us from it, that it may not grieve us.
(H. Melvill, B. D.)
The prayer of Jabez
Many comparisons have at times been instituted, and I think not
altogether without reason, between this book as the work of God and the world
as the production of God; such, for instance, as that what is necessary and
essential lies amply upon the surface of both. Analogies have sometimes been
gathered from the mixture that there is in Scripture in the developments of the
character of God; sometimes all that is awful, and sometimes all that is
benignant. So in the material world there is the same mixture in the
development and display of the Divine character and perfections. Sometimes,
again, an analogy, not I think altogether fanciful, has been supposed to exist
between this book and the world, in that there are some parts of it that seem
luxuriant and beautiful--some parts of the book in which every verse and every
word is like a flower springing up under your feet, or like the shade of a
beautiful vegetation around you, or like an exhibition of the magnificence and
loveliness of vegetable nature, while other parts appear sterile and barren,
with rocks on every side. When we look at this barren catalogue of names, when
we look at what is here presented, we seem to have got into one of those parts
of Scripture in which there is very little to delight the eye or to refresh the
heart, just as sometimes we may be passing through some sterile part in the
scenery of this world. What is suggested by what we see in some of these barren
spots of nature? Why, just this--that we there get a view of the rocks, of the
bands and the pillars
of our earth, that bind it and keep it together, and make it what it is, and
which are essential and necessary for the support of all the earth, and the
soil by which is supported and displayed in other parts the beauty and
sublimity of vegetation. So it is here; these parts of the Bible are just
representations to us of some of those barren rocks, you may say, but still
those rocks which run throughout Scripture, those genealogies which are
connected with all that is important in the history of the Messiah and the
fulfilment of prophecy. In looking at the passage we observe that with respect to this
Jabez we really know nothing but what is combined in these two verses; there is
no reference to him in any other part of Scripture. He was unquestionably, I
suppose, from the position in which he stands, of the tribe of Judah; as this
is the genealogy of Judah. We know not precisely from the passage who were his
parents; what particular line in Judah he belonged to; nor can we exactly make
out the precise time in which he lived; though it appears to me the passage
gives us a little light on that subject. It is said generally of him that “he
was more honourable than his brethren.” That may or may not imply censure
against his brethren. He might be honourable among the honourable; he might be
great among the great. The probability is, however, that it does rather convey
the idea of imperfection and defect in the character of surrounding society,
and hence it does mark more prominently the influence of principle and of piety
in him. But men may be honourable on various accounts: generally at the time to
which the Scripture refers, and now, men are estimated honourable for valour, for wisdom,
and for pity. I think it is very probable that all these met in Jabez.
1. There are traditions among the Jews respecting him; and they make
him to have been a man distinguished for wisdom as a teacher; distinguished as
the founder of a school, and having around him a multitude of disciples. This
opinion has upon it, perhaps, some air of probability from the last verse of
the second chapter in this book, in which it is said, “And the families of the
scribes which dwelt at Jabez,” or “with Jabez”; “the Tirathites, the
Shimeathites, and Suchathites. These are the Kenites that came of Hemath, the father of
the house of Rechab.” Now, “the families of the scribes which dwelt at Jabez,”
supposing it to be the name of a place, refers to men who are devoted to study;
if it be the name of the persons that dwelt with him, still the same idea seems
suggested. So that I think it very probable that the idea of the Jews is right.
They themselves take these words which are here used, and in which these
different divisions of scribes are distinguished, as being signifcant,
expressing certain qualities of these disciples with respect to the manner in
which they received the instruction of the master, and the manner in which they
were devoted to God. It is very probable, therefore, that he was distinguished
and honourable for his mental acquisition and his wisdom.
2. It seems to me that he was honourable also for his enterprise and
activity, and perhaps also for his valour, because he prays for the enlargement
of his coast. Now it strikes me that this particular prayer of Jabez about the enlargement
of his coast, and God being with him, seems to cast a little light on the time
in which he lived. It strikes me that he lived soon after the settlement of the
people in Canaan, and before they had taken complete and full possession of the
different lots. And there was among many of the people a sort of reluctance to
do this, a want of vigour and enterprise of mind and character. Joshua really
had to reprove them for sitting clown contented too soon, saying, “Why, a few
of you have got possession; yet there remains a number of places that are not
yet divided; why sit you here? Arise, take possession.” It strikes me,
therefore, this prayer has relation to that, and that he was more honourable
than his brethren because he entered into the mind of God.
3. Whatever may be thought of that, that he was honourable for his
piety is, I think, manifest. “He was more honourable than his brethren”; and
the sacred writer, after having stated that generally, in the next verse
develops the principle of this honourable character: “And Jabez called on the
God of Israel,” etc.
1. I should think it very likely that Jabez owed a good deal of his
religion to his mother.
2. We learn also, that piety towards God, the possession of the
principles and the manifestation of Scriptural religion, is in the sight of God
essential to the possession of a true and honourable character. The terms
“honourable” and “honourable character” have very different senses among men.
That which is highly approved among men in this respect is often an abomination
in the sight of God. There is many a man distinguished by this epithet in
society that is loathed in the society of heaven. A merely honourable character
in society means often nothing but a man of integrity. He is honourable in the
relations of common life. Under the influence of their principle men are led to
pay debts which they have contracted by vice, but to starve and to crush the
honest tradesman, and neglect to pay other debts which they have accumulated
upon themselves. And yet they are “honourable men!” Such are the perversions
abroad in the world and the absurdities in society.
3. Another thought is impressed upon us by the passage: the
importance that God attaches to faith and piety, and the character that flows
from it. The importance that God attaches to it is proved by the very
circumstance of there being this abrupt introduction of the character of Jabez
in the midst of this dry genealogical detail. It reminds one of a similar
passage in Genesis 5:1-32., “Enoch walked with God”;
impressing a glory and distinction upon the character of the man, and making it
stand out prominently from the midst of those with which it is connected. Now
if your genealogies were made out would the scribe have to pause at your name?
Is there anything about you of this character and these principles that in a
similar scroll or writing to this there may be this reason to pause and to
dwell upon you?
4. Another thing which you may draw from this subject is the
possibility of the combination of secular enterprise and activity with eminent
piety. I think these seem to be indicated as having met in the character of
Jabez. This piety towards God; his faith, his devotion, the time that he gave
for prayer, did not render it impossible with him to give time to active duty.
Perhaps, so to speak, he had a sanctified ambition to combine both activity and
enterprise with religion. And both these may be combined--diligence in business
with fervour of spirit, activity in the fulfilment of the duties of everyday
life, in connection with the cultivation of those principles and feelings which
keep us near to God, and which sanctify the activity and direct it. Now I think
it is likely that Jabez was a young man when this prayer was offered; that
there was this formation of his character comparatively early; that he thus
started in life, that he thus acted.
5. Another remark we make is this, that certainly one of the best
ways to preserve your speculations, your pursuits, your secular activity and
enterprise from being offensive to God and injurious to yourselves, is to enter
upon none, and to engage in none, but such as you can bring, like Jabez, and
lay at the footstool of the throne of God, and ask God to bless.
6. In the last place, let us learn from this subject the gratitude
that we ought to feel for the clear discovery that we have in Scripture of
God’s covenant relation to His children; that we can go to Him, not merely as
the God of Israel, but the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, in Him
reconciling the world to Himself, not imputing to men their trespasses. (T.
Binney.)
Jabez
The very situation of this text is worth remarking. It
stands in the very midst of genealogies. Why those names are so particularly
put upon record, or why nothing more besides the name, is not very easy to
discover. Perhaps it was to let us see that multitudes of persons live upon the
earth of whom, when you have told the name, you have told all that is worth mentioning.
Great men they might be in their generations, men of renown in an earthly point
of view, and yet, in the sight of God, insignificant and worthless. But,
however this may be, here is one person, at least, whom the Word of God is not
content with barely mentioning. It is said of him that he was “more honourable
than his brethren.” In whatever other points he was so, in this especially,
that, whereas the Holy Spirit barely runs over the names of others, and tells
us nothing else of them, when He comes to Jabez He stops short. Something He
relates concerning Jabez which He evidently holds forth to our praise and
imitation. What is the fact in the history of Jabez which the Holy Ghost hath
thought worthy of record? Is it any battle that he fought, or any exploit he
performed? is it any proof he gave of earthly wisdom or of earthly policy? No;
these are indeed the things which dazzle human eyes and which please the pens
of human writers. But not so the great God. The events He dwells on in the
history of Jabez is one which many earthly penmen would have scorned to write
of. He takes us to this good man’s closet, and tells us of a prayer he offered
there. All l amidst the multitude of things which are going on upon this earth,
amidst the manifold events which man calls great, there is nothing in God’s
sight half so considerable as the prayer of a poor humble soul for mercy and
acceptance. The prayer of a Paul, of a Cornelius, of a Jabez--“What trifling
matters,” saith the world, “are these!” But look into God’s Book and only see
the notice which is taken of these prayers by Him who made us. Pray like Jabez.
Pray, if not in his words, yet in his spirit, and you shall speed like him.
I. We are to
consider the import of the prayer--the nature, I mean, of the petition it
contains. There is no doubt but that it issued from the heart, and that it was
offered up with holy fervency of spirit. “Jabez called upon the God of Israel,”
such is the expression used. Something more, you see, he did than merely say
the words of prayer. He called or “cried” unto his God. He put his heart into
his words, as one in deep and holy earnest. There is a holy vehemence, too, in
the very form of his address. “Oh,” says he, “that Thou wouldest do this
thing!” And this should be your way of praying. But to come to the language of
the prayer.
1. What is the first petition of this earnest suitor at the throne of
grace? “Oh,” says he, “that Thou wouldest bless me indeed!” Now what sort of
blessing does he mean? God hath many in His gift. Life itself is a blessing;
health is a blessing; and so are food and raiment; so are the friends we mix
with and the home which we inhabit. But it is clearly something beyond these
which Jabez asks for. His language is emphatic: “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me
indeed!” As much as to say, “Oh that Thou wouldest give me Thy best, Thy truest
blessings!” And what are these? Not the short-lived blessings of the body, but
the eternal blessings of the soul. The man is “blessed indeed,” not who sits
down to a full table and wears his purple and fine linen--but who can say with
a good Scripture warrant, “Christ is mine and I am His.” He is “blessed indeed”
to whom the God of grace hath said, “I am thy salvation”--with whose spirit the
Spirit itself beareth witness that he is a child of God”--and “who is kept by
the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last
time.” These are the choicest gifts of God. Other things are blessings; but
they are the blessings of God’s enemies as well as of His people. Other things
are blessings, but they are temporal and transitory, and they “perish with the
using.” Grace to enjoy here and glory to expect hereafter--let a man have these
and he hath all. Jabez wanted Jacob’s blessing and not Esau’s--the birthright,
not the pottage. Sure I am, such is the choice of every poor awakened sinner.
“Give me Christ and His Cross rather than the world and its crown!”
2. But what is the next thing in the prayer? what does the holy man
next ask for? “That Thou wouldest enlarge my coast,” says he. Perhaps this
petition was of a temporal nature. Jabez, it is thought, was among those
Israelites who went in with Joshua to the holy land and had a portion there
assigned to him. If so, it is not unlikely that he was pressed and straitened
by the Canaanites around him, and that he begs in this part of his prayer that
God would clear the ground for him and give him room enough to dwell in. “Oh,
Lord,” we may well ask, “enlarge the coast of my poor narrow heart. Give to my
thoughts and my desires a wider range.” He grieves over the narrowness, the
selfishness of his desires. He feels himself, as it were, pent in and
circumscribed by things of this world. He is sensible that there is not room
enough within him for his God and for his brethren. He longs, therefore, in all
these respects to be enlarged to “reach forth unto the things which are
before”; to “comprehend with all saints what is the length, and breadth, and
depth, and height, and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge,” and
to be “filled with all the fulness of God.” Again, here is another point of
view in which the Christian seeks after enlargement. “Oh, Lord,” he is ever
ready to exclaim, “enlarge my usefulness. Make me a more active member of
Christ’s body; more abundant in the fruits of righteousness; more devoted to
Thy work and service; more profitable to my brethren and fellow-creatures!”
3. But we pass on to the next petition in our text: “Oh,” says Jabez,
“that Thine hand might be with me!” And why does he ask this? Evidently because
he was thoroughly persuaded that without the Lord he could do nothing. How
exactly in this point do his feelings meet those of all real Christians in the
present day! The worldly man goes out in his own strength and trusts in his own
arm to help him. Seldom does he feel the need of looking higher than his own wisdom and sagacity
and resolution. Whilst the believer thus “goes forth in the strength of the
Lord” he can do wonders; but let him at any time forget thus to pray, he is
soon made to feel that he is a “man who hath no strength.”
4. To come now to the last petition of the prayer before us. How does
the holy man conclude? Just as his Lord concludes in the prayer which He hath
taught us to present to Him. “Deliver us from evil” is our last petition in
that prayer. And what is the last request of Jabez? “That Thou wouldest keep me
from evil, that it may not grieve me.” “Except the Lord keep the city, the
watchman waketh but in vain.” There is safety neither for the soul nor for the
body except under the shadow of His wings. Apply this to spiritual evil, and it
expresses what is true, what is most eminently true, of every real servant of
the Lord--that sin is a thing which grieves him. Natural evil is painful and
unwelcome; but the evil of the soul--the evil to which Satan tempts--this is
the thing of all others which believers dread. A great deal of sin goes with
the world under the name of “pleasure.” “But all this,” says the believer, “is not pleasure to my
soul--it is pain and grief to me.”
