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+Project Gutenberg's Expositions of Holy Scripture, by Alexander Maclaren
+[Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers]
+
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+Title: Expositions of Holy Scripture
+ Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus and Numbers
+
+Author: Alexander Maclaren
+
+Release Date: December, 2004 [EBook #7069]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on March 5, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: Latin-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE ***
+
+
+
+
+This eBook was produced by Anne Folland, Charles Franks and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team
+
+
+
+
+EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE
+
+ALEXANDER MACLAREN, D. D., Litt. D.
+
+GENESIS, EXODUS, LEVITICUS AND NUMBERS
+
+
+
+
+EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE
+
+ALEXANDER MACLAREN, D. D., Litt. D.
+
+GENESIS
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+THE VISION OF CREATION (Genesis i. 26--ii. 3)
+
+HOW SIN CAME IN (Genesis iii. 1-15)
+
+EDEN LOST AND RESTORED (Genesis iii. 24; Revelation xxii. 14)
+
+THE GROWTH AND POWER OF SIN (Genesis iv. 3-16)
+
+WHAT CROUCHES AT THE DOOR (Genesis iv. 7, R.V.)
+
+WITH, BEFORE, AFTER (Genesis v. 22; Genesis xvii. 1;
+Deuteronomy xiii. 4)
+
+THE COURSE AND CROWN OF A DEVOUT LIFE (Genesis v. 24)
+
+THE SAINT AMONG SINNERS (Genesis vi. 9-22)
+
+'CLEAR SHINING AFTER RAIN' (Genesis viii. 1-22)
+
+THE SIGN FOR MAN AND THE REMEMBRANCER FOR GOD (Genesis ix. 8-17)
+
+AN EXAMPLE OF FAITH (Genesis xii. 1-9)
+
+ABRAM AND THE LIFE OF FAITH
+
+GOING FORTH (Genesis xii. 5)
+
+COMING IN
+
+THE MAN OF FAITH (Genesis xii. 6, 7)
+
+LIFE IN CANAAN (Genesis xii. 8)
+
+THE IMPORTANCE OF A CHOICE (Genesis xiii. 1-13)
+
+ABBAM THE HEBREW (Genesis xiv. 13)
+
+GOD'S COVENANT WITH ABRAM (Genesis xv. 5-18)
+
+THE WORD THAT SCATTERS FEAR (Genesis xv. 1)
+
+FAITH AND RIGHTEOUSNESS (Genesis xv. 6)
+
+WAITING FAITH REWARDED AND STRENGTHENED BY NEW REVELATIONS
+(Genesis xvii. 1-9)
+
+A PETULANT WISH (Genesis xvii. 18)
+
+'BECAUSE OF HIS IMPORTUNITY' (Genesis xviii. l6-33)
+
+THE INTERCOURSE OF GOD AND HIS FRIEND
+
+THE SWIFT DESTROYER (Genesis xix. 15-26)
+
+FAITH TESTED AND CROWNED (Genesis xxii. 1-14)
+
+THE CROWNING TEST AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH
+
+JEHOVAH-JIREH (Genesis xxii. 14)
+
+GUIDANCE IN THE WAY (Genesis xxiv. 27)
+
+THE DEATH OF ABRAHAM (Genesis xxv. 8)
+
+A BAD BARGAIN (Genesis xxv. 27-34)
+
+POTTAGE _versus_ BIRTHRIGHT (Genesis xxv. 34)
+
+THE FIRST APOSTLE OF PEACE AT ANY PRICE (Genesis xxvi. 12-25)
+
+THE HEAVENLY PATHWAY AND THE EARTHLY HEART (Genesis xxviii. 10-22)
+
+MAHANAIM: THE TWO CAMPS (Genesis xxxii. 1, 2)
+
+THE TWOFOLD WRESTLE--GOD'S WITH JACOB AND JACOB'S WITH GOD
+(Genesis xxxii. 9-12)
+
+A FORGOTTEN VOW (Genesis xxxv. 1)
+
+THE TRIALS AND VISIONS OF DEVOUT YOUTH (Genesis xxxvii. 1-11)
+
+MAN'S PASSIONS AND GOD'S PURPOSE (Genesis xxxvii. 23-36)
+
+GOODNESS IN A DUNGEON (Genesis xl. 1-15)
+
+JOSEPH, THE PRIME MINISTER (Genesis xli. 38-48)
+
+RECOGNITION AND RECONCILIATION (Genesis xlv. 1-15)
+
+JOSEPH, THE PARDONER AND PRESERVER
+
+GROWTH BY TRANSPLANTING (Genesis xlvii. 1-12)
+
+TWO RETROSPECTS OF ONE LIFE (Genesis xlvii. 9; Genesis xlviii. 15, 16)
+
+'THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB' (Genesis xlix. 23, 24)
+
+THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL (Genesis xlix. 24)
+
+A CALM EVENING, PROMISING A BRIGHT MORNING (Genesis l. 14-26)
+
+JOSEPH'S FAITH (Genesis l. 25)
+
+A COFFIN IN EGYPT (Genesis l. 26)
+
+
+
+
+ THE VISION OF CREATION
+
+
+ 'And God said, Let us make man in our image, after our
+ likeness; and let them have dominion over the fish of
+ the sea, and over the fowl of the air, and over the
+ cattle, and over all the earth, and over every creeping
+ thing that creepeth upon the earth. So God created man
+ in His own image: in the image of God created He him;
+ male and female created He them. And God blessed them:
+ and God said unto them, Be fruitful, and multiply, and
+ replenish the earth, and subdue it; and have dominion
+ over the fish of the sea, and over the fowl of the air,
+ and over every living thing that moveth upon the earth.
+ And God said, Behold, I have given you every herb bearing
+ seed, which is upon the face of all the earth, and every
+ tree, in the which is the fruit of a tree yielding seed;
+ to you it shall be for meat. And to every beast of the
+ earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing
+ that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life, I
+ have given every green herb for meat: and it was so. And
+ God saw every thing that He had made, and, behold, it
+ was very good. And the evening and the morning were the
+ sixth day.
+
+ 'Thus the heavens and the earth were finished, and all
+ the host of them. And on the seventh day God ended His
+ work which He had made; and He rested on the seventh day
+ from all His work which He had made. And God blessed the
+ seventh day, and sanctified it; because that in it He
+ had rested from all His work which God created and made.'
+ --GENESIS i. 26-ii. 3.
+
+We are not to look to Genesis for a scientific cosmogony, and are
+not to be disturbed by physicists' criticisms on it as such. Its
+purpose is quite another, and far more important; namely, to imprint
+deep and ineffaceable the conviction that the one God created all
+things. Nor must it be forgotten that this vision of creation was
+given to people ignorant of natural science, and prone to fall back
+into surrounding idolatry. The comparison of the creation narratives
+in Genesis with the cuneiform tablets, with which they evidently are
+most closely connected, has for its most important result the
+demonstration of the infinite elevation above their monstrosities
+and puerilities, of this solemn, steadfast attribution of the
+creative act to the one God. Here we can only draw out in brief the
+main points which the narrative brings into prominence.
+
+1. The revelation which it gives is the truth, obscured to all other
+men when it was given, that one God 'in the beginning created the
+heaven and the earth.' That solemn utterance is the keynote of the
+whole. The rest but expands it. It was a challenge and a denial for
+all the beliefs of the nations, the truth of which Israel was the
+champion and missionary. It swept the heavens and earth clear of the
+crowd of gods, and showed the One enthroned above, and operative in,
+all things. We can scarcely estimate the grandeur, the emancipating
+power, the all-uniting force, of that utterance. It is a worn
+commonplace to us. It was a strange, thrilling novelty when it was
+written at the head of this narrative. _Then_ it was in sharp
+opposition to beliefs that have long been dead to us; but it is
+still a protest against some living errors. Physical science has not
+spoken the final word when it has shown us how things came to be as
+they are. There remains the deeper question, What, or who,
+originated and guided the processes? And the only answer is the
+ancient declaration, 'In the beginning God created the heaven and
+the earth.'
+
+2. The record is as emphatic and as unique in its teaching as to the
+mode of creation: 'God said ... and it was so.' That lifts us above
+all the poor childish myths of the nations, some of them disgusting,
+many of them absurd, all of them unworthy. There was no other agency
+than the putting forth of the divine will. The speech of God is but
+a symbol of the flashing forth of His will. To us Christians the
+antique phrase suggests a fulness of meaning not inherent in it, for
+we have learned to believe that 'all things were made by Him' whose
+name is 'The Word of God'; but, apart from that, the representation
+here is sublime. 'He spake, and it was done'; that is the sign-
+manual of Deity.
+
+3. The completeness of creation is emphasised. We note, not only the
+recurrent 'and it was so,' which declares the perfect correspondence
+of the result with the divine intention, but also the recurring 'God
+saw that it was good.' His ideals are always realised. The divine
+artist never finds that the embodiment of His thought falls short of
+His thought.
+
+ 'What act is all its thought had been?
+ What will but felt the fleshly screen?
+
+But He has no hindrances nor incompletenesses in His creative work,
+and the very sabbath rest with which the narrative closes
+symbolises, not His need of repose, but His perfect accomplishment
+of His purpose. God ceases from His works because 'the works were
+finished,' and He saw that all was very good.
+
+4. The progressiveness of the creative process is brought into
+strong relief. The work of the first four days is the preparation of
+the dwelling-place for the living creatures who are afterwards
+created to inhabit it. How far the details of these days' work
+coincide with the order as science has made it out, we are not
+careful to ask here. The primeval chaos, the separation of the
+waters above from the waters beneath, the emergence of the land, the
+beginning of vegetation there, the shining out of the sun as the
+dense mists cleared, all find confirmation even in modern theories
+of evolution. But the intention of the whole is much rather to teach
+that, though the simple utterance of the divine will was the agent
+of creation, the manner of it was not a sudden calling of the world,
+as men know it, into being, but majestic, slow advance by stages,
+each of which rested on the preceding. To apply the old distinction
+between justification and sanctification, creation was a work, not
+an act. The Divine Workman, who is always patient, worked slowly
+then as He does now. Not at a leap, but by deliberate steps, the
+divine ideal attains realisation.
+
+5. The creation of living creatures on the fourth and fifth days is
+so arranged as to lead up to the creation of man as the climax. On
+the fifth day sea and air are peopled, and their denizens 'blessed,'
+for the equal divine love holds every living thing to its heart. On
+the sixth day the earth is replenished with living creatures. Then,
+last of all, comes man, the apex of creation. Obviously the purpose
+of the whole is to concentrate the light on man; and it is a matter
+of no importance whether the narrative is correct according to
+zoology, or not. What it says is that God made all the universe,
+that He prepared the earth for the delight of living creatures, that
+the happy birds that soar and sing, and the dumb creatures that move
+through the paths of the seas, and the beasts of the earth, are all
+His creating, and that man is linked to them, being made on the same
+day as the latter, and by the same word, but that between man and
+them all there is a gulf, since he is made in the divine image. That
+image implies personality, the consciousness of self, the power to
+say 'I,' as well as purity. The transition from the work of the
+first four days to that of creating living things must have had a
+break. No theory has been able to bridge the chasm without admitting
+a divine act introducing the new element of life, and none has been
+able to bridge the gulf between the animal and human consciousness
+without admitting a divine act introducing 'the image of God' into
+the nature common to animal and man. Three facts as to humanity are
+thrown up into prominence: its possession of the image of God, the
+equality and eternal interdependence of the sexes, and the lordship
+over all creatures. Mark especially the remarkable wording of verse 27:
+'created He _him_ male and female created He _them_.' So 'neither is
+the woman without the man, nor the man without the woman.' Each is
+maimed apart from the other. Both stand side by side, on one level
+before God. The germ of the most 'advanced' doctrines of the relations
+of the sexes is hidden here.
+
+
+
+
+HOW SIN CAME IN
+
+
+ 'Now the serpent was more subtil than any beast of the
+ field which the Lord God had made. And he said unto the
+ woman, Yea, hath God said, Ye shall not eat of every tree
+ of the garden? And the woman said unto the serpent, We
+ may eat of the fruit of the trees of the garden: But of
+ the fruit of the tree which is in the midst of the
+ garden, God hath said, Ye shall not eat of it, neither
+ shall ye touch it, lest ye die. And the serpent said
+ unto the woman, Ye shall not surely die: For God doth
+ know, that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes
+ shall be opened; and ye shall be as gods, knowing good
+ and evil. And when the woman saw that the tree was good
+ for food, and that it was pleasant to the eyes, and a
+ tree to be desired to make one wise, she took of the
+ fruit thereof, and did eat; and gave also unto her
+ husband with her, and he did eat. And the eyes of them
+ both were opened, and they knew that they were naked;
+ and they sewed fig-leaves together, and made themselves
+ aprons. And they heard the voice of the Lord God walking
+ in the garden in the cool of the day: and Adam and his
+ wife hid themselves from the presence of the Lord God
+ amongst the trees of the garden. And the Lord God called
+ unto Adam, and said unto him, Where art thou? And he
+ said, I heard Thy voice in the garden, and I was afraid,
+ because I was naked; and I hid myself. And He said, Who
+ told thee that thou wast naked? Hast thou eaten of the
+ tree, whereof I commanded thee that thou shouldest not
+ eat And the man said, The woman whom Thou gavest to be
+ with me, she gave me of the tree, and I did eat. And the
+ Lord God said unto the woman, What is this that thou hast
+ done? and the woman said, The serpent beguiled me, and I
+ did eat. And the Lord God said onto the serpent. Because
+ thou hast done this, thou art cursed above all cattle,
+ and above every beast of the field: upon thy belly shalt
+ thou go, and dust shalt thou eat all the days of thy
+ life. And I will put enmity between thee and the woman,
+ and between thy seed and her seed: it shall bruise thy
+ head, and thou shalt bruise his heel.'--GENESIS iii 1-15.
+
+It is no part of my purpose to enter on the critical questions
+connected with the story of 'the fall.' Whether it is a legend,
+purified and elevated, or not, is of less consequence than what is
+its moral and religious significance, and that significance is
+unaffected by the answer to the former question. The story
+presupposes that primitive man was in a state of ignorant innocence,
+not of intellectual or moral perfection, and it tells how that
+ignorant innocence came to pass into conscious sin. What are the
+stages of the transition?
+
+1. There is the presentation of inducement to evil. The law to which
+Adam is to be obedient is in the simplest form. There is
+restriction. 'Thou shalt not' is the first form of law, and it is a
+form congruous with the undeveloped, though as yet innocent, nature
+ascribed to him. The conception of duty is present, though in a very
+rudimentary shape. An innocent being may be aware of limitations,
+though as yet not 'knowing good and evil.' With deep truth the story
+represents the first suggestion of disobedience as presented from
+without. No doubt, it might have by degrees arisen from within, but
+the thought that it was imported from another sphere of being
+suggests that it is alien to true manhood, and that, if brought in
+from without, it may be cast out again. And the temptation had a
+personal source. There are beings who desire to draw men away from
+God. The serpent, by its poison and its loathly form, is the natural
+symbol of such an enemy of man. The insinuating slyness of the
+suggestions of evil is like the sinuous gliding of the snake, and
+truly represents the process by which temptation found its way into
+the hearts of the first pair, and of all their descendants. For it
+begins with casting a doubt on the reality of the prohibition. 'Hath
+God said?' is the first parallel opened by the besieger. The
+fascinations of the forbidden fruit are not dangled at first before
+Eve, but an apparently innocent doubt is filtered into her ear. And
+is not that the way in which we are still snared? The reality of
+moral distinctions, the essential wrongness of the sin, is obscured
+by a mist of sophistication. 'There is no harm in it' steals into
+some young man's or woman's mind about things that were forbidden at
+home, and they are half conquered before they know that they have
+been attacked. Then comes the next besieger's trench, much nearer
+the wall--namely, denial of the fatal consequences of the sin: 'Ye
+shall not surely die,' and a base hint that the prohibition was
+meant, not as a parapet to keep from falling headlong into the
+abyss, but as a barrier to keep from rising to a great good; 'for
+God doth know, that in the day ye eat thereof, then your eyes shall
+be opened, and ye shall be as gods.' These are still the two lies
+which wile us to sin: 'It will do you no harm,' and 'You are
+cheating yourselves out of good by not doing it.'
+
+2. Then comes the yielding to the tempter. As long as the
+prohibition was undoubted, and the fatal results certain, the
+fascinations of the forbidden thing were not felt. But as soon as
+these were tampered with, Eve saw 'that the tree was good for food,
+and that it was a delight to the eyes.' So it is still. Weaken the
+awe-inspiring sense of God's command, and of the ruin that follows
+the breach of it, and the heart of man is like a city without walls,
+into which any enemy can march unhindered. So long as God's 'Thou
+shalt not, lest thou die' rings in the ears, the eyes see little
+beauty in the sirens that sing and beckon. But once that awful voice
+is deadened, they charm, and allure to dally with them.
+
+In the undeveloped condition of primitive man temptation could only
+assail him through the senses and appetites, and its assault would
+be the more irresistible because reflection and experience were not
+yet his. But the act of yielding was, as sin ever is, a deliberate
+choice to please self and disobey God. The woman's more emotional,
+sensitive, compliant nature made her the first victim, and her
+greatest glory, her craving to share her good with him whom she
+loves, and her power to sway his will and acts, made her his
+temptress. 'As the husband is, the wife is,' says Tennyson; but the
+converse is even truer: As the wife is, the man is.
+
+3. The fatal consequences came with a rush. There is a gulf between
+being tempted and sinning, but the results of the sin are closely
+knit to it. They come automatically, as surely as a stream from a
+fountain. The promise of knowing good and evil was indeed kept, but
+instead of its making the sinners 'like gods,' it showed them that
+they were like beasts, and brought the first sense of shame. To know
+evil was, no doubt, a forward step intellectually; but to know it by
+experience, and as part of themselves, necessarily changed their
+ignorant innocence into bitter knowledge, and conscience awoke to
+rebuke them. The first thing that their opened eyes saw was
+themselves, and the immediate result of the sight was the first
+blush of shame. Before, they had walked in innocent unconsciousness,
+like angels or infants; now they had knowledge of good and evil,
+because their sin had made evil a part of themselves, and the
+knowledge was bitter.
+
+The second consequence of the fall is the disturbed relation with
+God, which is presented in the highly symbolical form fitting for
+early ages, and as true and impressive for the twentieth century as
+for them. Sin broke familiar communion with God, turned Him into a
+'fear and a dread,' and sent the guilty pair into ambush. Is not
+that deeply and perpetually true? The sun seen through mists becomes
+a lurid ball of scowling fire. The impulse is to hide from God, or
+to get rid of thoughts of Him. And when He _is_ felt to be
+near, it is as a questioner, bringing sin to mind. The shuffling
+excuses, which venture even to throw the blame of sin on God ('the
+woman whom _Thou_ gavest me'), or which try to palliate it as a
+mistake ('the serpent beguiled me'), have to come at last, however
+reluctantly, to confess that 'I' did the sin. Each has to say, 'I
+did eat.' So shall we all have to do. We may throw the blame on
+circumstances, weakness of judgment, and the like, while here, but
+at God's bar we shall have to say, '_Mea_ culpa, _mea_ culpa.'
+
+The curse pronounced on the serpent takes its habit and form as an
+emblem of the degradation of the personal tempter, and of the
+perennial antagonism between him and mankind, while even at that
+first hour of sin and retribution a gleam of hope, like the stray
+beam that steals through a gap in a thundercloud, promises that the
+conquered shall one day be the conqueror, and that the woman's seed,
+though wounded in the struggle, shall one day crush the poison-
+bearing, flat head in the dust, and end forever his power to harm.
+'Known unto God are all his works from the beginning,' and the
+Christ was promised ere the gates of Eden were shut on the exiles.
+
+
+
+
+EDEN LOST AND RESTORED
+
+
+ 'So He drove out the man: and He placed at the east of
+ the garden of Eden cherubims and a flaming sword which
+ turned every way, to keep the way of the tree of life.'
+ --GENESIS iii. 24.
+
+ 'Blessed are they that do His commandments, that they
+ may have right to the tree of life, and may enter in
+ through the gates into the city.'
+ REVELATION xxii. 14.
+
+Better is the end of a thing than the beginning.' Eden was fair, but
+the heavenly city shall be fairer. The Paradise regained is an
+advance on the Paradise that was lost. These are the two ends of the
+history of man, separated by who knows how many millenniums. Heaven
+lay about him in his infancy, but as he journeyed westwards its
+morning blush faded into the light of common day--and only at
+eventide shall the sky glow again with glory and colour, and the
+western heaven at last outshine the eastern, with a light that shall
+never die. A fall, and a rise--a rise that reverses the fall, a rise
+that transcends the glory from which he fell,--that is the Bible's
+notion of the history of the world, and I, for my part, believe it
+to be true, and feel it to be the one satisfactory explanation of
+what I see round about me and am conscious of within me.
+
+1. _Man had an Eden and lost it._
+
+I take the Fall to be a historical fact. To all who accept the
+authority of Scripture, no words are needed beyond the simple
+statement before us, but we may just gather up the signs that there
+are on the wide field of the world's history, and in the narrower
+experience of individuals, that such a fall has been.
+
+Look at the condition of the world: its degradation, its savagery-all
+its pining myriads, all its untold millions who sit in darkness
+and the shadow of death. Will any man try to bring before him the
+actual state of the heathen world, and, retaining his belief in a
+God, profess that these men are what God meant men to be? It seems
+to me that the present condition of the world is not congruous with
+the idea that men are in their primitive state, and if this is what
+God meant men for, then I see not how the dark clouds which rest on
+His wisdom and His love are to be lifted off.
+
+Then, again--if the world has not a Fall in its history, then we
+must take the lowest condition as the one from which all have come;
+and is that idea capable of defence? Do we see anywhere signs of an
+upward process going on now? Have we any experience of a tribe
+raising itself? Can you catch anywhere a race in the act of
+struggling up, outside of the pale of Christianity? Is not the
+history of all a history of decadence, except only where the Gospel
+has come in to reverse the process?
+
+But passing from this: What mean the experiences of the individual-these
+longings; this hard toil; these sorrows?
+
+How comes it that man alone on earth, manifestly meant to be leader,
+lord, etc., seems but cursed with a higher nature that he may know
+greater sorrows, and raised above the beasts in capacity that he may
+sink below them in woe, this capacity only leading to a more
+exquisite susceptibility, to a more various as well as more poignant
+misery?
+
+Whence come the contrarieties and discordance in his nature?
+
+It seems to me that all this is best explained as the Bible explains
+it by saying: (1) Sin has done it; (2) Sin is not part of God's
+original design, but man has fallen; (3) Sin had a personal
+beginning. There have been men who were pure, able to stand but free
+to fall.
+
+It seems to me that that explanation is more in harmony with the
+facts of the case, finds more response in the unsophisticated
+instinct of man, than any other. It seems to me that, though it
+leaves many dark and sorrowful mysteries all unsolved, yet that it
+alleviates the blackest of them, and flings some rays of hope on
+them all. It seems to me that it relieves the character and
+administration of God from the darkest dishonour; that it delivers
+man's position and destiny from the most hopeless despair; that
+though it leaves the mystery of the origin of evil, it brings out
+into clearest relief the central truths that evil is evil, and sin
+and sorrow are not God's will; that it vindicates as something
+better than fond imaginings the vague aspirations of the soul for a
+fair and holy state; that it establishes, as nothing else will, at
+once the love of God and the dignity of man; that it leaves open the
+possibility of the final overthrow of that Sin which it treats as an
+intrusion and stigmatises as a fall; that it therefore braces for
+more vigorous, hopeful conflict against it, and that while but for
+it the answer to the despairing question, Hast Thou made all men in
+vain? must be either the wailing echo 'In vain,' or the denial that
+He has made them at all, there is hope and there is power, and there
+is brightness thrown on the character of God and on the fate of man,
+by the old belief that God made man upright, and that man made
+himself a sinner.
+
+2. _Heaven restores the lost Eden_.
+
+'God is not ashamed to be called their God, _for_ He hath
+prepared them a _city_.'
+
+The highest conception we can form of heaven is the reversal of all
+the evil of earth, and the completion of its incomplete good: the
+sinless purity--the blessed presence of God--the fulfilment of all
+desires--the service which is _blessed_, not toil--the changelessness
+which is progress, not stagnation.
+
+3. _Heaven surpasses the lost Eden_.
+
+(1) Garden--City.
+
+The perfection of association--the _nations_ of the saved. Here
+'we mortal millions live alone,' even when united with dearest. Like
+Egyptian monks of old, each dwelling in his own cave, though all
+were a community.
+
+(2) The richer experience.
+
+The memory of past sorrows which are understood at last.
+
+Heaven's bliss in contrast with earthly joys.
+
+Sinlessness of those who have been sinners will be more intensely
+lustrous for its dark background in the past. Redeemed men will be
+brighter than angels.
+
+The impossibility of a fall.
+
+Death behind us.
+
+The former things shall no more come to mind, being lost in blaze of
+present transcendent experience, but yet shall be remembered as
+having led to that perfect state.
+
+Christ not only repairs the 'tabernacle which was fallen,' but
+builds a fairer temple. He brings 'a statelier Eden,' and makes us
+dwell for ever in a Garden City.
+
+
+
+
+THE GROWTH AND POWER OF SIN
+
+
+ 'And in process of time it came to pass, that Cain brought
+ of the fruit of the ground an offering unto the Lord. And
+ Abel, he also brought of the firstlings of his flock, and
+ of the fat thereof. And the Lord had respect unto Abel,
+ and to his offering: But unto Cain, and to his offering,
+ he had not respect. And Cain was very wroth, and his
+ countenance fell. And the Lord said unto Cain, Why art
+ thou wroth? and why is thy countenance fallen? If thou
+ doest well, shalt thou not be accepted? and if thou doest
+ not well, sin lieth at the door. And unto thee shall be
+ his desire, and thou shalt rule over him. And Cain talked
+ with Abel his brother: and it came to pass, when they
+ were in the field, that Cain rose up against Abel his
+ brother, and slew him. And the Lord said unto Cain,
+ Where is Abel thy brother? And he said, I know not. Am
+ I my brother's keeper? And He said, What hast thou done?
+ the voice of thy brother's blood crieth unto Me from the
+ ground. And now art thou cursed from the earth, which
+ hath opened her mouth to receive thy brother's blood from
+ thy hand. When thou tillest the ground, it shall not
+ henceforth yield unto thee her strength. A fugitive and
+ a vagabond shalt thou be in the earth. And Cain said unto
+ the Lord, My punishment is greater than I can bear.
+ Behold, Thou hast driven me out this day from the face
+ of the earth; and from Thy face shall I be hid; and I
+ shall be a fugitive and a vagabond in the earth: and it
+ shall come to pass, that every one that findeth me shall
+ slay me. And the Lord said unto him, Therefore, whosoever
+ slayeth Cain, vengeance shall be taken on him sevenfold.
+ And the Lord set a mark upon Cain, lest any finding him
+ should kill him. And Cain went out from the presence of
+ the Lord, and dwelt in the land of Nod, on the east of
+ Eden.'
+ GENESIS iv. 3-16.
+
+Many lessons crowd on us from this section. Its general purport is
+to show the growth of sin, and its power to part man from man even
+as it has parted man from God. We may call the whole 'The beginning
+of the fatal operations of sin on human society.'
+
+1. The first recorded act of worship occasions the first murder. Is
+not that only too correct a forecast of the oceans of blood which
+have been shed in the name of religion, and a striking proof of the
+subtle power of sin to corrupt even the best, and out of it to make
+the worst? What a lesson against the bitter hatred which has too
+often sprung up on so-called religious grounds! No malice is so
+venomous, no hate so fierce, no cruelty so fiendish, as those which
+are fed and fanned by religion. Here is the first triumph of sin,
+that it poisons the very springs of worship, and makes what should
+be the great uniter of men in sweet and holy bonds their great
+separator.
+
+2. Sin here appears as having power to bar men's way to God. Much
+ingenuity has been spent on the question why Abel's offering was
+accepted and Cain's rejected. But the narrative itself shows in the
+words of Jehovah, 'If thou doest well, is there not acceptance?'
+that the reason lay in Cain's evil deeds. So, in 1 John iii. 12, the
+fratricide is put down to the fact that 'his works were evil, and
+his brother's righteous'; and Hebrews xi. 4 differs from this view
+only in making the ground of righteousness prominent, when it
+ascribes the acceptableness of Abel's offering to faith. Both these
+passages are founded on the narrative, and we need not seek farther
+for the reason of the different reception of the two offerings.
+Character, then, or, more truly, faith, which is the foundation of a
+righteous character, determines the acceptableness of worship.
+Cain's offering had no sense of dependence, no outgoing of love and
+trust, no adoration,--though it may have had fear,--and no moral
+element. So it had no sweet odour for God. Abel's was sprinkled with
+some drops of the incense of lowly trust, and came from a heart
+which fain would be pure; therefore it was a joy to God. So we are
+taught at the very beginning, that, as is the man, so is his
+sacrifice; that the prayer of the wicked is an abomination. Plenty
+of worship nowadays is Cain worship. Many reputable professing
+Christians bring just such sacrifices. The prayers of such never
+reach higher than the church ceiling. Of course, the lesson of the
+story is not that a man must be pure before his sacrifice is
+accepted. Of course, the faintest cry of trust is heard, and a
+contrite heart, however sinful, is always welcome. But we are taught
+that our acts of worship must have our hearts in them, and that it
+is vain to pray and to love evil. Sin has the awful power of
+blocking our way to God.
+
+3. Note in one word that we have here at the beginning of human
+history the solemn distinction which runs through it all. These two,
+so near in blood, so separate in spirit, head the two classes into
+which Scripture decisively parts men, especially men who have heard
+the gospel. It is unfashionable now to draw that broad line between
+the righteous and the wicked, believers and unbelievers. Sheep and
+goats are all one. Modern liberal sentiment--so-called--will not
+consent to such narrowness as the old-fashioned classification.
+There are none of us black, and none white; we are all different
+shades of grey. But facts do not quite bear out such amiable views.
+Perhaps it is not less charitable, and a great deal truer, to draw
+the line broad and plain, on one side of which is peace and safety,
+and on the other trouble and death, if only we make it plain that no
+man need stop one minute on the dark side.
+
+4. The solemn divine voice reads the lesson of the power of sin,
+when once done, over the sinner. Like a wild beast, it crouches in
+ambush at his door, ready to spring and devour. The evil deed once
+committed takes shape, as it were, and waits to seize the doer.
+Remorse, inward disturbance, and above all, the fatal inclination to
+repeat sin till it becomes a habit, are set forth with terrible
+force in these grim figures. What a menagerie of ravenous beasts
+some of us have at the doors of our hearts! With what murderous
+longing they glare at us, seeking to fascinate us, and make us their
+prey! When we sin, we cannot escape the issues; and every wrong
+thing we do has a kind of horrible life given it, and sits
+henceforth there, beside us, ready to rend us. The tempting,
+seducing power of our own evils was never put in more startling and
+solemnly true words, on which the bitter experience of many a poor
+victim of his own past is a commentary. The eternal duty of
+resistance is farther taught by the words. Hope of victory,
+encouragement to struggle, the assurance that even these savage
+beasts may be subdued, and the lion and adder (the hidden and the
+glaring evils--those which wound unseen, and which spring with a
+roar) may be overcome, led in a silken leash or charmed into
+harmlessness, are given in the command, which is also a promise,
+'Rule thou over it.'