II. The answer
which this prayer received. Answered it was, and answered to the full. “The
Lord granted him that which he requested”; not a part, you observe, but the
whole. “That which he requested”--that is to say, all that he requested was
bestowed upon him. Now do think over his request. It was a very large one. It
comprehended much. He had not trespassed on the Divine bounty which says, “Ask,
and you shall have.” Let us, then, admire the bountifulness, the abundant mercy
of the God whom Jabez called upon. Surely He is a God of faithfulness and truth
and love. When has any humble soul ever cried to Him in vain? When hath He ever
said to the praying “seed of Jacob, Seek ye Me in vain”? To you who are
really “calling on the God of Israel” my text is surely a comfortable and
refreshing one. It affords a pledge; it gives, as it were, a promise and
assurance--that you will speed in your petitions. The God of Jabez is
unchanged, unchangeable--“the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever.” (A.
Roberts.)
Blessing and enlargement
We come upon this little history of Jabez with a kind of
surprise, as one who, travelling through a rocky and mountainous country, comes
all at once upon some little green dell, watered with streams and filled with
beauty. Observe--
I. Jabez called
upon the God of Israel. He declared himself a religious man, a worshipper of
the true God. It was the habit of his life. He was known by this. This still
lies at the foundation of individual prosperity and goodness of the highest
kind--personal religion, calling upon God. A man whose soul never “calls,”
never cries, never looks, never waits upon God, is not living to the end for
which a man should live; he is not truly living at all. Man is raised above the
brutes, in that he alone of all the creatures is so endowed that he stands
consciously before the face of the personal God, to reverence, serve, worship,
and adore the unseen Being.
II. Calling, what
does Jabez say? “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.” This prayer is not
very definite, but perhaps it is all the better, u expressive of many a
condition of life, and especially the state of one who is just beginning to pray. In conscious sin
and guilt, in weakness, confusion, and fear, a man knows not what to say. Then,
bethinking him that God is greater than his heart and knoweth all things, and
will therefore give interpretation to all the misery, penitence, longing, love;
that He will hear the groanings that cannot be uttered; that He will take dim
thought for words; the man is content, and with a cry of relief, as well as
earnestness, he says, “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed!”
III. But there is
something more definite immediately, “and enlarge my coast.” He prays for more
territory to his people and himself, more power, more wealth. These are what we should call
earthly and temporal blessings. The best men of the Old Testament did not
distinguish between temporal and spiritual as we do. Life was a spiritual unity
to these men. When a man’s sins are pardoned, and his life rectified, when his
soul is nourished by the blessing of God, one cannot but think the more that
man has the better. Let him be enlarged. No doubt an expanding life multiplies
dangers, but it also
multiplies grace if it be expansion on the right principle. When a penurious
man makes money, that is not enlargement in the grand sense at all. He is
building a prison, and himself will be the prisoner. An old man in his last
illness was received at one of the metropolitan hospitals. He was without
relations or friends, and to all appearance without resources. But a bag of
money was found round his neck. When death had apparently claimed him, a nurse
gently unfastened the string and removed the bag. At the same moment the old
man opened his eyes and felt instinctively for his treasure, which was no
longer in its place. He uttered the word, “Gone!” and died. The money amounted
to £174, the accumulation, no doubt, of many years. But was that man “enlarged”
as the process went on? He was narrowed and crippled. Every golden piece he put
into that bag was adding to the weight he carried, in more senses than one,
until it became a millstone about his neck and drowned him in death. From many
a death-bed there goes up that old man’s sigh, “Gone!” money “gone;” houses
“gone”; broad
acres “gone”; name and fame “gone.” All that has been striven for through a
lifetime “gone.” Ah! poor fatal enlargement that ends in such collapse. The
true enlargement is such, that such a catastrophe as that is quite impossible.
The man with soul enlarged never sighs in life or death “Gone!” He has chosen
the good part that shall not be taken away.
IV. The summing up
of the prayer. “And that Thy hand might be with me, and that Thou mightest keep
me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” So let us seek preservation from evil
inward and outward, by watchfulness, by prayer, by dependence on God, and we
need never fear enlargement. Let it go on without limit and without fear, if it
goes on thus banked in on either hand by Divine blessing and Divine care. (A.
Raleigh, D. D.)
Jabez
In visiting a foreign land, and seeing nothing but strange
forms and faces passing and repassing before us, it affords most exquisite
enjoyment to catch at the moment the well-known countenance of some dear old
friend or acquaintance. So it is with us here on wearily poring over these
chapters of names; we feel as if we were in a wilderness, at sea, on some
foreign strand; and what blessed relief do we experience as unawares we arrive
at this rare character of Old Testament Scripture, ensconced, enshrined in this
desert nook of names. We realise with double zest that proverb of
Scripture--“That as iron sharpeneth iron, so doth the countenance of a man his
friend.” In considering Jabez let us look--
I. To the
circumstances cast around his birth. He is here brought before us in connection
with his mother. Mothers are often mentioned in Scripture as influencing their
children for either good or evil--the mothers of the wicked kings of Israel on
the one hand, the mothers of Moses, Samuel, Joseph, etc., on the other. The
responsibility of mothers. The question was once proposed to Napoleon
Bonaparte, “How was a better, a more moral class of young persons to be
obtained in the country?” His answer was, “Let us have better mothers.”
II. To the character
of his life.
III. To his prayer
and its answer. (John Gardiner.)
The prayer of Jabez
I. Let us glance
at the parental anxiety of his mother. Her fears and perplexities were not
realised. The fears and dread of many a parent are never intended to be realised.
The delicate little child may outgrow its frailty, and live to be your comfort
and hope. The wild and unruly boy may become the staff of your old age.
II. The character
of this prayer.
1. There seems to be a pious reference to the prayer of Moses for the
tribe to which Jabez belonged. Jabez belonged to the tribe of Judah.
2. It is a prayer for spiritual blessings.
3. It is a prayer expressive of a humble dependence upon Divine
Providence for temporal blessings.
4. It is marked by a singular and holy distrust of himself--“keep me
from evil.”
Application:
1. God still waits to hear our humble prayers, and will grant all
those things which are needful for us.
2. It may teach us the source of some of our misfortunes and
mistakes; we have restrained prayer.
3. It teaches emphatically the value of religion. Godliness is
profitable for the life that now is. (W. J. Barrett.)
Jabez--an unexpected biography
As in life we are being continually surprised by the unexpected
turn which events often take, so the Bible sometimes surprises us with
unlooked-for disclosures. All of a sudden in the very midst of surrounding
dryness a beautiful biography appears, and in two verses a man’s life is
portrayed, beginning with birth, and containing a delineation of his character,
a full report of one of his prayers, and references to his mother and brothers.
I. The
significance of a name. Jabez was born at a time when “names meant truths and
words were the symbols of realities.” Jabez means sorrow or trouble. The
mother’s grief, expressed in the name of her child, was probably the ungodliness of her
other children, and there is no more fruitful source of sorrow to mothers than
this.
II. The distinction
of a character. More honourable. He had a good reputation.
III. The devotion of
a life. “Jabez called on the God of Israel.”
IV. The Divine
recognition of true prayer. (Homilist.)
The prayer of Jabez
I. The prayer
before us. Very striking is the ardour of expression contained in these words,
“Bless me”; “Bless me”; “Bless me indeed”; Oh, that Thou wouldest bless me”;
and “Oh I that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.”
II. Our
encouragement to pray the same. “God granted Jabez that which he requested.”
This shows us--
1. That God heareth prayer.
2. That God answereth prayer.
3. That God will grant us that which we request of Him.
Address:
1. Any among you who may live prayerlessly.
2. Any of you who may pray formally.
3. Any of you who do truly pray. (W. Mudge, B. A.)
Jabez: his life and his prayer
It is not much that we know of Jabez, but I think that in this
recorded history of that man there is suggested to us something of as solemn
warning and of as blessed consolation as you will find within the range of
God’s holy book.
I. The lesson of
the same given to him. Jabez--“sorrow.” It was to her best and worthiest son
that the mother of Jabez gave the name that implied how little hope of future
happiness with him or through him remained in her weary, despairing heart. We
can think of a contrasted picture: you remember the proud and hopeful name which
the mother of our race gave to her firstborn son; you know how much of
confident hope was expressed in the name of Cain. “Possession” she called
him--a great thing gained from God--who was yet so sorely to wring her heart.
Ever thus are human anticipations, whether of good or ill; the first murderer
welcomed with the hopeful name of Cain, while this wise and good and happy man
was to bear the desponding name of Jabez. How often we call by hard names
dispensations of God’s providence, which in reality are to prove great
blessings probably in many cases those events in our history, those dealings of
God with us, which we should call sorrowful at the time, stand us in more real
stead, and do us more real good, than the brightest and happiest that ever come
in our way.
II. We shall next
consider the prayer which jabez offered and which God granted him. What a wise
and what a safe prayer! Send me that which Thou knowest is blessing, though it
may not seem blessing to me; and deny me that which Thou knowest is not
blessing, however ready!, in my ignorance, may be to think it so.
1. The spirit of this prayer is that of confidence in God and
unqualified acquiescence in His appointment. This is a lesson of how we ought
to pray. You know, generally, the direction in which to steer; but you cannot
say what little movement of the helm may be expedient from time to time, to
suit each passing gust of wind, or each crossing wave. And it is just because
we do not know these things that it is so wise to leave the decision of the
precise thing to be sent us, as Jabez did, to God; and to pray with him that
God would bless us “indeed.”
2. The next two petitions imply a great and sound principle--the duty
of combining effort with prayer. When we are desirous to compass any new
attainment, when we wish to enlarge our coast, as it were, by taking in greater
fields of faith, of holiness, of patience, of humility, of all Christian
grace--in regard to all which we may well take up Joshua’s words,”that there
remaineth yet very much land to be possessed,” let us do like Jabez; working
like him as if we could do all, and praying as if we could do nothing. The
wisdom of Jabez appeared in that he put prayer and effort together.
3. The last petition is for deliverance from true evil--and from the
evil effects and influences of all evil. He does not ask that evil may never
come; but that evil may not be suffered to really harm when it comes. Evil
coming and trying us may do us great good; but Jabez prayed, and we may pray,
that evil should not grieve us. We may pray that evil may never be suffered to
harden us; to stir us up to wrath against God; to make us fretful, rebellious,
impatient; to tempt us to sin; in short, to do us harm when God intends it
always to do us good. It was for this that Jabez prayed. (A. K. H. Boyd, D.
D.)
Jabez
These words contain a life’s history in a sentence. This brief
epitome of human life appeals to universal experience. Its very brevity
increases its suggestiveness.
I. The mother’s
faithless anticipation reminds us how the present often colours our thoughts of
the future. Our judgments are biassed, often warped by our circumstances. We
interpret even the past by the present, and often fail therefore to make a just
estimate of it. We can only form a right estimate of the past by transporting
ourselves back into it. This is impossible with respect to the future. We may
learn what has been yesterday, but we know not what shall be on the morrow.
Hence the especial danger of letting our anticipations be coloured by our
present circumstances. God’s teaching is the very reverse of this. The thought
of the future is to colour the present. As Mr. Canning, when he announced in
Parliament the independence of South America, said “that he brought in the New
World to redress the balance of the Old,” so God gives us the bright
inheritance of heaven as a counterbalance to the cares and sorrows of earth. It
is only in the light of the future as revealed to us by God, that we can
rightly estimate the present. When we reverse God’s teaching we unfit ourselves
for the future. We go forth to the duties and burdens of the morrow weakened by
apprehension, instead of being strong with the courage of hope.
II. The prayer of
Jabez combines wise reticence and ordinary ambition. These are the elements of
true prayer--a sense of dependence, the expression of confidence, and
unrestrained petition, pouring out the heart to God, leaving to Him the
decision as to what is blessing indeed.
III. This prayer
also reveals the true spirit of Christian life. It is the outcome of practical
piety. Perhaps like Caleb he had to conquer his own inheritance. His dependence
upon God did not mean inaction. He had learned the great lesson that prayer and
effort go hand in hand, the one inspiring and sanctifying the other. Our great
need is to live more nearly as we pray. We can only ask that God’s hand may be
with us when our supreme desire is to do God’s will. Such prayer is both a test
and a safeguard. (A. F. Joscelyne.)
The prayer of Jabez
Remarkable is the honour which God puts upon prayer, and
numberless are the instances recorded of its efficacy.
I. The import of
the prayer of Jabez.
II. Its excellence.
It was so both in respect to sentiment and expression. It was--
1. Humble.
2. Diffusive (Philippians 4:6). We need to recite our
wants in order to impress our own minds with a sense of our utter helplessness
and unworthiness.
3. Importunate.
4. Believing. Petitions offered in faith, have as it were, the force
of commands (Isaiah 45:1).