+
+5. The deadly fruit of hate is taught us in the brief account of the
+actual murder. Notice the impressive plainness and fewness of the
+words. 'Cain rose up against his brother, and slew him.' A kind of
+horror-struck awe of the crime is audible. Observe the emphasis with
+which 'his brother' is repeated in the verse and throughout.
+Observe, also, the vivid light thrown by the story on the rise and
+progress of the sin. It begins with envy and jealousy. Cain was not
+wroth because his offering was rejected. What did he care for that?
+But what angered him was that his brother had what he had not. So
+selfishness was at the bottom, and that led on to envy, and that to
+hatred. Then comes a pause, in which God speaks remonstrances,--as
+God's voice--conscience--does now to us all,--between the
+imagination and the act of evil. A real or a feigned reconciliation
+is effected. The brothers go in apparent harmony to the field. No
+new provocation appears, but the old feelings, kept down for a time,
+come in again with a rush, and Cain is swept away by them. Hatred
+left to work means murder. The heart is the source of all evil.
+Selfishness is the mother tincture out of which all sorts of sin can
+be made. Guard the thoughts, and keep down self, and the deeds will
+take care of themselves.
+
+6. Mark how close on the heels of sin God's question treads! How God
+spoke, we know not. Doubtless in some fashion suited to the needs of
+Cain. But He speaks to us as really as to him, and no sooner is the
+rush of passion over, and the bad deed done, than a revulsion comes.
+What we call conscience asks the question in stern tones, which make
+a man's flesh creep. Our sin is like touching the electric bells
+which people sometimes put on their windows to give notice of
+thieves. As soon as we step beyond the line of duty we set the alarm
+going, and it wakens the sleeping conscience. Some of us go so far
+as to have silenced the voice within; but, for the most part, it
+speaks immediately after we have gratified our inclinations wrongly.
+
+7. Cain's defiant answer teaches us how a man hardens himself
+against God's voice. It also shows us how intensely selfish all sin
+is, and how weakly foolish its excuses are. It is sin which has rent
+men apart from men, and made them deny the very idea that they have
+duties to all men. The first sin was only against God; the second
+was against God and man. The first sin did not break, though it
+saddened, human love; the second kindled the flames of infernal
+hatred, and caused the first drops to flow of the torrents of blood
+which have soaked the earth. When men break away from God, they will
+soon murder one another.
+
+Cain was his brother's keeper. His question answered itself. If Abel
+was his brother, then he was bound to look after him. His self-
+condemning excuse is but a specimen of the shallow pleas by which
+the forgetfulness of duties we owe to all mankind, and all sins, are
+defended.
+
+8. The stern sentence is next pronounced. First we have the grand
+figure of the innocent blood having a voice which pierces the
+heavens. That teaches in the most forcible way the truth that God
+knows the crimes done by 'man's inhumanity to man,' even when the
+meek sufferers are silent. According to the fine old legend of the
+cranes of Ibycus, a bird of the air will carry the matter. It
+speaks, too, of God's tender regard for His saints, whose blood is
+precious in His sight; and it teaches that He will surely requite.
+We cannot but think of the innocent blood shed on Calvary, of the
+Brother of us all, whose sacrifice was accepted of God. His blood,
+too, crieth from the ground, has a voice which speaks in the ear of
+God, but not to plead for vengeance, but pardon.
+
+ 'Jesus' blood through earth and skies,
+ Mercy, free, boundless mercy, cries.'
+
+Then follows the sentence which falls into two parts--the curse of
+bitter, unrequited toil, and the doom of homeless wandering. The
+blood which has been poured out on the battlefield fertilises the
+soil; but Abel's blasted the earth. It was a supernatural
+infliction, to teach that bloodshed polluted the earth, and so to
+shed a nameless horror over the deed. We see an analogous feeling in
+the common belief that places where some foul sin has been committed
+are cursed. We see a weak natural correspondence in the devastating
+effect of war, as expressed in the old saying that no grass would
+grow where the hoof of the Turk's horse had stamped.
+
+The doom of wandering, which would be compulsory by reason of the
+earth's barrenness, is a parable. The murderer is hunted from place
+to place, as the Greek fable has it, by the furies, who suffer him
+not to rest. Conscience drives a man 'through dry places, seeking
+rest, and finding none.' All sin makes us homeless wanderers. There
+is but one home for the heart, one place of repose for a man,
+namely, in the heart of God, the secret place of the Most High; and
+he who, for his sin, durst not enter there, is driven forth into 'a
+salt land and not inhabited,' and has to wander wearily there. The
+legend of the wandering Jew, and that other of the sailor, condemned
+for ever to fly before the gale through stormy seas, have in them a
+deep truth. The earthly punishment of departing from God is that we
+have not where to lay our heads. Every sinner is a fugitive and a
+vagabond. But if we love God we are still wanderers indeed, but we
+are 'pilgrims and sojourners with Thee.'
+
+9. Cain's remonstrance completes the tragic picture. We see in it
+despair without penitence. He has no word of confession. If he had
+accepted his chastisement, and learned by it his sin, all the
+bitterness would have passed away. But he only writhes in agony, and
+adds, to the sentence pronounced, terrors of his own devising. God
+had not forbidden him to come into His presence. But he feels that
+he dare not venture thither. And he was right; for, whether we
+suppose that some sensible manifestation of the divine presence is
+meant by 'Thy face' or no, a man who had unrepented sin on his
+conscience, and murmurings in his heart, could not hold intercourse
+with God; nor would he wish to do so. Thus we learn again the lesson
+that sin separates from our Father, and that chastisements, not
+accepted as signs of His love, build up a black wall between God and
+us.
+
+Nor had Cain been told that his life was in danger. But his
+conscience made a coward of him, as of us all, and told him what he
+deserved. There were, no doubt, many other children of Adam, who
+would be ready to avenge Abel's death. The wild justice of revenge
+is deep in the heart of men; and the natural impulse would be to
+hunt down the murderer like a wolf. It is a dreadful picture of the
+defiant and despairing sinner, tortured by well-founded fears, shut
+out from the presence of God, but not able to shut out thoughts of
+Him, and seeing an avenger in every man.
+
+We need not ask how God set a mark on Cain. Enough that His doing so
+was a merciful alleviation of his lot, and teaches us how God's
+long-suffering spares life, and tempers judgment, that there may
+still be space for repentance. If even Cain has gracious protection
+and mercy blended with his chastisement, who can be beyond the pale
+of God's compassion, and with whom will not His loving providence
+and patient pity labour? No man is so scorched by the fire of
+retribution, but many a dewy drop from God's tenderness falls on
+him. No doubt, the story of the preservation of Cain was meant to
+restrain the blood-feuds so common and ruinous in early times; and
+we need the lesson yet, to keep us from vengeance under the mask of
+justice. But the deepest lesson and truest pathos of it lies in the
+picture of the watchful kindness of God lingering round the wretched
+man, like gracious sunshine playing on some scarred and black rock,
+to win him back by goodness to penitence, and through penitence to
+peace.
+
+
+
+
+WHAT CROUCHES AT THE DOOR
+
+
+ 'If thou doest not well, sin croucheth at the door: and
+ unto thee shall be his desire, and thou shalt rule over
+ him.'--GENESIS iv. 7 (R. V.).
+
+These early narratives clothe great moral and spiritual truths in
+picturesque forms, through which it is difficult for us to pierce.
+In the world's childhood God spoke to men as to children, because
+there were no words then framed which would express what we call
+abstract conceptions. They had to be shown by pictures. But these
+early men, simple and childlike as they were, had consciences; and
+one abstraction they did understand, and that was sin. They knew the
+difference between good and evil.
+
+So we have here God speaking to Cain, who was wroth because of the
+rejection of his sacrifice; and in dim, enigmatical words setting
+forth the reason of that rejection. 'If thou doest well, shalt thou
+not be accepted?' Then clearly his sacrifice was rejected because it
+was the sacrifice of an evil-doer. His description as such is given
+in the words of my text, which are hard for us to translate into our
+modern, less vivid and picturesque language. 'If thou doest not
+well, sin lieth at the door; and unto thee shall be his desire, and
+thou shalt rule over him.' Strange as the words sound, if I mistake
+not, they convey some very solemn lessons, and if well considered,
+become pregnant with meaning.
+
+The key to the whole interpretation of them is to remember that they
+describe what happens after, and because of, wrong-doing. They are
+all suspended on 'If thou doest not well.' Then, in that case, for
+the first thing--'sin lieth at the door.' Now the word translated
+here 'lieth' is employed only to express the _crouching_ of an
+animal, and frequently of a wild animal. The picture, then, is of
+the wrong-doer's sin lying at his door there like a crouching tiger
+ready to spring, and if it springs, fatal. 'If thou doest not well,
+a wild beast crouches at thy door.'
+
+Then there follow, with a singular swift transition of the metaphor,
+other words still harder to interpret, and which have been, as a
+matter of fact, interpreted in very diverse fashions. 'And unto thee
+shall be _its'_ (I make that slight alteration upon our version)
+'desire, and thou shalt rule over it.' Where did we hear these words
+before? They were spoken to Eve, in the declaration of her punishment.
+They contain the blessing that was embedded in the curse. 'Thy desire
+shall be to thy husband, and he shall rule over thee.' The longing of
+the pure womanly heart to the husband of her love, and the authority
+of the husband over the loving wife--the source of the deepest joy
+and purity of earth, is transferred, by a singularly bold metaphor,
+to this other relationship, and, in horrible parody of the wedded
+union and love, we have the picture of the sin, that was thought of
+as crouching at the sinner's door like a wild beast, now, as it were,
+wedded to him. He is mated to it now, and it has a kind of tigerish,
+murderous desire after him, while he on his part is to subdue and
+control it.
+
+The reference of these clauses to the sin which has just been spoken
+of involves, no doubt, a very bold figure, which has seemed to many
+readers too bold to be admissible, and the words have therefore been
+supposed to refer to Abel, who, as the younger brother, would be
+subordinate to Cain. But such a reference breaks the connection of
+the sentence, introduces a thought which is not a consequence of
+Cain's not doing well, has no moral bearing to warrant its
+appearance here, and compels us to travel an inconveniently long
+distance back in the context to find an antecedent to the 'his' and
+'him' of our text. It seems to be more in consonance, therefore,
+with the archaic style of the whole narrative, and to yield a
+profounder and worthier meaning, if we recognise the boldness of the
+metaphor, and take 'sin' as the subject of the whole. Now all this
+puts in concrete, metaphorical shape, suited to the stature of the
+bearers, great and solemn truths. Let us try to translate them into
+more modern speech.
+
+1. First think, then, of that wild beast which we tether to our
+doors by our wrong-doing.
+
+We talk about 'responsibility' and 'guilt,' and 'consequences that
+never can be effaced,' and the like. And all these abstract and
+quasi-philosophical terms are implied in the grim, tremendous
+metaphor of my text 'If thou doest not well, a tiger, a wild beast,
+is crouching at thy door.' We are all apt to be deceived by the
+imagination that when an evil deed is done, it passes away and
+leaves no permanent results. The lesson taught the childlike
+primitive man here, at the beginning, before experience had
+accumulated instances which might demonstrate the solemn truth, was
+that every human deed is immortal, and that the transitory evil
+thought, or word, or act, which seems to fleet by like a cloud, has
+a permanent being, and hereafter haunts the life of the doer, as a
+real presence. If thou doest not well, thou dost create a horrible
+something which nestles beside thee henceforward. The momentary act
+is incarnated, as it were, and sits there at the doer's doorpost
+waiting for him; which being turned into less forcible but more
+modern language, is just this: every sin that a man does has
+perennial consequences, which abide with the doer for evermore.
+
+I need not dwell upon illustrations of that to any length. Let me
+just run over two or three ways in which it is true. First of all,
+there is that solemn fact which we put into a long word that comes
+glibly off people's lips, and impresses them very little--the solemn
+fact of responsibility. We speak in common talk of such and such a
+thing lying at some one's door. Whether the phrase has come from
+this text I do not know. But it helps to illustrate the force of
+these words, and to suggest that they mean this, among other things,
+that we have to answer for every deed, however evanescent, however
+long forgotten. Its guilt is on our heads. Its consequences have to
+be experienced by us. We drink as we have brewed. As we make our
+beds, so we lie on them. There is no escape from the law of
+consequences. 'If 'twere done, when 'tis done, then 'twere well it
+were done quickly.' But seeing that it is not done when 'tis done,
+then perhaps it would be better that it were not done at all. Your
+deed of a moment, forgotten almost as soon as done, lies there at
+your door; or to take a more modern and commercial figure, it is
+debited to your account, and stands inscribed against you for ever.
+
+Think how you would like it, if all your deeds from your childhood,
+all your follies, your vices, your evil thoughts, your evil
+impulses, and your evil actions, were all made visible and embodied
+there before you. They are there, though you do not see them yet.
+All round your door they sit, ready to meet you and to bay out
+condemnation as you go forth. They are there, and one day you will
+find out that they are. For this is the law, certain as the
+revolution of the stars and fixed as the pillars of the firmament:
+'Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap' There is no seed
+which does not sprout in the harvest of the moral life. Every deed
+germinates according to its kind. For all that a man does he has to
+carry the consequences, and every one shall bear his own burden. 'If
+thou doest not well,' it is not, as we fondly conceive it sometimes
+to be, a mere passing deflection from the rule of right, which is
+done and done with, but we have created, as out of our very own
+substance, a witness against ourselves whose voice can never be
+stifled. 'If thou doest not well' thy sin takes permanent form and
+is fastened to thy door.
+
+And then let me remind you, too, how the metaphor of our text is
+confirmed by other obvious facts, on which I need but briefly dwell.
+Putting aside all the remoter bearings of that thought of
+responsibility, I suppose we all admit that we have consciences; I
+suppose that we all know that we have memories; I suppose we all of
+us have seen, in the cases of others, and have experienced for
+ourselves, how deeds long done and long forgotten have an awful
+power of rising again after many long years.
+
+Be sure that your memory has in it everything that you ever did. A
+landscape may be hidden by mists, but a puff of wind will clear them
+away, and it will all lie there, visible to the furthest horizon.
+There is no fact more certain than the extraordinary swiftness and
+completeness with which, in certain circumstances of life, and often
+very near the close of it, the whole panorama of the past may rise
+again before a man, as if one lightning flash showed all the dreary
+desolation that lay behind him. There have been men recovered from
+drowning and the like, who have told us that, as in an instant,
+there seemed unrolled before their startled eyes the whole scroll of
+their earthly career.
+
+The records of memory are like those pages on which you write with
+sympathetic ink, which disappears when dry, and seems to leave the
+page blank. You have only to hold it before the fire, or subject it
+to the proper chemical process, and at once it stands out legible.
+You are writing your biography upon the fleshly tables of your
+heart, my brother; and one day it will all be spread out before you,
+and you will be bid to read it, and to say what you think of it. The
+stings of a nettle will burn for days, if they are touched with
+water. The sting and inflammation of your evil deeds, though it has
+died down, is capable of being resuscitated, and it will be.
+
+What an awful menagerie of unclean beasts some of us have at our
+doors! What sort of creatures have you tethered at yours? Crawling
+serpents, ugly and venomous; wild creatures, fierce and bloody,
+obscene and foul; tigers and bears; lustful and mischievous apes and
+monkeys? or such as are lovely and of good report,--doves and lambs,
+creatures pure and peaceable, patient to serve and gentle of spirit?
+Remember, remember, that what a man soweth--be it hemlock or be it
+wheat--that, and nothing else, 'shall he reap.'
+
+2. Now, let us look for a moment at the next thought that is here;
+which is put into a strong, and, to our modern notions, somewhat
+violent metaphor;--the horrible longing, as it were, of sin toward
+the sinner: 'Unto thee shall be its desire.'
+
+As I explained, these words are drawn from the previous chapter,
+where they refer to the holy union of heart and affection in husband
+and wife. Here they are transferred with tremendous force, to set
+forth that which is a kind of horrible parody of that conjugal
+relation. A man is married to his wickedness, is mated to his evil,
+and it has, as it were, a tigerish longing for him, unhallowed and
+murderous. That is to say--our sins act towards us as if they
+desired to draw our love to themselves. This is just another form of
+the statement, that when once a man has done a wrong thing, it has
+an awful power of attracting him and making him hunger to do it
+again. Every evil that I do may, indeed, for a moment create in me a
+revulsion of conscience; but it also exercises a fascination over me
+which it is hard to resist. It is a great deal easier to find a man
+who has never done a wrong thing than to find a man who has only
+done it once. If the wall of the dyke is sound it will keep the
+water out, but if there is the tiniest hole in it, the flood will
+come in. So the evil that you do asserts its power over you, or, in
+the vigorous metaphor of my text, it has a fierce, longing desire
+after you, and it gets you into its clutches.
+
+'The foolish woman sitteth in the high places of the city, and
+saith, Whoso is simple let him turn in hither.' And foolish men go
+after her, and--'know not that her guests are in the depth of hell.'
+Ah! my brother! beware of that siren voice that draws you away from
+all the sweet and simple and pure food which Wisdom spreads upon her
+table, to tempt the beast that is in you with the words, 'Stolen
+waters are sweet, and bread eaten in secret is pleasant.' Beware of
+the first step, for as sure as you are living, the first step taken
+will make the second seem to become necessary. The first drop will
+be followed by a bigger second, and the second, at a shorter
+interval, by a more copious third, until the drops become a shower,
+and the shower becomes a deluge. The river of evil is ever wider and
+deeper, and more tumultuous. The little sins get in at the window,
+and open the front door for the full-grown house-breakers. One
+smooths the path for the other. All sin has an awful power of
+perpetuating and increasing itself. As the prophet says in his
+vision of the doleful creatures that make their sport in the
+desolate city, 'None of them shall want her mate. The wild beasts of
+the desert shall meet with the wild beasts of the island.' Every sin
+tells upon character, and makes the repetition of itself more and
+more easy. 'None is barren among them.' And all sin is linked
+together in a slimy tangle, like a field of seaweed, so that the man
+once caught in its oozy fingers is almost sure to be drowned.
+
+3. And now, lastly, one word about the command, which is also a
+promise: 'To thee shall be its desire, and thou shalt rule over it.'
+
+Man's primitive charter, according to the earlier chapters of
+Genesis, was to have dominion over the beasts of the field. Cain
+knew what it was to war against the wild creatures which contested
+the possession of the earth with man, and to tame some of them for
+his uses. And, says the divine voice, just as you war against the
+beasts of prey, just as you subdue to your purposes and yoke to your
+implements the tamable animals over which you have dominion, so rule
+over _this_ wild beast that is threatening you. It is needful
+for all men, if they do not mean to be torn to pieces, to master the
+animal that is in them, and the wild thing that has been created out
+of them. It is bone of your bone and flesh of your flesh. It is your
+own evil that is thus incarnated there, as it were, before you; and
+you have to subdue it, if it is not to tyrannise over you. We all
+admit that in theory, but how terribly hard the practice! The words
+of our text seem to carry but little hope or comfort in them, to the
+man who has tried--as, no doubt, many of us have tried--to flee the
+lusts that war against the soul, and to bridle the animal that is in
+him. Those who have done so most honestly know best how hard it is,
+and may fairly ask, Is this useless repetition of the threadbare
+injunction all that you have to say to us? If so, you may as well
+hold your tongue. A wild beast sits at my door, you say, and then
+you bid me, 'Rule thou over it!' Tell me to tame the tiger! 'Canst
+thou draw out Leviathan with a hook? Wilt thou take him a servant
+for ever?'
+
+I do not undervalue the earnest and sometimes partially successful
+efforts at moral reformation which some men of more than usual force
+of character are able to make, emancipating themselves from the
+outward practice of gross sin, and achieving for themselves much
+that is admirable. But if we rightly understand what sin is--namely,
+the taking self for our law and centre instead of God--and how deep
+its working and all-pervading its poison, we shall learn the tragic
+significance of the prophets question, 'Can the leopard change his
+spots?' Then may a man cast out sin from his nature by his own
+resolve, when the body can eliminate poison from the veins by its
+own energy. If there is nothing more to be said to the world than
+this message, 'Sin lieth at thy door--rule thou over it,' we have no
+gospel to preach, and sin's dominion is secure. For there is nothing
+in all this world of empty, windy words, more empty and windy than
+to come to a poor soul that is all bespattered and stained with sin,
+and say to him: 'Get up, and make thyself clean, and keep thyself
+so!' It cannot be done.
+
+So my text, though it keeps itself within the limits of the law and
+only proclaims duty, must have hidden, in its very hardness, a sweet
+kernel of promise. For what God commands God enables us to do.
+
+Therefore these words, 'Rule thou over it,' do really point onwards
+through all the ages to that one fact in which every man's sin is
+conquered and neutralised, and every man's struggles may be made
+hopeful and successful, the great fact that Jesus Christ, God's own
+Son, came down from heaven, like an athlete descending into the
+arena, to fight with and to overcome the grim wild beasts, our
+passions and our sins, and to lead them, transformed, in the silken
+leash of His love.
+
+My brother! your sin is mightier than you. The old word of the Psalm
+is true about every one of us, 'Our iniquities are stronger than
+we.' And, blessed be His name! the hope of the Psalmist is the
+experience of the Christian: 'As for my transgressions, Thou wilt
+purge them away.' Christ will strengthen you, to conquer; Christ
+will take away your guilt; Christ will bear, has borne your burden;
+Christ will cleanse your memory; Christ will purge your conscience.
+Trusting to Him, and by His power and life within us, we may conquer
+our evil. Trusting to Him, and for the sake of His blood shed for us
+all upon the cross, we are delivered from the burden, guilt, and
+power of our sins and of our sin. With thy hand in His, and thy will
+submitted to Him, 'thou shalt tread on the lion and the adder; the
+young lion and the dragon thou shalt trample under foot.'
+
+
+
+
+WITH, BEFORE, AFTER
+
+
+ 'Enoch walked with God,'--GENESIS v. 22.
+
+ 'Walk before Me.'--GENESIS xvii. 1.
+
+ 'Ye shall walk after the Lord your God.'--DEUTERONOMY xiii. 4.
+
+You will have anticipated, I suppose, my purpose in doing what I
+very seldom do--cutting little snippets out of different verses and
+putting them together. You see that these three fragments, in their
+resemblances and in their differences, are equally significant and
+instructive. They concur in regarding life as a walk--a metaphor
+which expresses continuity, so that every man's life is a whole,
+which expresses progress, which expresses change, and which implies
+a goal. They agree in saying that God must he brought into a life
+somehow, and in some aspect, if that life is to be anything else but
+an aimless wandering, if it is to tend to the point to which every
+human life should attain. But then they diverge, and, if we put them
+together, they say to us that there are three different ways in
+which we ought to bring God into our life. We should 'walk
+_with_ Him,' like Enoch; we should 'walk _before_' Him, as
+Abraham was bade to do; and we should 'walk _after_' Him, as
+the command to do was given to all Israel. And these three
+prepositions, _with_, _before_, _after_, attached to the general idea
+of life as a walk, give us a triple aspect--which yet is, of course,
+fundamentally, one--of the way in which life may be ennobled, dignified,
+calmed, hallowed, focussed, and concentrated by the various relations
+into which we enter with Him. So I take the three of them.
+
+1. 'Enoch walked _with_ God.'
+
+That is a sweet, simple, easily intelligible, and yet lofty way of
+putting the notion which we bring into a more abstract and less
+impressive shape when we talk about communion with God. Two men
+travelling along a road keep each other company. 'How can two walk
+together except they be agreed?' The companion is at our side all
+the same, though the mists may have come down and we cannot see Him.
+We can hear His voice, we can grasp His hand, we can catch the
+echoes of His steps. We know He is there, and that is enough. Enoch
+and God walked together, by the simple exercise of the faith that
+fills the Invisible with one great, loving Face. By a continuous,
+definite effort, as we are going through the bustle of daily life,
+and amid all the pettiness and perplexities and monotonies that make
+up our often weary and always heavy days, we can realise to
+ourselves that He is of a truth at our sides, and by purity of life
+and heart we can bring Him nearer, and can make ourselves more
+conscious of His nearness. For, brethren, the one thing that parts a
+man from God, and makes it impossible for a heart to expatiate in
+the thought of His presence, is the contrariety to His will in our
+conduct. The slightest invisible film of mist that comes across the
+blue abyss of the mighty sky will blot out the brightest of the
+stars, and we may sometimes not be able to see the mist, and only
+know that it is there because we do not see the planet. So
+unconscious sin may steal in between us and God, and we shall no
+longer be able to say, 'I walk with Him.'
+
+The Roman Catholics talk, in their mechanical way, of bringing down
+all the spiritual into the material and formal, about the 'practice
+of the presence of God.' It is an ugly phrase, but it means a great
+thing, that Christian people ought, very much more than they do, to
+aim, day by day, and amidst their daily duties, at realising that
+most elementary thought which, like a great many other elementary
+thoughts, is impotent because we believe it so utterly, that
+wherever we are, we may have Him with us. It is the secret of
+blessedness, of tranquillity, of power, of everything good and
+noble.
+
+'I am a stranger with Thee, and a sojourner, as all my fathers
+were,' said the Psalmist of old. If he had left out these two little
+words, 'with Thee,' he would have been uttering a tragic complaint;
+but when they come in, all that is painful, all that is solitary,
+all that is transient, bitterly transient, in the long succession of
+the generations that have passed across earth's scene, and have not
+been kindred to it, is cleared away and changed into gladness. Never
+mind, though you are a stranger, if you have that companion. Never
+mind, though you are only a sojourner; if you have Him with you,
+whatever passes He will not pass; and though we dwell here in a
+system to which we do not belong, and its transiency and our
+transiency bring with them many sorrows, when we can say, 'Lord!
+Thou hast been our dwelling-place in all generations,' we are at
+home, and that eternal home will never pass.
+
+Enoch 'walked with God,' and, of course, 'God took him,' There was
+nothing else for it, and there could be no other end, for a life of
+communion with God here has in it the prophecy and the pledge of a
+life of eternal union hereafter. So, then, 'practise the presence of
+God.' An old mystic says: 'If I can tell how many times to-day I
+have thought about God, I have not thought about Him often enough.'
+Walk with Him by faith, by effort, by purity.
+
+2. And now take the other aspect suggested by the other word God
+spoke to Abraham: 'I am the Almighty God, walk _before_ Me and
+be thou perfect.'
+
+That suggests, as I suppose I do not need to point out, the idea not
+only of communion, which the former phrase brought to our minds, but
+that of the inspection of our conduct. 'As ever in the great
+Taskmaster's eye,' says the stern Puritan poet, and although one may
+object to that word 'Taskmaster,' yet the idea conveyed is the
+correct expansion of the commandment given to Abraham. Observe how
+'walk before Me' is dovetailed, as it were, between the revelation
+'I am the Almighty God' and the injunction 'Be thou perfect.' The
+realisation of that presence of the Almighty which is implied in the
+expression 'Walk before Me,' the assurance that we are in His sight,
+will lead straight to the fulfilment of the injunction that bears
+upon the moral conduct. The same connection of thought underlies
+Peter's injunction, 'Like as He ... is holy, so be ye holy in all
+manner of conversation,' followed immediately as it is by, 'If ye
+call on Him as Father, who without respect of persons judgeth'--as a
+present estimate--'according to every mail's work, pass the time of
+your sojourning here in fear'--that reverential awe which will lead
+you to be 'holy even as I am holy.'
+
+This thought that we are in that divine presence, and that there is
+silently, but most really, a divine opinion being formed of us,
+consolidated, as it were, moment by moment through our lives, is
+only tolerable if we have been walking with God. If we are sure, by
+the power of our communion with Him, of His loving heart as well as
+of His righteous judgment, then we can spread ourselves out before
+Him, as a woman will lay out her webs of cloth on the green grass
+for the sun to blaze down upon them, and bleach the ingrained filth
+out of them. We must first walk 'with God' before the consciousness
+that we are walking 'before' Him becomes one that we can entertain
+and not go mad. When we are sure of the 'with' we can bear the
+'before.'
+
+Did you ever see how on a review day, as each successive battalion
+and company nears the saluting-point where the General inspecting
+sits, they straighten themselves up and dress their ranks, and pull
+themselves together as they pass beneath his critical eye. A
+master's eye makes diligent servants. If we, in the strength of God,
+would only realise, day by day and act by act of our lives, that we
+are before Him, what a revolution could be effected on our
+characters and what a transformation on all our conduct!
+
+'Walk before Me' and you will be perfect. For the Hebrew words on
+which I am now commenting may be read, in accordance with the usage
+of the language, as being not only a commandment but a promise, or,
+rather, not as two commandments, but a commandment with an appended
+promise, and so as equivalent to 'If you will walk before Me you
+will be perfect.' And if we realise that we are under 'the pure eyes
+and perfect judgment of' God, we shall thereby be strongly urged and
+mightily helped to be perfect as He is perfect.
+
+3. Lastly, take the other relation, which is suggested by the third
+of my texts, where Israel as a whole is commanded to 'walk
+_after_ the Lord' their God.
+
+In harmony with the very frequent expression of the Old Testament
+about 'going after idols' so Israel here is to 'go after God.' What
+does that mean? Communion, the consciousness of being judged by God,
+will lead on to aspiration and loving, longing effort to get nearer
+and nearer to Him. 'My soul followeth hard after Thee,' said the
+Psalmist, 'Thy right hand upholdeth me.' That element of yearning
+aspiration, of eager desire to be closer and closer, and liker and
+liker, to God must be in all true religion. And unless we have it in
+some measure, it is useless to talk about being Christian people. To
+press onwards, not as though we had already attained, but following
+after, if that we may apprehend that for which also we are
+apprehended, is the attitude of every true follower of Christ. The
+very crown of the excellence of the Christian life is that it never
+can reach its goal, and therefore an immortal youth of aspiration
+and growth is guaranteed to it. Christian people, are you following
+after God? Are you any nearer to Him than you were ten years ago?
+'Walk with Me, walk before Me, walk after Me.'
+
+I need not do more than remind you of another meaning involved in
+this same expression. If I walk after God, then I let Him go before
+me and show me my road. Do you remember how, when the ark was to
+cross Jordan, the commandment was given to the Israelites to let it
+go well on in front, so that there should be no mistake about the
+course, 'for ye have not passed this way heretofore.' Do not be in
+too great a hurry to press upon the heels of God, if I may so say.
+Do not let your decisions outrun His providence. Keep back the
+impatience that would hurry on, and wait for His ripening purposes
+to ripen and His counsels to develop themselves. Walk after God, and
+be sure you do not go in front of your Guide, or you will lose both
+your way and your Guide.
+
+I need not say more than a word about the highest aspect which this
+third of our commandments takes, 'His sheep follow Him'--'leaving us
+an example that we should follow in His steps,' that is the
+culmination of the walking 'with,' and 'before,' and 'after' God
+which these Old Testament saints were partially practising. All is
+gathered into the one great word, 'He that saith he abideth in Him
+ought himself also so to walk even as He walked.'
+
+
+
+
+THE COURSE AND CROWN OF A DEVOUT LIFE
+
+
+ 'And Enoch walked with God; and he was not, for God took
+ him.'
+ GENESIS v. 24.
+
+This notice of Enoch occurs in the course of a catalogue of the
+descendants of Adam, from the Creation to the Deluge. It is
+evidently a very ancient document, and is constructed on a
+remarkable plan. The formula for each man is the same. So-and-so
+lived, begat his heir, the next in the series, lived on after that
+so many years, having anonymous children, lived altogether so long,
+and then died. The chief thing about each life is the birth of the
+successor, and each man's career is in broad outline the same. A
+dreary monotony runs through the ages. How brief and uniform may be
+the records of lives of striving and tears and smiles and love that
+stretched through centuries! Nine hundred years shrink into less
+than as many lines.
+
+The solemn monotony is broken in the case of Enoch. This paragraph
+begins as usual--he 'lived'; but afterwards, instead of that word,
+we read that he 'walked with God'--happy they for whom such a phrase
+is equivalent to 'live'--and, instead of 'died,' it is said of him
+that 'he _was not_.' That seems to imply that he, as it were,
+slipped out of sight or suddenly disappeared; as one of the psalms
+says, 'I looked, and lo! he was not.' He was there a moment ago--now
+he is gone; and my text tells how that sudden withdrawal came about.
+God, with whom he walked, put out His hand and took him to Himself.
+Of course. What other end could there be to a life that was all
+passed in communion with God except that apotheosis and crown of it
+all, the lifting of the man into closer communion with his Father
+and his Friend?
+
+So, then, there are just these two things here--the noblest life and
+its crown.
+
+1. The noblest life.
+
+'He walked with God.' That is all. There is no need to tell what he
+did or tried to do, how he sorrowed or joyed, what were his
+circumstances. These may all fade from men's knowledge as they have
+somewhat faded from his memory up yonder. It is enough that he
+walked with God.
+
+Of course, we have here, underlying the phrase, the familiar
+comparison of life to a journey, with all its suggestions of
+constant change and constant effort, and with the suggestion, too,
+that each life should be a progress directly tending to one clearly
+recognised goal. But passing from that, let us just think for a
+moment of the characteristics which must go to make up a life of
+which we can say that it is walking with God. The first of these
+clearly is the one that the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews
+puts his finger upon, when he makes faith the spring of Enoch's
+career. The first requisite to true communion with God is vigorous
+exercise of that faculty by which we realise the fact of His
+presence with us; and that not as a jealous-eyed inspector, from
+whose scrutiny we would fain escape, but as a companion and friend
+to whom we can cleave. 'He that cometh to God,' and walks with God,
+must first of all 'believe that He _is_'; and passing by all
+the fascinations of things seen, and rising above all the
+temptations of things temporal, his realising eye must fix upon the
+divine Father and see Him nearer and more clearly than these. You
+cannot walk with God unless you are emancipated from the dominion of
+sense and time, and are living by the power of that great faculty,
+which lays hold of the things that are unseen as the realities, and
+smiles at the false and forged pretensions of material things to be
+the real. We have to invert the teaching of the world and of our
+senses. My fingers and my eyes and my ears tell me that this gross,
+material universe about me is the real, and that all beyond it is
+shadowy and (sometimes we think) doubtful, or, at any rate, dim and
+far off. But that is false, and the truth is precisely the other
+way. The Unseen is the Real, and the Material is the merely
+Apparent. Behind all visible objects, and giving them all their
+reality, lies the unchangeable God.
+
+Cultivate the faculty and habit of vigorous faith, if you would walk
+with God. For the world will put its bandages over your eyes, and
+try to tempt you to believe that these poor, shabby illusions are
+the precious things; and we have to shake ourselves free from its
+harlot kisses and its glozing lies, by very vigorous and continual
+efforts of the will and of the understanding, if we are to make real
+to ourselves that which is real, the presence of our God.
+
+Besides this vigorous exercise of the faculty of faith, there is
+another requisite for a walk with God, closely connected with it,
+and yet capable of being looked at separately, and that is, that we
+shall keep up the habit of continual occupation of thought with Him.
+That is very much an affair of habit with Christian people, and I am
+afraid that the neglect of it is the habitual practice of the bulk
+of professing Christians nowadays. It is hard, amidst all our work
+and thought and joys and sorrows, to keep fresh our consciousness of
+His presence, and to talk with Him in the midst of the rush of
+business. But what do we do about our dear ones when we are away
+from them? The measure of our love of them is accurately represented
+by the frequency of our remembrances of them. The mother parted from
+her child, the husband and the wife separated from one another, the
+lover and the friend, think of each other a thousand times a day.
+Whenever the spring is taken off, then the natural bent of the
+inclination and heart assert themselves, and the mind goes back
+again, as into a sanctuary, into the sweet thought. Is that how we
+do with God? Do we so walk with Him, as that thought, when released,
+instinctively sets in that direction? When I take off the break,
+does my spirit turn to God? If there is no hand at the helm, does
+the bow always point that way? When the magnet is withdrawn for a
+moment, does the needle tremble back and settle itself northwards?
+If we are walking with God, we shall, more times a day than we can
+count when the evening comes on, have had the thought of Him coming
+into our hearts 'like some sweet beguiling melody, so sweet we know
+not we are listening to it.' Thus we shall 'walk with God.'
+
+Then there is another requisite. 'How can two walk together except
+they be agreed?' 'He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also
+so to walk even as He walked.' There is no union with God in such
+communion possible, unless there be a union with Him by conformity
+of will and submission of effort and aim to His commandments. Well,
+then, is that life possible for us? Look at this instance before us.
+We know very little about how much knowledge of God these people in
+old days had, but, at all events, it was a great deal less than you
+and I have. Their theology was very different from ours; their
+religion was absolutely identical with ours. Their faith, which
+grasped the God revealed in their creed, was the same as our faith,
+though the creed which their faith grasped was only an outline
+sketch of yours and mine. But at all times and in all generations,
+the element and essence of the religious life has been the same-that
+is, the realising sense of the living divine presence, the
+effort and aspiration after communion with Him, and the quiet
+obedience and conformity of the practical life to His will. And so
+we can reach out our hands across all the centuries to this pre-
+Noachian, antediluvian patriarch, dim amongst the mists, and feel
+that he too is our brother.
+
+And he has set us the example that in all conditions of life, and
+under the most unfavourable circumstances, it is possible to live in
+this close touch with God. For in his time, not only was there, as I
+have said, an incomplete and rudimentary knowledge of God, but in
+his time the earth was filled with violence, and gigantic forms of
+evil are represented as having dominated mankind. Amidst it all, the
+Titanic pride, the godlessness, the scorn, the rudeness, and the
+violence, amidst it all, this one 'white flower of a blameless life'
+managed to find nutriment upon the dunghill, and to blossom fresh
+and fair there. You and I cannot, whatever may be our hindrances in
+living a consistent Christian life, have anything like the
+difficulties that this man had and surmounted. For us all, whatever
+our conditions, such a life is possible.
+
+And then there is another lesson that he teaches us, viz. that such
+a life is consistent with the completest discharge of all common
+duties. The outline, as far as appearance was concerned, of this
+man's life was the same as the outline of those of his ancestors and
+successors. They are all described in the same terms. The formula is
+the same. Enoch lived, Mahalaleel, and all the rest of the half-
+unpronounceable names, they lived, they begat their heirs, and sons
+and daughters, and then they died. And the same formula is used
+about this man. He walked with God, but it was while treading the
+common path of secular life that he did so.
+
+He found it possible to live in communion with God, and yet to do
+all the common things that men did then. Anybody's house may be a
+Bethel--a house of God--and anybody's work may be worship; and
+wherever we are and whatever we do, it is possible therein to serve
+God, and there to walk with Him.
+
+2. And now a word about the crown of this life of communion. 'He was
+not, for God took him'
+
+What wonderful reticence in describing, or rather hinting at, the
+stupendous miracle that is here in question! Is that like a book
+that came from the legend-loving and legend-making brains of men; or
+does it sound like the speech of God, to whom nothing is
+extraordinary and nothing needs to have a mark of admiration after
+it? It was the same to Him whether Enoch died or whether He simply
+took him to Himself. If one wants to know what men would have made
+of such a thing, if _they_ had had to tell it, let them read
+those wretched Rabbinical fables that have been stitched on to this
+verse. There they will see how men describe miracles; and here they
+will see how God does so.
+
+'_He was not_.' As I have said, he disappeared; that was what
+the world knew. 'God took him'; that was what God tells the world.
+
+Thus this strange exception to the law of death stood, as I suppose,
+to the ancient world as doing somewhat the same office for them that
+the translation of Elijah afterwards partially did for Israel, and
+that the resurrection of Jesus Christ does completely for us, viz.
+it brought the future life into the realm of fact, and took it out
+of the dim region of speculation altogether. He establishes a truth
+who proves it, and he proves a fact that shows it. A doctrine of a
+future state is not worth much, but the fact of a future state,
+which was established by this incident then, and is certified for us
+all now, by the Christ risen from the dead, is all-important. Our
+gospel is all built upon facts, and this is the earliest fact in
+man's history which made man's subsistence in other conditions than
+that of earthly life a certainty.
+
+And then, again, this wonderful exception shows to us, as it did to
+that ancient world, that the natural end of a religious life is
+union with God hereafter. It seems to me that the real proofs of a
+future life are two: one, the fact of Christ's resurrection, and the
+other, the fact of our religious experience. For anything looks to
+me more likely, and less incredible, than that a man who could walk
+with God should only have a poor earthly life to do it in, and that
+all these aspirations, these emotions, should be bounded and ended
+by a trivial thing, that touches only the physical frame. Surely,
+surely, there is nothing so absurd as to believe that he who can say
+'Thou art my God,' and who has said it, should ever by anything be
+brought to cease to say it. Death cannot kill love to God; and the
+only end of the religious life of earth is its perfecting in heaven.
+The experiences that we have here, in their loftiness and in their
+incompleteness, equally witness for us, of the rest and the
+perfectness that remain for the children of God.
+
+Then, again, this man in his unique experience was, and is, a
+witness of the fact that death is an excrescence, and results from
+sin. I suppose that he trod the road which the divine intention had
+destined to be trodden by all the children of men, if they had not
+sinned; and that his experience, unique as it is, is a survival, so
+to speak, of what was meant to be the law for humanity, unless there
+had intervened the terrible fact of sin and its wages, death. The
+road had been made, and this one man was allowed to travel along it
+that we might all learn, by the example of the exception, that the
+rule under which we live was not the rule that God originally meant
+for us, and that death has resulted from the fact of transgression.
+No doubt Enoch had in him the seeds of it, no doubt there were the
+possibilities of disease and the necessity of death in his physical
+frame, but God has shown us in that one instance, and in the other
+of the great prophet's, how _He_ is not subject to the law that
+men shall die, although men are subject to it, and that if He will,
+He can take them all to Himself, as He did take these two, and will
+take them who, at last, shall not die but be changed.
+
+Let me remind you that this unique and exceptional end of a life of
+communion may, in its deepest, essential character, be experienced
+by each of us. There are two passages in the book of Psalms, both of
+which I regard as allusions to this incident. The one of them is in
+the forty-ninth Psalm and reads thus: 'He will deliver my soul from
+the power of the grave, for He will take me.' Our version conceals
+the allusion, by its unfortunate and non-literal rendering
+'receive.' The same word is employed there as here. Can we fail to
+see the reference? The Psalmist expects his soul to be 'delivered
+from the power of the grave,' because God _takes_ it.
+
+And again, in the great seventy-third Psalm, which marks perhaps the
+highwater mark of pre-Christian anticipations of a future state, we
+read: 'Thou wilt guide me by Thy counsel, and afterwards _take_
+me' (again the same word) 'to glory.' Here, again, the Psalmist
+looks back to the unique and exceptional instance, and in the
+rapture and ecstasy of the faith that has grasped the living God as
+his portion, says to himself: 'Though the externals of Enoch's end
+and of mine may differ, their substance will be the same, and I,
+too, shall cease to be seen of men, because God takes me into the
+secret of His pavilion, by the loving clasp of His lifting hand.'
+
+Enoch was led, if I may say so, round the top of the valley, beyond
+the head waters of the dark river, and was kept on the high level
+until he got to the other side. You and I have to go down the hill,
+out of the sunshine, in among the dank weeds, to stumble over the
+black rocks, and wade through the deep water; but we shall get over
+to the same place where he stands, and He that took him round by the
+top will 'take' us through the river; and so shall we 'ever be with
+the Lord'
+
+'Enoch walked with God and he was not; for God took him.' This verse
+is like some little spring with trees and flowers on a cliff. The
+dry genealogical table--and here this bit of human life in it! How
+unlike the others--they _lived_ and they _died_; this man's life was
+walking with God and his departure was a fading away, a ceasing to be
+found here. It is remarkable in how calm a tone the Bible speaks of
+its supernatural events. We should not have known this to be a miracle
+but for the Epistle to the Hebrews.
+
+The dim past of these early chapters carries us over many centuries.
+We know next to nothing about the men, where they lived, how they
+lived, what thoughts they had, what tongue they spoke. Some people
+would say that they never lived at all. I believe, and most of you,
+I suppose, believe that they did. But how little personality we give
+them! Little as we know of environment and circumstances, we know
+the main thing, the fact of their having been. Then we are sure that
+they had sorrow and joy, strife and love, toil and rest, like the
+rest of us, that whether their days were longer or shorter they were
+filled much as ours are, that whatever was the pattern into which
+the quiet threads of their life was woven it was, warp and weft, the
+same yarn as ours. In broad features every human life is much the
+same. Widely different as the clothing of these grey fathers in
+their tents, with their simple contrivances and brief records, is
+from that of cultivated busy Englishmen to-day, the same human form
+is beneath both. And further, we know but little as to their
+religious ideas, how far they were surrounded with miracles, what
+they knew of God and of His purposes, how they received their
+knowledge, what served them for a Bible. Of what positive
+institutions of religion they had we know nothing; whether for them
+there was sacrifice and a sabbath day, how far the original gospel
+to Adam was known or remembered or understood by them. All that is
+perfectly dark to us. But this we know, that those of them who were
+godly men lived by the same power by which godly men live nowadays.
+Whatever their creed, their religion was ours. Religion, the bond
+that unites again the soul to God, has always been the same.
+
+
+
+
+THE SAINT AMONG SINNERS
+
+
+ 'These are the generations of Noah: Noah was a just man
+ and perfect in his generations, and Noah walked with
+ God. And Noah begat three sons, Shem, Ham, and Japheth.
+ The earth also was corrupt before God, and the earth was
+ filled with violence. And God looked upon the earth,
+ and, behold, it was corrupt; for all flesh had corrupted
+ His way upon the earth. And God said unto Noah, The end
+ of all flesh is come before Me; for the earth is filled
+ with violence through them; and, behold, I will destroy
+ them with the earth. Make thee an ark of gopher wood;
+ rooms shalt thou make in the ark, and shalt pitch it
+ within and without with pitch. And this is the fashion
+ which thou shalt make it of: The length of the ark shall
+ be three hundred cubits, the breadth of it fifty cubits,
+ and the height of it thirty cubits. A window shalt thou
+ make to the ark, and in a cubit shalt thou finish it
+ above; and the door of the ark shalt thou set in the
+ side thereof; with lower, second, and third stories shalt
+ thou make it. And, behold, I, even I, do bring a flood of
+ waters upon the earth, to destroy all flesh, wherein is
+ the breath of life, from under heaven; and every thing
+ that is in the earth shall die. But with thee will I
+ establish My covenant; and thou shalt come into the ark,
+ thou, and thy sons, and thy wife, and thy sons' wives
+ with thee. And of every living thing of all flesh, two
+ of every sort shalt thou bring into the ark, to keep them
+ alive with thee; they shall be male and female. Of fowls
+ after their kind, and of cattle after their kind, of
+ every creeping thing of the earth after his kind, two of
+ every sort shall come unto thee, to keep them alive.
+ And take thou unto thee of all food that is eaten, and
+ thou shalt gather it to thee; and it shall be for food
+ for thee, and for them. Thus did Noah; according to all
+ that God commanded him, so did he.'--GENESIS vi. 9-22.
+
+1. Notice here, first, the solitary saint. Noah stands alone 'in his
+generations' like some single tree, green and erect, in a forest of
+blasted and fallen pines. 'Among the faithless, faithful only he.'
+His character is described, so to speak, from the outside inwards.
+He is 'righteous,' or discharging all the obligations of law and of
+his various relationships. He is 'perfect.' His whole nature is
+developed, and all in due symmetry and proportion; no beauty
+wanting, no grace cultivated at the expense of others. He is a full
+man; not a one-sided and therefore a distorted one. Of course we do
+not take these words to imply sinlessness. They express a relative,
+not an absolute, completeness. Hence we may learn both a lesson of
+stimulus and of hope. We are not to rest satisfied with partial
+goodness, but to seek to attain an all-round perfectness, even in
+regard to the graces least natural to our dispositions. And we can
+rejoice to believe that God is generous in His acceptance and
+praise. He does not grudge commendation, but takes account of the
+deepest desires and main tendencies of a life, and sees the germ as
+a full-blown flower, and the bud as a fruit.
+
+Learn, too, that solitary goodness is possible. Noah stood
+uninfected by the universal contagion; and, as is always the case,
+the evil around, which he did not share, drove him to a more rigid
+abstinence from it. A Christian who is alone 'in his generations,'
+like a lily among nettles, has to be, and usually is, a more earnest
+Christian than if he were among like-minded men. The saints in
+'Caesar's household' needed to be very unmistakable saints, if they
+were not to be swept away by the torrent of godlessness. It is hard,
+but it is possible, for a boy at school, or a young man in an
+office, or a soldier in a barrack, to stand alone, and be
+Christlike; but only on condition that he yields to no temptation to
+drop his conduct to the level around him, and is never guilty of
+compromise. Once yield, and all is over. Flowers grow on a dunghill,
+and the very reeking rottenness may make the bloom finer.
+
+Learn, too, that the true place for the saint is 'in his
+generations.' If the mass is corrupt, so much the more need to rub
+the salt well in. Disgust and cowardice, and the love of congenial
+society, keep Christian people from mixing with the world, which
+they must do if they are to do Christ's work in it. There is a great
+deal too much union with the world, and a great deal too much
+separation from it, nowadays, and both are of the wrong sort. We
+cannot keep too far away from it, by abstinence from living by its
+maxims, and tampering with its pleasures. We cannot mix too much
+with it if we take our Christianity with us, and remember our
+vocation to be its light.
+
+Notice, again, the companion of the solitary saint. What beauty
+there is in that description of the isolated man, passing lonely
+amid his contemporaries, like a stream of pure water flowing through
+some foul liquid, and untouched by it, and yet not alone in his
+loneliness, because 'he walked with God!' The less he found
+congenial companionship on earth, the more he realised God as by his
+side. The remarkable phrase, used only of Enoch and of Noah, implies
+a closer relation than the other expression, 'To walk before God.'
+Communion, the habitual occupation of mind and heart with God, the
+happy sense of His presence making every wilderness and solitary
+place glad because of Him. the child's clasping the father's hand
+with his tiny fingers, and so being held up and lifted over many a
+rough place, are all implied. Are we lonely in outward reality? Here
+is our unfailing companion. Have we to stand single among
+companions, who laugh at us and our religion? One man, with God to
+back him, is always in the majority. Though surrounded by friends,
+have we found that, after all, we live and suffer, and must die
+alone? Here is the all-sufficient Friend, if we have fellowship with
+whom our hearts will be lonely no more.
+
+Observe that this communion is the foundation of all righteousness
+in conduct. Because Noah walked with God, he was 'just' and
+'perfect.' If we live habitually in the holy of holies, our faces
+will shine when we come forth. If we desire to be good and pure, we
+must dwell with God, and His Spirit will pass into our hearts, and
+we shall bear the fragrance of his presence wherever we go. Learn,
+also, that communion with God is not possible unless we are fighting
+against our sin, and have some measure of holiness. We begin
+communion with Him, indeed, not by holiness, but by faith. But it is
+not kept up without the cultivation of purity. Sin makes fellowship
+with God impossible. 'Can two walk together, except they be agreed?'
+'What communion hath light with darkness?' The delicate bond which
+unites us in happy communion with God shrivels up, as if scorched,
+at the touch of sin. 'If we say that we have fellowship with Him,
+and walk in darkness, we lie.'
+
+2. Notice the universal apostasy. Two points are brought out in the
+sombre description. The first is moral corruption; the second,
+violence. Bad men are cruel men. When the bonds which knit society
+to God are relaxed, selfishness soon becomes furious, and forcibly
+seizes what it lusts after, regardless of others' rights. Sin saps
+the very foundations of social life, and makes men into tigers, more
+destructive to each other than wild beasts. All our grand modern
+schemes for the reformation of society will fail unless they begin
+with the reformation of the individual. To walk with God is the true
+way to make men gentle and pitying.
+
+Learn from this dark outline that God gazes in silence on the evil.
+That is a grand, solemn expression, 'Corrupt before God.' All this
+mad riot of pollution and violence is holding its carnival of lust
+and blood under the very eye of God, and He says never a word. So is
+it ever. Like some band of conspirators in a dark corner, bad men do
+deeds of darkness, and fancy they are unseen, and that God forgets
+_them_, because they forget God; and all the while His eye is
+fixed on them, and the darkness is light about them. Then comes a
+further expression of the same thought: 'God looked upon the earth.'
+As a sudden beam of sunshine out of a thunder-cloud, His eye flashes
+down, not as if He then began to know, but that His knowledge then
+began, as it were, to act.
+
+3. What does the stern sentence on the rotten world teach us? A very
+profound truth, not only of the certain divine retribution, but of
+the indissoluble connection of sin with destruction. The same word
+is thrice employed in verses 11 and 12 to express 'corruption' and
+in verse 13 to express 'destruction.' A similar usage is found in 1
+Corinthians iii. 17, where the same Greek word is translated
+'defile' and 'destroy.' This teaches us that, in deepest reality,
+corruption is destruction, that sin is death, that every sinner is a
+suicide. God's act in punishment corresponds to, and is the
+inevitable outcome of, our act in transgression. So fatal is all
+evil, that one word serves to describe both the poison-secreting
+root and the poisoned fruit. Sin is death in the making; death is
+sin finished.
+
+The promise of deliverance, which comes side by side with the stern
+sentence, illustrates the blessed truth that God's darkest
+threatenings are accompanied with a revelation of the way of escape.
+The ark is always shown along with the flood. Zoar is pointed out
+when God foretells Sodom's ruin. We are no sooner warned of the
+penalties of sin, than we are bid to hear the message of mercy in
+Christ. The brazen serpent is ever reared where the venomous snakes
+bite and burn.
+
+4. We pass by the details of the construction of the ark to draw the
+final lesson from the exact obedience of Noah. We have the statement
+twice over, He did 'according to all that God commanded him.' It was
+no easy thing for him to build the ark, amidst the scoffing of his
+generations. Smart witticisms fell around him like hail. All the
+'practical men' thought him a dreamy fool, wasting his time, while
+they prospered and made something of life. The Epistle to the
+Hebrews tells us the secret of his obedience: 'By faith, Noah,' etc.
+He realised the distant unseen, because he believed Him who warned
+him of it. The immediate object of his faith was 'the things not
+seen as yet'; but the real, deepest object was God, whose word
+showed him these. So faith is always trust in a divine Person,
+whether it lays hold of the past sacrifice, the present indwelling
+Spirit, or the future heaven.
+
+Noah's example teaches us the practical effects of faith. 'Moved
+with godly fear,' says Hebrews; by which is meant, not a mere dread
+of personal evil, for Noah was assured of safety--but that godly
+reverence and happy fear which dwells with faith, and secures
+precise obedience. Learn that a faith which does not work on the
+feelings is a very poor thing. Some Christian people have a great
+horror of emotional religion. Unemotional religion is a great deal
+worse. The road by which faith gets at the hands is through the
+heart. And he who believes but feels nothing, will do exactly as
+much as he feels, and probably does not really believe much more.
+
+So after Noah's emotion followed his action. He was bid to prepare
+his ark, we have only to take refuge in the ark which God has
+prepared in Christ; but the principle of Noah's obedience applies to
+us all. He realised so perfectly that future, with its double
+prospect of destruction and deliverance, that his whole life was
+moulded by the conduct which should lead to his escape. The far-off
+flood was more real to him than the shows of life around him.
+Therefore he could stand all the gibes, and gave himself to a course
+of life which was sheer folly unless that future was real. Perhaps a
+hundred and twenty years passed between the warning and the flood;
+and for all that time he held on his way, nor faltered in his faith.
+Does our faith realise that which lies before us with anything like
+similar clearness? Do we see that future shining through all the
+trivial, fleeting present? Does it possess weight and solidity
+enough to shape our lives? Noah's creed was much shorter than ours;
+but I fear his faith was as much stronger.
+
+5. We may think, finally, of the vindication of his faith. For a
+hundred and twenty years the wits laughed, and the 'common-sense'
+people wondered, and the patient saint went on hammering and
+pitching at his ark. But one morning it began to rain; and by
+degrees, somehow, Noah did not seem quite such a fool. The jests
+would look rather different when the water was up to the knees of
+the jesters; and their sarcasms would stick in their throats as they
+drowned. So is it always. So it will be at the last great day. The
+men who lived for the future, by faith in Christ, will be found out
+to have been the wise men when the future has become the present,
+and the present has become the past, and is gone for ever; while
+they who had no aims beyond the things of time, which are now sunk
+beneath the dreary horizon, will awake too late to the conviction
+that they are outside the ark of safety, and that their truest
+epitaph is 'Thou fool!'
+
+
+
+
+'CLEAR SHINING AFTER RAIN'
+
+
+ 'And God remembered Noah, and every living thing, and all
+ the cattle that was with him in the ark: and God made a
+ wind to pass over the earth, and the waters asswaged;
+ The fountains also of the deep and the windows of heaven
+ were stopped, and the rain from heaven was restrained;
+ And the waters returned from off the earth continually:
+ and after the end of the hundred and fifty days the
+ waters were abated. And the ark rested in the seventh
+ month, on the seventeenth day of the month, upon the
+ mountains of Ararat. And the waters decreased continually
+ until the tenth month: in the tenth month, on the first
+ day of the month, were the tops of the mountains seen.
+ And it came to pass at the end of forty days that Noah
+ opened the window of the ark which he had made: And he
+ sent forth a raven, which went forth to and fro, until
+ the waters were dried up from off the earth. Also he sent
+ forth a dove from him, to see if the waters were abated
+ from off the face of the ground; But the dove found no
+ rest for the sole of her foot, and she returned unto him
+ into the ark, for the waters were on the face of the
+ whole earth: then he put forth his hand, and took her,
+ and pulled her in unto him into the ark. And he stayed
+ yet other seven days; and again he sent forth the dove
+ out of the ark; And the dove came in to him in the
+ evening; and, lo, in her mouth was an olive leaf pluckt
+ off: so Noah knew that the waters were abated from off
+ the earth. And he stayed yet other seven days; and sent
+ forth the dove; which returned not again unto him any
+ more. And it came to pass in the six hundredth and first
+ year, in the first month, the first day of the month,
+ the waters were dried up from off the earth: and Noah
+ removed the covering of the ark, and looked, and, behold,
+ the face of the ground was dry. And in the second month,
+ on the seven and twentieth day of the month, was the
+ earth dried. And God spake unto Noah, saying, Go forth
+ of the ark, thou, and thy wife, and thy sons, and thy
+ sons wives with thee. Bring forth with thee every living
+ thing that is with thee, of all flesh, both of fowl,
+ and of cattle, and of every creeping thing that creepeth
+ upon the earth; that they may breed abundantly in the
+ earth, and be fruitful, and multiply upon the earth.
+ And Noah went forth, and his sons, and his wife, and
+ his sons' wives with him: Every beast, every creeping
+ thing, and every fowl, and whatsoever creepeth upon the
+ earth, after their kinds, went forth out of the ark.
+ And Noah builded an altar unto the Lord; and took of
+ every clean beast, and of every clean fowl, and offered
+ burnt offerings on the altar. And the Lord smelled a
+ sweet savour; and the Lord said in His heart, I will
+ not again curse the ground any more for man's sake; for
+ the imagination of man's heart is evil from his youth;
+ neither will I again smite any more every thing living,
+ as I have done. While the earth remaineth, seedtime and
+ harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and
+ day and night shall not cease,'--GENESIS viii. 1-22.
+
+The universal tradition of a deluge is most naturally accounted for
+by admitting that there was a 'universal deluge.' But 'universal'
+does not apply to the extent as embracing the whole earth, but as
+affecting the small area then inhabited--an area which was probably
+not greater than the valleys of the Euphrates and Tigris. The story
+in Genesis is the Hebrew version of the universal tradition, and its
+plain affinity to the cuneiform narratives is to be frankly
+accepted. But the relationship of these two is not certain. Are they
+mother and daughter, or are they sisters? The theory that the
+narrative in Genesis is derived from the Babylonian, and is a
+purified, elevated rendering of it, is not so likely as that both
+are renderings of a more primitive account, to which the Hebrew
+narrative has kept true, while the other has tainted it with
+polytheistic ideas. In this passage the cessation of the flood is
+the theme, and it brings out both the love of the God who sent the
+awful punishment, and the patient godliness of the man who was
+spared from it. So it completes the teaching of the flood, and
+proclaims that God 'in wrath remembers mercy.'
+
+1. 'God remembered Noah.' That is a strong 'anthropomorphism,' like
+many other things in Genesis--very natural when these records were
+written, and bearing a true meaning for all times. It might seem as
+if, in the wild rush of the waters from beneath and from above, the
+little handful in the ark were forgotten. Had the Judge of all the
+earth, while executing 'terrible things in righteousness,' leisure
+to think of them who were 'afar off upon the sea'? Was it a blind
+wrath that had been let loose? No; in all the severity there was
+tender regard for those worthy of it. Judgment was discriminating.
+The sunshine of love broke through even the rain-clouds of the
+flood.
+
+So the blessed lesson is taught that, in the widest sweep of the
+most stormy judgments, there are those who abide safely, fearing no
+evil. Though the waters are out, there is a rock on which we may
+stand safe, above their highest wave. And why did God 'remember
+Noah'? It was not favouritism, arbitrary and immoral. Noah was bid
+to build the ark, because he was 'righteous' in a world of evil-
+doers; he was 'remembered' in the ark, because he had believed God's
+warning, obeyed God's command as seeing the judgment 'not seen as
+yet,' and so 'became heir of the righteousness which is by faith.'
+They who trust God, and, trusting Him, realise as if present the
+future judgment, and, 'moved with fear,' take refuge in the ark, are
+never forgot by Him, even while the world is drowned. They live in
+His heart, and in due time He will show that He remembers them.
+
+2. The gradual subsidence of the flood is told with singular
+exactitude of dates, which are certainly peculiar if they are not
+historical. The slow decrease negatives the explanation of the story
+as being the exaggerated remembrance of some tidal-wave caused by
+earthquake and the like. Precisely five months after the flood
+began, the ark grounded, and the two sources, the rain from above
+and the 'fountains of the deep' (that is, probably, the sea), were
+'restrained,' and a high wind set in. That date marked the end of
+the increase of the waters, and consequently the beginning of their
+decrease. Seven months and ten days elapsed between it and the
+complete restoration of the earth to its previous condition. That
+time was divided into stages. Two months and a half passed before
+the highest land emerged; two months more and the surface was all
+visible; a month and twenty-seven days more before 'the earth was
+dry.' The frequent recurrence of the sacred numbers, seven and ten,
+is noticeable. The length of time required for the restorative
+process witnesses to the magnitude of the catastrophe, impresses the
+imagination, and suggests the majestic slowness of the divine
+working, and how He uses natural processes for His purposes of moral
+government, and rules the wildest outbursts of physical agents. The
+Lord as king 'sitteth upon the flood,' and opens or seals the
+fountains of the great deep as He will. Scripture does not tell of
+the links between the First Cause and the physical effect. It brings
+the latter close up to the former. The last link touches the fixed
+staple, and all between may be ignored.