Application:
1. Let all now call to mind their several wants and necessities.
2. Let nothing be thought too small or too great to ask.
3. Let the pressure of our wants and the richness of our prospects
stimulate us.
4. Let us expect the accomplishment of that glorious promise (John 14:18; John 14:14). (Skeletons of Sermons.)
The prayer of Jabez
Like a star set in the darkness of midnight, more conspicuous
because of the surrounding gloom, is the name of a great man in the chronicles
of the trifling and the insignificant. How encouraging is the assurance, “If
any man love God
the same is known of Him,” whoever he may be, wherever he may dwell. The name
of Jabez stands in most emphatic isolation upon the sacred page. He is
distinguished by his faith in God from hie contemporaries, of whom it would
seem that the most important record of their lives was this: “These were the
potters, and those that dwelt among plants and hedges: there they dwelt with
the king for his work” (1 Chronicles 4:23). They served an
earthly monarch; he a heavenly. Their business was among things frail and
perishing; his was with things unseen and eternal. Their arts and manufactures
have long since crumbled into dust. This prayer abides to bless the Church of
God until the end of time.
I. A concise
memoir--“And Jabez was more honourable than his brethren,” etc. The Scriptures
are full of these comprehensive, brief, but weighty texts which Luther was wont
to call “little Bibles.” “A man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost.” “Apelles
approved in Christ.” “He was a burning and a shining light.” “Of whom the world
was not worthy.” The genealogy in which the name of Jabez occurs is that of the
royal family of Judah. The compression of Scripture truth within its limited
area is one of the great miracles which belong to the structure of God’s Word.
It is said of Jabez that “he was more honourable than his brethren,” though
with a less honourable name. His mother had anticipated the hour of anguish
with unusual sadness, and she called him Jabez--that is “grief.” “When thou
wast born,” say the Easterns, “thou didst weep, and all about thee did rejoice;
so live, that when thou diest thou mayest rejoice, and all about thee may
weep.” We may consider this epithet “honourable” as applied to Jabez, from
either a secular or a spiritual point of view. In the former case it would mean
that integrity and uprightness pervaded all his actions, that in the business
of this world no impeachment could lie against his good name, that all his
undertakings would bear the most rigid scrutiny. Nor is it a matter of small
importance that those who profess to be the children of God should be
recognised by the men of the world as actuated by unscrupulous integrity. The
children in the marketplace very keenly scrutinise the conduct of those who
avow themselves to be Christians, and they expect, and not without reason, that
our code of morals should be superior to their own. But we may consider this
title conferred on Jabez as issuing from the court of heaven, and bestowed upon
him because of his eminence in the service of God.
II. A comprehensive
prayer. “And Jabez called on thor God of Israel, saying, Oh that Thou wouldest
bless me indeed, and enlarge my coast, and that Thine hand might be with me,
and that Thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” He was a
true prince in Israel, having power with God; and yet it is only one prayer of
his which has been preserved. One prayer, doubtless one of many, for it reveals
a mastery in the holy exerciser only attained by much practice. One prayer has
lifted a man out of the lowest depression to the loftiest summits of enjoyment.
It has expelled the dark tides of sorrow from the soul, and brought in proofs
of God’s love dearer than life itself. It has widened the channels of enjoyment
and filled them with inexhaustible supplies of delight.
1. He seeks the best blessings. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me
indeed.” He “covets earnestly the best gifts.” God Himself is the only fountain
and source of true blessedness. We should not, however, completely appreciate
this prayer if we do not notice that temporal things may become blessings
indeed. If we do not prefer the gift to the giver; if they are the means of
drawing us nearer to Him, then “all things work together for good.” It would
seem to have been the desire of Jabez to see his Heavenly Father’s smile
through all earthly conditions and in all Divine bestowments. And it is indeed
a true philosophy which determines respecting life and all its mutations that
it matters not so much what we get for our earthly lot, as how we get it. The
things which men most usually covet conspire to their hurt because they have
not God’s blessing.
2. He prays for an enlarged territory. “That Thou wouldest enlarge my
coast.” It appears probable that this Jabez was a younger son, and that he was
born at a time when the patrimony was well-nigh, exhausted. This would account
for the maternal solicitude which had conferred on him so dolorous a name. An
Israelite might indeed put up this prayer without misgiving, because every inch
of territory which he gained would be rescued from heathenism, and brought
within the confines of the Land of Promise. But war prefer to look at this
petition as a supplication for spiritual good. Every grace-taught man must
sympathise with this cry for room. Too often fettered and environed by
corruptions, cares, and infirmities, we feel the need of enlarged desires,
expanding affections, and uncontracted views of Divine realities. “The world of
the blind,” says Mr. Prescott, the historian, speaking from painful experience,
“is bounded by the length of the arm.” A blind world revolves in the narrow
orbit of things that can be touched. The gospel introduces its subjects into
the vast regions of things unseen and eternal, and bestows upon them that
“other sense” called faith, and confers the capacity of communion with the
Eternal. When will the Church of Christ adopt this portion of the prayer of Jabez?
“Oh that Thou wouldest enlarge my coast!” Too often we hear complaints of
demands too numerous, and solicitations that are wearisome.
3. He prays that the hand of God may be with him. The hand that
directs, supports, supplies, and chastens us. There can be nothing more
delightful to the child of God than the constant recognition of the fact that
his Father’s hand is pointing out for him the path of life.
4. He would be kept from evil.
“And
that Thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” Now we gain
more light on the suggestive name of this man. He was called
Jabez--“grief”--and it is evident that he was one of those who grieve over sin.
That is the greatest trouble of all good men. Not only from the wiles of Satan
and the snares of the world, but from our very selves we require the defence of
the Almighty arm.
III. The complete
answer. God granted him that which he requested. Throughout all Europe we have
seen in the Churches the votive garlands and offerings hung by the
superstitious at the shrines from whose patrons their relief is supposed to
have come. What a contrast between these tinselled trifles and the rich museum
which the Church of God possesses of grateful recollection and adoring praise
on the part of those who have prevailed at the throne of grace! He has a
treasure of great worth who can rejoice in a distinct answer to prayer. (W.
G. Lewis,)
The prayer of Jabez
We will without any formal divisions simply endeavour to travel
through the petitions offered up in this prayer of Jabez. First petition: “Oh
that Thou wouldest bless me.”
1. There are many apparent blessings that are real curses.
2. There are apparent curses which often are real blessings.
3. There are blessings which are beth apparent and real.
Second petition: “And enlarge my coast.” A coast means a boundary
line, such as divides one territory from another, or terminates a country, as
the sea-coast is the boundary of our island. Every quickened soul has a
coast--the territory of inward experience which is limited and bounded by the
line that the Holy Spirit has drawn in his conscience.
1. Some have a narrow experience, they cannot get beyond doubts and
fears, guilt and convictions, with at times earnest desires for mercy and
pardon.
2. Others have their coast a little more extended. They are enabled
to hope in God’s mercy, and anchor in His promises.
3. Others can through faith rest in Christ’s blood and righteousness,
having received some intimation of favour, but not brought into the liberty of
the gospel.
4. Others are brought into the life, light, liberty, joy and peace of
the gospel. The living soul cannot but earnestly desire to have his coast
enlarged. More light, more life, more liberty, more feeling, more knowledge of
God in Christ, more faith, hope, and love. To have his heart enlarged in
prayer--meditation--communion, in affection to the people of God. Third
petition: “And that Thy hand might be with me.” A living child wants to see and
feel a fatherly hand with him and over him, going before him temporally, holding
him up spiritually, clearing his path, and giving him testimonies that what is
done in his fear shall terminate in his approbation. Fourth petition: “And that
Thou wouldest keep me from evil.” It is a base representation of the gospel of
grace to say that it leads to licentiousness. Every child of God will be more
or less frequently offering up this prayer. Shun as you would a pestilence any
one who makes light of sin. Evil is a grief, a burden to every living soul. (J.
C. Philpot.)
The prayer of the warrior Jew
(Sermon to children):--In speaking to you about Jabez, I would say these four
things and ask you to remember them.
I. He was a humble
man. It is beautiful to be humble. All his trust is in God, he looks to Him
alone. He reminds us of Jehoshaphat (2 Chronicles 20:12).
II. He was a great
man. It is well to be great.
III. He was a kind
man. It is better to be kind. He was kind, I think, among other things, in that
he loved his mother.
IV. He was a good
man. It is best of all to be good. (J. R. MacDuff, D. D.)
The character and prayer of Jabez
I. His character.
“More honourable than his brethren.” He was more pious. Piety is honourable.
1. For by “humility and the fear of the Lord are riches, and honour,
and life.”
2. As it engages us in the most glorious employments.
3. As it interests us in the most glorious privileges.
4. As it interests us in the most glorious rewards.
II. His prayer.
Notice--
1. The object of his worship--“the God of Israel.” He was not an
idolater. He was grateful, he remembered God’s kindness to Israel. He confided
in God’s sufficiency.
2. The contents of his prayer, or what he asked. We, like Jabez,
ought to--
Jabez, the “honourable”
Some analogies suggested by the sea-coast may teach the following
lessons.
I. An enlarged
“coast” suggests an expanded horizon. Our spiritual relations determine whether
soul vision command outlook from a small bay, or toward broad ocean.
II. An enlarged
“coast” suggests a broader surface. The glory of a coast is its wide sweep of
the ocean. Such in figure is the human soul when possessed and enlarged by the
Spirit of God. What sublime possibilities of Divine enlargement belongs to the
heart of man!
III. An enlarged
“coast” suggests a more extended pathway. Sometimes a narrow strip of land
forms the only path when walking on the sea-coast. The enlarged pathway will
secure--
1. Safety.
2. Peace. (The Study.)
The prayer of Jabez
The text implies more than it expresses. That there is a great
variety and distinction among men; some are more and some less honourable.
II. The offspring
of sorrow my become the parent of joy.
III. The best and
highest honour attaches to true religion.
IV. Though Jabez
(sorrow) is not the direct name of every one, yet sorrow is assuredly the lot
of all.
V. Prayer is the
appointment of God; He would have us pray always, and not faint.
VI. A blessing
indeed will be found to have three properties which serve to enhance its value.
1. It is given in covenant love.
2. It is well suited.
3. It is abiding.
VII. Protection by
the power of God and preservation in His way are momentous benefits.
VIII. Sin ever
grieves the heart of a good man.
IX. In regard to
property, it is lawful to seek addition and enlargement, if the will and glory
of God be duly regarded.
X. Answers granted
to prayer in time past, should encourage us to renew our application to the God
of our mercies.
XI. The hand of God
with any man is a certain pledge of prosperity.
XII. When faith and
fervour accompany our petitions, an answer of peace is near at hand. (Tract
Magazine.)
The lustre of a good man’s character
The occurrence of this text in the Book of Chronicles says far
more for Jabez than though it had appeared in a list of biographical sketches;
as, for instance, in Hebrews 11:1-40. We see as it were the
ancient scribe penning down upon his manuscript one name after another in
genealogical order, and with wonted precision; but arriving at this name he is
so deeply impressed by the holiness of the man, and the peculiarly consistent
character of his life, that when about to enrol his name in the annals of
Israel he feels obliged to forget the stern prescriptions of form; and flinging
aside under inspiration the proverbial stiffness of the genealogist, he becomes
the recorder not merely of a name, but of a saintly character withal, and thus
unwittingly confirms the important truth that the good man shines everywhere. (George
Venables.)
What is God’s blessing
In the midst of this wilderness of dry names, the dead leaves of a
long-gone past, we stumble by chance on a beautiful flower, lovely in form and
perfumed with precious and holy sentiment, a perfectly glad surprise amidst the
barrenness of mere enumeration.
1. How many and various are the meanings we attach to the word
“bless”! In the Bible we find God blessing men, and quite as frequently men
blessing God; God blessing man by pouring out upon him physical happiness and physical
prosperity; blessing him also by making him righteous and cleansing him from
sin. Man, on the other hand, is spoken of as blessing God for His bounty and
care, for His holy chastisement, for His merciful forgiveness. Again we have
men blessing one another and blessing themselves in the way of
self-congratulation. We find the word used likewise in a more formal and
superstitious way as though the pronouncing of it would entail its fulfilment
and become not only a prophecy but a pledge. Leaving Scripture we notice that
the term bless is in common use among ourselves in more senses than one. We
speak of persons as blessed with high talents, or with a noble position,
blessed with a large family or with good fortune; especially do we regard
health as a blessing and in most cases also long life.
2. The meaning of the word “bless” or “blessing” depends on the
person who uses the term, depends on his native character, surroundings,
training, his self-culture or his entire lack of it, his toilsome struggle after
virtue or his shameful familiarity with vice. You may be so debased as to think
that God’s blessing consists in letting you do exactly as you please, however
wicked it may be, without suffering the final consequences of detection, or you
may have a nature as lofty, as to regard as the best of God’s blessings “a
clean heart and a right spirit,” without which all other of His good gifts would be but curses.
3. The prayer for increased prosperity is perfectly justifiable so
long as a man cares most of all to be kept from evil and sin. There is no harm
in praying for temporal prosperity, if we feel it to be any real relief to our
care and so long as we are ready to take God’s answer of “No” as willingly as
to receive an answer of “Yes.” God’s blessing indeed is to be kept from evil.