+
+But the patient expectance of Noah comes out strongly in the story,
+as well as the gradualness of God's working. Not till 'forty days'--a
+round number--after the land appeared, did He do anything. He
+waited quietly till the path was plain. Eager impatience does not
+become those who trust in God. It is not said that the raven was
+sent out to see if the waters were abated. No purpose is named, nor
+is it said that it returned at all. 'To and fro' may mean over the
+waste of waters, not back and forward to and from the ark. The
+raven, from its blackness, its habit of feeding on carrion, its
+fierceness, was a bird of ill-omen, and sending it forth has a grim
+suggestion that it would find food enough, and 'rest for the sole of
+its foot,' among the swollen corpses floating on the dark waters.
+The dove, on the other hand, is the emblem of gentleness, purity,
+and tenderness. She went forth, the very embodiment of meek hope
+that wings its way over dark and desolate scenes of calamity and
+judgment, and, though disappointed at first, patiently waits till
+the waters sink further, discerns the earliest signs of their drying
+up, and comes back to the sender with a report which is a prophecy:
+'Your peace shall return to you again.' Happy they who send forth,
+not the raven, but the dove, from their patient hearts. Their gentle
+wishes come back with confirmation of their hopes, 'as doves to
+their windows.'
+
+3. But Noah did not leave the ark, though 'the earth was dry.' God
+had 'shut him in,' and it must be God who brings him out. We have to
+take heed of precipitate departure from the place where He has fixed
+us. Like Israel in the desert, it must be 'at the commandment of the
+Lord' that we pitch the camp, and at the commandment of the Lord
+that we journey. Till He speaks we must remain, and as soon as He
+speaks we must remove. 'God spake unto Noah, saying, Go forth ...
+and Noah went forth.' Thus prompt must be our obedience. A sacrifice
+of gratitude is the fit close of each epoch in our lives, and the
+fit beginning of each new one. Before he thought of anything else,
+Noah built his altar. All our deeds should be set in a golden ring
+of thankfulness. So the past is hallowed, and the future secure of
+God's protection. It is no unworthy conception of God which
+underlies the strongly human expression that he 'smelled the sweet
+savour.' He delights in our offerings, and our trustful, grateful
+love is 'an odour of a sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable' to Him.
+The pledge that He will not any more curse the ground for man's sake
+is occasioned by the sacrifice, but is grounded on what seems, at
+first sight, a reason for the very opposite conclusion. Man's evil
+heart the reason for God's forbearance? Yes, because it is _'evil
+from his youth_.' He deals with men as knowing our frame, the
+corruption of our nature, and the need that the tree should be made
+good before it can bring forth good fruit. Therefore He will not
+smite, but rather seek to draw to repentance by His goodness, and by
+the faithful continuance of His beneficence in the steadfast
+covenant of revolving seasons, 'filling our hearts with food and
+gladness.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SIGN FOR MAN AND THE REMEMBRANCER FOR GOD
+
+
+ 'And God spake unto Noah, and to his sons with him,
+ saying, And I, behold, I establish my covenant with you,
+ and with your seed after you; And with every living
+ creature that is with you, of the fowl, of the cattle,
+ and of every beast of the earth with you; from all that
+ go out of the ark, to every beast of the earth. And I
+ will establish my covenant with you; neither shall all
+ flesh be cut off any more by the waters of a flood;
+ neither shall there any more be a flood to destroy the
+ earth. And God said, This is the token of the covenant
+ which I make between Me and you and every living creature
+ that is with you, for perpetual generations: I do set My
+ bow in the cloud, and it shall be for a token of a
+ covenant between Me and the earth. And it shall come to
+ pass, when I bring a cloud over the earth, that the bow
+ shall be seen in the cloud: And I will remember My
+ covenant, which is between Me and you and every living
+ creature of all flesh; and the waters shall no more
+ become a flood to destroy all flesh. And the bow shall
+ be in the cloud; and I will look upon it, that I may
+ remember the everlasting covenant between God and every
+ living creature of all flesh that is upon the earth. And
+ God said unto Noah, This is the token of the covenant,
+ which I have established between Me and all flesh that
+ is upon the earth.
+ GENESIS ix. 8-17.
+
+The previous verses of this chapter lay down the outlines of the new
+order which followed the flood. The blessing and the command to be
+fruitful are repeated. The dominion over animals is confirmed, but
+enlarged by the permission to use them as food, and by the laying on
+them of 'the terror of you and the dread of you.' The sanctity of
+human life is laid down with great emphasis. Violence and bloodshed
+had brought about the flood. The appalling destruction effected by
+it might lead to the mistaken notion that God held man's life cheap.
+Therefore the cornerstone of future society is laid in that
+declaration that life is inviolable. These blessings and commands
+are followed by this remarkable section, which deals with God's
+covenant with Noah, and its token in the rainbow.
+
+1. The covenant is stated, and the parties concerned in it
+enumerated in verses 3-11. When Noah came forth from the ark, after
+the stupendous act of divine justice, he must have felt that the
+first thing he needed was some assurance as to the footing on which
+he and the new world round him stood with God. The flood had swept
+away the old order. It had revealed terrible possibilities of
+destruction in nature, and terrible possibilities of wrath in God.
+Was any knowledge of His intentions and ways possible? Could
+continuance of the new order be counted on? The answer to such
+questions was--God's covenant. Now, as then, when any great
+convulsions shake what seems permanent, and bring home to men the
+thinness of the crust of use and wont roofing an infinite depth of
+unknown possibilities of change, on which we walk, the heart cries
+out for some assurance of perpetuity, and some revelation of God's
+mind. We can have such, as truly as Noah had, if we use the
+Revelation given us in Jesus.
+
+In God's covenant with Noah, the fact of the covenant may first be
+noted. What is a covenant? The term usually implies a reciprocal
+bond, both parties to which come under obligations by it, each to
+the other. But, in this case, there are no obligations on the part
+of man or of the creatures. This covenant is God's only. It is
+contingent on nothing done by the recipients. He binds Himself,
+whatever be the conduct of men. This covenant is the self-motived
+promise of an unconditional mercy. May we not say that the 'New
+Covenant' in Jesus Christ is after the pattern of this, rather than
+after the manner of compacts which require both parties to do their
+several parts?
+
+But note the great thought, that God limits His freedom of action by
+this definite promise. Noah was not left to grope in dread among the
+terrible possibilities opened by the flood. God marked out the line
+on which He would move, and marked off a course which He would not
+pursue. It is like a king giving his subjects a constitution. Men
+can reckon on God. He has let them know much of the principles and
+methods of His government. He has buoyed out His course, as it were,
+on the ocean, or pricked it down upon a chart. We have not to do
+with arbitrary power, with inscrutable will. Our God is not one who
+'giveth no account of any of His matters.' To use a common saying,
+'We know where to have Him.'
+
+The substance of this covenant is noteworthy. It is concerned solely
+with physical nature. There is nothing spiritual or 'religious'
+about it. There are to be no more universal deluges. That is all
+which it guarantees. But consider how important such an assurance
+was in two aspects. Note the solemn light which it threw on the
+past. It taught that the flood was an exception in the divine
+government, which should stand unrepeated for ever, in its dread
+pre-eminence testifying how awful it was as a judicial act, and how
+outrageous had been the guilt which it drowned out of existence and
+sight. A wholesome terror at the unexampled act of judgment would
+fill the hearts of the little group which now represented mankind.
+
+Consider the effect of the covenant in encouraging hope. We have
+said that the one thing needful for Noah was some assurance that the
+new order would last. He was like a man who has just been rescued
+from an earthquake or a volcanic eruption. The ground seems to reel
+beneath him. Old habitudes have been curled up like leaves in the
+fire. Is there to be any fixity, any ground for continuous action,
+or for labour for a moment beyond the present? Is it worth while to
+plant or sow? Men who have lived through national tempests or
+domestic crashes know how much they need to be steadied afterwards
+by some reasonable assurance of comparative continuity. And these
+men, in the childhood of the race, would need it much. So they were
+sent out to till the earth, and to begin again strenuous lives, with
+this covenant to keep them from falling into a hand-to-mouth style
+of life, which would have brought them down to barbarism. We all
+need the same kind of assurance; and then, when we get it, such is
+the weakness of humanity, we are tempted to think that continuity
+means eternity, and that, because probably to-morrow shall be as
+this day, there will never come a to-morrow which shall be quite
+unlike to-day. The crust of cooled earth, on which we walk, is thick
+enough to bear man and all his works, but there comes a time when it
+will crack. The world will not be flooded again, but we forget, what
+Noah did not know, that it will be burned.
+
+The parties to the covenant must be noticed. Note how frequently the
+share in it, which all living creatures have, is referred to in the
+context. In verse 10 the language becomes strained (in the
+original), in order to express the universal participation of all
+living creatures; and in verse l3 'the earth' itself is spoken of as
+one party. God recognises obligations to all living things, and even
+to the dumb, non-sentient earth. He will not causelessly quench one
+bright, innocent life, nor harm one clod. Surely this is, at least,
+an incipient revelation of a God whose 'tender mercies are over all
+his works.' He 'doth take care for oxen'; and man, with all the
+creatures that are with him, and all the wild ones that 'come not
+near' him, and all the solid structure of the world, are held in one
+covenant of protecting and sustaining providence and power.
+
+2. The sign of the covenant is described at great length in verses
+12-17. Note that verses 12, 13 state the general idea of a token or
+sign, that verses 14-16 deepen this by stating that the token to man
+is a reminder to God, and that verse 17 sums up the whole with
+emphatic repetition of the main points. The narrative does not
+imply, as has often been supposed, that the rainbow was visible for
+the first time after the deluge. To suppose that, is to read more
+into the story than is there, or than common sense tolerates. If
+there were showers and sunshine, there must have been rainbows. But
+the fair vision strode across the sky with no articulate promise in
+its loveliness, though it must always have kindled wonder, and
+sometimes stirred deeper thoughts. Now, for the first time, it was
+made 'a sign,' the visible pledge of God's promise.
+
+Mark the emphasis with which God's agency is declared and His
+ownership asserted. '_I_ do set _My_ bow.' Neither Noah nor the writer
+knew anything about refraction or the prismatic spectrum. But perhaps
+they knew more about the rainbow than people do who know all about
+how it comes, except that God sets it in the cloud, and that it is His.
+Let us have the facts which science labels as such, by all means, and
+the more the better; but do not let us forget that there are other facts
+in nature which science has no means of attaining, but which are as
+solid and a great deal deeper than those which it supplies.
+
+The natural adaptation of the rainbow for this office of a token is
+too plain to need dwelling on. It 'fills the sky when storms prepare
+to part,' and hence is a natural token that the downpour is being
+stayed. Somewhere there must be a bit of blue through which the sun
+can pierce; and the small gap, which is large enough to let it out,
+will grow till all the sky is one azure dome. It springs into sight
+in front of the cloud, without which it could not be, so it typifies
+the light which may glorify judgments, and is born of sorrows borne
+in the presence of God. It comes from the sunshine smiting the
+cloud; so it preaches the blending of love with divine judgment. It
+unites earth and heaven; so it proclaims that heavenly love is ready
+to transform earthly sorrows. It stretches across the land; so it
+speaks of an all-embracing care, which enfolds the earth and all its
+creatures.
+
+It is not only a 'sign to men.' It is also, in the strong
+anthropomorphism of the narrative, a remembrancer to God. Of course
+this is accommodation of the representation of His nature to the
+limitations of ours. And the danger of attaching unworthy ideas to
+it is lessened by noticing that He is said to set His bow in the
+cloud, before it acts as His remembrancer. Therefore, He had
+remembered before it appeared. The truth, conveyed in the childlike
+language, is that God has His covenant ever before Him, and that He
+responds to and honours the appeal made to Him, by that which He has
+Himself appointed for a sign to men. The expectant eyes of the
+trustful man and the eye of God meet, as it were, in looking on the
+sign. On earth it nourishes faith; in heaven it moves to love and
+blessing. God can be reminded of what He always remembers. The
+rainbow reminds Him of His covenant by its calm light. Jesus Christ
+reminds Him of His grace by His intercession before the throne. We
+remind Him of His plighted faithfulness by our prayers. 'Ye that are
+the Lord's remembrancers, keep not silence.'
+
+
+
+
+AN EXAMPLE OF FAITH
+
+
+ 'Now the Lord had said unto Abram, Get thee out of thy
+ country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father's
+ house, unto a land that I will shew thee: And I will
+ make of thee a great nation, and I will bless thee, and
+ make thy name great; and thou shalt be a blessing: And
+ I will bless them that bless thee, and curse him that
+ curseth thee: and in thee shall all families of the earth
+ be blessed. So Abram departed, as the Lord had spoken
+ unto him; and Lot went with him: and Abram was seventy
+ and five years old when he departed out of Haran. And
+ Abram took Sarai his wife, and Lot his brother's son,
+ and all their substance that they had gathered, and the
+ souls that they had gotten in Haran; and they went forth
+ to go into the land of Canaan; and into the land of
+ Canaan they came. And Abram passed through the land unto
+ the place of Sichem, unto the plain of Moreh. And the
+ Canaanite was then in the land. And the Lord appeared
+ unto Abram, and said, Unto thy seed will I give this
+ land: and there builded he an altar unto the Lord, who
+ appeared unto him. And he removed from thence unto a
+ mountain on the east of Beth-el, and pitched his tent,
+ having Beth-el on the west, and Hai on the east: and
+ there he builded an altar unto the Lord, and called upon
+ the name of the Lord. And Abram journeyed, going on
+ still toward the south.'
+ GENESIS xii. 1-9.
+
+
+I
+
+
+We stand here at the well-head of a great river--a narrow channel,
+across which a child can step, but which is to open out a broad
+bosom that will reflect the sky and refresh continents. The call of
+Abram is the most important event in the Old Testament, but it is
+also an eminent example of individual faith. For both reasons he is
+called 'the Father of the Faithful.' We look at the incident here
+mainly from the latter point of view. It falls into three parts.
+
+1. The divine voice of command and promise.--God's servants have to
+be separated from home and kindred, and all surroundings. The
+command to Abram was no mere arbitrary test of obedience. God could
+not have done what He meant with him, unless He had got him by
+himself. So Isaiah (li. 2) put his finger on the essential when he
+says, 'I called him alone.' God's communications are made to
+solitary souls, and His voice to us always summons us to forsake
+friends and companions, and to go apart with God. No man gets speech
+of God in a crowd. If you desired to fill a person with electricity,
+you used to put him on a stool with glass legs, to keep him from
+earthly contact. If the quickening impulse from the great magnet is
+to charge the soul, that soul must be isolated. 'He that loveth
+father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me.'
+
+The vagueness of the command is significant. Abram did not know
+'whither he went.' He is not told that Canaan is the land, till he
+has reached Canaan. A true obedience is content to have orders
+enough for present duty. Ships are sometimes sent out with sealed
+instructions, to be opened when they reach latitude and longitude
+so-and-so. That is how we are all sent out. Our knowledge goes no
+farther ahead than is needful to guide our next step. If we 'go out'
+as He bids us, He will show us what to do next.
+
+ 'I do not ask to see
+ The distant scene; one step enough for me.'
+
+Observe the promise. We may notice that it needed a soul raised
+above the merely temporal to care much for such promises. They would
+have been but thin diet for earthly appetites. 'A great nation'; a
+divine blessing; to be a source of blessing to the whole world, and
+a touchstone by their conduct to which men would be blessed or
+cursed;--what was there in these to fascinate a man, unless he had
+faith to teach him the relative importance of the earthly and the
+heavenly, the present and the future? Notice that the whole promise
+appeals to unselfish desires. It is always, in some measure,
+elevating to live for a future, rather than a present, good; but if
+it be only the same kind of good as the present would yield, it is a
+poor affair. The only really ennobling faith is one which sets
+before itself a future full of divine blessing, and of diffusion of
+that blessing through us, and which therefore scorns delights, and
+for such gifts is content to be solitary and a wanderer.
+
+2. The obedience of faith.--We have here a wonderful example of
+prompt, unquestioning obedience to a bare word. We do not know how
+the divine command was conveyed to Abram. We simply read, 'The Lord
+said'; and if we contrast this with verse 7, 'The Lord appeared ...
+and said,' it will seem probable that there was no outward sign of
+the divine will. The patriarch knew that he was following a divine
+command, and not his own purpose; but there seems to have been no
+appeal to sense to authenticate the inward voice. He stands, then,
+on a high level, setting the example of faith as unconditional
+acceptance of, and obedience to, God's bare word.
+
+Observe that faith, which is the reliance on a person, and therefore
+trust in his word, passes into both forms of confidence in that word
+as promise, and obedience to that word as command. We cannot cut
+faith in halves, and exercise the one aspect without the other. Some
+people's faith says that it delights in God's promises, but it does
+not delight in His commandments. That is no faith at all. Whoever
+takes God at His word, will take all His words. There is no faith
+without obedience; there is no obedience without faith.
+
+We have already said enough about the separation which was effected
+by Abram's journey; but we may just notice that the departure from
+his father's house was but the necessary result of the gulf between
+them and him, which had been opened by his faith. They were
+idolaters; he worshipped one God. That drove them farther apart than
+the distance between Sichem and Haran. When sympathy in religion was
+at an end, the breach of all other ties was best. So to-day, whether
+there be outward separation or no, depends on circumstances; but
+every true Christian is parted from the dearest who is not a
+Christian, by an abyss wider than any outward distance can make. The
+law for us is Abram's law, 'Get thee out.' Either our faith will
+separate us from the world, or the world will separate us from our
+faith and our God.
+
+The companionship of Lot, who attaches himself to Abram, teaches
+that religion, in its true possessors, exercises an attractive
+influence over even common natures, and may win them to a loftier
+life. Some weak eyes may discern more glory in the sunshine tinting
+a poor bit of mist into ruddy light than in the beam which is too
+bright to look at. A faithful Abram will draw Lot after him.
+
+'They went forth to go into the land of Canaan; and into the land of
+Canaan they came.' Compare this singular expression with chapter xi.
+31, where we have Terah's emigration from Ur described in the same
+terms, with the all-important difference in the end, 'They came' not
+into Canaan, but 'unto Haran, and dwelt there.' Many begin the
+course; one finishes it. Terah's journeying was only in search of
+pasture and an abode. So he dropped his wider scheme when the
+narrower served his purpose. It was an easy matter to go from Ur to
+Haran. Both were on the same bank of the Euphrates. But to cross the
+broad, deep, rapid river was a different thing, and meant an
+irrevocable cutting loose from the past life. Only the man of faith
+did that. There are plenty of half-and-half Christians, who go along
+merrily from Ur to Haran; but when they see the wide stream in
+front, and realise how completely the other side is separated from
+all that is familiar, they take another thought, and conclude they
+have come far enough, and Haran will serve their turn.
+
+Again, the phrase teaches us the certain issue of patient pilgrimage
+and persistent purpose. There is no mystery in getting to the
+journey's end. 'One foot up, and the other foot down,' continued
+long enough, will bring to the goal of the longest march. It looks a
+weary journey, and we wonder if we shall ever get thither. But the
+magic of 'one step at a time' does it. The guide is also the
+upholder of our way. 'Every one of them appeareth before God in
+Zion.'
+
+3. The life in the land.--The first characteristic of it is its
+continual wandering. This is the feature which the Epistle to the
+Hebrews marks as significant. There was no reason but his own choice
+why Abram should continue to journey, and prefer to pitch his tent
+now under the terebinth tree of Moreh, now by Hebron, rather than to
+enter some of the cities of the land. He dwelt in tents because he
+looked for the city. The clear vision of the future detached him, as
+it will always detach men, from close participation in the present.
+It is not because we are mortal, and death is near at the furthest,
+that the Christian is to sit loose to this world, but because he
+lives by the hope of the inheritance. He must choose to be a
+pilgrim, and keep himself apart in feeling and aims from this
+present. The great lesson from the wandering life of Abram is, 'Set
+your affection on things above.' Cultivate the sense of belonging to
+another polity than that in the midst of which you dwell. The
+Canaanites christened Abram 'The Hebrew' (Genesis xiv. 13), which
+may be translated 'The man from the other side.' That is the name
+which all true Christians should deserve. They should bear their
+foreign extraction in their faces, and never be naturalised subjects
+here. Life is wholesomer in the tent under the spreading tree, with
+the fresh air blowing about us and clear sky above, than in the
+Canaanite city.
+
+Observe, too, that Abram's life was permeated with worship. Wherever
+he pitches his tent, he builds an altar. So he fed his faith, and
+kept up his communion with God. The only condition on which the
+pilgrim life is possible, and the temptations of the world cease to
+draw our hearts, is that all life shall be filled with the
+consciousness of the divine presence, our homes altars, and
+ourselves joyful thankofferings. Then every abode is blessed. The
+undefended tent is a safe fortress, in which dwelling we need not
+envy those who dwell in palaces. Common tasks will then be fresh,
+full of interest, because we see God in them, and offer them up to
+Him. The wandering life will be a life of walking with God, and
+progressive knowledge of Him; and over all the roughnesses and the
+sorrows and the trivialities of it will be spread 'the light that
+never was on sea or land, the consecration' of God's presence, and
+the peacefulness of communion with Him.
+
+Again, we may notice that the life of obedience was followed by
+fuller manifestations of God, and of His will. God 'appeared' when
+Abram was in the land. Is it not always true that obedience is
+blessed by closer vision and more knowledge? To him that hath shall
+be given; and he who has followed the unseen Guide through dimly
+discerned paths to an invisible goal, will be gladdened when he
+reaches the true Canaan, by the sight of Him whom, having not seen,
+he loved. Even here on earth obedience is the path to fuller
+knowledge; and when the pilgrims who have left all and followed the
+Captain of salvation through a deeper, darker stream than Abram
+crossed, have touched the other side, God will appear to them, and
+say, as the enraptured eye gazes amazed on the goodly land, 'Arise,
+walk through the land in the length of it and in the breadth of it;
+for I will give it unto thee.'
+
+
+
+
+ABRAM AND THE LIFE OF FAITH
+
+
+II
+
+
+A great act of renunciation at the divine call lies at the
+foundation of Israel's history, as it does at the foundation of
+every life that blesses the world or is worth living. The divine
+Word to Abram first gives the command in all its authoritativeness
+and plain setting forth of how much had to be surrendered, and then
+in its exuberant setting forth of how much was to be won by
+obedience. God does not hide the sacrifices that have to be made if
+we will be true to His command. He will enlist no recruits on false
+pretences. All ties of country, kindred, and father's house have to
+be loosened, and, if need be, to be cut, for His command is to be
+supreme, and clinging hands that would hold back the pilgrim have to
+be disengaged. If a man realises God's hold on him, he feels all
+others relaxed. The magnetism of the divine command overcomes
+gravitation, and lifts him high above earth. The life of faith ever
+begins as that of 'the Father of the Faithful' began, with the
+solemn recognition of a divine will which separates. Further, Abram
+saw plainly what he had to leave, but not what he was to win. He had
+to make a venture of faith, for 'the land that I will shew thee' was
+undefined. Certainly it was somewhere, but where was it? He had to
+fling away substance for what seemed shadow to all but the eye of
+faith, as we all have to do. The familiar, undeniable good of the
+present has to be waived in favour of what 'common sense' calls a
+misty possibility in the future. To part with solid acres and get
+nothing but hopes of an inheritance in the skies looks like
+insanity, and is the only true wisdom. 'Get thee out' is plain; 'the
+land that I will shew thee' looks like the doubtful outlines seen
+from afar at sea, which may be but clouds.
+
+But Abram had a great hope blazing in front, none the less bright or
+guiding because it all rested on the bare promise of God. It is the
+prerogative of faith to give solidity and reality to what the world
+thinks has neither. The wanderer who had left his country was to
+receive a land for his own; the solitary who had left his kindred
+was to become the founder of a nation; the unknown stranger was to
+win a great name,--and how wonderfully that has come true! Not only
+was he to be blessed, but also to be a blessing, for from him was to
+flow that which should bless all the earth,--and how transcendently
+that has come true! The attitude of men to him (and to the universal
+blessing that should descend from him) was to determine their
+position in reference to God and 'blessings' or 'cursings' from him.
+So the migration of Abram was a turning-point in universal history.
+
+Obedience followed the command, immediate as the thunder on the
+flash, and complete. 'So Abram went, as the Lord had spoken unto
+him,'--blessed they of whose lives that may be the summing-up! Happy
+the life which has God's command at the back of every deed, and no
+command of His unobeyed! If our acts are closely parallel with God's
+speech to us, they will prosper, and we shall be peaceful wherever
+we may have to wander. Success followed obedience in Abram's case,
+as in deepest truth it always does. That is a pregnant expression:
+'They went forth to go into the land of Canaan; and into the land of
+Canaan they came.' A strange itinerary of a journey, which omits all
+but the start and the finish! And yet are these not the most
+important points in any journey or life,--whither it was directed
+and where it arrived? How little will the weary tramps in the desert
+be remembered when the goal has been reached! Dangers and privations
+soon pass from memory, and we shall think little of sorrows, cares,
+and pains, when we arrive at home. The life of faith is the only one
+which is always sure of getting to the place to which it seeks to
+journey. Others miss their aim, or drop dead on the road, like the
+early emigrants out West; Christian lives get to the city.
+
+Once in the land, Abram was still a stranger and pilgrim. He first
+planted himself in its heart by Sichem, but outside the city, under
+the terebinth tree of Moreh. The reason for his position is given in
+the significant statement that 'the Canaanite was then in the land.'
+So he had to live in the midst of an alien civilisation, and yet
+keep apart from it. As Hebrews says, he was 'dwelling in
+tabernacles,' because he 'looked for a city.' The hope of the
+permanent future made him keep clear of the passing present; and we
+are to feel ourselves pilgrims and sojourners, not so much because
+earth is fleeting and we are mortal, as because our true affinities
+are with the unseen and eternal. But the presence of 'the Canaanite'
+is connected also with the following words, which tell that 'the
+Lord appeared unto Abram,' and now after his obedience told him that
+this was the land that was to be his. He unfolds His purposes to
+those who keep His commandments; obedience is the mother of insight.
+The revelation put a further strain on faith, for the present
+occupiers of the land were many and strong; but it matters not how
+formidably and firmly rooted the Canaanite is, God's children can be
+sure that the promise will be fulfilled. We can calmly look on his
+power and reckon on its decay, if the Lord appears to us, as to
+Abram--and He surely will if we have followed His separating voice,
+and dwell as strangers here, because our hearts are with Him.
+
+After the appearance of God and the promise, we have an outline of
+the pilgrim's life, as seen in Abram. He signalised God's further
+opening of His purposes, by building an altar on the place where He
+had been seen by him. Thankful recognition and commemoration of the
+times in our lives when He has most plainly drawn near and shown us
+glimpses of His will, are no less blessed than due, and they who
+thus rear altars to Him will wonder, when they come to count up how
+many they have had to build. But the life of faith is ever a pilgrim
+life, and Bethel has soon to be the home instead of Shechem. There,
+too, Abram keeps outside the city, and pitches his tent. There, too,
+the altar rises by the side of the tent. The transitory provision
+for housing the pilgrim contrasts with the solid structure for
+offering sacrifices. The tent is 'pitched,' and may be struck and
+carried away to-morrow, but the altar is 'builded.' That part of our
+lives which is concerned with the material and corporeal is, after
+all, short in duration and small in importance; that which has to do
+with God, His revelations, and His worship and service, lasts. What
+is left in ancient historic lands, like Egypt or Greece, is the
+temples of the gods, while the huts of the people have perished long
+centuries ago. What we build for God lasts; what we pitch for
+ourselves is transient as we are.
+
+
+
+
+GOING FORTH
+
+
+ 'They went forth to go into the land of Canaan, and into
+ the land of Canaan they came.'--GENESIS xii. 5.
+
+
+I
+
+
+The reference of these words is to Abram's act of faith in leaving
+Haran and setting out on his pilgrimage. It is a strange narrative
+of a journey, which omits the journey altogether, with its weary
+marches, privations, and perils, and notes but its beginning and its
+end. Are not these the main points in every life, its direction and
+its attainment? There are--
+
+ 'Two points in the adventure of the diver,
+ One--when, a beggar, he prepares to plunge,
+ One--when, a prince, he rises with his pearl.'
+
+Abram and his company had a clear aim. But does not the Epistle to
+the Hebrews magnify him precisely because he 'went out, not knowing
+whither he went'? Both statements are true, for Abram had the same
+combination of knowledge and ignorance as we all have. He knew that
+he was to go to a land that he should afterwards inherit, and he
+knew that, in the first place, Canaan was to be his 'objective
+point,' but he did not know, till long after he had crossed the
+Euphrates and pitched his tent by Bethel, that it was the land. The
+ultimate goal was clear, and the first step towards it was plain,
+but how that first step was related to the goal was not plain, and
+all the steps between were unknown. He went forth with sealed
+orders, to go to a certain place, where he would have further
+instructions. He knew that he was to go to Canaan, and beyond that
+point all was dark, except for the sparkle of the great hope that
+gleamed on the horizon in front, as a sunlit summit rises above a
+sea of mist between it and the traveller. Like such a traveller,
+Abram could not accurately tell how far off the shining peak was,
+nor where, in the intervening gorges full of mist, the path lay; but
+he plunged into the darkness with a good heart, because he had
+caught a glimpse of his journey's end. So with us. We may have clear
+before us the ultimate aim and goal of our lives, and also the step
+which we have to take now, in pressing towards it, while between
+these two there stretches a valley full of mist, the breadth of
+which may be measured by years or by hours, for all that we know,
+and the rough places and green pastures of which are equally hidden
+from us. We have to be sure that the mountain peak far ahead, with
+the sunshine bathing it, is not delusive cloud but solid reality,
+and we have to make sure that God has bid us step out on the yard of
+path which we _can_ see, and, having secured these two certainties,
+we are to cast ourselves into the obscurity before us, and to bear in
+our hearts the vision of the end, to cheer us amid the difficulties
+of the road.
+
+Life is strenuous, fruitful, and noble, in the measure in which its
+ultimate aim is kept clearly visible throughout it all. Nearer aims,
+prescribed by physical necessities, tastes, circumstances, and the
+like, are clear enough, but a melancholy multitude of us have never
+reflected on the further question: 'What then?' Suppose I have made
+my fortune, or won my wife, or established my position, or achieved
+a reputation, behind all these successes lies the larger question.
+These are not ends but means, and it is fatal to treat them as being
+the goal of our efforts or the chief end of our being. There would
+be fewer wrecked lives, and fewer bitter and disappointed old men,
+if there were more young ones who, at starting, put clearly before
+themselves the question: 'What am I living for? and what am I going
+to do when I have secured the nearer aims necessarily prescribed to
+me?'
+
+What that aim should be is not doubtful. The only worthy end
+befitting creatures with hearts, minds, consciences, and wills like
+ours is God Himself. Abram's 'Canaan' is usually regarded as an
+emblem of heaven, and that is correct, but the land of our
+inheritance is not wholly beyond the river, for God is the portion
+of our hearts. He _is_ heaven. To dwell with Him, to have all
+the current of our being running towards Him, to set Him before us
+in the strenuous hours of effort and in the quiet moments of repose,
+in the bright and in the dark days, are the conditions of
+blessedness, strength, and peace.