4. It is a grand test, ever ready at hand for deciding the most
subtle case of conscience, to look whether we can deliberately ask for God’s
blessing to rest upon it. (Charles Voysey, B. A.)
Prayer of the son of sorrow
I. The matter of
it, or the things asked for.
1. He begins by asking God to bless him. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless
me indeed.” He would want that blessing on himself personally, on his house,
and on all his avocations. He knew that the blessing of God maketh rich; and he
knew quite as well that nothing could really and permanently prosper without
that blessing.
2. He prays for enlargement. “And enlarge my coast.” Both temporal
and spiritual. Give me a larger heart; broader views of Thyself, of Thy ways,
and of Thy purposes; and a wider sphere of sympathy, influence, and usefulness.
“Thou hast enlarged me,” says the Psalmist, “when I was in distress,” And Paul,
when writing to the Corinthians, as to his children, pleadingly entreats, “Be
ye also enlarged.” It is neither pleasant nor advantageous to be cooped up
within narrow bounds.
3. He seeks Divine co-operation. “And that Thine hand may be with
me.” That Thy power may second and give effect to my poor energies. What can my
hand do without Thee? But Thine is the hand that has created and sustains the
universe.
4. He implores Divine protection. “And that Thou wouldest keep me
from evil, that it may not grieve me.”
II. The manner of
this prayer. “And Jabez called on the God of Israel, saying,” etc. We
altogether like the tone and spirit of this prayer.
1. There is the devout reverence of it. “Oh that Thou wouldest.” The
Divine name is not so much as mentioned. He knew he was coming to the God of
Israel, and that He is a great and holy and terrible God. And we can recognise
the cry of a heart too full of pious awe to allow His hallowed name to escape
the lips of the suppliant. This reverence should characterise all our approaches to
God.
2. There is the spiritual wisdom of it. Jabez puts things in their
right places; and what was for him the most important thing, first. Nothing
could, in his esteem, antedate the blessing of God; hence he will put that
first. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.” And was he not perfectly right
in this? Did it matter what God gave him if He withheld that blessing from him?
3. There are the speciality and comprehensiveness of it. It takes a
wide sweep, and yet does not lose sight of what is most specific and
particular.
4. At the same time there is the brevity of it. So specific, so
comprehensive, and yet so brief. Assuredly Jabez recognised the solemn fact
that God is in heaven, and man upon the earth, and therefore that his words
should be few.
5. There is the earnestness of it. “Oh that,” etc. It comes directly
out of his heart, and breathes the very spirit of desire.
6. There is the faith which inspired it, and which runs through it
like a living soul. This man in coming to God believes that He is, and that He
is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.
III. The success of
this prayer. “And God granted him that which he requested.”
1. That he has come to a God who is as ready to give as He is to ask.
2. That he has come to a God who is as comprehensive in His gifts as
He is in His desires.
3. That he has come to a God who never forgets His promises to those
that seek Him.
4. That he has come to a God who will honour those with His
benefactions who honour Him with their confidence and trust. Allow me, then, to
propose Jabez to you as an example, and Jabez’s prayer as a model prayer. You
have the same God to go to, and you have far greater light to guide you to Him
than Jabez had. You have all gospel promises to encourage you. You have the new
and living way
thrown open to you. You have the Holy Spirit to teach and help you. You have
the great Advocate to plead for you. (The Church.)
Verses 14, 21, 23. For
they were craftsmen . . . that wrought
fine linen . . . those
that dwelt among plants.--
Craftsmen, potters, etc.
If all men affected one and the same trade of life or pleasure or
recreation, it were not possible they could live one by another; neither could
there be any use of commerce, whereby life is maintained. It is good reason we
should make a right use of this gracious dispensation of the Almighty, that we
should improve our several dispositions and faculties to the advancing of the
common stock, and that we should neither encroach upon each other’s profession
nor be apt to censure each other’s recreation. (Bishop Hall.)
Origin and use of arts and inventions
I. Useful arts
emanate from the wisdom and goodness of god.
II. Useful arts are
beneficial in their tendency.
III. Therefore all
engaged in useful arts promote the welfare of society. (James Wolfendale.)
Verse 9-10
And Jabez was more honourable than his brethren.
Jabez
We know
nothing whatsoever of the Jabez here commemorated beyond what we find in these
two verses. But this is enough to mark him out as worthy, in no ordinary
degree, of being admired and imitated. There is a depth and a comprehensiveness
in the registered prayer of this unknown individual--unknown except from that
prayer--which should suffice to make him a teacher of the righteous in every
generation. Let us now take the several parts of the text in succession,
commenting upon each and searching out the lessons which may be useful to
ourselves. The first verse contains a short account of Jabez; the second is
occupied by his prayer. Now there is no denying that we are short-sighted
beings, so little able to look into the future that we constantly miscalculate
as to what would be for our good, anticipating evil from what is working for
benefit, and reckoning upon benefit from that which may prove fraught with
nothing but evil. How frequently does that which we have baptized with our
tears make the countenance sunny with smiles! how frequently, again, does that
which we have welcomed with smiles wring from us tears! We do not know the
particular reasons which influenced the mother of Jabez to call him by that
name, a name which means “sorrowful.” We are merely told, “His mother called
his name Jabez, saying, Because I bare him with sorrow.” Whether it were that
she brought forth this son with more than common anguish, or whether, as it may
have been, the time of his birth were the time of her widowhood, the mother
evidently felt but little of a mother’s joy, and looked on her infant with
forebodings and fears. Perhaps it could hardly have been her own bodily
suffering which made her fasten on the boy a dark and gloomy appellation, for,
the danger past, she would rather have given a name commemorative of
deliverance, remembering “no more her anguish for joy that a man was born into
the world.” Indeed, when Rachel bare Benjamin she called his name Benoni, that
is, “the son of my sorrow”; but then it was “as her soul was in departing, for
she died.” We may well, therefore, suppose that the mother of Jabez had deeper
and more lasting sorrows to register in the name of her boy than those of the
giving him birth. And whatsoever may have been the cause, whether domestic
affliction or public calamity, we may consider the woman as having bent in
bitterness over her new-born child, having only tears to give him as his
welcome to the world, and feeling it impossible to associate with him even a
hope of happiness. She had probably looked with different sentiments on her
other children. She had clasped them to her breast with all s mother’s
gladness. But with Jabez it was all gloom; the mother felt as if she could
never be happy again: this boy brought nothing but an accession of care. And
yet the history of the family is gathered into the brief sentence, “Jabez was
more honourable than his brethren.” Nothing is told us of his brethren, except
that they were less honourable than himself; they, too, may have been
excellent, and perhaps as much is implied, but Jabez took the lead, and whether or not the
youngest in years, surpassed every other in piety and renown. Oh, if the mother
lived to see the manhood of her sons, how strangely must the name Jabez, a name
probably given in a moment of despondency and faithlessness, have fallen on her
earl She may then have regretted the gloomy and ominous name, feeling as though
it reproached her for having yielded to her grief, and allowed herself to give
way to dreary forebodings. It may have seemed to her as a standing memorial of
her want of confidence in God, and of the falseness of human calculations. And
is not this brief notice of the mother of Jabez full of warning and admonition
to ourselves? How ready are we to give the name Jabez to persons or things
which, could we but look into God’s purpose, or repose on His promise, we might
regard as designed to minister permanently to our security and happiness. “All
these things,” said the patriarch Jacob, “are against me,” as one trial after another fell to
his lot. And yet, as you all know, it was by and through these gloomy dealings
that a merciful God was providing for the sustenance of the patriarch and his
household, for their support and aggrandisement in a season of extraordinary
pressure. Thus it continually happens in regard of ourselves. We give the
sorrowful title to that which is designed for the beneficent end. Judging only
by present appearances, allowing our fears and feelings rather than our faith
to take the estimate or fix the character of occurrences, we look with gloom on
our friends and with melancholy on our sources of good. Sickness, we call it
Jabez, though it may be sent to minister to our spiritual health; poverty, we
call it Jabez, though coming to help us to the possession of heavenly riches;
bereavement, we call it Jabez, though designed to graft us more closely into
the household of God. Oh for a better judgment! or rather, oh for a simpler
faith! We cannot, indeed, see the end from the beginning, and therefore cannot
be sure that what rises in cloud will set in vermilion and gold; but we need
not take upon ourselves to give the dark name, as though we could not be
deceived in regard of the nature. Let us derive this lesson from the concise
but striking narrative in the first verse of our text. Let us neither look
confidently on what promises best, nor despairingly on what wears the most
threatening appearance. God often wraps up the withered leaf of disappointment
in the bright purple bud, and as often unfolds the golden flower of enjoyment
in the nipped and blighted shoot. Experience is full of evidence that there is
no depending on appearances. If, in a spirit of repining or unbelief, you brand
as Jabez what may be but a blessing in disguise, no marvel if sometimes, in
just anger and judgment, He allow the title to prove correct, and suffer not
this Jabez, this child born in sorrow, to become to you as otherwise it might,
more honourable, more profitable than any of its brethren. But let us now turn
to the prayer of Jabez. We ought not to examine the prayer without pausing to
observe to whom it is addressed. It is not stated that Jabez called on God, but
on “the God of Israel.” There are few things more significant than the
difference in the manner in which God is addressed by saints under the old and
under the new dispensation. Patriarchs pray to God as the God of their fathers;
apostles pray to Him as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. In both forms of
address there is an intimation of the same fact, that we need something to
encourage us in approaching unto God; that exposed as we are to His just wrath
for our sins, we can have no confidence in speaking to Him as to absolute
Deity. There must be something to lean upon, some plea to urge, otherwise we
can but shrink from the presence of One so awful in His gloriousness. We must,
then, have some title with which to address God--some title which, interfering
not with His majesty or His mysteriousness, may yet place Him under a character
which shall give hope to the sinful as they prostrate themselves before Him. We
need not say that under the gospel dispensation this title should be that which
is used by St. Paul, “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Having such a
Mediator through whom to approach, there is no poor supplicant who may not come
with boldness to the mercy-seat. But under earlier dispensations, when the mediatorial office
was but imperfectly made known, men had to seize on other pleas and
encouragements; and then it was a great thing that they could address God as
you continually find Him addressed, as the God of Israel, the God of their
fathers, the God of Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob. The title assured them
that God was ready to hear prayer and to answer it. They went before God,
thronged, as it were, with remembrances of mercies bestowed, deliverances
vouchsafed, evils averted: how could they fear that God was too great to be
addressed, too occupied to reply, or too stern to show kindness, when they bore
in mind how He had shielded their parents, hearkened to their cry, and proved
Himself unto them “a very present help” in all time of trouble? Ah, and though,
under the new dispensation, “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” be the great
character under which God should be addressed by us in prayer, there is no need
for our altogether dropping the title, the God of our fathers. It might often
do much to cheer a sorrowful heart, and to encourage a timid, to address God as
the God of our fathers--the God in whom my parents trusted. And what did Jabez
pray for? for great things--great, if you suppose him to have spoken only as an
heir of the temporal Canaan, greater if you ascribe to him acquaintance with
the mercies of redemption. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.” Lay the
emphasis on that word “indeed.” Many things pass for blessings which are not;
to as many more we deny, though we ought to give the character. There is a
blessing in appearance which is not also a blessing in reality; and conversely,
the reality may exist where the appearance is wanting. The man in prosperity
appears to have, the man in adversity to be without a blessing--yet how often
does God bless by withholding! And Jabez goes on, “That Thou wouldest enlarge
my coast.” He probably speaks as one who had to win from the enemy his portion
of the promised land. He knew that, as the Lord said to Joshua, “there remained
yet very much land to be possessed”; it was not, then, necessarily as a man
desirous of securing to himself a broader inheritance, it may have been as one
who felt jealous that the idolater should still defile what God had set apart
for His people, that he entreated the enlargement of his coast. And a Christian
may use the same prayer; he, too, has to ask that his coast may be enlarged.
Who amongst us has yet taken possession of one-half the territory assigned him
by God? Our privileges as Christians, as members of an apostolical Church, as
heirs of the kingdom of heaven, how are these practically under-valued, how
little are they realised, how sluggishly appropriated! What districts of
unpossessed territory are there in the Bible! how much of that blessed book has
been comparatively unexamined by us! We have our favourite parts, and give only
an occasional and cursory notice to the rest. How little practical use do we
make of God’s promises! What need, then, for the prayer, “Oh that Thou wouldest
enlarge my coast”! I would not be circumscribed in spiritual things. I would
not live always within these narrow bounds. There are bright and glorious
tracts beyond. It is a righteous covetousness, this for an enlargement of
coast; for he has done little, we might almost say nothing, in religion, who
can be content with what he has done. It is a holy ambition, this which pants
for an ampler territory. But are we only to pray? are we not also to struggle,
for the enlargement of our coasts? Indeed we are: observe how Jabez proceeds,
“And that Thine hand might be with me.” He represents himself as arming for the
enlargement of his coast, but as knowing all the while that “the battle is the
Lord’s.” There is one more petition in the prayer of him who, named with a dark
and inauspicious name, yet grew to be “more honourable than his brethren”:
“That Thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” “Shall we
receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil?” Jabez prayed
not for the being kept from evil, but kept from the being grieved by evil. And
there is a vast difference between the being visited by evil and grieved by
evil. He is grieved by evil who does not receive it meekly and submissively, as
the chastisement of his heavenly Father. He is grieved by evil whom evil
injures, in place of benefits--which latter is always God’s purpose in His
permission or appointment. He is grieved by evil whom it drives into sin, and
to whom, therefore, it furnishes cause of bitter repentance. You see, then,
that Jabez showed great spiritual discernment in casting his prayer into this
particular form. We, too, should pray, not absolutely that God would keep us
from evil, but that He would so keep it from us, or us from it, that it may not
grieve us. (H. Melvill, B. D.)