+
+That aim clearly apprehended and persistently pursued gives
+continuity to life, such as nothing else can do. How many of the
+things that drew us to themselves, and were for a while the objects
+of desire and effort, have sunk below the horizon! The lives that
+are not directed to God as their chief end are like the voyages of
+old-time sailors, who had to creep from one headland to another, and
+steer for points which, one after another, were reached, left
+behind, and forgotten. There is only one aim so great, so far in
+advance that we can never reach, and therefore can never pass and
+drop it. Life then becomes a chain, not a heap of unrelated
+fragments. That aim made ours, stimulates effort to its highest
+point, and therefore secures blessedness. It emancipates from many
+bonds, and takes the poison out of the mosquito bites of small
+annoyances, and the stings of great sorrows. It gleams ever before a
+man, sufficiently attained to make him at rest, sufficiently
+unattained to give the joy of progress. The pilgrims who had but one
+single aim, 'to go to the land of Canaan,' were delivered from the
+miseries of conflicting desires, and with simplicity of aim came
+concentration of force and calm of spirit.
+
+
+
+
+COMING IN
+
+
+II
+
+
+If life has a clear, definite aim, and especially if its aim is the
+highest, there will be detachment from, and abandonment of, many
+lower ones. Nothing worth doing is done, and nothing worth being is
+realised in ourselves, except on condition of resolutely ignoring
+much that attracts. 'They went forth'; Haran must be given up if
+Canaan is to be reached. Artists are content to pay the price for
+mastery in their art, students think it no hardship to remain
+ignorant of much in order to know their own subject thoroughly; men
+of business feel it no sacrifice to give up culture, leisure, and
+sometimes still higher things, such as love and purity, to win
+wealth. And we shall not be Christians after Christ's heart unless
+we practise similar restrictions. The stream that is to flow with
+impetus sufficient to scour its bed clear of obstructions must not
+be allowed to meander in side branches, but be banked up in one
+channel. Sometimes there must be actual surrender and outward
+withdrawal from lower aims which, by our weakness, have become rival
+aims; always there must be subordination and detachment in heart and
+mind. The compass in an iron ship is disturbed by the iron, unless
+it has been adjusted; the golden apples arrest the runner, and there
+are clogs and weights in every life, which have to be laid aside if
+the race is to be won. The old pilgrim fashion is still the only
+way. We must do as Abram did: leave Haran and its idols behind us,
+and go forth, ready to dwell, if need be, in deserts, and as
+sojourners even when among cities, or we shall not reach the 'land
+that is very far off.' It is near us if we forsake self and the
+'things seen and temporal,' but it recedes when we turn our hearts
+to these.
+
+'Into the land of Canaan they came.' No man honestly and rightly
+seeks God and fails to find Him. No man has less goodness and
+Christ-likeness than he truly desires and earnestly pursues. Nearer
+aims are often missed, and it is well that they should be. We should
+thank God for disappointments, for hopes unfulfilled, or proving
+still greater disappointments when fulfilled. It is mercy that often
+makes the harvest from our sowing a scanty one, for so we are being
+taught to turn from the quest in which searching has no assurance of
+finding, to that in which to seek is to find. 'I have never said to
+any of the seed of Jacob, Seek ye me in vain.' We may not reach
+other lands which seem to us to be lands of promise, or when we do,
+may find that the land is 'evil and naughty,' but this land we shall
+reach, if we desire it, and if, desiring it, we go forth from this
+vain world. The Christian life is the only one which has no
+failures, no balked efforts, no frustrated aims, no brave settings
+out and defeated returnings. The literal meaning of one of the Old
+Testament words for _sin_ is missing the mark, and that embodies the
+truth that no man wins what he seeks who seeks satisfaction elsewhere
+than in God. Like the rivers in Asiatic deserts, which are lost in
+the sand and never reach the sea, all lives which flow towards anything
+but God are dissipated and vain.
+
+But the supreme realisation of an experience like Abram's is
+reserved for another life. No pilgrim Zion-ward perishes in the
+wilderness, or loses his way or fails to come to 'the city of
+habitation.' 'They go from strength to strength, every one of them
+in Zion appeareth before God.' And when they appear there, they will
+think no more, just as this narrative says nothing, of the sandy,
+salt, waterless wildernesses, or the wearinesses, dangers, and toils
+of the road. The experience of the happy travellers, who have found
+all which they sought and are at home for ever in the fatherland
+towards which they journeyed, will all be summed up in this, that
+'they went forth to go into the land of Canaan, and into the land of
+Canaan they came.'
+
+
+
+
+THE MAN OF FAITH
+
+
+ 'And Abram passed through the land unto the place of
+ Sichem, unto the plain of Moreh. And the Canaanite was
+ then in the land. And the Lord appeared unto Abram, and
+ said, Unto thy seed will I give this land: and there
+ builded he an altar unto the Lord, who appeared unto
+ him.'--GENESIS xii. 6, 7.
+
+Great epoch and man. Steps of Abram's training. First he was simply
+called to go--no promise of inheritance--obeyed--came to Canaan-found
+a thickly peopled land with advanced social order, and received no
+divine vision till he was face to face with the Canaanite.
+
+1. _God's bit-by-bit leading of us._
+
+How slowly the divine purpose was revealed--the trial before the
+promise--did not know where, nor that Canaan was land, but only told
+enough for his first march.
+
+So with us--our ignorance of future is meant to have the effect of
+keeping us near God and training us to live a day at a time.
+
+God's finger on the page points to a word at a time. Each day's
+route is given morning by morning in the order for the day.
+
+2. _Obedience often brings us into very difficult places._
+
+Abram was ready to say, no doubt, 'This cannot be the land for me,
+peopled as it is with all these Canaanites.' We are ever ready to
+think that, if we find obstacles, we must have misunderstood God's
+directions, but 'many adversaries' often indicate an 'open door.'
+
+3. _The presence of enemies brings the presence of God._
+
+This is the first time we read that God _appeared_ to men.
+
+As the darkness thickens, the pillar of fire brightens. But not only
+does God appear more clearly, but our spirits are more eager and
+therefore able to see Him. We are mercifully left to feel the
+enemies before we see Him present in His strength.
+
+4. _The victory for us lies in the vision of God and of His loving
+purpose._
+
+How superb the confidence of 'Unto thy seed will I give _this_
+land.'
+
+That vision is our true strength. And it will make us feel as
+pilgrims, which is in itself more than half the battle.
+
+
+
+
+LIFE IN CANAAN
+
+
+ 'And he removed from thence unto a mountain on the east
+ of Beth-el, and pitched his tent, having Beth-el on the
+ west, and Hai on the east: and there he builded an altar
+ unto the Lord, and called upon the name of the Lord.'
+ GENESIS xii. 3.
+
+These are the two first acts of Abram in the land of Canaan.
+
+1. _All life should blend earthly and heavenly._
+
+They are not to be separated. Religion should run through everything
+and take the whole of life for its field. Where we cannot carry it
+is no place for us. It is a shame that heathenism should be more
+penetrated by its religion than Christendom is.
+
+2. _The family should be a church._
+
+Domestic religion. New Testament households. Abram a priest. The
+decay of family religion, worship, and instruction.
+
+3. _The service to God should be more costly than to
+ourselves._
+
+Pitching a tent cheaper than building an altar. Give God the best.
+We build ourselves ceiled houses and the ark dwells in curtains.
+Pagans build elaborate temples, but their houses are hovels. Too
+many Christians do the opposite.
+
+4. _Building for God lasts, for selves perishes._
+
+A tent is stricken, and no trace remains but embers. The stones of
+Jacob's altar may be standing yet. The Parthenon of Athens remains:
+where are the hovels of the people? 'He that doeth the will of God
+abideth for ever.' Permanent results of transitory deeds.
+
+
+
+
+THE IMPORTANCE OF A CHOICE
+
+
+ 'And Abram went up out of Egypt, he, and his wife, and
+ all that he had, and Lot with him, into the south. And
+ Abram was very rich in cattle, in silver, and in gold.
+ And he went on his journeys from the south even to Beth-el,
+ unto the place where his tent had been at the beginning,
+ between Beth-el and Hal; Unto the place of the altar,
+ which he had made there at the first: and there Abram
+ called on the name of the Lord. And Lot also, which went
+ with Abram, had flocks, and herds, and tents. And the
+ land was not able to bear them, that they might dwell
+ together: for their substance was great, so that they
+ could not dwell together. And there was a strife between
+ the herdmen of Abram's cattle and the herdmen of Lot's
+ cattle; and the Canaanite and the Perizzite dwelled then
+ in the land. And Abram said unto Lot, Let there be no
+ strife, I pray thee, between me and thee, and between my
+ herdmen and thy herdmen; for we be brethren. Is not the
+ whole land before thee? Separate thyself, I pray thee,
+ from me: if thou wilt lake the left hand, then I will
+ go to the right; or if thou depart to the right hand,
+ then I will go to the left. And Lot lifted up his eyes,
+ and beheld all the plain of Jordan, that it was well
+ watered every where, before the Lord destroyed Sodom and
+ Gomorrah, even as the garden of the Lord, like the land
+ of Egypt, as thou comest unto Zoar. Then Lot chose him
+ all the plain of Jordan; and Lot journeyed east: and
+ they separated themselves the one from the other. Abram
+ dwelled in the land of Canaan, and Lot dwelled in the
+ cities of the plain, and pitched his tent toward Sodom.
+ But the men of Sodom were wicked and sinners before the
+ Lord exceedingly.'--GENESIS xiii. 1-13.
+
+The main lesson of this section is the wisdom of seeking spiritual
+rather than temporal good. That is illustrated on both sides.
+Prosperity attends Abram and Lot while they think more of obeying
+God than of flocks and herds. Lot makes a mistake, as far as this
+world is concerned, when he chooses his place of abode for the sake
+of its material advantages. But the introductory verses (vv. 1-4)
+suggest a question, and seem to teach an important lesson. Was Abram
+right in so soon leaving the land to which God had led him, and
+going down to Egypt? Was that not taking the bit between his teeth?
+He had been commanded to go to Canaan; should he not have stopped
+there--famine or no famine--till the same authority commanded him to
+leave the land? If God had put him there, should he not have trusted
+God to keep him alive in famine? The narrative seems to imply that
+his going to Egypt was a failure of faith. It gives no hint of a
+divine voice leading him thither. We do not hear that he builded any
+altar beside his tent there, as he had done in the happier days of
+life by trust. His stay resulted in peril and in something very like
+lying, for which he had to bear the disgrace of being rebuked by an
+idolater, and having no word of excuse to offer. The great lesson of
+the whole section, and indeed of Abram's whole life, receives fresh
+illustration from the story thus understood, which preaches loudly
+that trust is safety and wellbeing, and that it is always sin and
+always folly to leave Canaan, where God has put us, even if there be
+a famine, and to go down into Egypt, even if its harvests be
+abundant.
+
+But another lesson is also taught. After the interruption of the
+Egyptian journey, Abram had to begin all his Canaan life over again.
+Very emphatically the narrative puts it, that he went to 'the place
+where his tent had been at the beginning,' to the altar which he had
+made at the first. Yes! that is the only place for a man who has
+faltered and gone aside from the course of obedience. He must begin
+over again. The backsliding Christian has to resort anew to the
+place of the penitent, and to come to Christ, as he did at first for
+pardon. It is a solemn thought that years of obedience and heroisms
+of self-surrender, may be so annihilated by some act of self-seeking
+distrust that the whole career has, as it were, to be begun anew
+from the very starting-point. It is a blessed thought that, however
+far and long we may have wandered, we can always return to the place
+where we were at the beginning, and there call on the name of the
+Lord.
+
+Note how we are taught here the great truth for the Old Testament,
+that outward prosperity follows most surely those who do not seek
+for it. Abram's wealth has increased, and his companion, Lot, has
+shared in the prosperity. It is because he 'went with Abram' that he
+'had flocks, and herds, and tents.' Of course, the connection
+between despising the world and possessing it is not thus close in
+New Testament times. But even now, one often sees that the men who
+_will_ be rich fall into a pit of poverty, and that a heart set
+on higher things, which counts earthly advantages second and not
+first, wins a sufficiency of these most surely. Foxlike cunning, and
+wolf-like rapacity, and Devil-like selfishness, which make up a
+large portion of what the world calls 'great business capacity,' do
+not always secure the prize. But the real possession of earth and
+all its wealth depends to-day, as much as ever it did in Abram's
+times, on seeking 'first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness.'
+Only when we are Christ's are all things ours. They are ours, not by
+the vulgar way of what the world calls ownership, but in proportion
+as we use them to the highest ends of helping us to grow in wisdom
+and Christ-likeness, in the measure in which we subordinate them to
+heavenly good, in the degree in which we employ them as means of
+serving Christ. We can see the Pleiades best by not looking directly
+at, but somewhat away from, them; and just as pleasure, if made the
+direct object of life, ceases to be pleasure, so the world's goods,
+if taken for our chief aim, cease to yield even the imperfect good
+which they can bestow.
+
+But now we have to look at the two dim figures which the remainder
+of this story presents to us, and which shine there, in that far-off
+past, types and instances of the two great classes into which men
+are divided,--Abram, the man of faith; Lot, the man of sense.
+
+Mark the conduct of the man of faith. Why should he, who has God's
+promise that all the land is his, squabble with his kinsman about
+pasture and wells? The herdsmen naturally would come to high words
+and blows, especially as the available land was diminished by the
+claims of the 'Canaanite and Perizzite.' But the direct effect of
+Abram's faith was to make him feel that the matter in dispute was
+too small to warrant a quarrel. A soul truly living in the
+contemplation of the future, and filled with God's promises, will
+never be eager to insist on its rights, or to stand on its dignity,
+and will take too accurate a measure of the worth of things temporal
+to get into a heat about them. The clash of conflicting interests,
+and the bad blood bred by them, seem infinitely small, when we are
+up on the height of communion with God. An acre or two more or less
+of grass land does not look all-important, when our vision of the
+city which hath foundations is clear. So an elevated calm and 'sweet
+reasonableness' will mark the man who truly lives by faith, and he
+will seek after the things that make for peace. Abram could fight,
+as Old Testament morality permitted, when occasion arose, as Lot
+found out to his advantage before long. But he would not strive
+about such trifles.
+
+May we not venture to apply his words to churches and sects? They
+too, if they have faith strong and dominant, will not easily fall
+out with one another about intrusions on each other's territory,
+especially in the presence, as at this day, of the common foe. When
+the Canaanite and the Perizzite are in the land, and Unbelief in
+militant forms is arrayed against us, it is more than folly, it is
+sin, for brethren to be turning their weapons against each other.
+The common foe should make them stand shoulder to shoulder. Abram's
+faith led, too, to the noble generosity of his proposal. The elder
+and superior gives the younger and inferior the right of option, and
+is quite willing to take Lot's leavings. Right or left--it mattered
+not to him; God would be with him, whichever way he went; and the
+glorious Beyond, for which he lived, blazed too bright before his
+inward sight to let him be very solicitous where he was. 'I have
+learned, in whatsoever state I am, therewith to be content.' It does
+not matter much what accommodation we have on ship-board, when the
+voyage is so short. If our thoughts are stretching across the sea to
+the landing at home, and the welcome there, we shall not fight with
+our fellow-passengers about our cabins or places at the table. And
+notice what rest comes when faith thus dwindles the worth of the
+momentary arrangements here. The less of our energies are consumed
+in asserting ourselves, and scrambling for our rights, and cutting
+in before other people, so as to get the best places for ourselves,
+the more we shall have to spare for better things; and the more we
+live in the future, and leave God to order our ways, the more shall
+our souls be wrapped in perfect peace. Mark the conduct of the man
+of sense. We can fancy the two standing on the barren hills by
+Bethel, from one of which, as travellers tell us, there is precisely
+the view which Lot saw. He lifted up his greedy eyes, and there, at
+his feet, lay that strange Jordan valley with its almost tropical
+richness, its dark lines of foliage telling of abundant water, the
+palm-trees of Jericho perhaps, and the glittering cities. Up there
+among the hills there was little to tempt,--rocks and scanty
+herbage; down below, it was like the lost Eden, or the Egypt from
+which they had but lately come.
+
+What need for hesitation? True, the men of the plain were 'wicked
+and sinners before the Lord exceedingly,' as the chapter says with
+grim emphasis. But Lot evidently never thought about that. He knew
+it, though, and ought to have thought about it. It was his sin that
+he was guided in his choice only by considerations of temporal
+advantage. Put his action into words, and it says, 'Grass for my
+sheep is more to me than fellowship with God, and a good conscience.'
+No doubt he would have had salves enough. 'I do not need to become
+like them, though I live among them.' 'A man must look after his own
+interests.' 'I can serve God down there as well as up here.' Perhaps
+he even thought that he might be a missionary among these sinners.
+But at bottom he did not seek first the kingdom of God, but the other
+things.
+
+We have seldom the choice put before us so dramatically and sharply;
+but it is as really presented to each. There is the shameless
+cynicism of the men who avowedly only ask the question, 'Will it
+pay?' But there are subtler forms which affect us all. It is the
+standing temptation of Englishmen to apply a money standard to
+everything, to adopt courses of action of which the only
+recommendation is that they promote getting on in the world. Men who
+call themselves Christians select schools for their children, or
+professions for their boys, or marriages for their daughters, down
+in Sodom, because it will give them a lift in life which they would
+not get up in the starved pastures at Bethel, with nobody but Abram
+and his like to associate with. If the earnestness with which men
+pursue an end is to be taken as any measure of its importance in
+their eyes, it certainly does not look much as if modern average
+Christians did believe that it was of more moment to be united to
+God, and to be growing like Him, than to secure a good large share
+of earthly possessions. Tried by the test of conduct, their faith in
+getting on is a great deal deeper than their faith in getting up.
+But if our religion does not make us put the world beneath our feet,
+and count all things but loss that we may win Christ, we had better
+ask ourselves whether our religion is any better than Lot's, which
+was second-hand, and was much more imitation of Abram than obedience
+to God.
+
+Lot teaches us that material good may tempt and conquer, even after
+it has once been overcome. His early life had been heroic; in his
+young enthusiasm, he had thrown in his portion with Abram in his
+great venture. He had not been thinking of his flocks when he left
+Haran. Probably, as I have just said, he was a good deal galvanised
+into imitation; but still, he had chosen the better part. But now he
+has tired of a pilgrim's life. There are men who cut down the
+thorns, and in whom the seed is sown; but thorns are tenacious of
+life, and quick growing, and so they spread over the field and choke
+the seed. It is easier to take some one bold step than to keep true
+through life to its spirit. Youth contemns, but too often middle-age
+worships, worldly success. The world tightens its grasp as we grow
+older, and Lot and Demas teach us that it is hard to keep for a
+lifetime on the heights. Faith, strong and ever renewed by
+communion, can do it; nothing else can.
+
+Lot's history teaches what comes of setting the world first, and
+God's kingdom second. For one thing, the association with it is sure
+to get closer. Lot began with choosing the plain; then he crept a
+little nearer, and pitched his tent 'towards' Sodom; next time we
+hear of him, he is living in the city, and mixed up inextricably
+with its people. The first false step leads on to connections
+unforeseen, from which the man would have shrunk in horror, if he
+had been told that he would make them. Once on the incline, time and
+gravity will settle how far down we go. We shall see, in subsequent
+sections, how far Lot's own moral character suffered from his
+choice. But we may so far anticipate the future narrative as to
+point out that it affords a plain instance of the great truth that
+the sure way to lose the world as well as our own souls, is to make
+it our first object. He would have been safe if he had stopped up
+among the hills. The shadowy Eastern kings who swooped down on the
+plain would never have ventured up there. But when we choose the
+world for our portion, we lay ourselves open to the full weight of
+all the blows which change and fortune can inflict, and come
+voluntarily down from an impregnable fastness to the undefended
+open.
+
+Nor is this all; but at the last, when the fiery rain bursts on the
+doomed city, Lot has to leave all the wealth for which he has
+sacrificed conscience and peace, and escapes with bare life; he
+suffers loss even if he himself is 'saved as dragged through the
+fire.' The world passeth away and the lust thereof, but he that
+doeth the will of God abideth for ever. The riches which wax not
+old, and need not to be left when we leave all things besides, are
+surely the treasures which the calmest reason dictates should be our
+chief aim. God is the true portion of the soul; if we have Him, we
+have all. So, let us seek Him first, and, with Him, all else is
+ours.
+
+
+
+
+ABRAM THE HEBREW
+
+
+ 'And there came one that had escaped, and told Abram the
+ Hebrew.'
+ GENESIS xiv. 13.
+
+This is a singular designation of Abram as 'The Hebrew.' Probably we
+have in its use here a trace of the customary epithet which he bore
+among the inhabitants of Canaan, and perhaps the presence of the
+name in this narrative may indicate the influence of some older
+account, traditional or written, which owed its authorship to some
+of them. At all events, this is the first appearance of the name in
+Scripture. As we all know, it has become that of the nation, but a
+Jew did not call himself a 'Hebrew' except in intercourse with
+foreigners. As in many other cases, the national name used by other
+nations was not that by which the people called themselves. Here,
+obviously, it is not a national name, for the very good reason that
+there was no nation then. It is a personal epithet, or, in plain
+English, a nickname, and it means, probably, as the ancient Greek
+translation of Genesis gives it, neither more nor less than 'The man
+from the other side,' the man that had come across the water. Just
+as a mediaeval prince bore the _sobriquet_ Outremere-the 'man
+from beyond the sea'--so Abram, to the aboriginal, or, at least,
+long-settled, inhabitants of the country, was known simply as the
+foreigner, the 'man from the other side' (of the Jordan, or more
+probably of the great river Euphrates), the man from across the
+water.
+
+Now that name may suggest, with a permissible, and, I hope, not
+misleading play of fancy, just two things, which I seek now to press
+upon our hearts and consciences. The one is as to how men become
+Christians, and the other is as to how they look to other people
+when they are.
+
+1. Men become Christians by a great emigration.
+
+'Get thee out from thy father's house, and from thy country, and
+from thy kindred,' was the command to Abram. And he became the heir
+to God's promises and the father of the faithful, because he did not
+hesitate a moment to make the plunge and to leave behind him all his
+past, his associations, his loves, much of his possessions, and, in
+a very profound sense, his old self, and put a great impassable gulf
+between him and them all.
+
+Now I am not going to say anything so narrow or foolish as that the
+Christian life must always begin with a conscious and sudden change;
+but this I am quite sure of, that in the vast majority of cases of
+thoroughly and out-and-out religious men, there must be a conscious
+change, whether it has been diffused through months or years, or
+concentrated in one burning moment. There has been a beginning;
+whether it has been like the dawn, or whether it has been like the
+kindling of a candle, the beginning of the flashing of the divine
+light into the heart; and the men that are most really under the
+influence of religious truth can, as a rule, looking back upon their
+past experience, see that it divides itself into two halves,
+separated from each other by a profound gulf--the time on the other
+side, and that on this side, of the great river. We must take heed
+lest by insisting on any one way of entrance into the kingdom we
+seem to narrow God's mercy, or sadden true hearts, or make the
+method of approach a test of the fact of entrance. God's city has
+more than twelve gates; they open to all the thirty-two points of
+the compass, yet there is, in the religious experience of the truest
+saints, always something analogous to this change. And what I desire
+to press upon you is, that unless you are only religious people
+after the popular superficial fashion of the day, there will be
+something like it in your lives.
+
+There will be a change in a man's deepest self, so that he will be a
+'new creature,' with new tastes, new motives stirring to action, new
+desires pressing for satisfaction, new loves sweetly filling his
+heart, new insight into the meanings and true good of life and time
+guiding his conduct, new aversions withdrawing him from old delights
+which have become hateful now, new hopes pluming their growing
+wings, and new powers bearing him along a new road. There will be a
+change in his relations to God and to God's will. God in Christ will
+have become his centre, instead of self, which was so before. He
+lives in a new world, being himself a new man.
+
+Our Lord uses this very illustration when He says, 'He that heareth
+My Word, and believeth Him that sent Me, hath eternal life, and
+cometh not into judgment, but hath passed out of death into life.'
+That is a great migration, is it not, from the condition of a corpse
+to that of a living man? Paul, too, gives the same idea with a
+somewhat different turn of the illustration, when he gives 'thanks
+to the Father who delivered us out of the power of darkness, and
+translated us into the kingdom of,'--not, as we might expect to
+complete the antithesis, 'the light,' but--the 'kingdom of the Son
+of His love,' which is the same thing as the light. The illustration
+is probably drawn from the practice of the ancient conquering
+monarchs, who, when they subjugated a country, were wont to lead
+away captive long files of its inhabitants as compulsory colonists,
+and set them down in another land. Thus the conquering Christ comes,
+and those whom He conquers by His love, He shifts by a great
+emigration out of the dominion of that darkness which is at once
+tyranny and anarchy, and leads them into the happy kingdom of the
+light.
+
+Thus, then, all Christian men become such, because they turn their
+backs upon their old selves, and crucify their affections and lusts;
+and paste down the leaf, as it were, on which their blotted past is
+writ, and turn over a new and a fairer one. And my question to you,
+dear brethren, is, Are you men from the other side, who were not
+born where you live now, and who have passed out of the native
+Chaldea into the foreign--and yet to the new self home--land of
+union with God?
+
+2. This designation may be taken as teaching that a Christian should
+be known as a foreigner, a man from across the water.
+
+Everybody in Canaan that knew Abram at all knew him as not one of
+themselves. The Hebrew was the name he went by, because his
+unlikeness to the others was the most conspicuous thing about him,
+even to the shallowest eye. Abram found himself, when he had
+migrated into Canaan, in no barbarous country, but plunged at once
+into the midst of an organised and compact civilisation, that walled
+its cities, and had the comforts and conveniences and regularities
+of a settled order; and in the midst of it all, what did he do? He
+elected to live in a tent. 'He dwelt in tabernacles, as the Epistle
+to the Hebrews comments upon his history, 'because he looked for a
+city.' The more his expectations were fixed upon a permanent abode,
+the more transitory did he make his abode here. If there had been no
+other city to fill his eyes, he would have gone and lived in some of
+those that were in the land. If there had been no other order to
+which he felt himself to belong, he would have had no objection to
+cast in his lot with the order and the people with whom he lived on
+friendly terms. But although he bought and sold with them, and
+fought for them and by their sides, and acquired from them land in
+which to bury his dead, he was not one of them, but said, 'No! I am
+not going into your city. I stay in my tent under this terebinth
+tree; for I am here as a stranger and a sojourner.' No doubt there
+were differences of language, dress, and a hundred other little
+things which helped the impression made on the men of the land by
+this strange visitor who lived in amity but in separation, and they
+are all crystallised in the name which the popular voice gave him,
+'The man from the other side.'
+
+That is the impression which Christian people ought to make in the
+world. They should be recognised, by even unobservant eyes who know
+nothing of the inner secret of their lives, as plainly belonging to
+another order. If we seek to keep fresh in our own minds the
+consciousness that we do so, it will make itself manifest in all our
+bearing and actions. So that exhortation to cultivate the continual
+sense that our true city--the mother city of our hearts and hopes--is
+in heaven is ever to be reiterated, and as constantly obeyed, as the
+necessary condition of a life worthy of our true affinities and of
+our glorious hopes.
+
+Nor less needful is the other exhortation--live by the laws of your
+own land, not by those of the foreign country where you are for a
+time. If you do that thoroughly, you will not need to say, 'I am
+from another country.' Your conduct will say it for you. An English
+ship is a bit of England, in whatever latitude it may be, and
+however far beyond the three-mile limit of the King's authority upon
+the seas it may float. And so, wherever there is a Christian man,
+there is a bit of God's kingdom, and over that little speck in the
+midst of the ocean of the world the flag with the Cross on it should
+fly, and the laws of the Christ should be the only laws that have
+currency. If it could be said of us as Haman said to his king about
+the Jews, that we were a people with laws 'diverse from those of all
+people,' we should be doing more than, alas! most of us do, to
+honour Him whom we profess to serve. Follow Christ, and people will
+be quick enough to say of you 'The man from the other side,' 'He
+does not belong to our city.' There is no need for ostentation, nor
+for saying, 'Come and see my zeal for the Lord,' nor for blowing
+trumpets before us at street corners or elsewhere. The less of all
+that the better. The more we try to do the common things done by the
+folk round us, but from another motive, the more powerful will be
+our witness for our Master.
+
+For instance, when John Knox was in the French galleys, he was
+fastened to the same oar with some criminal, perhaps a murderer. The
+two men sat on the same bench, did the same work, tugged at the same
+heavy sweep, were fed with the same food, suffered the same sorrows.
+Do you think there was any doubt as to the infinite gulf between
+them? We may be working side by side, at the very same tasks, and
+under similar circumstances, with men that have no share in our
+faith, and no sympathy with our hopes and aspirations, and yet,
+though doing the same thing, it will _not_ be the same thing.
+And if we keep Christ before us, and follow His steps who has left
+us an example, depend upon it people will very soon find out that we
+are men 'from across the water.'
+
+Notice, further, how this dissimilarity and obvious aloofness from
+the order of things in which we dwell is still perfectly compatible
+with all sorts of helpful associations. The context shows us that.
+There had come a flood of invasion, under kings with strange and
+barbarous names, from the far East. They had swept down upon the
+fertile valley of Siddim, and there had inflicted devastation.
+Amongst the captives had been Lot, Abram's relative, and all his
+goods had been taken. One fugitive, as it appears, had escaped, and
+the first thing he did was to go straight to 'the man from the other
+side,' and tell him about it, as if sure of sympathy and help. No
+doubt the relationship between Abram and Lot was the main reason why
+the panting survivor made his way to the hills where Abram's tent
+was pitched, but there was also confidence in his willingness to
+help the Sodomites who had lost their goods. So it was not to the
+sons of Heth in Mamre that the fugitive turned in his extremity, but
+he 'told Abram the Hebrew.'
+
+I need not narrate over again the familiar story of how, for once in
+his peaceful life, the 'friend of God' girds on his sword and
+develops military instincts in his prompt and well-planned pursuit,
+which show that if he did not try to conquer some part of the land
+which he knew to be his by the will of God, it was not for want of
+ability, but because he 'believed God,' and could wait. We all know
+how he armed his slaves, and made a swift march to the northern
+extremity of the land, and then, by a nocturnal surprise, came down
+upon the marauders and scattered them like chaff, before his onset,
+and recovered Lot and all the spoil.
+
+Let us learn that, if Christian men will live well apart from the
+world, they will be able to sympathise with and help the world; and
+that our religion should fit us for the prompt and heroic
+undertaking, as it certainly does for the successful accomplishment,
+of all deeds of brotherly kindness and sympathy, bringing help and
+solace to the weak and the wearied, liberty to the captives, and
+hope to the despairing.
+
+I do not believe that Christian men have any business to draw swords
+now. Abram is in that respect the Old Testament type of a God-
+fearing hero, with the actual sword in his hands. The New Testament
+type of a Christian warrior without a sword is not one jot less, but
+more, heroic. The form of sympathy, help, and 'public spirit' which
+the 'man from the other side' displayed is worse than an anachronism
+now in the light of Christ's law. It is a contradiction. But the
+spirit which breathed through Abram's conduct should be ours. We are
+bound to 'seek the peace of the city' where we dwell as strangers
+and pilgrims, avoiding no duty of sympathy and help, but by prompt,
+heroic, self-forgetting service to all the needy, sorrowful, and
+oppressed, building up such characters for ourselves that fugitives
+and desperate men shall instinctively turn to men from the other
+side for that help which, they know full well, the men of the
+country are too selfish or cowardly to give.