The prayer of Jabez
Many comparisons have at times been instituted, and I think not
altogether without reason, between this book as the work of God and the world
as the production of God; such, for instance, as that what is necessary and
essential lies amply upon the surface of both. Analogies have sometimes been
gathered from the mixture that there is in Scripture in the developments of the
character of God; sometimes all that is awful, and sometimes all that is
benignant. So in the material world there is the same mixture in the
development and display of the Divine character and perfections. Sometimes,
again, an analogy, not I think altogether fanciful, has been supposed to exist
between this book and the world, in that there are some parts of it that seem
luxuriant and beautiful--some parts of the book in which every verse and every
word is like a flower springing up under your feet, or like the shade of a
beautiful vegetation around you, or like an exhibition of the magnificence and
loveliness of vegetable nature, while other parts appear sterile and barren,
with rocks on every side. When we look at this barren catalogue of names, when
we look at what is here presented, we seem to have got into one of those parts
of Scripture in which there is very little to delight the eye or to refresh the
heart, just as sometimes we may be passing through some sterile part in the
scenery of this world. What is suggested by what we see in some of these barren
spots of nature? Why, just this--that we there get a view of the rocks, of the
bands and the pillars
of our earth, that bind it and keep it together, and make it what it is, and
which are essential and necessary for the support of all the earth, and the
soil by which is supported and displayed in other parts the beauty and
sublimity of vegetation. So it is here; these parts of the Bible are just representations
to us of some of those barren rocks, you may say, but still those rocks which
run throughout Scripture, those genealogies which are connected with all that
is important in the history of the Messiah and the fulfilment of prophecy. In
looking at the passage
we observe that with respect to this Jabez we really know nothing but what is
combined in these two verses; there is no reference to him in any other part of
Scripture. He was unquestionably, I suppose, from the position in which he
stands, of the tribe of Judah; as this is the genealogy of Judah. We know not
precisely from the passage who were his parents; what particular line in Judah
he belonged to; nor can we exactly make out the precise time in which he lived;
though it appears to me the passage gives us a little light on that subject. It
is said generally of him that “he was more honourable than his brethren.” That
may or may not imply censure against his brethren. He might be honourable among
the honourable; he might be great among the great. The probability is, however,
that it does rather convey the idea of imperfection and defect in the character
of surrounding society, and hence it does mark more prominently the influence
of principle and of piety in him. But men may be honourable on various
accounts: generally at the time to which the Scripture refers, and now, men are estimated honourable
for valour, for wisdom, and for pity. I think it is very probable that all
these met in Jabez.
1. There are traditions among the Jews respecting him; and they make
him to have been a man distinguished for wisdom as a teacher; distinguished as
the founder of a school, and having around him a multitude of disciples. This
opinion has upon it, perhaps, some air of probability from the last verse of
the second chapter in this book, in which it is said, “And the families of the
scribes which dwelt at Jabez,” or “with Jabez”; “the Tirathites, the
Shimeathites, and Suchathites. These are the Kenites that came of Hemath, the father of
the house of Rechab.” Now, “the families of the scribes which dwelt at Jabez,”
supposing it to be the name of a place, refers to men who are devoted to study;
if it be the name of the persons that dwelt with him, still the same idea seems
suggested. So that I think it very probable that the idea of the Jews is right.
They themselves take these words which are here used, and in which these
different divisions of scribes are distinguished, as being signifcant,
expressing certain qualities of these disciples with respect to the manner in
which they received the instruction of the master, and the manner in which they
were devoted to God. It is very probable, therefore, that he was distinguished
and honourable for his mental acquisition and his wisdom.
2. It seems to me that he was honourable also for his enterprise and
activity, and perhaps also for his valour, because he prays for the enlargement
of his coast. Now it strikes me that this particular prayer of Jabez about the
enlargement of his coast, and God being with him, seems to cast a little light
on the time in which he lived. It strikes me that he lived soon after the
settlement of the people in Canaan, and before they had taken complete and full
possession of the different lots. And there was among many of the people a sort
of reluctance to do this, a want of vigour and enterprise of mind and
character. Joshua really had to reprove them for sitting clown contented too
soon, saying, “Why, a few of you have got possession; yet there remains a
number of places that are not yet divided; why sit you here? Arise, take
possession.” It strikes me, therefore, this prayer has relation to that, and
that he was more honourable than his brethren because he entered into the mind
of God.
3. Whatever may be thought of that, that he was honourable for his
piety is, I think, manifest. “He was more honourable than his brethren”; and
the sacred writer, after having stated that generally, in the next verse
develops the principle of this honourable character: “And Jabez called on the
God of Israel,” etc.
1. I should think it very likely that Jabez owed a good deal of his
religion to his mother.
2. We learn also, that piety towards God, the possession of the
principles and the manifestation of Scriptural religion, is in the sight of God
essential to the possession of a true and honourable character. The terms
“honourable” and “honourable character” have very different senses among men.
That which is highly approved among men in this respect is often an abomination
in the sight of God. There is many a man distinguished by this epithet in
society that is loathed in the society of heaven. A merely honourable character
in society means often nothing but a man of integrity. He is honourable in the
relations of common life. Under the influence of their principle men are led to
pay debts which they have contracted by vice, but to starve and to crush the
honest tradesman, and neglect to pay other debts which they have accumulated
upon themselves. And yet they are “honourable men!” Such are the perversions
abroad in the world and the absurdities in society.
3. Another thought is impressed upon us by the passage: the
importance that God attaches to faith and piety, and the character that flows
from it. The importance that God attaches to it is proved by the very
circumstance of there being this abrupt introduction of the character of Jabez
in the midst of this dry genealogical detail. It reminds one of a similar
passage in Genesis 5:1-32., “Enoch walked with God”;
impressing a glory and distinction upon the character of the man, and making it
stand out prominently from the midst of those with which it is connected. Now
if your genealogies were made out would the scribe have to pause at your name?
Is there anything about you of this character and these principles that in a
similar scroll or writing to this there may be this reason to pause and to
dwell upon you?
4. Another thing which you may draw from this subject is the
possibility of the combination of secular enterprise and activity with eminent
piety. I think these seem to be indicated as having met in the character of
Jabez. This piety towards God; his faith, his devotion, the time that he gave
for prayer, did not render it impossible with him to give time to active duty.
Perhaps, so to speak, he had a sanctified ambition to combine both activity and
enterprise with religion. And both these may be combined--diligence in business
with fervour of spirit, activity in the fulfilment of the duties of everyday
life, in connection with the cultivation of those principles and feelings which
keep us near to God, and which sanctify the activity and direct it. Now I think
it is likely that Jabez was a young man when this prayer was offered; that
there was this formation of his character comparatively early; that he thus
started in life, that he thus acted.
5. Another remark we make is this, that certainly one of the best
ways to preserve your speculations, your pursuits, your secular activity and
enterprise from being offensive to God and injurious to yourselves, is to enter
upon none, and to engage in none, but such as you can bring, like Jabez, and
lay at the footstool of the throne of God, and ask God to bless.
6. In the last place, let us learn from this subject the gratitude
that we ought to feel for the clear discovery that we have in Scripture of
God’s covenant relation to His children; that we can go to Him, not merely as
the God of Israel, but the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, in Him
reconciling the world to Himself, not imputing to men their trespasses. (T.
Binney.)
Jabez
The very situation of this text is worth remarking. It
stands in the very midst of genealogies. Why those names are so particularly
put upon record, or why nothing more besides the name, is not very easy to
discover. Perhaps it was to let us see that multitudes of persons live upon the
earth of whom, when you have told the name, you have told all that is worth
mentioning. Great men they might be in their generations, men of renown in an
earthly point of view, and yet, in the sight of God, insignificant and
worthless. But, however this may be, here is one person, at least, whom the
Word of God is not content with barely mentioning. It is said of him that he
was “more honourable than his brethren.” In whatever other points he was so, in
this especially, that, whereas the Holy Spirit barely runs over the names of
others, and tells us nothing else of them, when He comes to Jabez He stops
short. Something He relates concerning Jabez which He evidently holds forth to
our praise and imitation. What is the fact in the history of Jabez which the
Holy Ghost hath thought worthy of record? Is it any battle that he fought, or
any exploit he performed? is it any proof he gave of earthly wisdom or of
earthly policy? No; these are indeed the things which dazzle human eyes and
which please the pens of human writers. But not so the great God. The events He
dwells on in the history of Jabez is one which many earthly penmen would have
scorned to write of. He takes us to this good man’s closet, and tells us of a
prayer he offered there. All l amidst the multitude of things which are going
on upon this earth, amidst the manifold events which man calls great, there is
nothing in God’s sight half so considerable as the prayer of a poor humble soul
for mercy and acceptance. The prayer of a Paul, of a Cornelius, of a
Jabez--“What trifling matters,” saith the world, “are these!” But look into
God’s Book and only see the notice which is taken of these prayers by Him who
made us. Pray like Jabez. Pray, if not in his words, yet in his spirit, and you
shall speed like him.
I. We are to
consider the import of the prayer--the nature, I mean, of the petition it
contains. There is no doubt but that it issued from the heart, and that it was
offered up with holy fervency of spirit. “Jabez called upon the God of Israel,”
such is the expression used. Something more, you see, he did than merely say
the words of prayer. He called or “cried” unto his God. He put his heart into his
words, as one in deep and holy earnest. There is a holy vehemence, too, in the
very form of his address. “Oh,” says he, “that Thou wouldest do this thing!”
And this should be your way of praying. But to come to the language of the
prayer.
1. What is the first petition of this earnest suitor at the throne of
grace? “Oh,” says he, “that Thou wouldest bless me indeed!” Now what sort of
blessing does he mean? God hath many in His gift. Life itself is a blessing;
health is a blessing; and so are food and raiment; so are the friends we mix
with and the home which we inhabit. But it is clearly something beyond these
which Jabez asks for. His language is emphatic: “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me
indeed!” As much as to say, “Oh that Thou wouldest give me Thy best, Thy truest
blessings!” And what are these? Not the short-lived blessings of the body, but
the eternal blessings of the soul. The man is “blessed indeed,” not who sits
down to a full table and wears his purple and fine linen--but who can say with
a good Scripture warrant, “Christ is mine and I am His.” He is “blessed indeed”
to whom the God of grace hath said, “I am thy salvation”--with whose spirit the
Spirit itself beareth witness that he is a child of God”--and “who is kept by
the power of God through faith unto salvation ready to be revealed in the last
time.” These are the choicest gifts of God. Other things are blessings; but
they are the blessings of God’s enemies as well as of His people. Other things
are blessings, but they are temporal and transitory, and they “perish with the
using.” Grace to enjoy here and glory to expect hereafter--let a man have these
and he hath all. Jabez wanted Jacob’s blessing and not Esau’s--the birthright,
not the pottage. Sure I am, such is the choice of every poor awakened sinner.
“Give me Christ and His Cross rather than the world and its crown!”
2. But what is the next thing in the prayer? what does the holy man
next ask for? “That Thou wouldest enlarge my coast,” says he. Perhaps this
petition was of a temporal nature. Jabez, it is thought, was among those
Israelites who went in with Joshua to the holy land and had a portion there
assigned to him. If so, it is not unlikely that he was pressed and straitened
by the Canaanites around him, and that he begs in this part of his prayer that
God would clear the ground for him and give him room enough to dwell in. “Oh,
Lord,” we may well ask, “enlarge the coast of my poor narrow heart. Give to my
thoughts and my desires a wider range.” He grieves over the narrowness, the
selfishness of his desires. He feels himself, as it were, pent in and
circumscribed by things of this world. He is sensible that there is not room
enough within him for his God and for his brethren. He longs, therefore, in all
these respects to be enlarged to “reach forth unto the things which are
before”; to “comprehend with all saints what is the length, and breadth, and
depth, and height, and to know the love of Christ which passeth knowledge,” and
to be “filled with all the fulness of God.” Again, here is another point of
view in which the Christian seeks after enlargement. “Oh, Lord,” he is ever
ready to exclaim, “enlarge my usefulness. Make me a more active member of
Christ’s body; more abundant in the fruits of righteousness; more devoted to
Thy work and service; more profitable to my brethren and fellow-creatures!”
3. But we pass on to the next petition in our text: “Oh,” says Jabez,
“that Thine hand might be with me!” And why does he ask this? Evidently because
he was thoroughly persuaded that without the Lord he could do nothing. How
exactly in this point do his feelings meet those of all real Christians in the
present day! The worldly man goes out in his own strength and trusts in his own
arm to help him. Seldom does he feel the need of looking higher than his own wisdom and sagacity
and resolution. Whilst the believer thus “goes forth in the strength of the
Lord” he can do wonders; but let him at any time forget thus to pray, he is
soon made to feel that he is a “man who hath no strength.”