+
+May I venture to suggest yet another and very different application
+of this name? To the aboriginal inhabitants of heaven, the angels
+that kept their first estate, redeemed men are possessors of a
+unique experience; and are the 'men from the other side.' They who
+entered on their pilgrimage through the Red Sea of conversion, pass
+out of it through the Jordan of death. They who become Christ's, by
+the great change of yielding their hearts to Him, and who live here
+as pilgrims and sojourners, pass dryshod through the stream into His
+presence. And there they who have always dwelt in the sunny
+highlands of the true Canaan, gather round them, and call them, not
+unenvying, perhaps, their experience, 'The men that have crossed.'
+The 'Hebrews of the Hebrews' in the heavens are those who have known
+what it is to be pilgrims and sojourners, and to whom the promise
+has been fulfilled in the last hour of their journey, 'When thou
+passest through the river, I will be with thee.' _They_ teach
+the angels a new song who sing, 'Thou hast led us through fire and
+through water, and brought us into a wealthy place.'
+
+
+
+
+GOD'S COVENANT WITH ABRAM
+
+
+ 'And He brought him forth abroad, and said, Look now
+ toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to
+ number them: and He said unto him, So shall thy seed be.
+ And he believed in the Lord; and He counted it to him
+ for righteousness. And He said unto him, I am the Lord
+ that brought thee out of Ur of the Chaldees, to give
+ thee this land to inherit it. And he said, Lord God,
+ whereby shall I know that I shall inherit it? And He
+ said unto him, Take me an heifer of three years old, and
+ a she goat of three years old, and a ram of three years
+ old, and a turtledove, and a young pigeon. And he took
+ unto him all these, and divided them in the midst, and
+ laid each piece one against another: but the birds
+ divided he not. And when the fowls came down upon the
+ carcases, Abram drove them away. And when the sun was
+ going down, a deep sleep fell upon Abram; and, lo, an
+ horror of great darkness fell upon him. And he said unto
+ Abram, Know of a surety that thy seed shall be a stranger
+ in a land that is not theirs, and shall serve them; and
+ they shall afflict them four hundred years; And also
+ that nation, whom they shall serve, will I judge: and
+ afterward shall they come out with great substance. And
+ thou shalt go to thy fathers in peace; thou shalt be
+ buried in a good old age. But in the fourth generation
+ they shall come hither again: for the iniquity of the
+ Amorites is not yet full. And it came to pass, that,
+ when the sun went down, and it was dark, behold a smoking
+ furnace, and a burning lamp that passed between those
+ pieces. In the same day the Lord made a covenant with
+ Abram, saying, Unto thy seed have I given this land,
+ from the river of Egypt unto the great river, the river
+ Euphrates.'--GENESIS xv. 5-18.
+
+1. Abram had exposed himself to dangerous reprisals by his victory
+over the confederate Eastern raiders. In the reaction following the
+excitement of battle, dread and despondency seem to have shadowed
+his soul. Therefore the assurance with which this chapter opens came
+to him. It was new, and came in a new form. He is cast into a state
+of spiritual ecstasy, and a mighty 'word' sounds, audible to his
+inward ear. The form which it takes--'I am thy shield'--suggests
+the thought that God shapes His revelation according to the moment's
+need. The unwarlike Abram might well dread the return of the
+marauders in force, to avenge their defeat. Therefore God speaks to
+his fears and present want. Just as to Jacob the angels appeared as
+a heavenly camp guarding his undefended tents and helpless women;
+so, here and always, God is to us what we most need at the moment,
+whether it be comfort, or wisdom, or guidance, or strength. The
+manna tasted to each man, as the rabbis say, what he most desired.
+God's gifts take the shape of man's necessity.
+
+Abram had just exercised singular generosity in absolutely refusing
+to enrich himself from the spoil. God reveals Himself as 'his
+exceeding great reward.' He gives Himself as recompense for all
+sacrifices. Whatever is given up at His bidding, 'the Lord is able
+to give thee much more than this.' Not outward things, nor even an
+outward heaven, is the guerdon of the soul; but a larger possession
+of Him who alone fills the heart, and fills the heart alone. Other
+riches may be counted, but this is 'exceeding great,' passing
+comprehension, and ever unexhausted, and having something over after
+all experience. Both these aspects of God's preciousness are true
+for earth; but we need a shield only while exposed to attack. In the
+land of peace, He is only our reward.
+
+2. Mark the triumphant faith which wings to meet the divine promise.
+The first effect of that great assurance is to deepen Abram's
+consciousness of the strange contradiction to it apparently given by
+his childlessness. It is not distrust that answers the promise with
+a question, but it is eagerness to accept the assurance and
+ingenuous utterance of difficulties in the hope of their removal.
+God is too wise a father not to know the difference between the
+tones of confidence and unbelief, however alike they may sound; and
+He is too patient to be angry if we cannot take in all His promise
+at once. He breaks it into bits not too large for our lips, as He
+does here. The frequent reiterations of the same promises in Abram's
+life are not vain. They are a specimen of the unwearied repetition
+of our lessons, 'Here a little, there a little,' which our teacher
+gives His slow scholars. So, once more, Abram gets the promise of
+posterity in still more glorious form. Before, it was likened to the
+dust of the earth; now it is as the innumerable stars shining in the
+clear Eastern heaven. As he gazes up into the solemn depths, the
+immensity and peace of the steadfast sky seems to help him to rise
+above the narrow limits and changefulness of earth, and a great
+trust floods his soul. Abram had lived by faith ever since he left
+Haran; but the historian, usually so silent about the thoughts of
+his characters, breaks through his usual manner of narrative to
+insert the all-important words which mark an epoch in revelation,
+and are, in some aspects, the most significant in the Old Testament.
+Abram 'believed in the Lord; and He counted it to him for
+righteousness.'
+
+Observe the teaching as to the nature and object of faith in that
+first clause. The word rendered 'believed' literally means to steady
+oneself by leaning on something. So it gives in a vivid picture more
+instructive than many a long treatise what faith is, and what it
+does for us. As a man leans his trembling hand on a staff, so we lay
+our weak and changeful selves on God's strength; and as the most
+mutable thing is steadied by being fastened to a fixed point, so we,
+though in ourselves light as thistledown, may be steadfast as rock,
+if we are bound to the rock of ages by the living band of faith. The
+metaphor makes it plain that faith cannot be merely an intellectual
+act of assent, but must include a moral act, that of confidence.
+Belief as credence is mainly an affair of the head, but belief as
+trust is an act of the will and the affections.
+
+The object of faith is set in sunlight clearness by these words,--the
+first in which Scripture speaks of faith. Abram leaned on 'the Lord.'
+It was not the promise, but the promiser, that was truly the object
+of Abram's trust. He believed the former, because he trusted Him who
+made it. Many confusions in Christian teaching would have been avoided
+if it had been always seen that faith grasps a person, not a doctrine,
+and that even when the person is revealed by doctrine, it is him, and
+not only it, which faith lays hold of. Whether God speaks promises,
+teachings of truth, or commandments, faith accepts them, because it
+trusts Him. Christ is revealed to us for our faith by the doctrinal
+statements of the New Testament. But we must grasp Himself, as so
+revealed, if we are to have faith which saves the soul. This same
+thought of the true object of faith as personal helps us to understand
+the substantial identity of faith in all ages and stages of revelation,
+however different the substance of the creeds. Abram knew very little
+of God, as compared with our knowledge. But it was the same God whom
+Abram trusted, and whom we trust as made known in His Son. Hence we
+can stretch out our hands across the ages, and clasp his as partaker
+of 'like precious faith.' We walk in the light of the same sun,--he
+in its morning beams, we in its noonday glory. There has never been
+but one road to God, and that is the road which Abram trod, when 'he
+believed in the Lord.'
+
+3. Mark the full-orbed gospel truth as to the righteousness of faith
+which is embedded in this record of early revelation, 'He counted it
+to him for righteousness.' A geologist would be astonished if he
+came on remains in some of the primary strata which indicated the
+existence, in these remote epochs, of species supposed to be of much
+more recent date. So here we are startled at finding the peculiarly
+New Testament teaching away back in this dim distance. No wonder
+that Paul fastened on this verse, which so remarkably breaks the
+flow of the narrative, as proof that his great principle of
+justification by faith was really the one only law by which, in all
+ages, men had found acceptance with God. Long before law or
+circumcision, faith had been counted for righteousness. The whole
+Mosaic system was a parenthesis; and even in it, whoever had been
+accepted had been so because of his trust, not because of his works.
+The whole of the subsequent divine dealings with Israel rested on
+this act of faith, and on the relation to God into which, through
+it, Abram entered. He was not a perfectly righteous man, as some
+passages of his life show; but he rose here to the height of loving
+and yearning trust in God, and God took that trust in lieu of
+perfect conformity to His will. He treated and regarded him as
+righteous, as is proved by the covenant which follows. The gospel
+takes up this principle, gives us a fuller revelation, presents the
+perfect righteousness of Christ as capable of becoming ours by
+faith, and so unveils the ground on which Abram and the latest
+generations are equally 'accepted in the beloved.' This reckoning of
+righteousness to the unrighteous, on condition of their faith, is
+not because of any merit in faith. It does not come about in reward
+of, but by means of, their faith, which is nothing in itself, but is
+the channel only of the blessing. Nor is it a mere arbitrary act of
+God's, or an unreal imputing of what is not. But faith unites with
+Christ; and 'he that is joined to the Lord is one spirit,' so as
+that 'in Him we have redemption.' His righteousness becomes ours.
+Faith grafts us into the living Vine, and we are no longer regarded
+in our poor sinful individual personality, but as members of Christ.
+Faith builds us into the rock; but He is a living Stone, and we are
+living stones, and the life of the foundation rises up through all
+the courses of the great temple. Faith unites sinful men to God in
+Christ; therefore it makes them partakers of the 'blessedness of the
+man, ... to whom the Lord will not impute sin,' and of the
+blessedness of the man to whom the Lord reckons his faith for
+righteousness. That same faith which thus clothes us with the white
+robe of Christ's righteousness, in lieu of our own tattered raiment,
+also is the condition of our becoming righteous by the actual
+working out in our character of all things lovely and of good
+report. It opens the heart to the entrance of that divine Christ,
+who is first made _for_ us, and then, by daily appropriation of
+the law of the spirit of life, is made _in_ us, 'righteousness
+and sanctification, and redemption.' May all who read these lines
+'be found in Him,' having 'that which is through the faith of
+Christ, the righteousness which is of God by faith!'
+
+4. Consider the covenant which is the consequence of Abram's faith,
+and the proof of his acceptance.
+
+It is important to observe that the whole remainder of this chapter
+is regarded by the writer as the result of Abram's believing God.
+The way in which verse 7 and the rest are bolted on, as it were, to
+verse 6, clearly shows this. The nearer lesson from this fact is,
+that all the Old Testament revelation from this point onward rests
+on the foundation of faith. The further lesson, for all times, is
+that faith is ever rewarded by more intimate and loving
+manifestations of God's friendship, and by fuller disclosure of His
+purposes. The covenant is not only God's binding Himself anew by
+solemn acts to fulfil His promises already made, but it is His
+entering into far sweeter and nearer alliance with Abram than even
+He had hitherto had. That name, 'the friend of God,' by which he is
+still known over all the Mohammedan world, contains the very essence
+of the covenant. In old days men were wont to conclude a bond of
+closest amity by cutting their flesh and interchanging the flowing
+blood. Henceforth they had, as it were, one life. We have not here
+the shedding of Abram's blood, as in the covenant of circumcision.
+Still, the slain animals represent the parties to the covenant, and
+the notion of a resulting unity of the closest order as between God
+and Abram is the very heart of the whole incident.
+
+The particulars as to the rite by which the covenant was established
+are profoundly illuminative. The significant division of the animals
+into two shows that they were regarded as representing the
+contracting parties, and the passing between them symbolised the
+taking up of the obligations of the covenant. This strange rite,
+which was widely spread, derives importance from the use of it
+probably made in Hebrews ix 16, 17. The new covenant, bringing still
+closer friendship and higher blessings, is sealed by the blood of
+Christ. He represents both God and man. In His death, may we not say
+that the manhood and the Godhead are parted, and we, standing as it
+were between them, encompassed by that awful sacrifice, and enclosed
+in its mysterious depths, enter into covenant with God, and become
+His friends?
+
+We need not to dwell upon the detailed promises, of which the
+covenant was the seal. They are simply the fuller expansion of those
+already made, but now confirmed by more solemn guarantees. The new
+relation of familiar friendship, established by the covenant itself,
+is the main thing. It was fitting that God's friend should be in the
+secret of His purposes. 'The servant knoweth not what his lord
+doeth,' but the friend does. And so we have here the assurance that
+faith will pierce to the discernment of much of the mind of God,
+which is hid from sense and the wisdom of this world. If we would
+know, we must believe. We may be 'men of God's counsel,' and see
+deeply into the realities of the present, and far ahead into what
+will then become the certainties of the future, if only we live by
+faith in the secret place of the Most High, and, like John, lean so
+close on the Master's bosom that we can hear His lowest whisper.
+
+Notice, too, the lessons of the smoking furnace and the blazing
+torch. They are like the pillar of fire and cloud. Darkness and
+light; a heart of fire and a wrapping of darkness,--these are not
+symbols of Israel and its checkered fate, as Dean Stanley thinks,
+but of the divine presence: they proclaim the double aspect of all
+divine manifestations, the double element in the divine nature. He
+can never be completely known; He is never completely hid. Ever does
+the lamp flame; ever around it the smoke wreathes. In all His self-
+revelation is 'the hiding of His power'; after all revelation He
+dwelleth 'in the thick darkness.' Only the smoke is itself fire, but
+not illumined to our vision. The darkness is light inaccessible.
+Much that was 'smoke' to Abram has caught fire, and is 'light' to
+us. But these two elements will ever remain; and throughout eternity
+God will be unknown, and yet well known, pouring Himself in ever-
+growing radiance on our eyes, and yet 'the King invisible.'
+
+Nor is this all the teaching of the symbol. It speaks of that
+twofold aspect of the divine nature, by which to hearts that love He
+is gladsome light, and to unloving ones He is threatening darkness.
+As to the Israelites the pillar was light, and to the Egyptians
+darkness and terror; so the same God is joy to some, and dread to
+others. 'What maketh heaven, that maketh hell.' Light itself can
+become the source of pain the most exquisite, if the eye is
+diseased. God Himself cannot but be a torment to men who love
+darkness rather than light. Love and wrath, life and death, a God
+who pities and who cannot but judge, are solemnly proclaimed by that
+ancient symbol, and are plainly declared to us in the perfect
+revelation in Christ Jesus.
+
+Observe, too, the manner of the ratification of the covenant. The
+symbol of the Divine presence passed between the pieces. No mention
+is made of Abram's doing so. Why this one-sided covenant? Because
+God's gracious dealings with men are one-sided. He seeks no oaths
+from us; He does not exchange blessings for our gifts. His covenant
+is the free result of His unmotived love, and is ratified by a
+solemn sacrifice, which we do not offer. We have nothing to do but
+to take what He gives. All ideas of barter and bargain are far from
+Him. Our part is but to embrace His covenant, which is complete and
+ratified whether we embrace it or not. What a wonderful thought that
+is of a covenant-making and a covenant-keeping God! We do not hear
+so much of it as our fathers did. The more is the pity. It means
+that God has, as it were, buoyed out across the boundless ocean of
+His possible modes of action a plain course, which He binds Himself
+to keep; that He has frankly let us into the very secret of His
+doings; that He has stooped to use human forms of assurance to make
+it easier to trust Him; that He has confirmed His promise by a
+mighty sacrifice. Therefore we may enter into closest friendship
+with Him, and take for our own the exultant swan-song of Abram's
+royal son: 'Although my house be not so with God [although my life
+be stained, and my righteousness unfit to be offered to His pure
+eyes]; yet He hath made with me an everlasting covenant, ordered in
+all things, and sure: for this is all my salvation, and all my
+desire.'
+
+
+
+
+THE WORD THAT SCATTERS FEAR
+
+
+ 'Fear not, Abram: I am thy shield, and thy exceeding
+ great reward.'
+ GENESIS XV. 1.
+
+
+I
+
+
+Abram was now apparently about eighty-five years old. He had been
+fourteen years in Palestine, and had, for the only time in his life,
+quite recently been driven to have recourse to arms against a
+formidable league of northern kings, whom, after a swift forced
+march from the extreme south to the extreme north of the land, he
+had defeated. He might well fear attack from their overwhelmingly
+superior forces. So this vision, like all God's words, fits closely
+to moments needs, but is also for all time and all men.
+
+1. The call to conquer fear.
+
+Fear not.--(_a_) There is abundant reason for fear in facts of
+life. There are so many certain evils, and so many possible evils,
+that any man who is not a feather-brained fool must sometimes quail.
+
+(_b_) Reasons for fear in our relations to divine law.
+
+(_c_) The only rational way of conquering fears is by showing
+them to be unfounded. It is waste of breath to say, Don't be afraid,
+and to do nothing to remove the occasions of fear. It is childish to
+try to get rid of fears by shutting the eyes tight and refusing to
+look formidable facts in the face.
+
+(_d_) The revelation of God is the true antidote to fear.
+
+(_e_) 'Fear not' is the characteristic word of divine
+revelation. It is of frequent occurrence from Abraham till John in
+Patmos.
+
+2. The ground of the call in the Revelation of God as Shield.
+
+ (_a_) As to outward evils, His protection assures us, not of
+absolute exemption, but of His entire control of them, so that men
+and circumstances are His instruments, and His will only is
+powerful. Chedorlaomer and all the allied kings are nothing; 'a
+noise,' as the prophet said of a later conqueror. All the bitterness
+and terror is taken out of evil. If any fiery dart pass through the
+shield, all its poison is wiped off in passage. So there remains no
+reason for fear, since all things work together for good. Behind
+that shield we are safe as diver in his bell, though seas rave and
+sea-monsters swim around.
+
+(_b_) As to inward evils, our Shield assures us of absolute
+exemption. 'Shield of faith.' Faith is shield because it takes hold
+of God's strength.
+
+3. The ground of the call in the Revelation of God as Reward.
+Abraham had refused all share in booty, a large sacrifice, and here
+he is promised, A Reward in God, _i.e._ He gives Himself in
+recompense for all sacrifices in path of duty. 'The Lord is able to
+give thee much more than these.' This promise opens out to general
+truth that God Himself is the true reward of a devout life. There
+are many recompenses for all sacrifices for God, some of them
+outward and material, some of them inward and spiritual, but the reward
+which surpasses all others is that by such sacrifices we attain to
+greater capacity for God, and therefore possess more of Him. This is
+the only Reward worth thinking of--God only satisfies the soul. With
+Him we are rich; without Him poor; 'exceeding great'--'riches in
+glory,' transcending all measure. The revelations of God as Shield
+and Reward are both given in reference to the present life, but the
+former applies only to earth, where 'without are fighters, within are
+fears'; while 'the latter is mainly true for heaven, where those
+who have fought, having God for their Shield, will possess Him for
+their Reward, in a measure and manner which will make all earthly
+experiences seem poor. Here the 'heirs of God' get subsistence money,
+which is a small instalment of their inheritance; there they enter
+into possession of it all.
+
+
+II
+
+
+Many years have passed since Abram was called to go forth from his
+father's house, assured that God would make of him a great nation.
+They had been years of growing power. He has been dwelling at Mamre,
+as a prince among the people of the land, a power. There sweeps down
+on Southern Palestine the earliest of those invasions from the vast
+plains of the North which afterwards for generations were the
+standing dread of Abram's descendants. Like the storm pillars in
+their own deserts, are these wild marauders with the wild names that
+never appear again in the history. Down on the rich valleys and
+peaceful pasture lands they swoop for booty, not for conquest. Like
+some sea-bird, they snatch their prey and away. They carry with them
+among the long train of captives Abram's ungenerous brother-in-law,
+Lot. Then the friend of God, the father of the faithful, musters his
+men, like an Arab sheikh as he was, and swiftly follows the track of
+the marauders over the hills of Samaria, and across the plain of
+Jezreel. The night falls, and down he swoops upon them and scatters
+them. Coming back he had interviews with the King of Sodom, when he
+refuses to take any of the spoil, and with Melchizedek. Abram is
+back at Mamre. How natural that fear and depression should seize
+him: the reaction from high excitement; the dread that from the
+swarming East vengeance would come for his success in that night
+surprise; the thought that if it did, he was a wandering stranger in
+a strange land and could not count on allies. Then there would come,
+perhaps, the remembrance of how long God had delayed the very
+beginnings of the fulfilment, 'Seeing I go childless.'
+
+To this mood of mind the divine vision is addressed. 'Fear not--I am
+thy shield' whatever force comes against thee, 'and thine exceeding
+great reward,'--perhaps in reference to his refusal to take
+anything from the spoil. But God says this to us all. In these
+antique words the very loftiest and purest principles of spiritual
+religion are set forth.
+
+He that loves and trusts God possesses God.
+
+He that possesses God has enough for earth.
+
+He that possesses God has enough for heaven.
+
+1. It is possible for a man to have God for his. 'I am thy Reward,'--not
+merely Rewarder, but Reward.
+
+How can one spiritual Being belong to another?--plainly, By mutual
+love.
+
+The Gospel assures us of God's love, and makes it possible for ours
+to be fixed on Him.
+
+Faith gives us God for ours.
+
+The highest view of the blessings of the Gospel is that God Himself
+becomes our reward.
+
+How sad the insanity of men appears, in the ordinary aims of their
+life, its rewards and its objects of desire! How they chase after
+variety!
+
+How much loftier and truer a conception of the blessing of religion
+this is than notions of mere escape and the like!
+
+2. The possession of God is enough for earth.
+
+God the all-sufficient object for our spirits, His love, the
+communication of Himself, the sense of His presence, the depths of
+His infinite character, of His wondrous ways, of His revealed Truth
+as an object for thought: of His authoritative will as imperative
+for will and conscience: aspiration towards Him.
+
+God the Eternal Object.
+
+To find Him in everything, and everything in Him, is to be at rest.
+
+This is what He promises--
+
+Not a life of outward success and ease--much nobler than if He did.
+
+Take Abram's as a type.
+
+In war He will be our Defence.
+
+In absence of other joys He will be Enough.
+
+Sphered and included in Him is all sweetness. He sustains all
+relations, and does for us what these other joys and goods partially
+do.
+
+The possession of His love should put away all fear, since having
+Him we are not at the mercy of externals.
+
+What, then, is Life as men ordinarily make it?--what a blunder!
+
+3. To possess God is enough for heaven.
+
+Such a relationship is the great proof of immortality.
+
+Christ and Sadducees.
+
+The true glory of heaven is in fuller possession of God: no doubt
+other things, but these subsidiary.
+
+The Reward is God.
+
+The idea of recompense ample and full for all sorrow.
+
+More than adequate wages for all work.
+
+That final reward will show how wise the wanderer was, who left his
+father's house and 'looked for a city.' God is not ashamed to be
+called their God.
+
+Christ comes to us--offers Himself.
+
+Think of how rich with Him, and oh, think of how poor without Him!
+
+Which will you have on earth?
+
+Which will you have in another world?
+
+
+
+
+FAITH AND RIGHTEOUSNESS
+
+
+ 'And he believed in the Lord; and He counted it to him
+ for righteousness.'
+ GENESIS XV. 6.
+
+It is remarkable to find this anticipation of New Testament teaching
+so far back. It is like finding one full-blown flower in a garden
+where all else is but swelling into bud. No wonder that Paul
+fastened on it to prove that justification by faith was older than
+Moses, than law or circumcision, that his teaching was the real
+original, and that faith lay at the foundation of the Old Testament
+religion.
+
+1. The Nature of Faith.--The metaphor in the Hebrew word is that of
+a man leaning all his weight on some strong stay. Surely that
+metaphor says more than many definitions. It teaches that the
+essence of faith is absolute reliance, and that unites us with Him
+on whom we rely. Its result will be steadfastness. We are weak,
+mobile, apt to be driven hither and thither, but light things lashed
+to fixed things become fixed. So 'reeds shaken with wind' are
+changed into iron pillars.
+
+2. The Object of Faith.--'Lord.' It is a Person, not the promise but
+the Promiser. Of course, reliance on the Person results in
+acceptance of His word, and here it is God's word as to the future.
+Our faith has to do with the future, but also with the past. Its
+object is Christ, the historic Christ, the living Christ, the Christ
+who will come again. How clear the nature of faith becomes when its
+object is clear! It cannot be mere assent, but trust. How clear
+becomes its identity in all ages! The creeds may be different in
+completeness, but the object of faith is the same, and the emotion
+is the same.
+
+3. The effect of Faith.--Righteous is conformity to the will of God.
+Abram was not righteous, but he yielded himself to God and trusted
+Him, and God accepted that as the equivalent of righteousness. The
+acceptance was shown by the Covenant, and by the fulfilment of the
+promises.
+
+So here is the great truth that faith is accepted for righteous. It
+is rightly regarded and treated as righteous, by the estimate of
+God, who estimates things as they really are. It _is_ righteousness,
+for--
+
+(_a_) Faith is itself a supreme act of righteousness, as being
+accordant with God's supreme desire for man.
+
+(_b_) Faith unites with Christ the righteous.
+
+(_c_) Faith will blossom out into all righteousness.
+
+
+
+
+WAITING FAITH REWARDED AND STRENGTHENED BY NEW REVELATIONS
+
+
+ 'And when Abram was ninety years old and nine, the Lord
+ appeared to Abram, and said unto him, I am the Almighty
+ God; walk before Me, and be thou perfect. And I will
+ make My covenant between Me and thee, and will multiply
+ thee exceedingly. And Abram fell on his face: and God
+ talked with him, saying, As for Me, behold, My covenant
+ is with thee, and thou shalt be a father of many nations.
+ Neither shall thy name any more be called Abram, but thy
+ name shall be Abraham; for a father of many nations have
+ I made thee. And I will make thee exceeding fruitful, and
+ I will make nations of thee, and kings shall come out of
+ thee. And I will establish My covenant between Me and
+ thee and thy seed after thee in their generations for an
+ everlasting covenant, to be a God unto thee, and to thy
+ seed after thee. And I will give unto thee, and to thy
+ seed after thee, the land wherein thou art a stranger,
+ all the land of Canaan, for an everlasting possession;
+ and I will be their God. And God said unto Abraham, Thou
+ shalt keep My covenant therefore, thou, and thy seed
+ after thee In their generations.'
+ GENESIS xvii. 1-9.
+
+Abram was seventy-five years old when he left Haran. He was ninety-
+nine when God appeared to him, as recorded in this chapter. There
+had been three divine communications in these twenty-five years--one
+at Bethel on entering the land, one after the hiving off of Lot, and
+one after the battle with the Eastern kings. The last-named vision
+had taken place before Ishmael's birth, and therefore more than
+thirteen years prior to the date of the lesson.
+
+We are apt to think of Abraham's life as being crowded with
+supernatural revelations. We forget the foreshortening necessary in
+so brief a sketch of so long a career, which brings distant points
+close together. Revelations were really but thinly sown in Abram's
+life. For something over thirteen years he had been left to walk by
+faith, and, no doubt, had felt the pressure of things seen, silently
+pushing the unseen out of his life.
+
+Especially would this be the case as Ishmael grew up, and his
+father's heart began to cling to him. The promise was beginning to
+grow dimmer, as years passed without the birth of the promised heir.
+As verse 18 of this chapter shows, Abram's thoughts were turning to
+Ishmael as a possible substitute. His wavering confidence was
+steadied and quickened by this new revelation. We, too, are often
+tempted to think that, in the highest matters, 'a bird in the hand
+is worth two in the bush,' and to wish that God would be content
+with our Ishmaels, which satisfy us, and would not withdraw us from
+possessed good, to make us live by hope of good unseen. We need to
+reflect on this vision when we are thus tempted.
+
+1. Note the revelation of God's character, and of our consequent
+duty, which preceded the repetition of the covenant. 'I am the
+Almighty God.' The aspect of the divine nature, made prominent in
+each revelation of Himself, stands in close connection with the
+circumstances or mental state of the recipient. So when God appeared
+to Abram after the slaughter of the kings, He revealed Himself as
+'thy Shield' with reference to the danger of renewed attack from the
+formidable powers which He had bearded and beaten. In the present
+case the stress is laid on God's omnipotence, which points to doubts
+whispering in Abram's heart, by reason of God's delay in fulfilling
+His word, and of his own advancing years and failing strength. Paul
+brings out the meaning of the revelation when he glorifies the faith
+which it kindled anew in Abram, 'being fully assured that, what He
+had promised, He was able also to perform' (Rom. iv. 21). Whenever
+our 'faith has fallen asleep' and we are ready to let go our hold of
+God's ideal and settle down on the low levels of the actual, or to
+be somewhat ashamed of our aspirations after what seems so slow of
+realisation, or to elevate prudent calculations of probability above
+the daring enthusiasms of Christian hope, the ancient word, that
+breathed itself into Abram's hushed heart, should speak new vigour
+into ours. 'I am the Almighty God--take My power into all thy
+calculations, and reckon certainties with it for the chief factor.
+The one impossibility is that any word of Mine should fail. The one
+imprudence is to doubt My word.'
+
+What follows in regard to our duty from that revelation? 'Walk
+before Me, and be thou perfect.' Enoch walked _with_ God; that
+is, his whole active life was passed in communion with Him. The idea
+conveyed by 'walking _before_ God' is not precisely the same.
+It is rather that of an active life, spent in continual
+consciousness of being 'naked and opened before the eyes of Him to
+whom we have to give account.' That thrilling consciousness will not
+paralyse nor terrify, if we feel that we are not only 'ever in the
+great Task-Master's eye,' but that God's omniscience is all-knowing
+love, and is brought closer to our hearts and clothed in gracious
+tenderness in Christ whose 'eyes were as a flame of fire,' but whose
+love is more ardent still, who knows us altogether, and pities and
+loves as perfectly as He knows.
+
+What sort of life will spring from the double realisation of God's
+almightiness, and of our being ever before Him? 'Be thou perfect.'
+Nothing short of immaculate conformity with His will can satisfy His
+gaze. His desire for us should be our aim and desire for ourselves.
+The standard of aspiration and effort cannot be lowered to meet
+weakness. This is nobility of life--to aim at the unattainable, and
+to be ever approximating towards our aim. It is more blessed to be
+smitten with the longing to win the unwon than to stagnate in
+ignoble contentment with partial attainments. Better to climb, with
+faces turned upwards to the inaccessible peak, than to lie at ease
+in the fat valleys! It is the salt of life to have our aims set
+fixedly towards ideal perfection, and to say, 'I count not myself to
+have apprehended: but ... I press toward the mark.' _Toward_
+that mark is better than _to_ any lower. Our moral perfection
+is, as it were, the reflection in humanity of the divine
+almightiness.
+
+The wide landscape may be mirrored in an inch of glass. Infinity may
+be, in some manner, presented in miniature in finite natures. Our
+power cannot represent God's omnipotence, but our moral perfection
+may, especially since that omnipotence is pledged to make us perfect
+if we will walk before Him.
+
+2. Note the sign of the renewed covenant. Compliance with these
+injunctions is clearly laid down as the human condition of the
+divine fulfilment of it. 'Be thou perfect' comes first; 'My covenant
+is with thee' follows. There was contingency recognised from the
+beginning. If Israel broke the covenant, God was not unfaithful if
+He should not adhere to it. But the present point is that a new
+confirmation is given before the terms are repeated. The main
+purpose, then, of this revelation, did not lie in that repetition,
+but in the seal given to Abram by the change of name.