4. To come now to the last petition of the prayer before us. How does
the holy man conclude? Just as his Lord concludes in the prayer which He hath
taught us to present to Him. “Deliver us from evil” is our last petition in
that prayer. And what is the last request of Jabez? “That Thou wouldest keep me
from evil, that it may not grieve me.” “Except the Lord keep the city, the
watchman waketh but in vain.” There is safety neither for the soul nor for the
body except under the shadow of His wings. Apply this to spiritual evil, and it
expresses what is true, what is most eminently true, of every real servant of
the Lord--that sin is a thing which grieves him. Natural evil is painful and
unwelcome; but the evil of the soul--the evil to which Satan tempts--this is
the thing of all others which believers dread. A great deal of sin goes with
the world under the name of “pleasure.” “But all this,” says the believer, “is not pleasure to my
soul--it is pain and grief to me.”
II. The answer
which this prayer received. Answered it was, and answered to the full. “The
Lord granted him that which he requested”; not a part, you observe, but the
whole. “That which he requested”--that is to say, all that he requested was
bestowed upon him. Now do think over his request. It was a very large one. It
comprehended much. He had not trespassed on the Divine bounty which says, “Ask,
and you shall have.” Let us, then, admire the bountifulness, the abundant mercy
of the God whom Jabez called upon. Surely He is a God of faithfulness and truth
and love. When has any humble soul ever cried to Him in vain? When hath He ever
said to the praying “seed of Jacob, Seek ye Me in vain”? To you who are
really “calling on the God of Israel” my text is surely a comfortable and
refreshing one. It affords a pledge; it gives, as it were, a promise and
assurance--that you will speed in your petitions. The God of Jabez is
unchanged, unchangeable--“the same yesterday, to-day, and for ever.” (A.
Roberts.)
Blessing and enlargement
We come upon this little history of Jabez with a kind of
surprise, as one who, travelling through a rocky and mountainous country, comes
all at once upon some little green dell, watered with streams and filled with
beauty. Observe--
I. Jabez called
upon the God of Israel. He declared himself a religious man, a worshipper of
the true God. It was the habit of his life. He was known by this. This still
lies at the foundation of individual prosperity and goodness of the highest
kind--personal religion, calling upon God. A man whose soul never “calls,” never
cries, never looks, never waits upon God, is not living to the end for which a
man should live; he is not truly living at all. Man is raised above the brutes,
in that he alone of all the creatures is so endowed that he stands consciously
before the face of the personal God, to reverence, serve, worship, and adore
the unseen Being.
II. Calling, what
does Jabez say? “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.” This prayer is not
very definite, but perhaps it is all the better, u expressive of many a
condition of life, and especially the state of one who is just beginning to pray. In conscious sin
and guilt, in weakness, confusion, and fear, a man knows not what to say. Then,
bethinking him that God is greater than his heart and knoweth all things, and
will therefore give interpretation to all the misery, penitence, longing, love;
that He will hear the groanings that cannot be uttered; that He will take dim
thought for words; the man is content, and with a cry of relief, as well as
earnestness, he says, “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed!”
III. But there is
something more definite immediately, “and enlarge my coast.” He prays for more
territory to his people and himself, more power, more wealth. These are what we should call
earthly and temporal blessings. The best men of the Old Testament did not
distinguish between temporal and spiritual as we do. Life was a spiritual unity
to these men. When a man’s sins are pardoned, and his life rectified, when his
soul is nourished by the blessing of God, one cannot but think the more that
man has the better. Let him be enlarged. No doubt an expanding life multiplies
dangers, but it also
multiplies grace if it be expansion on the right principle. When a penurious
man makes money, that is not enlargement in the grand sense at all. He is
building a prison, and himself will be the prisoner. An old man in his last
illness was received at one of the metropolitan hospitals. He was without
relations or friends, and to all appearance without resources. But a bag of
money was found round his neck. When death had apparently claimed him, a nurse
gently unfastened the string and removed the bag. At the same moment the old
man opened his eyes and felt instinctively for his treasure, which was no
longer in its place. He uttered the word, “Gone!” and died. The money amounted
to £174, the accumulation, no doubt, of many years. But was that man “enlarged”
as the process went on? He was narrowed and crippled. Every golden piece he put
into that bag was adding to the weight he carried, in more senses than one,
until it became a millstone about his neck and drowned him in death. From many
a death-bed there goes up that old man’s sigh, “Gone!” money “gone;” houses
“gone”; broad
acres “gone”; name and fame “gone.” All that has been striven for through a
lifetime “gone.” Ah! poor fatal enlargement that ends in such collapse. The
true enlargement is such, that such a catastrophe as that is quite impossible.
The man with soul enlarged never sighs in life or death “Gone!” He has chosen
the good part that shall not be taken away.
IV. The summing up
of the prayer. “And that Thy hand might be with me, and that Thou mightest keep
me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” So let us seek preservation from evil
inward and outward, by watchfulness, by prayer, by dependence on God, and we
need never fear enlargement. Let it go on without limit and without fear, if it
goes on thus banked in on either hand by Divine blessing and Divine care. (A.
Raleigh, D. D.)
Jabez
In visiting a foreign land, and seeing nothing but strange
forms and faces passing and repassing before us, it affords most exquisite
enjoyment to catch at the moment the well-known countenance of some dear old
friend or acquaintance. So it is with us here on wearily poring over these
chapters of names; we feel as if we were in a wilderness, at sea, on some
foreign strand; and what blessed relief do we experience as unawares we arrive
at this rare character of Old Testament Scripture, ensconced, enshrined in this
desert nook of names. We realise with double zest that proverb of
Scripture--“That as iron sharpeneth iron, so doth the countenance of a man his
friend.” In considering Jabez let us look--
I. To the
circumstances cast around his birth. He is here brought before us in connection
with his mother. Mothers are often mentioned in Scripture as influencing their
children for either good or evil--the mothers of the wicked kings of Israel on
the one hand, the mothers of Moses, Samuel, Joseph, etc., on the other. The
responsibility of mothers. The question was once proposed to Napoleon
Bonaparte, “How was a better, a more moral class of young persons to be
obtained in the country?” His answer was, “Let us have better mothers.”
II. To the
character of his life.
III. To his prayer
and its answer. (John Gardiner.)
The prayer of Jabez
I. Let us glance
at the parental anxiety of his mother. Her fears and perplexities were not
realised. The fears and dread of many a parent are never intended to be
realised. The delicate little child may outgrow its frailty, and live to be
your comfort and hope. The wild and unruly boy may become the staff of your old
age.
II. The character
of this prayer.
1. There seems to be a pious reference to the prayer of Moses for the
tribe to which Jabez belonged. Jabez belonged to the tribe of Judah.
2. It is a prayer for spiritual blessings.
3. It is a prayer expressive of a humble dependence upon Divine
Providence for temporal blessings.
4. It is marked by a singular and holy distrust of himself--“keep me
from evil.”
Application:
1. God still waits to hear our humble prayers, and will grant all
those things which are needful for us.
2. It may teach us the source of some of our misfortunes and
mistakes; we have restrained prayer.
3. It teaches emphatically the value of religion. Godliness is profitable
for the life that now is. (W. J. Barrett.)
Jabez--an unexpected biography
As in life we are being continually surprised by the unexpected
turn which events often take, so the Bible sometimes surprises us with
unlooked-for disclosures. All of a sudden in the very midst of surrounding
dryness a beautiful biography appears, and in two verses a man’s life is
portrayed, beginning with birth, and containing a delineation of his character,
a full report of one of his prayers, and references to his mother and brothers.
I. The
significance of a name. Jabez was born at a time when “names meant truths and
words were the symbols of realities.” Jabez means sorrow or trouble. The
mother’s grief, expressed in the name of her child, was probably the ungodliness of her
other children, and there is no more fruitful source of sorrow to mothers than
this.
II. The distinction
of a character. More honourable. He had a good reputation.
III. The devotion of
a life. “Jabez called on the God of Israel.”
IV. The Divine
recognition of true prayer. (Homilist.)
The prayer of Jabez
I. The prayer
before us. Very striking is the ardour of expression contained in these words,
“Bless me”; “Bless me”; “Bless me indeed”; Oh, that Thou wouldest bless me”;
and “Oh I that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.”
II. Our
encouragement to pray the same. “God granted Jabez that which he requested.”
This shows us--
1. That God heareth prayer.
2. That God answereth prayer.
3. That God will grant us that which we request of Him.
Address:
1. Any among you who may live prayerlessly.
2. Any of you who may pray formally.
3. Any of you who do truly pray. (W. Mudge, B. A.)
Jabez: his life and his prayer
It is not much that we know of Jabez, but I think that in this
recorded history of that man there is suggested to us something of as solemn
warning and of as blessed consolation as you will find within the range of
God’s holy book.
I. The lesson of
the same given to him. Jabez--“sorrow.” It was to her best and worthiest son
that the mother of Jabez gave the name that implied how little hope of future
happiness with him or through him remained in her weary, despairing heart. We
can think of a contrasted picture: you remember the proud and hopeful name
which the mother of our race gave to her firstborn son; you know how much of
confident hope was expressed in the name of Cain. “Possession” she called
him--a great thing gained from God--who was yet so sorely to wring her heart.
Ever thus are human anticipations, whether of good or ill; the first murderer
welcomed with the hopeful name of Cain, while this wise and good and happy man
was to bear the desponding name of Jabez. How often we call by hard names
dispensations of God’s providence, which in reality are to prove great
blessings probably in many cases those events in our history, those dealings of
God with us, which we should call sorrowful at the time, stand us in more real
stead, and do us more real good, than the brightest and happiest that ever come
in our way.
II. We shall next
consider the prayer which jabez offered and which God granted him. What a wise
and what a safe prayer! Send me that which Thou knowest is blessing, though it
may not seem blessing to me; and deny me that which Thou knowest is not
blessing, however ready!, in my ignorance, may be to think it so.
1. The spirit of this prayer is that of confidence in God and
unqualified acquiescence in His appointment. This is a lesson of how we ought
to pray. You know, generally, the direction in which to steer; but you cannot
say what little movement of the helm may be expedient from time to time, to
suit each passing gust of wind, or each crossing wave. And it is just because
we do not know these things that it is so wise to leave the decision of the
precise thing to be sent us, as Jabez did, to God; and to pray with him that
God would bless us “indeed.”
2. The next two petitions imply a great and sound principle--the duty
of combining effort with prayer. When we are desirous to compass any new
attainment, when we wish to enlarge our coast, as it were, by taking in greater
fields of faith, of holiness, of patience, of humility, of all Christian
grace--in regard to all which we may well take up Joshua’s words,”that there
remaineth yet very much land to be possessed,” let us do like Jabez; working
like him as if we could do all, and praying as if we could do nothing. The
wisdom of Jabez appeared in that he put prayer and effort together.
3. The last petition is for deliverance from true evil--and from the
evil effects and influences of all evil. He does not ask that evil may never
come; but that evil may not be suffered to really harm when it comes. Evil
coming and trying us may do us great good; but Jabez prayed, and we may pray,
that evil should not grieve us. We may pray that evil may never be suffered to
harden us; to stir us up to wrath against God; to make us fretful, rebellious,
impatient; to tempt us to sin; in short, to do us harm when God intends it
always to do us good. It was for this that Jabez prayed. (A. K. H. Boyd, D.
D.)
Jabez
These words contain a life’s history in a sentence. This brief
epitome of human life appeals to universal experience. Its very brevity
increases its suggestiveness.
I. The mother’s
faithless anticipation reminds us how the present often colours our thoughts of
the future. Our judgments are biassed, often warped by our circumstances. We
interpret even the past by the present, and often fail therefore to make a just
estimate of it. We can only form a right estimate of the past by transporting
ourselves back into it. This is impossible with respect to the future. We may
learn what has been yesterday, but we know not what shall be on the morrow.
Hence the especial danger of letting our anticipations be coloured by our
present circumstances. God’s teaching is the very reverse of this. The thought
of the future is to colour the present. As Mr. Canning, when he announced in
Parliament the independence of South America, said “that he brought in the New
World to redress the balance of the Old,” so God gives us the bright
inheritance of heaven as a counterbalance to the cares and sorrows of earth. It
is only in the light of the future as revealed to us by God, that we can
rightly estimate the present. When we reverse God’s teaching we unfit ourselves
for the future. We go forth to the duties and burdens of the morrow weakened by
apprehension, instead of being strong with the courage of hope.
II. The prayer of
Jabez combines wise reticence and ordinary ambition. These are the elements of
true prayer--a sense of dependence, the expression of confidence, and
unrestrained petition, pouring out the heart to God, leaving to Him the
decision as to what is blessing indeed.