+
+Another sign was also given, which had a wider reference. The change
+of name was God's seal to His part. Circumcision was the seal of the
+other party, by which Abram, his family, and afterwards the nation,
+took on themselves the obligations of the compact.
+
+The name bestowed is taken to mean 'Father of a Multitude.' It was
+the condensation into a word, of the divine promise. What a trial of
+Abram's faith it was to bid him take a name which would sound in
+men's ears liker irony than promise! He, close on a hundred years
+old, with but one child, who was known not to be the heir, to be
+called the father of many! How often Canaanites and his own
+household would smile as they used it! What a piece of senile
+presumption it would seem to them! How often Abram himself would be
+tempted to think his new name a farce rather than a sign! But he
+took it humbly from God, and he wore it, whether it brought ridicule
+from others or assurance in his own heart. It takes some courage for
+any of us to call ourselves by names which rest on God's promise and
+seem to have little vindication in present facts. The world is fond
+of laughing at 'saints,' but Christians should familiarise
+themselves with the lofty designations which God gives His children,
+and see in them not only a summons to life corresponding, but a
+pledge and prophecy of the final possession of all which these
+imply. God calls 'things that are not, as though they were'; and it
+is wisdom, faith, and humility--not presumption--which accepts the
+names as omens of what shall one day be.
+
+The substance of the covenant is mainly identical with previous
+revelations. The land is to belong to Abram's seed. That seed is to
+be very numerous. But there is new emphasis placed on God's relation
+to Abram's descendants. God promises to be 'a God unto thee, and to
+thy seed after thee,' and, again, 'I will be their God' (verses 7,
+8). That article of the old covenant is repeated in the new (Jer.
+xxxi. 33), with the addition, 'And they shall be My people,' which
+is really involved in it. We do not read later more spiritual ideas
+into the words, when we find in them here, at the very beginning of
+Hebrew monotheism, an insight into the deep truth of the reciprocal
+possession of God by us, and of us by God. What a glimpse into the
+depths of that divine heart is given, when we see that we are His
+possession, precious to Him above all the riches of earth and the
+magnificences of heaven! What a lesson as to the inmost blessedness
+of religion, when we learn that it takes God for its very own, and
+is rich in possessing Him, whatever else may be owned or lacking!
+
+To possess God is only possible on condition of yielding ourselves
+to Him. When we give ourselves up, in heart, mind, and will, to be
+His, He is ours. When we cease to be our own, we get God for ours.
+The self-centred man is poor; he neither owns himself nor anything
+besides, in any deep sense. When we lose ourselves in God, we find
+ourselves, and being content to have nothing, and not even to be our
+own masters or owners, we possess ourselves more truly than ever,
+and have God for our portion, and in Him 'all things are ours.'
+
+
+
+
+A PETULANT WISH
+
+
+ 'And Abraham said unto God, O that Ishmael might live
+ before Thee!
+ GENESIS xvii. 18.
+
+These words sound very devout, and they have often been used by
+Christian parents yearning for the best interests of their children,
+and sometimes of their wayward and prodigal children. But
+consecrated as they are by that usage, I am afraid that their
+meaning, as they were uttered, was nothing so devout and good as
+that which is often attached to them.
+
+1. Note the temper in which Abraham speaks here. The very existence
+of Ishmael was a memorial of Abraham's failure in faith and
+patience. For he thought that the promised heir was long in coming,
+and so he thought that he would help God. For thirteen years the
+child had been living beside him, winding a son's way into a
+father's heart, with much in his character, as was afterwards seen,
+that would make a frank, daring boy his old father's darling. Then
+all at once comes the divine message, 'This is not the son of the
+Covenant; this is not the heir of the Promise. Sarah shall have a
+child, and from him shall come the blessings that have been
+foretold.' And what does Abraham do? Fall down in thankfulness
+before God? leap up in heart at the conviction that now at last the
+long-looked-for fulfilment of the oath of God was impending? Not he.
+'O that _Ishmael_ might live before Thee. Why cannot _he_ do? Why may
+he not be the chosen child, the heir of the Promise? Take him, O God!'
+
+That is to say, he thinks he knows better than God. He is petulant,
+he resists his blessing, he fancies that his own plan is quite as
+good as the divine plan. He does not want to draw away his heart
+from the child that it has twined round. So he loses the blessing of
+the revelation that is being made to him; because he does not bow
+his will, and accept God's way instead of his own. Now, do you not
+think that that is what we do? When God sends us Isaac, do we not
+often say, 'Take Ishmael; he is my own making. I have set all my
+hopes on him. Why should I have to wrench them all away?' In our
+individual lives we want to prescribe to God, far too often, not
+only the _ends_, but the _way_ in which we shall get to the ends; and
+we think to ourselves, 'That road of my own engineering that I have
+got all staked out, that is the true way for God's providence to take.'
+And when His path does not coincide with ours, then we are discontented,
+and instead of submitting we go with our pet schemes to Him; and if
+not in so many words, at least in spirit and temper, we try to force
+our way upon God, and when He is speaking about Isaac insist on pressing
+Ishmael on His notice.
+
+It is often so in regard to our individual lives; and it is so in
+regard to the united action of Christian people very often. A great
+deal of what calls itself earnest contending for 'the faith once
+delivered to the saints' is nothing more nor less than insisting
+that methods of men's devising shall be continued, when God seems to
+be substituting for them methods of His own sending; and so fighting
+about externals and church polity, and determining that the world
+has got to be saved in my own special fashion, and in no other,
+though God Himself seems to be suggesting the new thing to me. That
+is a very frequent phenomenon in the experience of Christian
+communities and churches. Ishmael is so very dear. He is not the
+child of promise, but he is the child that we have thought it
+advisable to help God with. It is hard for us to part with him.
+
+Dear brethren, sometimes, too, God comes to us in various
+providences, and not only reduces into chaos and a heap of confusion
+our nicely built-up little houses, but He sometimes comes to us, and
+lifts us out of some lower kind of good, which is perfectly
+satisfactory to us, or all but perfectly satisfactory, in order to
+give to us something nobler and higher. And we resist that too; and
+do not see why Ishmael should not serve God's turn as he has served
+ours; or think that there is no need at all for Isaac to come into
+our lives. God never takes away from us a lower, unless for the
+purpose of bestowing upon us a higher blessing. Therefore not to
+submit is the foolishest thing that men can do.
+
+But if that be anything like an account of the temper expressed by
+this saying, is it not strange that murmuring against God takes the
+shape of praying? Ah! there is a great deal of 'prayer' as it calls
+itself, which is just moulded upon this petulant word of Abraham's
+momentarily failing faith and submission. How many people think that
+to pray means to bring their wishes to God, and try to coax Him to
+make them His wishes! Why, half the shallow sceptical talk of this
+generation about the worthlessness of prayer goes upon that
+fundamental fallacy that the notion of prayer is to dictate terms to
+God; and that unless a man gets his wishes answered he has no right
+to suppose that his prayers are answered. But it is not so. Prayer
+is not after the type of 'O that Ishmael might live before Thee!'
+That is a poor kind of prayer of which the inmost spirit is
+resistance to a clear dictate of the divine will; but the true
+prayer is, 'O that I may be willing to take what Thou art willing,
+in Thy mercy and love, to send!'
+
+I believe in importunate prayer, but I believe also that a great deal
+of what calls itself importunate prayer is nothing more than an obstinate
+determination not to be satisfied with what satisfies God. If a man
+has been bringing his wishes--and he cannot but have such--continuously
+to God, with regard to any outward things, and these have not been
+answered, he needs to look very carefully into his own temper and heart
+in order to make sure that what seems to be waiting upon God in
+importunate petition is not pestering Him with refused desires. To make
+a prayer out of my rebellion against His will is surely the greatest
+abuse of prayer that can be conceived. And when Abraham said, 'O that
+Ishmael might live before Thee!' if he said it in the spirit in which I
+think he did, he was not praying, but he was grumbling.
+
+2. And then notice, still further, how such a temper and such a
+prayer have the effect of hiding joy and blessing from us.
+
+This was the crisis of Abraham's whole life. It was the moment at
+which his hundred years nearly of patient waiting were about to be
+rewarded. The message which he had just received was the most lovely
+and gracious word that ever had come to him from the heavens,
+although many such words had come. And what does he do with it?
+Instead of falling down before God, and letting his whole heart go
+out in jubilant gratitude, he has nothing to say but 'I would rather
+that Thou didst it in another way. It is all very well to speak
+about sending this heir of promise. I have no pleasure in that,
+because it means that my Ishmael is to be passed by and shelved.' So
+the proffered joy is turned to ashes, and Abraham gets no good, for
+the moment, out of God's greatest blessing to him; but all the sky
+is darkened by mists that come up from his own heart.
+
+Brethren, if you want to be miserable, perk up your own will against
+God's. If you want to be blessed, acquiesce in all that He does
+send, in all that He has sent, and, by anticipation, in all that He
+will send. For, depend upon it, the secret of finding sunbeams in
+everything is simply letting God have His own way, and making your
+will the sounding-board and echo of His. If Abraham had done as he
+ought to have done, that would have been the gladdest moment of his
+life. You and I can make out of our deepest sorrows the occasions of
+pure, though it is quiet, gladness, if only we have learned to say,
+'Not my will, but Thy will be done.' That is the talisman that turns
+everything into gold, and makes sorrow forget its nature, and almost
+approximate to solemn joy.
+
+3. My last word is this: God loves us all too well to listen to such
+a prayer.
+
+Abraham's passionate cry was so much empty wind, and was like a
+straw laid across the course of an express train, in so far as its
+power to modify the gracious purpose of God already declared was
+concerned. And would it not be a miserable thing if we could deflect
+the solemn, loving march of the divine Providence by these hot,
+foolish, purblind wishes of ours, that see only the nearer end of
+things, and have no notion of where their further end may go, or
+what it may be?
+
+Is it not better that we should fall back upon this thought, though,
+at first sight, it seems so to limit the power of petition, 'We know
+that if we ask anything according to His will He heareth us'? There
+is nothing that would more wreck our lives than if what some people
+want were to be the case--that God should let us have our own way,
+and give us serpents because we asked for them and fancied they were
+eggs; or let us break our teeth upon bestowed stones because, like
+whimpering children crying for the moon, we had asked for them under
+the delusion that they were bread.
+
+Leave all that in His hands; and be sure of this, that the true way
+to peace, to rest, to gladness, and to wringing the last drop of
+possible sweetness out of gifts and losses, disappointments and
+fruitions, is to have no will but God's will enthroned above and in
+our own wills. If Abraham had acquiesced and submitted, Ishmael and
+Isaac would have been a pair to bless his life, as they stood
+together over his grave. And if you and I will leave God to order
+all our ways, and not try to interfere with His purposes by our
+short-sighted dictation, 'all things will work together for good to
+us, because we love God,' and lovingly accept His will and His law.
+
+
+
+
+'BECAUSE OF HIS IMPORTUNITY'
+
+
+ 'And the men rose up from thence, and looked toward
+ Sodom: and Abraham went with them to bring them on the
+ way. And the Lord said, Shall I hide from Abraham that
+ thing which I do; Seeing that Abraham shall surely become
+ a great and mighty nation, and all the nations of the
+ earth shall be blessed in him! For I know him, that he
+ will command his children and his household after him,
+ and they shall keep the way of the Lord, to do justice
+ and judgment; that the Lord may bring upon Abraham that
+ which He hath spoken of him. And the Lord said, Because
+ the cry of Sodom and Gomorrah is great, and because
+ their sin is very grievous; I will go down now, and see
+ whether they have done altogether according to the cry
+ of it, which is come unto Me; and if not, I will know.
+ And the men turned their faces from thence, and went
+ toward Sodom: but Abraham stood yet before the Lord.
+ And Abraham drew near, and said, Wilt Thou also destroy
+ the righteous with the wicked? Peradventure there be
+ fifty righteous within the city: wilt Thou also destroy
+ and not spare the place for the fifty righteous that
+ are therein? That be far from Thee to do after this
+ manner, to slay the righteous with the wicked: and that
+ the righteous should be as the wicked, that be far from
+ Thee: Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?
+ And the Lord said, If I find in Sodom fifty righteous
+ within the city, then I will spare all the place for
+ their sakes. And Abraham answered and said, Behold now,
+ I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord, which am
+ but dust and ashes: Peradventure there shall lack five
+ of the fifty righteous: wilt Thou destroy all the city
+ for lack of five? And He said, If I find there forty
+ and five, I will not destroy it. And he spake unto Him
+ yet again, and said, Peradventure there shall be forty
+ found there. And He said, I will not do it for forty's
+ sake. And he said unto Him, Oh let not the Lord be angry,
+ and I will speak: Peradventure there shall thirty be
+ found there. And He said, I will not do it, if I find
+ thirty there. And he said, Behold now, I have taken upon
+ me to speak unto the Lord: Peradventure there shall be
+ twenty found there. And He said, I will not destroy it
+ for twenty's sake. And he said, Oh let not the Lord be
+ angry, and I will speak yet but this once: Peradventure
+ ten shall be found there. And He said, I will not destroy
+ it for ten's sake. And the Lord went His way, as soon as
+ He had left communing with Abraham: and Abraham returned
+ unto his place.'--GENESIS xviii. 16-33.
+
+
+I
+
+
+The first verse of this chapter says that 'the Lord appeared' unto
+Abraham, and then proceeds to tell that 'three men stood over
+against him,' thus indicating that these were, collectively, the
+manifestation of Jehovah. Two of the three subsequently 'went toward
+Sodom,' and are called 'angels' in chapter xix. 1. One remained with
+Abraham, and is addressed by him as 'Lord,' but the three are
+similarly addressed in verse 3. The inference is that Jehovah
+appeared, not only in the one 'man' who spake with Abraham, but also
+in the two who went to Sodom.
+
+In this incident we have, first, God's communication of His purpose
+to Abraham. He was called the friend of God, and friends confide in
+each other. 'The secret of the Lord is with them that fear Him,' and
+it is ever true that they who live in amity and communion with God
+thereby acquire insight into His purposes. Even in regard to public
+or so-called 'political' events, a man who believes in God and His
+moral government will often be endowed with a 'terrible sagacity,'
+which forecasts consequences more surely than do godless
+politicians. In regard to one's own history, it is still more
+evidently true that the one way to apprehend God's purposes in it is
+to keep in close friendship with Him. Then we shall see the meaning
+of the else bewildering whirl of events, and be able to say, 'He
+that hath wrought us for the selfsame thing is God.' But the reason
+assigned for intrusting Abraham with the knowledge of God's purpose
+is to be noted. It was because of his place as the medium of
+blessing to the nations, and as the lawgiver to his descendants. God
+had 'known him,'--that is, had lovingly brought him into close
+relations with Himself, not for his own sake only, but, much more,
+that he might be a channel of grace to Israel and the world. His
+'commandment' to his descendants was to lead to their worship of
+Jehovah and their upright living, and these again to their
+possession of the blessings promised to Abraham. That purpose would
+be aided by the knowledge of the judgment on Sodom, its source, and
+its cause, and therefore Abraham was admitted into the council-
+chamber of Jehovah. The insight given to God's friends is given that
+they may more fully benefit men by leading them into paths of
+righteousness, on which alone they can be met by God's blessings.
+
+The strongly figurative representation in verses 20, 21, according
+to which Jehovah goes down to ascertain whether the facts of Sodom's
+sin correspond to the report of it, belongs to the early stage of
+revelation, and need not surprise us, but should impress on us the
+gradual character of the divine Revelation, which would have been
+useless unless it had been accommodated to the mental and spiritual
+stature of its recipients. Nor should it hide from us the lofty
+conception of God's long-suffering justice, which is presented in so
+childlike a form. He does 'not judge after ... the hearing of His
+ears,' nor smite without full knowledge of the sin. A later stage of
+revelation puts the same thought in language less strange to us,
+when it teaches that 'the Lord is a God of knowledge, and by Him
+actions are weighed,' and in His balances many a false estimate,
+both of virtuous and vicious acts, is corrected, and retribution is
+always exactly adjusted to the deed.
+
+But the main importance of the incident is in the wonderful picture
+of Abraham's intercession, which, in like manner, veils, under a
+strangely sensuous representation, lofty truths for all ages. It is
+to be noted that the divine purpose expressed in 'I will go down
+now, and see,' is fulfilled in the going of the two (men or angels)
+towards Sodom; therefore Jehovah was in them. But He was also in the
+One before whom Abraham stood. The first great truth enshrined in
+this part of the story is that the friend of God is compassionate
+even of the sinful and degraded. Abraham did not intercede for Lot,
+but for the sinners in Sodom. He had perilled his life in warfare
+for them; he now pleads with God for them. Where had he learned this
+brave pity? Where but from the God with whom he lived by faith? How
+much more surely will real communion with Jesus lead _us_ to
+look on all men, and especially on the vicious and outcast, with His
+eyes who saw the multitudes as sheep without a shepherd, torn,
+panting, scattered, and lying exhausted and defenceless!
+Indifference to the miseries and impending dangers of Christless men
+is impossible for any whom He calls 'not servants, but friends.'
+
+Again, we are taught the boldness of pleading which is permitted to
+the friend of God, and is compatible with deepest reverence. Abraham
+is keenly conscious of his audacity, and yet, though he knows
+himself to be but dust and ashes, that does not stifle his
+petitions. His was the holy 'importunity' which Jesus sent forth for
+our imitation. The word so rendered in Luke xi. 8, which is found in
+the New Testament there only, literally means 'shamelessness,' and
+is exactly the disposition which Abraham showed here. Not only was
+he persistent, but he increased his expectations with each partial
+granting of his prayer. The more God gives, the more does the true
+suppliant expect and crave; and rightly so, for the gift to be given
+is infinite, and each degree of possession enlarges capacity so as
+to fit to receive more, and widens desire. What contented us to-day
+should not content us to-morrow.
+
+Again, Abraham is bold in appealing to a law to which God is bound
+to conform. 'Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?' is
+often quoted with an application foreign to its true meaning.
+Abraham was not preaching to men trust that the most perplexing acts
+of God would be capable of full vindication if we knew all, but he
+was pleading with God that His acts should be plainly accordant with
+the idea of justice planted by Him in us. The phrase is often used
+to strengthen the struggling faith that
+
+ 'All is right which seems most wrong,
+ If it be His sweet will.'
+
+But it means not 'Such and such a thing must be right because God
+has done it,' but 'Such and such a thing is right, therefore God
+must do it.' Of course, our conceptions of right are not the
+absolute measure of the divine acts, and the very fact which Abraham
+thought contrary to justice is continually exemplified in
+Providence, that 'the righteous should be as the wicked' in regard
+to earthly calamities affecting communities. So far Abraham was
+wrong, but the spirit of his remonstrance was wholly right.
+
+Again, we learn the precious lesson that prayer for others is a real
+power, and does bring down blessings and avert evils. Abraham did
+not here pray for Lot, but yet 'God remembered Abraham, and sent Lot
+out of the midst of the overthrow'(chap. xix. 29), so that there had
+been unrecorded intercession for him too. The unselfish desires for
+others, that exhale from human hearts under the influence of the
+love which Christ plants in us, do come down in blessings on others,
+as the moisture drawn up by the sun may descend in fructifying rain
+on far-off pastures of the wilderness. We help one another when we
+pray for one another.
+
+The last lesson taught is that 'righteous' men are indeed the 'salt
+of the earth' not only preserving cities and nations from further
+corruption, but procuring for them further existence and probation.
+God holds back His judgments so long as hope of amendment survives,
+and 'will not destroy for the ten's sake.'
+
+
+
+
+THE INTERCOURSE OF GOD AND HIS FRIEND
+
+
+II
+
+
+We have seen that the fruit of Abraham's faith was God's entrance
+into close covenant relations with him; or, as James puts it, 'It
+was reckoned unto him for righteousness; and he was called the
+friend of God.' This incident shows us the intercourse of the divine
+and human friends in its familiarity, mutual confidence, and power.
+It is a forecast of Christ's own profound teachings in His parting
+words in the upper chamber, concerning the sweet and wondrous
+intercourse between the believing soul and the indwelling God.
+
+1. The friend of God catches a gleam of divine pity and tenderness.
+Abraham has no relations with the men of Sodom. Their evil ways
+would repel him; and he would be a stranger among them still more
+than among the Canaanites, whose iniquity was 'not yet full.' But
+though he has no special bonds with them, he cannot but melt with
+tender compassion when he hears their doom. Communion with the very
+Source of all gentle love has softened his heart, and he yearns over
+the wicked and fated city. Where else than from his heavenly Friend
+could he have learned this sympathy? It wells up in this chapter
+like some sudden spring among solemn solitudes--the first instance
+of that divine charity which is the best sign that we have been with
+God, and have learned of Him. All that the New Testament teaches of
+love to God, as necessarily issuing in love to man, and of the true
+love to man as overleaping all narrow bounds of kindred, country,
+race, and ignoring all questions of character, and gushing forth in
+fullest energy towards the sinners in danger of just punishment, is
+here in germ. The friend of God must be the friend of men; and if
+they be wicked, and he sees the frightful doom which they do not
+see, these make his pity the deeper. Abraham does not contest the
+justice of the doom. He lives too near his friend not to know that
+sin must mean death. The effect of friendship with God is not to
+make men wish that there were no judgments for evil-doers, but to
+touch their hearts with pity, and to stir them to intercession and
+to effort for their deliverance.
+
+2. The friend of God has absolute trust in the rectitude of His
+acts. Abraham's remonstrance, if we may call it so, embodies some
+thoughts about the government of God in the world which should be
+pondered.
+
+His first abrupt question, flung out without any reverential
+preface, assumes that the character of God requires that the fate of
+the righteous should be distinguished from that of the wicked. The
+very brusqueness of the question shows that he supposed himself to
+be appealing to an elementary and indubitable law of God's dealings.
+The teachings of the Fall and of the Flood had graven deep on his
+conscience the truth that the same loving Friend must needs deal out
+rewards to the good and chastisement to the bad. That was the simple
+faith of an early time, when problems like those which tortured the
+writers of the seventy-third Psalm, or of Job and Ecclesiastes, had
+not yet disturbed the childlike trust of the friend of God, because
+no facts in his experience had forced them on him. But the belief
+which was axiomatic to him, and true for his supernaturally shaped
+life with its special miracles and visible divine guard, is not the
+ultimate and irrefragable principle which he thought it. In
+widespread calamities the righteous are blended with the wicked in
+one bloody ruin; and it is the very misery of such judgments that
+often the sufferers are not the wrongdoers, but that the fathers eat
+the sour grapes, and the children's teeth are set on edge. The
+whirlwind of temporal judgments makes no distinctions between the
+dwellings of the righteous and the wicked, but levels them both. No
+doubt, the fact that the impending destruction was to be a direct
+Divine interposition of a punitive kind made it more necessary that
+it should be confined to the actual culprits. No doubt, too,
+Abraham's zeal for the honour of God's government was right. But his
+first plea belongs to the stage of revelation at which he stood, not
+to that of the New Testament, which teaches that the eighteen on
+whom the tower in Siloam fell were not sinners above all men in
+Jerusalem. Abraham's confidence in God's justice, not Abraham's
+conceptions of what that justice required, is to be imitated. A
+friend of God will hold fast by the faith that 'His way is perfect,'
+and will cherish it even in the presence of facts more perplexing
+than any which met Abraham's eyes.
+
+Another assumption in his prayer is that the righteous are sources
+of blessing and shields for the wicked. Has he there laid hold of a
+true principle? Certainly, it is indeed the law that 'every man
+shall bear his own burden,' but that law is modified by the
+operation of this other, of which God's providence is full. Many a
+drop of blessing trickles from the wet fleece to the dry ground.
+Many a stroke of judgment is carried off harmlessly by the lightning
+conductor. Where God's friends are inextricably mixed up with evil-
+doers, it is not rare to see diffused blessings which are destined
+indeed primarily for the former, but find their way to the latter.
+Christians are the 'salt of the earth' in this sense too, that they
+save corrupt communities from swift destruction, and for their sakes
+the angels delay their blow. In the final resort, each soul must
+reap its own harvest from its own deeds; but the individualism of
+Christianity is not isolation. We are bound together in mysterious
+community, and a good man is a fountain of far-flowing good. The
+truest 'saviours of society' are the servants of God.
+
+A third principle is embodied in the solemn question, 'Shall not the
+Judge of all the earth do right?' This is not meant in its bearing
+here, as we so often hear it quoted, to silence man's questionings
+as to mysterious divine acts, or to warn us from applying our
+measures of right and wrong to these. The very opposite thought is
+conveyed; namely, the confidence that what God does must approve
+itself as just to men. He is Judge of all the earth, and therefore
+bound by His very nature, as by His relations to men, to do nothing
+that cannot be pointed to as inflexibly right. If Abraham had meant,
+'What God does, must needs be right, therefore crush down all
+questions of how it accords with thy sense of justice,' he would
+have been condemning his own prayer as presumptuous, and the thought
+would have been entirely out of place. But the appeal to God to
+vindicate His own character by doing what shall be in manifest
+accord with His name, is bold language indeed, but not too bold,
+because it is prompted by absolute confidence in Him. God's
+punishments must be obviously righteous to have moral effect, or to
+be worthy of Him.
+
+But true as the principle is, it needs to be guarded. Abraham
+himself is an instance that men's conceptions of right do not
+completely correspond to the reality. His notion of 'right' was, in
+some particulars, as his life shows, imperfect, rudimentary, and far
+beneath New Testament ideas. Conscience needs education. The best
+men's conceptions of what befits divine justice are relative,
+progressive; and a shifting standard is no standard. It becomes us
+to be very cautious before we say to God, 'This is the way. Walk
+Thou in it,' or dismiss any doctrine as untrue on the ground of its
+contradicting our instincts of justice.
+
+3. The friend of God has power with God. 'Shall I hide from Abraham
+that thing which I do?' The divine Friend recognises the obligation
+of confidence. True friendship is frank, and cannot bear to hide its
+purposes. That one sentence in its bold attribution of a like
+feeling to God leads us deep into the Divine heart, and the sweet
+reality of his amity. Insight into His will ever belongs to those
+who live near Him. It is the beginning of the long series of
+disclosures of 'the secret of the Lord' to 'them that fear Him,'
+which is crowned by 'henceforth I call you not servants; but ...
+friends; for all things that I have heard of My Father I have made
+known unto you.' So much for the divine side of the communion.
+
+On the human side, we are here taught the great truth, that God's
+friends are intercessors, whose voice has a mysterious but most real
+power with God. If it be true, that, in general terms, the righteous
+are shields and sources of blessing to the unholy, it is still more
+distinctly true that they have access to God's secret place with
+petitions for others as well as for themselves. The desires which go
+up to God, like the vapours exhaled to heaven, fall in refreshing
+rain on spots far away from that whence they rose. In these days we
+need to keep fast hold of our belief in the efficacy of prayer for
+others and for ourselves. God knows Himself and the laws of His
+government a great deal better than any one besides does; and He has
+abundantly shown us in His Word, and by many experiences, that
+breath spent in intercession is not wasted. In these old times, when
+worship was mainly sacrificial, this wonderful instance of pure
+intercession meets us, an anticipation of later times. And from
+thence onwards there has never failed proof to those who will look
+for it, that God's friends are true priests, and help their brethren
+by their prayers. Our voices should 'rise like a fountain night and
+day' for men. But there is a secret distrust of the power, and a
+flagrantly plain neglect of the duty, of intercession nowadays,
+which need sorely the lesson that God 'remembered Abraham' and
+delivered Lot. Luther, in his rough, strong way, says: 'If I have a
+Christian who prays to God for me, I will be of good courage, and be
+afraid of nothing. If I have one who prays against me, I had rather
+have the Grand Turk for my enemy.'
+
+The tone of Abraham's intercession may teach us how familiar the
+intercourse with the Heavenly Friend may be. The boldest words from
+a loving heart, jealous of God's honour, are not irreverent in His
+eyes. This prayer is abrupt, almost rough. It sounds like
+remonstrance quite as much as prayer. Abraham appeals to God to take
+care of His name and honour, as if he had said, If Thou doest this,
+what will the world say of Thee, but that Thou art unmerciful? But
+the grand confidence in God's character, the eager desire that it
+should be vindicated before the world, the dread that the least film
+should veil the silvery whiteness or the golden lustre of His name,
+the sensitiveness for His honour--these are the effects of communion
+with Him; and for these God accepts the bold prayer as truer
+reverence than is found in many more guarded and lowly sounding
+words. Many conventional proprieties of worship may be broken just
+because the worship is real. 'The frequent sputter shows that the
+soul's depths boil in earnest.' We may learn, too, that the most
+loving familiarity never forgets the fathomless gulf between God and
+it. Abraham remembers that he is 'dust and ashes'; he knows that he
+is venturing much in speaking to God. His pertinacious prayers have
+a recurring burden of lowly recognition of his place. Twice he
+heralds them with 'I have taken upon me to speak unto the Lord';
+twice with 'Oh let not the Lord be angry.' Perfect love casts out
+fear and deepens reverence. We may come with free hearts, from which
+every weight of trembling and every cloud of doubt has been lifted.
+But the less the dread, the lower we shall bow before the Loftiness
+which we love. We do not pray aright until we tell God everything.
+The 'boldness' which we as Christians ought to have, means literally
+a frank speaking out of all that is in our hearts. Such 'boldness
+and access with confidence' will often make short work of so-called
+seemly reverence, but it will never transgress by so much as a
+hair's-breadth the limits of lowly, trustful love.
+
+Abraham's persistency may teach us a lesson. If one might so say, he
+hangs on God's skirt like a burr. Each petition granted only
+encourages him to another. Six times he pleads, and God waits till
+he has done before He goes away; He cannot leave His friend till
+that friend has said all his say. What a contrast the fiery fervour
+and unwearying pertinacity of Abraham's prayers make to the stiff
+formalism of the intercessions one is familiar with! The former are
+like the successive pulses of a volcano driving a hot lava stream
+before it; the latter, like the slow flow of a glacier, cold and
+sluggish. Is any part of our public or private worship more
+hopelessly formal than our prayers for others? This picture from the
+old world may well shame our languid petitions, and stir us up to a
+holy boldness and persistence in prayer. Our Saviour Himself teaches
+that 'men ought always to pray, and not to faint,' and Himself
+recommends to us a holy importunity, which He teaches us to believe
+is, in mysterious fashion, a power with God. He gives room for such
+patient continuance in prayer by sometimes delaying the apparent
+answer, not because He needs to be won over to bless, but because it
+is good for us to draw near, and to keep near, the Lord. He is ever
+at the door, ready to open, and if sometimes, like Rhoda to Peter,
+He does not open immediately, and we have to keep knocking, it is
+that our desires may increase by delay, and so He may be able to
+give a blessing, which will be the greater and sweeter for the
+tarrying.