III. This prayer
also reveals the true spirit of Christian life. It is the outcome of practical
piety. Perhaps like Caleb he had to conquer his own inheritance. His dependence
upon God did not mean inaction. He had learned the great lesson that prayer and
effort go hand in hand, the one inspiring and sanctifying the other. Our great
need is to live more nearly as we pray. We can only ask that God’s hand may be
with us when our supreme desire is to do God’s will. Such prayer is both a test
and a safeguard. (A. F. Joscelyne.)
The prayer of Jabez
Remarkable is the honour which God puts upon prayer, and
numberless are the instances recorded of its efficacy.
I. The import of
the prayer of Jabez.
II. Its excellence.
It was so both in respect to sentiment and expression. It was--
1. Humble.
2. Diffusive (Philippians 4:6). We need to recite our
wants in order to impress our own minds with a sense of our utter helplessness
and unworthiness.
3. Importunate.
4. Believing. Petitions offered in faith, have as it were, the force
of commands (Isaiah 45:1).
Application:
1. Let all now call to mind their several wants and necessities.
2. Let nothing be thought too small or too great to ask.
3. Let the pressure of our wants and the richness of our prospects
stimulate us.
4. Let us expect the accomplishment of that glorious promise (John 14:18; John 14:14). (Skeletons of Sermons.)
The prayer of Jabez
Like a star set in the darkness of midnight, more conspicuous
because of the surrounding gloom, is the name of a great man in the chronicles
of the trifling and the insignificant. How encouraging is the assurance, “If
any man love God
the same is known of Him,” whoever he may be, wherever he may dwell. The name
of Jabez stands in most emphatic isolation upon the sacred page. He is
distinguished by his faith in God from hie contemporaries, of whom it would
seem that the most important record of their lives was this: “These were the
potters, and those that dwelt among plants and hedges: there they dwelt with
the king for his work” (1 Chronicles 4:23). They served an
earthly monarch; he a heavenly. Their business was among things frail and
perishing; his was with things unseen and eternal. Their arts and manufactures
have long since crumbled into dust. This prayer abides to bless the Church of
God until the end of time.
I. A concise
memoir--“And Jabez was more honourable than his brethren,” etc. The Scriptures
are full of these comprehensive, brief, but weighty texts which Luther was wont
to call “little Bibles.” “A man full of faith and of the Holy Ghost.” “Apelles
approved in Christ.” “He was a burning and a shining light.” “Of whom the world
was not worthy.” The genealogy in which the name of Jabez occurs is that of the
royal family of Judah. The compression of Scripture truth within its limited
area is one of the great miracles which belong to the structure of God’s Word.
It is said of Jabez that “he was more honourable than his brethren,” though
with a less honourable name. His mother had anticipated the hour of anguish
with unusual sadness, and she called him Jabez--that is “grief.” “When thou
wast born,” say the Easterns, “thou didst weep, and all about thee did rejoice;
so live, that when thou diest thou mayest rejoice, and all about thee may
weep.” We may consider this epithet “honourable” as applied to Jabez, from
either a secular or a spiritual point of view. In the former case it would mean
that integrity and uprightness pervaded all his actions, that in the business
of this world no impeachment could lie against his good name, that all his
undertakings would bear the most rigid scrutiny. Nor is it a matter of small
importance that those who profess to be the children of God should be
recognised by the men of the world as actuated by unscrupulous integrity. The
children in the marketplace very keenly scrutinise the conduct of those who
avow themselves to be Christians, and they expect, and not without reason, that
our code of morals should be superior to their own. But we may consider this
title conferred on Jabez as issuing from the court of heaven, and bestowed upon
him because of his eminence in the service of God.
II. A comprehensive
prayer. “And Jabez called on thor God of Israel, saying, Oh that Thou wouldest
bless me indeed, and enlarge my coast, and that Thine hand might be with me,
and that Thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” He was a
true prince in Israel, having power with God; and yet it is only one prayer of
his which has been preserved. One prayer, doubtless one of many, for it reveals
a mastery in the holy exerciser only attained by much practice. One prayer has
lifted a man out of the lowest depression to the loftiest summits of enjoyment.
It has expelled the dark tides of sorrow from the soul, and brought in proofs
of God’s love dearer than life itself. It has widened the channels of enjoyment
and filled them with inexhaustible supplies of delight.
1. He seeks the best blessings. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me
indeed.” He “covets earnestly the best gifts.” God Himself is the only fountain
and source of true blessedness. We should not, however, completely appreciate
this prayer if we do not notice that temporal things may become blessings
indeed. If we do not prefer the gift to the giver; if they are the means of
drawing us nearer to Him, then “all things work together for good.” It would
seem to have been the desire of Jabez to see his Heavenly Father’s smile
through all earthly conditions and in all Divine bestowments. And it is indeed
a true philosophy which determines respecting life and all its mutations that it
matters not so much what we get for our earthly lot, as how we get it. The
things which men most usually covet conspire to their hurt because they have
not God’s blessing.
2. He prays for an enlarged territory. “That Thou wouldest enlarge my
coast.” It appears probable that this Jabez was a younger son, and that he was
born at a time when the patrimony was well-nigh, exhausted. This would account
for the maternal solicitude which had conferred on him so dolorous a name. An
Israelite might indeed put up this prayer without misgiving, because every inch
of territory which he gained would be rescued from heathenism, and brought
within the confines of the Land of Promise. But war prefer to look at this
petition as a supplication for spiritual good. Every grace-taught man must
sympathise with this cry for room. Too often fettered and environed by
corruptions, cares, and infirmities, we feel the need of enlarged desires,
expanding affections, and uncontracted views of Divine realities. “The world of
the blind,” says Mr. Prescott, the historian, speaking from painful experience,
“is bounded by the length of the arm.” A blind world revolves in the narrow
orbit of things that can be touched. The gospel introduces its subjects into
the vast regions of things unseen and eternal, and bestows upon them that
“other sense” called faith, and confers the capacity of communion with the
Eternal. When will the Church of Christ adopt this portion of the prayer of
Jabez? “Oh that Thou wouldest enlarge my coast!” Too often we hear complaints
of demands too numerous, and solicitations that are wearisome.
3. He prays that the hand of God may be with him. The hand that
directs, supports, supplies, and chastens us. There can be nothing more
delightful to the child of God than the constant recognition of the fact that
his Father’s hand is pointing out for him the path of life.
4. He would be kept from evil.
“And
that Thou wouldest keep me from evil, that it may not grieve me.” Now we gain
more light on the suggestive name of this man. He was called
Jabez--“grief”--and it is evident that he was one of those who grieve over sin.
That is the greatest trouble of all good men. Not only from the wiles of Satan
and the snares of the world, but from our very selves we require the defence of
the Almighty arm.
III. The complete
answer. God granted him that which he requested. Throughout all Europe we have
seen in the Churches the votive garlands and offerings hung by the
superstitious at the shrines from whose patrons their relief is supposed to
have come. What a contrast between these tinselled trifles and the rich museum
which the Church of God possesses of grateful recollection and adoring praise
on the part of those who have prevailed at the throne of grace! He has a
treasure of great worth who can rejoice in a distinct answer to prayer. (W.
G. Lewis,)
The prayer of Jabez
We will without any formal divisions simply endeavour to travel
through the petitions offered up in this prayer of Jabez. First petition: “Oh
that Thou wouldest bless me.”
1. There are many apparent blessings that are real curses.
2. There are apparent curses which often are real blessings.
3. There are blessings which are beth apparent and real.
Second petition: “And enlarge my coast.” A coast means a boundary
line, such as divides one territory from another, or terminates a country, as
the sea-coast is the boundary of our island. Every quickened soul has a
coast--the territory of inward experience which is limited and bounded by the
line that the Holy Spirit has drawn in his conscience.
1. Some have a narrow experience, they cannot get beyond doubts and
fears, guilt and convictions, with at times earnest desires for mercy and
pardon.
2. Others have their coast a little more extended. They are enabled
to hope in God’s mercy, and anchor in His promises.
3. Others can through faith rest in Christ’s blood and righteousness,
having received some intimation of favour, but not brought into the liberty of
the gospel.
4. Others are brought into the life, light, liberty, joy and peace of
the gospel. The living soul cannot but earnestly desire to have his coast
enlarged. More light, more life, more liberty, more feeling, more knowledge of
God in Christ, more faith, hope, and love. To have his heart enlarged in
prayer--meditation--communion, in affection to the people of God. Third
petition: “And that Thy hand might be with me.” A living child wants to see and
feel a fatherly hand with him and over him, going before him temporally,
holding him up spiritually, clearing his path, and giving him testimonies that
what is done in his fear shall terminate in his approbation. Fourth petition:
“And that Thou wouldest keep me from evil.” It is a base representation of the
gospel of grace to say that it leads to licentiousness. Every child of God will
be more or less frequently offering up this prayer. Shun as you would a
pestilence any one who makes light of sin. Evil is a grief, a burden to every
living soul. (J. C. Philpot.)
The prayer of the warrior Jew
(Sermon to children):--In speaking to you about Jabez, I would say these four
things and ask you to remember them.
I. He was a humble
man. It is beautiful to be humble. All his trust is in God, he looks to Him
alone. He reminds us of Jehoshaphat (2 Chronicles 20:12).
II. He was a great
man. It is well to be great.
III. He was a kind
man. It is better to be kind. He was kind, I think, among other things, in that
he loved his mother.
IV. He was a good
man. It is best of all to be good. (J. R. MacDuff, D. D.)
The character and prayer of Jabez
I. His character.
“More honourable than his brethren.” He was more pious. Piety is honourable.
1. For by “humility and the fear of the Lord are riches, and honour,
and life.”
2. As it engages us in the most glorious employments.
3. As it interests us in the most glorious privileges.
4. As it interests us in the most glorious rewards.
II. His prayer.
Notice--
1. The object of his worship--“the God of Israel.” He was not an
idolater. He was grateful, he remembered God’s kindness to Israel. He confided
in God’s sufficiency.
2. The contents of his prayer, or what he asked. We, like Jabez,
ought to--
Jabez, the “honourable”
Some analogies suggested by the sea-coast may teach the following
lessons.
I. An enlarged
“coast” suggests an expanded horizon. Our spiritual relations determine whether
soul vision command outlook from a small bay, or toward broad ocean.
II. An enlarged
“coast” suggests a broader surface. The glory of a coast is its wide sweep of
the ocean. Such in figure is the human soul when possessed and enlarged by the
Spirit of God. What sublime possibilities of Divine enlargement belongs to the
heart of man!
III. An enlarged
“coast” suggests a more extended pathway. Sometimes a narrow strip of land forms
the only path when walking on the sea-coast. The enlarged pathway will secure--
1. Safety.
2. Peace. (The Study.)
The prayer of Jabez
The text implies more than it expresses. That there is a great
variety and distinction among men; some are more and some less honourable.
II. The offspring
of sorrow my become the parent of joy.
III. The best and
highest honour attaches to true religion.
IV. Though Jabez
(sorrow) is not the direct name of every one, yet sorrow is assuredly the lot
of all.
V. Prayer is the
appointment of God; He would have us pray always, and not faint.
VI. A blessing
indeed will be found to have three properties which serve to enhance its value.
1. It is given in covenant love.
2. It is well suited.
3. It is abiding.
VII. Protection by the
power of God and preservation in His way are momentous benefits.
VIII. Sin ever
grieves the heart of a good man.
IX. In regard to
property, it is lawful to seek addition and enlargement, if the will and glory
of God be duly regarded.
X. Answers granted
to prayer in time past, should encourage us to renew our application to the God
of our mercies.
XI. The hand of God
with any man is a certain pledge of prosperity.
XII. When faith and
fervour accompany our petitions, an answer of peace is near at hand. (Tract
Magazine.)
The lustre of a good man’s character
The occurrence of this text in the Book of Chronicles says far
more for Jabez than though it had appeared in a list of biographical sketches;
as, for instance, in Hebrews 11:1-40. We see as it were the
ancient scribe penning down upon his manuscript one name after another in
genealogical order, and with wonted precision; but arriving at this name he is
so deeply impressed by the holiness of the man, and the peculiarly consistent
character of his life, that when about to enrol his name in the annals of
Israel he feels obliged to forget the stern prescriptions of form; and flinging
aside under inspiration the proverbial stiffness of the genealogist, he becomes
the recorder not merely of a name, but of a saintly character withal, and thus
unwittingly confirms the important truth that the good man shines everywhere. (George
Venables.)
What is God’s blessing
In the midst of this wilderness of dry names, the dead leaves of a
long-gone past, we stumble by chance on a beautiful flower, lovely in form and
perfumed with precious and holy sentiment, a perfectly glad surprise amidst the
barrenness of mere enumeration.
1. How many and various are the meanings we attach to the word
“bless”! In the Bible we find God blessing men, and quite as frequently men
blessing God; God blessing man by pouring out upon him physical happiness and
physical prosperity; blessing him also by making him righteous and cleansing
him from sin. Man, on the other hand, is spoken of as blessing God for His
bounty and care, for His holy chastisement, for His merciful forgiveness. Again
we have men blessing one another and blessing themselves in the way of
self-congratulation. We find the word used likewise in a more formal and
superstitious way as though the pronouncing of it would entail its fulfilment
and become not only a prophecy but a pledge. Leaving Scripture we notice that
the term bless is in common use among ourselves in more senses than one. We
speak of persons as blessed with high talents, or with a noble position,
blessed with a large family or with good fortune; especially do we regard
health as a blessing and in most cases also long life.
2. The meaning of the word “bless” or “blessing” depends on the
person who uses the term, depends on his native character, surroundings,
training, his self-culture or his entire lack of it, his toilsome struggle
after virtue or his shameful familiarity with vice. You may be so debased as to
think that God’s blessing consists in letting you do exactly as you please,
however wicked it may be, without suffering the final consequences of
detection, or you may have a nature as lofty, as to regard as the best of God’s
blessings “a clean heart and a right spirit,” without which all other of His good gifts
would be but curses.
3. The prayer for increased prosperity is perfectly justifiable so
long as a man cares most of all to be kept from evil and sin. There is no harm
in praying for temporal prosperity, if we feel it to be any real relief to our
care and so long as we are ready to take God’s answer of “No” as willingly as
to receive an answer of “Yes.” God’s blessing indeed is to be kept from evil.
4. It is a grand test, ever ready at hand for deciding the most
subtle case of conscience, to look whether we can deliberately ask for God’s
blessing to rest upon it. (Charles Voysey, B. A.)
Prayer of the son of sorrow
I. The matter of
it, or the things asked for.
1. He begins by asking God to bless him. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless
me indeed.” He would want that blessing on himself personally, on his house,
and on all his avocations. He knew that the blessing of God maketh rich; and he
knew quite as well that nothing could really and permanently prosper without
that blessing.
2. He prays for enlargement. “And enlarge my coast.” Both temporal
and spiritual. Give me a larger heart; broader views of Thyself, of Thy ways,
and of Thy purposes; and a wider sphere of sympathy, influence, and usefulness.
“Thou hast enlarged me,” says the Psalmist, “when I was in distress,” And Paul,
when writing to the Corinthians, as to his children, pleadingly entreats, “Be
ye also enlarged.” It is neither pleasant nor advantageous to be cooped up
within narrow bounds.
3. He seeks Divine co-operation. “And that Thine hand may be with
me.” That Thy power may second and give effect to my poor energies. What can my
hand do without Thee? But Thine is the hand that has created and sustains the
universe.
4. He implores Divine protection. “And that Thou wouldest keep me
from evil, that it may not grieve me.”
II. The manner of
this prayer. “And Jabez called on the God of Israel, saying,” etc. We
altogether like the tone and spirit of this prayer.
1. There is the devout reverence of it. “Oh that Thou wouldest.” The
Divine name is not so much as mentioned. He knew he was coming to the God of
Israel, and that He is a great and holy and terrible God. And we can recognise
the cry of a heart too full of pious awe to allow His hallowed name to escape
the lips of the suppliant. This reverence should characterise all our approaches to
God.
2. There is the spiritual wisdom of it. Jabez puts things in their
right places; and what was for him the most important thing, first. Nothing
could, in his esteem, antedate the blessing of God; hence he will put that
first. “Oh that Thou wouldest bless me indeed.” And was he not perfectly right
in this? Did it matter what God gave him if He withheld that blessing from him?
3. There are the speciality and comprehensiveness of it. It takes a
wide sweep, and yet does not lose sight of what is most specific and
particular.
4. At the same time there is the brevity of it. So specific, so
comprehensive, and yet so brief. Assuredly Jabez recognised the solemn fact that
God is in heaven, and man upon the earth, and therefore that his words should
be few.
5. There is the earnestness of it. “Oh that,” etc. It comes directly
out of his heart, and breathes the very spirit of desire.
6. There is the faith which inspired it, and which runs through it
like a living soul. This man in coming to God believes that He is, and that He
is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.
III. The success of
this prayer. “And God granted him that which he requested.”
1. That he has come to a God who is as ready to give as He is to ask.
2. That he has come to a God who is as comprehensive in His gifts as
He is in His desires.
3. That he has come to a God who never forgets His promises to those
that seek Him.
4. That he has come to a God who will honour those with His
benefactions who honour Him with their confidence and trust. Allow me, then, to
propose Jabez to you as an example, and Jabez’s prayer as a model prayer. You
have the same God to go to, and you have far greater light to guide you to Him
than Jabez had. You have all gospel promises to encourage you. You have the new
and living way
thrown open to you. You have the Holy Spirit to teach and help you. You have
the great Advocate to plead for you. (The Church.)
Verses 14, 21, 23. For they
were craftsmen . . . that wrought
fine linen . . . those
that dwelt among plants.--
Craftsmen, potters, etc.
If all men affected one and the same trade of life or pleasure or
recreation, it were not possible they could live one by another; neither could
there be any use of commerce, whereby life is maintained. It is good reason we
should make a right use of this gracious dispensation of the Almighty, that we
should improve our several dispositions and faculties to the advancing of the
common stock, and that we should neither encroach upon each other’s profession
nor be apt to censure each other’s recreation. (Bishop Hall.)
Origin and use of arts and inventions
I. Useful arts
emanate from the wisdom and goodness of god.
II. Useful arts are
beneficial in their tendency.
III. Therefore all
engaged in useful arts promote the welfare of society. (James Wolfendale.)
Verse 22
And these are ancient things.
Ancient things
The ancient is no use except it be also modern. This is the true
test of antiquity. Things are not valuable simply because they are ancient;
they may be ancient and dead. We have nothing to do with that kind of
antiquity--it is the antiquity of mythology, not of history.
1. All the greatest things are ancient. All you can do is to
modernise their form. The telegraph is older than the garden of Eden--not under
that name: nothing new has been invented, except combination, adaptation; all
the elements and factors are as old as God.
2. Where usefulness is proved antiquity becomes an argument and an
illustration. This is the true root and the true use of history. Where
usefulness has not been proved, to refer to antiquity is to invoke the
sophistical assistance of superstition. We must insist on living usefulness. We
must not prop up tottering walls because the copestones are covered with grey
moss. This doctrine of the usefulness of antiquity must be applied ruthlessly:
3. Antiquity without Christianity dies. Any civilisation that has not
in it the living spirit, the living God, dies. What is the proof? History is
the elucidation and history is the evidence. Civilisation will be of no use to
you when you lose the risen Christ. Non-spiritual civilisation is useless. Look
at China--aa infinite death--the hermit of the globe--a living extinction.
China was printing from type five hundred years before Caxton was born; she had
the mariner’s compass before England was a nation. There was a time when our
forefathers were clothed in sheepskins, when they dyed and painted their whole
bodies; and at that time the Chinese were blasting their rocks with gunpowder.
Before Daniel saw his visions China had a constitutional government. Then what
makes China, this great cipher of the globe, a burden to civilisation? Because
its civilisation is only ancient; she has not the Cross. Without that all
things tend to decay. Greek--Roman--European civilisation have all gone down in
the proportion in which they were not vitally connected with the Cross. (J.
Parker, D. D.)
Verse 23
There they dwelt with the king for his work.
With the King for His work
(A motto for Sunday school teachers.) Work done well, however
common, is accounted worthy of its wage, but work done for royalty generally
has some special attraction to commend it. Such a man is privileged by
appointment to be purveyor of this or that to her Majesty the Queen; and he
takes good care to let us know it. It is published in his shop window. It is
painted on his sign over the door. He is, “By appointment to the Queen.”
Royalty seems to dignify him. Looking at my text I see three or four
observations springing from it.
I. Our King has
many kinds of servants.
1. Soldiers. It is their duty to contend earnestly for the faith once
delivered to the saints.
2. Watchmen.
3. Heralds.
4. Scribes.
5. Musicians.
6. Potters.
These may supply a very good emblem of Sunday school teachers. The
potters take the clay while it is pliable and soft, and put it on the wheel and
make the wheel revolve, and then with thumb and finger fashion the clay as it
revolves before them. If ever at any time the human mind is plastic it is while
the child is young.
7. Gardeners.
This is just what a Sunday school teacher should be. He tries to
get the plants out from the wild waste and bring them into the “garden walled
around.” He knows that the Church is the garden of the Lord and he longs to
plant many little slips in it.
II. All who live
with our King must work. I have thought that some of our Church members
imagined that the cause of Christ was a coach, and that they were to ride on
it, and that they would prefer the box-seat, or else a very comfortable seat in
the middle of the coach. But all who live with our King must work.
1. Because He works.
2. Because His company always inspires us with the desire to do
something for Him.
3. Because there is so much to do that you cannot help doing
something.
III. Those that work
for our King ought to live with Him.
1. That they may gather strength. In the old fable, when Hercules
fought with the giant he could not kill him. He flung him down with all his
might, but every time the giant got up stronger than before. The old fable said
that the earth was the giant’s mother, and every time that he fell he touched
her and got new strength from her. So every time a Christian falls on his
knees--draws near to God--he gets new strength.
2. To keep up their enthusiasm.
3. That they may be inspired with courage.
4. If they would cultivate the soft grace of patience.
IV. That which
should reconcile us to any work is, that we are working for the King. (C.
H. Spurgeon.)
Certain members of the royal household
It is a matter of very common occurrence in this world, in forming
our estimates of men and things, to ignore altogether the real and constant
contributors to success, and to look only at him or them who represent the
success. The commander of an ocean steamer is the person whose name is printed,
who meets the public eye, and possesses the public confidence; the men who
sweat and pant down deep in the ship before the hot and roaring fires, the men
who climb the icy rigging, who with stiffening limbs battle with the frozen
sails, and watch hour after hour amid cold and darkness for danger, are never
thought of. We see the victorious leader of armies surrounded in the hour of
triumph by a brilliant staff, while multitudes shout and cheer. How few ever
think at such a time of the thousands of silent graves where men lie who paid
the costly price of life for this hour of their leader’s triumph!
Because the world judges usually in this way the strong contrast of the text
strikes us. The royal household is not alone the king with his victorious
generals and stately nobles, but the potters and the dwellers or workers among
plants and hedges. Our text teaches us--
I. That none are
ignored, despised, or forgotten in the royal household of our King because of
the apparent insignificance of the position they fill. The work of the Church
analagous to that of the potters and hedgers is not in favour. Only a few are
willing to do the humble and necessary work of the Church.
II. That the
recognition of the value of labour of the humble workers is just as sure, and
reward just as certain, as of that which is most prominent. In the service of
the King of kings there is no respecting of persons. It is not the position but
the work accomplished that obtains consideration from Him. The name of Luther,
or even of Paul, is of no account before Him, nor the office of reformer or
apostle, only as meaning mighty labour accomplished in and for the Church. The
Hudson may be of far more importance to the country because of its deeper
channel, broader bosom, than a little brook that meanders through the meadows
of some country valley. One is a broad highway, bearing much of the commerce of
great States; the other gives grass to the meadows, drink to cattle, and beauty
to the landscape; but surely the Hudson is entitled to no more praise for being what it is than
the brook for being what it is. No occupation that is right, however mean, can
debar us from dwelling with our Lord. We see constantly earthern pots, of very
little value in themselves, crowned with the sweetest, the most beautiful, the
rarest flowers and plants. Cheap as the red clay is, it is about the only
material that could be used. One great value is its cheapness; another is, that
plants, with a singular want of taste, would refuse to flourish in pots of
silver or gold; their very density and want of porosity render them nearly
valueless for this purpose. Just so the very humbleness of work renders some
peculiarly fitted to do it. Conclusion:
1. Here we have encouragement for all the Lord’s workers, in
2. Here we may find reason for warm sympathy with all the workers of
our King. (Henry W. F. Jones.)
Working for the King
I. How work links
men to kings. There are many wrong ideas in the world about labour. Not a few
people try to bring up their children without it, and you will see a man toil
early and late to make money, getting no enjoyment out of it himself, and when
you get at the reason it is that he may make his son a gentleman, which means,
someone who can live without work. This is not according to the Divine idea: “My
Father worketh hitherto, and I work.” It was not for nothing that Christ toiled
at the carpenter’s bench. If you were to take out of the Bible all the stories
of men who worked for their living, you would rob it of its greatest beauty.
The men and women who work, whether with brain or hand, or both, are the people
who save a nation from ruin. What is a man’s religion worth if it does not
teach him to labour? Are we not to work out our own salvation, and that for the
best of reasons, “It is God that worketh in us.” The sunshine and the rain are
useless to the
fields that have not been tilled. He who has no plough needs not to trouble to
sharpen his scythe. Bibles and sermons to the idle are not, cannot be,
appreciated, and Sabbaths are but a weariness to the man who does no kind of
Christian work. Do not mistake
yourself for a Christian because you like some popular preacher; it is on the
same principle that wasps like honey, but they will rather starve than make it.
You would not have heard of these men if they had not worked. Their toil has bound up their life
with the king’s life. Why should you not act so that the story of God cannot be
fully told without your name being mentioned?
II. Kings need
different kinds of workers. There is a sense in which God needs us and cannot
carry out His plans without us. Whatever your talent there is room for you. Not
only genius, but dogged drudgery. We want the artist to paint the picture, and
the workman to frame it; the author to write the book, and the printer to give
it to the world. How true it is that no one man can do all that needs to be done, even with his
own gifts. Does the gardener wish to send in a choice rose he has just cut?
Does he wish his rose to stand on the king’s table? Then he must have the help of the potter. He
must have one of his vases. (Thomas Champness.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》