+
+So the friendship is manifested on both sides: on God's, by
+disclosure of His purpose and compliance with His friend's request;
+on Abraham's, by speech which is saved from irreverence by love, and
+by prayer which is acceptable to God by its very importunity. Jesus
+Christ has promised us the highest form of such friendship, when He
+has said, 'I have called you friends: for all things that I have
+heard of My Father I have made known unto you'; and again, 'If ye
+abide in Me, ... ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done
+unto you.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SWIFT DESTROYER
+
+
+ 'And when the morning arose, then the angels hastened
+ Lot, saying, Arise, take thy wife, and thy two daughters,
+ which are here; lest them be consumed in the iniquity of
+ the city. And while he lingered, the men laid hold upon
+ his hand, and upon the hand of his wife, and upon the
+ hand of his two daughters; the Lord being merciful unto
+ him: and they brought him forth, and set him without
+ the city. And it came to pass, when they had brought
+ them forth abroad, that He said, Escape for thy life;
+ look not behind thee, neither stay thou in all the plain;
+ escape to the mountain, lest thou be consumed. And Lot
+ said unto them, Oh, not so, my Lord: Behold now, Thy
+ servant hath found grace in Thy sight, and Thou hast
+ magnified Thy mercy, which Thou hast shewed unto me in
+ saving my life; and I cannot escape to the mountain, lest
+ some evil take me, and I die: Behold now, this city is
+ near to flee unto, and it is a little one: Oh, let me
+ escape thither, (is it not a little one?) and my soul
+ shall live. And He said unto him, See, I have accepted
+ thee concerning this thing also, that I will not overthrow
+ this city, for the which thou hast spoken. Haste thee,
+ escape thither; for I cannot do any thing till thou be
+ come thither. Therefore the name of the city was called
+ Zoar. The sun was risen upon the earth when Lot entered
+ into Zoar. Then the Lord rained upon Sodom and upon
+ Gomorrah brimstone and fire from the Lord out of heaven;
+ And He overthrew those cities, and all the plain, and
+ all the inhabitants of the cities, and that which grew
+ upon the ground. But his wife looked back from behind
+ him, and she became a pillar of salt.'--GENESIS xix. 15-26.
+
+The religious significance of this solemn page of revelation is but
+little affected by any of the interesting questions which criticism
+raises concerning it, so that I am free to look at the whole
+narrative for the purpose of deducing its perennial lessons. There
+are four clearly marked stages in the story: the lingering of Lot in
+the doomed city, and the friendly force which dragged him from it;
+the prayer of abject fear, and the wonderful answer; the awful
+catastrophe; and the fate of the wretched woman who looked back.
+
+1. Lot's lingering and rescue by force. Second thoughts are not
+always best. When great resolves have to be made, and when a clear
+divine command has to be obeyed, the first thought is usually the
+nobler; and the second, which pulls it back, and damps its ardour,
+is usually of the earth, earthy. So was it with Lot. Overnight, in
+the excitement of the terrible scene enacted before his door, Lot
+had been not only resolved himself to flee, but his voice had urged
+his sons-in-law to escape from the doom which he then felt to be
+imminent. But with the cold grey light of morning his mood has
+changed. The ties which held him in Sodom reassert their power.
+Perhaps daylight made his fears seem less real. There was no sign in
+the chill Eastern twilight that this day was to be unlike the other
+days. Perhaps the angels' summons roused him from sleep, and their
+'arise' is literally meant. It might have given wings to his flight.
+Urgent, and resonant, like the morning bugle, it bids him be
+stirring lest he be swept away 'in the punishment of the city.'
+Observe that the same word means 'sin' and 'punishment,'--a
+testimony to the profound truth that at bottom they are one, sin
+being pain in the root, pain being sin in the flower. So our own
+word 'evil' covers all the ground, and means both sin and sorrow.
+But even that pealing note does not shatter his hesitation. He still
+lingers. What kept him? That which had first taken him there--material
+advantages. He had struck root in Sodom. The tent life which he had
+kept to at first has been long given up; we find him sitting in the
+gate of the city, the place for gossip and friendly intercourse. He
+has either formed, or is going to form, marriage alliances for his
+daughters with men of the city who are as black as the rest. Perhaps
+his wife, whom the story will not name, for pity or for horror, was a
+Sodomite. To escape meant to leave all this and his wealth behind. If
+he goes out, he goes out a pauper. So his heart, which is where his
+treasure is, makes his movements slow. What insanity his lingering
+must have seemed to the angels! I wonder if we, who cling so desperately
+to the world, and who are so slow to go where God would have us to be
+for our own safety, if thereby we shall lose anything of this world's
+wealth, seem very much wiser to eyes made clear-sighted with the wisdom
+of heaven. This poor hesitating lingerer, too much at home in the city
+of destruction to get out of it even to save his life, has plenty of
+brothers to-day. Every man who lets the world hold him by the skirts
+when Christ is calling him to salvation, and every man who is reluctant
+to obey any clear call to sacrifice and separation from godless men,
+may see his own face in this glass, and perhaps get a glimpse of its
+ugliness.
+
+What a homely picture, full of weighty truth, the story gives us, of
+the angels each taking two of the reluctant four by the hand, and
+dragging them with some degree of kindly force from destruction into
+safety! So, in a great fire, domestic animals and horses seem to
+find a strange fascination in the flames, and have to be carried out
+of certain death by main force. They 'set him'--or we might read,
+'made him rest'--outside the city. It was but a little distance, for
+these 'cities' were tiny places, and the walls were soon reached.
+But it was far enough to change Lot's whole feelings. He passes to
+feeble despair and abject fear, as we shall see. That forlorn group,
+homeless, friendless, stripped of everything, shivering outside the
+gate in the cold morning air, may teach us how wise and prudent the
+man is who seeks the kingdom of God second, and the other things
+first.
+
+2. There was a pause outside the city. A new voice speaks now to
+Lot. 'They' brought him forth; but 'He' said 'escape.' The same
+'Lord' to whom Abraham had prayed, has now rejoined the mysterious
+pair whom He had sent to Sodom. And Lot's entreaty is addressed to
+Him whom he calls 'my Lord.' He uses singular pronouns throughout,
+although the narrator says that he 'said unto _them_.' There
+seems to be here the same idea as is embodied in the word 'Elohim';
+namely, that the divine powers are regarded as in some sense
+separable, and yet all inhering in a personal unity. At all events,
+we have here a distinct representation of an intercourse between God
+and man, in which thoughts are conveyed to the human spirit direct
+from the divine, and desires pass from the human to the divine. The
+manner of the intercourse we do not know, but the possibility of the
+fact can scarcely be denied by any believer in a God; and, however
+we may call this miraculous or abnormal, the essence of the event
+can be repeated in the experience of each of us. God still speaks to
+men, and men may still plead with God. Unless our religion is
+communion, it is nothing.
+
+The divine voice reiterates the angels' urgent command in still more
+stringent words: 'Escape for thy life.' There is to be no more
+angel-leading, but Lot's feet are to be made as hinds' feet by the
+thought of the flaming death that is pursuing. His lingering looks
+are sternly forbidden, since they would delay his flight and divide
+his heart. The direction of his flight is for the first time pointed
+out. The fertile plain, which had lured him down from the safe
+hills, is prohibited. Only on the mountain-side, probably the
+eastern mountains, where the morning red was beginning to blush, is
+there safety.
+
+Lot's answer shows a complete change of feeling. He is too fully
+alarmed now. His fright is so desperate that it has killed faith and
+common sense. The natural conclusion from God's mercy, which he
+acknowledges, would have been trust and obedience. 'Therefore I can
+escape,' not 'but I cannot escape,' would have been the logic of
+faith. The latter is the irrationality of fear. When a man who has
+been cleaving to this fleeting life of earthly good wakes up to
+believe his danger, he is ever apt to plunge into an abyss of
+terror, in which God's commands seem impossible, and His will to
+save becomes dim. The world first lies to us by 'You are quite safe
+where you are. Don't be in a hurry to go.' Then it lies, 'You never
+can get away now.' Reverse Lot's whimpering fears, and we get the
+truth. Are not God's directions how to escape, promises that we
+shall escape? Will He begin to build, and not be able to finish?
+Will the judgments of His hand overrun their commission, like a
+bloodhound which, in its master's absence, may rend his friend? 'We
+have all of us one human heart,' and this swift leap from
+unreasoning carelessness to as unreasoning dread, this failure to
+draw the true conclusion from God's past mercy, and this despairing
+recoil from the path pointed for us, and craving for easier ways,
+belongs to us. 'A strange servant of God was this,' say we. Yes, and
+we are often quite as strange. How many people awakened to see their
+danger are so absorbed by the sight that they cannot see the cross,
+or think they can never reach it!
+
+God answered the cry, whatever its fault, and that may well make us
+pause in our condemnation. He hears even a very imperfect petition,
+and can see the tiniest germ of faith buried under thick clods of
+doubt and fear. This stooping readiness to meet Lot's weakness comes
+in wonderful contrast with the terrible revelation of judgment which
+follows. What a conception of God, which had room for this more than
+human patience with weakness, and also for the flashing, lurid
+glories of destructive retribution! Zoar is spared, not for the
+unworthy reason which Lot suggested--because its minuteness might
+buy impunity, as some noxious insect too small to be worth crushing--but
+in accordance with the principle which was illustrated in Abraham's
+intercession, and even in Lot's safety; namely, that the righteous are
+shields for others, as Paul had the lives of all that sailed with him
+given to him.
+
+God's 'cannot' answers Lot's 'cannot.' His power is limited by His
+own solemn purpose to save His faltering servant. The latter had
+feared that, before he could reach the mountain, 'the evil' would
+overtake him. God shows him that his safety was a condition
+precedent to its outburst. Lot barred the way. God could not 'let
+slip the dogs of' judgment, but held them in the leash until Lot was
+in Zoar. Very awful is the command to make haste, based on this
+impossibility, as if God were weary of delay, and more than ready to
+smite. However we may find anthropomorphism in these early
+narratives, let us not forget that, when the world has long been
+groaning under some giant evil, and the bitter seed is grown up into
+a waving forest of poison, there is something in the passionless
+righteousness of God which brooks no longer delay, but seeks to make
+'a short work' on the earth.
+
+3. So we are brought face to face with the grim story of the
+destruction. There is a world of tragic meaning in the simple note
+of time given. 'The sun was risen upon the earth when Lot entered
+into Zoar.' The low-lying cities of the plain would lie in shadow
+for some time before the sun topped the eastern hills. What a dawn!
+At that joyous hour, just when the sunshine struck down on the
+smiling plain, and lake and river gleamed like silver, and all
+things woke to new hopes and fresh life, then the sky darkened, and
+the earth sank, and horrible rain of fiery bitumen fell from the
+black pall, salt mud poured in streams, and over all hung a column
+of fat, oily smoke. It is not my province to discuss the physical
+cause of the destruction; but I may refer to the suggestions of Sir
+J. W. Dawson, in his _Egypt and Syria_, and in _The Expositor_ for
+May 1886, in which he shows that great beds of bituminous limestone
+extend below the Jordan valley and much of the Dead Sea, and that the
+escape of inflammable gag from these through the opening of a fissure
+along a great 'line of fault,' is capable of producing all the effects
+described. The 'brimstone' of the Authorised Version is probably
+rather some form of bituminous matter which would be carried into the
+air by such an escape of gas, and a thick saline mud would accompany
+the eruption, encrusting anything it reached. Subsidence would follow
+the ejection of quantities of such matter; and hence the word 'overthrew,'
+which seems inappropriate to a mere conflagration, would be explained.
+
+But, however this may be, we have to recognise a supernatural
+element in the starting of the train of natural causes, as well as
+in the timing of the catastrophe, and a divine purpose of
+retribution, which turns the catastrophe, however effected, into a
+judgment.
+
+So regarded, the event has a double meaning. In the first place, it
+is a revelation of an element in the divine character and of a
+feature in the divine government. To the men of that time, it might
+be a warning. To Abraham, and through him to his descendants, and
+through them to us, it preaches a truth very unwelcome to many in
+this day: that there is in God that which constrains Him to hate,
+fight against, and punish, evil. The temper of this generation turns
+away from such thoughts, and, in the name of the truth that 'God is
+love,' would fain obliterate the truth that He does and will punish.
+But if the punitive element be suppressed, and that in God which
+makes it necessary ignored or weakened, the result will be a God who
+has not force enough to love, but only weakly to indulge. If He does
+not hate and punish, He does not pardon. For the sake of the love of
+God, we must hold firm by the belief in the judgments of God. The
+God who destroyed Sodom is not merely the God of an earlier
+antiquated creed. 'Is He the God of the Jews only? Is He not also of
+the Gentiles? Yea, of the Gentiles also.'
+
+Again, this event is a prophecy. So our Lord has employed it; and
+much of the imagery in which the last judgment is represented is
+directly drawn from this narrative. So far from this story showing
+to us only the superstitions of a form of belief which we have long
+outgrown, its deepest meaning lies far ahead, and closes the history
+of man on the earth. We know from the lips which cannot lie, that
+the appalling suddenness of that destruction foreshadows the
+swiftness of the coming of that last 'day of the Lord.' We know that
+in literality some of the physical features shall be reproduced; for
+the fire which shall burn up the world and all its works is no
+figure, nor is it proclaimed only by such non-authoritative voices
+as those of Jesus and His apostles, but also by the modern
+possessors of infallible certitude, the men of science. We know that
+that day shall be a day of retribution. We know, too, that the crime
+of Sodom, foul and unnatural as it was, is not the darkest, but that
+its inhabitants (who have to face that judgment too) will find their
+doom more tolerable, and their sins lighter, than some who have had
+high places in the Church, than the Pharisees and wise men who have
+not taken Christ for their Saviour.
+
+4. The fate of the loiterer. Her backward look must have been more
+than momentary, for the destruction of the cities did not begin till
+Lot was safe in Zoar. She must have lingered far behind, and been
+overtaken by the eruption of liquid saline mud, which, as Sir J. W.
+Dawson has shown, would attend or follow the outburst of bituminous
+matter, so that her fate was the natural consequence of her heart
+being still in Sodom. As to the 'pillar of salt' which has excited
+cavils on the one hand and foolish legends on the other, probably we
+are to think rather of a heap than of a pillar. The word does not
+occur in either meaning elsewhere, but its derivation implies
+something raised above the level of the ground; and a heap, such as
+would be formed by a human body encrusted with salt mud, would suit
+the requirements of the expression. Like a man who falls in a
+snowstorm, or, still more accurately, just as some of the victims at
+Pompeii stumbled in their flight, and were buried under the ashes,
+which still keep the outline of their figures, so Lot's wife was
+covered with the half-liquid slimy mud. Granted the delay in her
+flight, the rest is perfectly simple and natural. She was buried in
+a horrible tomb; and, in pity to her memory, no name has been
+written upon it. She remains to all generations, in a far truer
+sense than superstition dreamed of when it pointed to an upright
+salt rock as her prison and her monument, a warning of the danger of
+the backward look, which betrays the true home of the heart, and may
+leave us unsheltered in the open plain when the fiery storm bursts.
+'Remember Lot's wife.'
+
+When the angels awoke Lot, the day was breaking. By the time that
+Abraham had risen 'early in the morning,' and reached the place by
+his tent from which he had yesterday looked on the smiling plain,
+all was over, and the heavy smoke cloud wrapped the dead with its
+pall-like folds. So swift and sudden is to be the coming of the Son
+of man,--as the lightning which rushes in one fierce blinding flash
+from one side of heaven to the other. Wherefore, God calls to each
+of us: 'Escape for thy life; look not behind thee.'
+
+
+
+
+FAITH TESTED AND CROWNED
+
+
+ 'And it came to pass after these things, that God did
+ tempt Abraham, and said unto him, Abraham: and he said,
+ Behold, here I am. And He said, Take now thy son, thine
+ only son Isaac, whom thou lovest, and get thee into the
+ land of Moriah; and offer him there for a burnt offering
+ upon one of the mountains which I will tell thee of. And
+ Abraham rose up early in the morning, and saddled his
+ ass, and took two of his young men with him, and Isaac
+ his son, and clave the wood for the burnt offering, and
+ rose up, and went unto the place of which God had told
+ him. Then on the third day Abraham lifted up his eyes,
+ and saw the place afar off. And Abraham said unto his
+ young men, 'Abide ye here with the ass; and I and the
+ lad will go yonder and worship, and come again to you.
+ And Abraham took the wood of the burnt offering, and laid
+ it upon Isaac his son; and he took the fire in his hand,
+ and a knife; and they went both of them together. And
+ Isaac spake unto Abraham his father, and said, My father:
+ and he said, Here am I, my son. And he said, Behold the
+ fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt
+ offering! And Abraham said, My son, God will provide
+ Himself a lamb for a burnt offering: so they went both
+ of them together. And they came to the place which God
+ had told him of; and Abraham built an altar there, and
+ laid the wood in order, and bound Isaac his son, and
+ laid him on the altar upon the wood. And Abraham stretched
+ forth his hand, and took the knife to slay his son. And
+ the angel of the Lord called unto him out of heaven,
+ and said, Abraham, Abraham: and he said, Here am I. And
+ He said, Lay not thine hand upon the lad, neither do
+ thou any thing unto him: for now I know that thou fearest
+ God, seeing thou hast not withheld thy son, thine only
+ son from Me. And Abraham lifted up his eyes, and looked,
+ and behold behind him a ram caught in a thicket by his
+ horns: and Abraham went and took the ram, and offered
+ him up for a burnt offering in the stead of his son.
+ And Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah-jireh:
+ as it is said to this day, In the mount of the Lord it
+ shall be seen.'--GENESIS xxii. 1-14.
+
+
+I
+
+
+A life of faith and self-denial has usually its sharpest trials at
+or near its beginning. A stormy day has generally a calm close. But
+Abraham's sorest discipline came all sudden, like a bolt from blue
+sky. Near the end, and after many years of peaceful, uneventful
+life, he had to take a yet higher degree in the school of faith.
+Sharp trial means increased possession of God. So his last terrible
+experience turned to his crowning mercy.
+
+1. The very first words of this solemn narrative raise many
+questions. We have God appointing the awful trial. The Revised
+Version properly replaces 'tempt' by 'prove.' The former word
+conveys the idea of appealing to the worse part of a man, with the
+wish that he may yield and do the wrong. The latter means an appeal
+to the better part of a man, with the desire that he should stand.
+Temptation says: 'Do this pleasant thing; do not be hindered by the
+fact that it is wrong.' Trial, or proving, says: 'Do this right and
+noble thing; do not be hindered by the fact that it is painful.' The
+one is 'a sweet, beguiling melody,' breathing soft indulgence and
+relaxation over the soul; the other is a pealing trumpet-call to
+high achievements.
+
+God's proving does not mean that He stands by, watching how His
+child will behave. He helps us to sustain the trial to which He
+subjects us. Life is all probation; and because it is so, it is all
+the field for the divine aid. The motive of His proving men is that
+they may be strengthened. He puts us into His gymnasium to improve
+our physique. If we stand the trial, our faith is increased; if we
+fall, we learn self-distrust and closer clinging to Him. No
+objection can be raised to the representation of this passage as to
+God's proving Abraham, which does not equally apply to the whole
+structure of life as a place of probation that it may be a place of
+blessing. But the manner of the trial here presents a difficulty.
+How could God command a father to kill his son? Is that in
+accordance with His character? Well, two considerations deserve
+attention. First, the final issue; namely, Isaac's deliverance, was
+an integral part of the divine purpose from the beginning of the
+trial; so that the question really is, Was it accordant with the
+divine character to require readiness to sacrifice even a son at His
+command? Second, that in Abraham's time, a father's right over his
+child's life was unquestioned, and that therefore this command,
+though it lacerated Abraham's heart, did not wound his conscience as
+it would do were it heard to-day. It is impossible to conceive of a
+divine injunction such as this being addressed to us. We have
+learned the inalienable sacredness of every life, and the awful
+prerogative and burden of individuality. God's command cannot
+enforce sin. But it was not wrong in Abraham's eyes for a father to
+slay his son; and God might shape His message to the form of the
+existing morality without derogation from His character, especially
+when the result of the message would be, among other things, to
+teach His abhorrence of human sacrifices, and so to lift the
+existing morality to a higher level.
+
+2. The great body of the history sets before us Abraham standing the
+terrible test. What unsurpassable beauty is in the simple story! It
+is remarkable, even among the scriptural narratives, for the entire
+absence of anything but the visible facts. There is not a syllable
+about the feelings of father or of son. The silence is more pathetic
+than many words. We look as into a magic crystal, and see the very
+event before our eyes, and our own imaginations tell us more of the
+world of struggle and sorrow raging under that calm outside than the
+highest art could do. The pathos of reticence was never more
+perfectly illustrated. Observe, too, the minute, prolonged details
+of the slow progress to the dread instant of sacrifice. Each step is
+told in precisely the same manner, and the series of short clauses,
+coupled together by an artless 'and,' are like the single strokes of
+a passing bell, or the slow drops of blood heard falling from a
+fatal wound. The homely preparations for the journey are made by
+Abraham himself. He makes no confidante of Sarah; only God and
+himself knew what that bundle of wood meant. What thoughts must have
+torn his soul throughout these weary days! How hard to keep his
+voice round and full while he spoke to Isaac! How much the long
+protracted tension of the march increased the sharpness of the test!
+It is easier to reach the height of obedient self-sacrifice in some
+moment of enthusiasm, than to keep up there through the commonplace
+details of slowly passing days. Many a faith, which could even have
+slain its dearest, would have broken down long before the last step
+of that sad journey was taken.
+
+The elements of the trial were two: first, Abraham's soul was torn
+asunder by the conflict of fatherly love and obedience to God. The
+narrative intimates this struggle by continually insisting on the
+relationship between the two. The command dwells with emphasis on
+it: 'thy son, thine only son Isaac, whom thou lovest.' He takes with
+him 'Isaac his son'; lays the wood on 'Isaac his son.' Isaac 'spake
+unto Abraham his father'; Abraham answers, 'Here am I, my son'; and
+again, 'My son, God will provide.' He bound 'Isaac his son'; he
+'took the knife to slay his son'; and lastly, in the glad surprise
+at the end, he offers the ram 'in the stead of his son.' Thus, at
+every turn, the tender bond is forced on our notice, that we may
+feel how terrible was the task laid on him--to cut it asunder with
+his own hand. The friend of God must hold all other love as less
+than His, and must be ready to yield up the dearest at His bidding.
+Cruel as the necessity seems to flesh and blood, and specially
+poignant as his pain was, in essence Abraham's trial only required
+of him what all true religion requires of us. Some of us have been
+called by God's providence to give up the light of our eyes, the joy
+of our homes, to Him. Some of us have had to make the choice between
+earthly and heavenly love. All of us have to throne God in our
+hearts, and to let not the dearest usurp His place. In our weakness
+we may well shrink from such a test. But let us not forget that the
+trial of Abraham was not imposed by his own mistaken conceptions of
+duty, nor by a sterner God than the New Testament reveals, but is
+distinctly set before every Christian in essence, though not in
+form, by the gentle lips from which flowed the law of love more
+stringent and exclusive in its claims than any other: 'He that
+loveth father or mother more than Me is not worthy of Me.'
+
+The conflict in Abraham's soul had a still more painful aspect in
+that it seemed to rend his very religion into two. Faith in the
+promise on which he had been living all his life drew one way; faith
+in the later command, another. God seemed to be against God, faith
+against faith, promise against command. If he obeys now, what is to
+become of the hopes that had shone for years before him? His whole
+career will be rendered nugatory, and with his own hand he will
+crush to powder his life's work. That wonderful short dialogue which
+broke the stern silence of the journey seems to throw light on his
+mood. There is nothing in literature sacred or secular, fact or
+fiction, poetry or prose, more touching than the innocent curiosity
+of Isaac's boyish question, and the yearning self-restraint of the
+father's desperate and yet calm answer. But its value is not only in
+its pathos. It seems to show that, though he knew not how, still he
+held by the hope that somehow God would not forget His promise. Out
+of his very despair, his faith struck, out of the flint of the hard
+command, a little spark which served to give some flicker of light
+amid the darkness. His answer to his boy does not make his sacrifice
+less, but his faith more. The writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews
+gives a somewhat different turn to his hopes, when he tells us that
+he offered up the heir of the promises, 'accounting that God was
+able to raise him from the dead.' Both ways of clinging to the early
+promise, even while obeying the later command, seem to have passed
+through his mind. The wavering from the one to the other is natural.
+He is sure that God had not lied before, and means what He commands
+now. He is sure that there is some point of reconciliation--perhaps
+this, perhaps that, but certainly somewhat. So he goes straight on
+the road marked for him, quite sure that it will not end in a blind
+alley, from which there is no exit. That is the very climax of
+faith--to trust God so absolutely, even when His ways seem
+contradictory, as to be more willing to believe apparent
+impossibilities than to doubt Him, and to be therefore ready for the
+hardest trial of obedience. We, too, have sometimes to take courses
+which seem to annihilate the hope and aims of a life. The lesson for
+us is to go straight on the path of clear duty wherever it leads. If
+it seem to bring us up to inaccessible cliffs, we may be sure that
+when we get there we shall find some ledge, though it may be no
+broader than a chamois could tread, which will suffice for a path.
+If it seem to bring us to a deep and bridgeless stream, we shall
+find a ford when we get to the water's edge. If the mountains seem
+to draw together and bar a passage, we shall find, when we reach
+them, that they open out; though it may be no wider than a canon,
+still the stream can get through, and our boat with it.
+
+3. So we have the climax of the story--faith rewarded. The first
+great lesson which the interposition of the Divine voice teaches us,
+is that obedience is complete when the inward surrender is complete.
+The outward act was needless. Abraham would have done no more if the
+flashing knife had buried itself in Isaac's heart. Here is the first
+great proclamation of the truth which revolutionises morality and
+religion, the beginnings of the teaching which culminates in the
+ethics of the Sermon on the Mount, and in the gospel of salvation,
+not by deeds, but through faith. The will is the man, the true
+action is the submission of the will. The outward deed is only the
+coarse medium through which it is made visible for men: God looks on
+purpose as performance.
+
+Again, faith is rewarded by God's acceptance and approval. 'I know
+that thou fearest God,' not meaning that He learned the heart by the
+conduct, but that, on occasion of the conduct, He breathes into the
+obedient heart that calm consciousness of its service as recognised
+and accepted by Him, which is the highest reward that His friend can
+know. 'To be well pleasing to Him' is our noblest aim, which,
+cherished, makes sacrifice sweet, and all difficult things easy.
+'Nor know we anything more fair Than is the smile upon Thy face.'
+
+Again, faith is rewarded by a deeper insight into God's will. Much
+has been said about the sacrifice of Isaac in its bearing upon the
+custom of human sacrifice. We do not believe that Abraham was led to
+his act by a mistaken idea, borrowed from surrounding idolatries.
+His position as the sole monotheist amid these, the absence of
+evidence that human sacrifice was practised then among his
+neighbours, and, above all, the fact of the divine approval of his
+intention, forbid our acceptance of that theory. Nor can we regard
+the condemnation of such sacrifices as the main object of the
+incident. But no doubt an incidental result, and, we may perhaps
+say, a subsidiary purpose of it, was to stamp all such hideous
+usages with the brand of God's displeasure. The mode of thought
+which led to them was deeply rooted in the consciousness of the Old
+World, and corresponded to a true conception of the needs of
+humanity. The dark sense of sin, the conviction that it required
+expiation, and that procurable only by death, drove men to these
+horrid rites. And that ram, caught in the thicket, thorn-crowned and
+substituted for the human victim, taught Abraham and his sons that
+God appointed and provided a lamb for an offering. It was a lesson
+won by faith. Nor need we hesitate to see some dim forecast of the
+great Substitute whom God provided, who bears the sins of the world.
+
+Again, faith is rewarded by receiving back the surrendered blessing,
+made more precious because it has been laid on the altar. How
+strange and solemn must have been the joy with which these two
+looked in each other's faces! What thankful wonder must have filled
+Abraham's heart as he loosed the cord that had bound his son! It
+would be many days before the thrill of gratitude died away, and the
+possession of his son seemed to Abraham, or that of life seemed to
+Isaac, a common thing. He was doubly now a child of wonder, born by
+miracle, delivered by miracle. So is it ever. God gives us back our
+sacrifices, tinged with a new beauty, and purified from earthly
+alloy.
+
+We never know how sweet our blessings are till we have yielded them
+to Him. 'There is no man that hath left' anything or any person for
+Christ's sake and the gospel's who will not 'receive a hundred-fold
+more in this life, and in the world to come life everlasting.'
+
+Lastly, Abraham was rewarded by being made a faint adumbration, for
+all time, of the yet more wondrous and awful love of the divine
+Father, who, for our sakes, has surrendered His only-begotten Son,
+whom He loved. Paul quotes the very words of this chapter when he
+says: 'He that _spared_ not His _own Son_, but delivered Him up for us
+all.' Such thoughts carry us into dim regions, in which, perhaps,
+silence is best. Did some shadow of loss and pain pass over the divine
+all-sufficiency and joy, when He sent His Son? Was the unresisting
+innocence of the son a far-off likeness of the willing eagerness of
+the sinless Sufferer who chose to die? Was the resolved surrender of
+the father a faint prelude of the deep divine love which gave His
+only Son for us? Shall we not say, 'Now I know that Thou lovest me,
+because Thou hast not withheld Thy Son, Thine only Son, from me'?
+Shall we not recognise this as the crown of Abraham's reward, that
+his act of surrender of his dearest to God, his Friend, has been
+glorified by being made the mirror of God's unspeakable gift of His
+Son to us, His enemies?
+
+
+
+
+THE CROWNING TEST AND TRIUMPH OF FAITH
+
+
+II
+
+
+The first words of this lesson give the keynote for its meaning.
+'God did prove Abraham'; the strange command was a test of his
+faith. In recent times the incident has been regarded chiefly as
+embodying a protest against child-sacrifices, and no doubt that is
+part of its intention, and their condemnation was part of its
+effect, but the other is the principal thing. Abraham, as the
+'Father of the Faithful,' has his faith tested by a series of events
+from his setting out from Haran, and they culminate in this sharpest
+of all, the command to slay his son. The life of faith is ever a
+life of testing, and very often the fire that tries increases in
+heat as life advances. The worst conflicts are not always at the
+beginning of the war.
+
+Our best way of knowing ourselves is to observe our own conduct,
+especially when it is hard to do nobly. We may easily cheat
+ourselves about what is the basis and ruling motive of our lives,
+but our actions will show it us. God does not 'test' us as if He did
+not know what was gold and what base metal, but the proving is meant
+to make clear to others and ourselves what is the worth and strength
+of our religion. The test is also a means of increasing the faith
+which it demonstrates, so that the exhortation to 'count it all joy'
+to have faith tried is no overstrained counsel of perfection.
+
+The narrative plainly declares that the command to sacrifice his son
+was to Abraham unmistakably divine. The explanation that Abraham,
+living beside peoples who practised child-sacrifice, heard but the
+voice of his own conscience asking, 'Canst thou do for Jehovah what
+these do for Moloch?' does not correspond to the record. No doubt
+God does speak through conscience; but what sent Abraham on his
+terrible journey was a command which he knew did not spring up
+within, but came to him from above. We may believe or disbelieve the
+possibility or the actuality of such direct and distinguishable
+commands from God, but we do not face the facts of this narrative
+unless we recognise that it asserts that God made His will known to
+Abraham, and that Abraham knew that it was God's will, not his own
+thought.
+
+But is it conceivable that God should ever bid a man commit a crime?
+To the question put in that bald way, of course there can be but one
+answer, No. But several conditions have to be taken into account.
+First, it is conceivable that God should test a man's willingness to
+surrender what is most precious to him, and what all his hopes are
+fixed on; and this command was given with the purpose that it should
+not be obeyed in fact, if the willingness to obey it was proved.
+Again, the stage of development of the moral sense at which Abraham
+stood has to be remembered. The child-sacrifices around him were not
+regarded as crimes, but as worship, and, while his affections were
+the same as ours, and his father's heart was wrung, to slay Isaac
+did not present itself to him as a crime in the way in which it does
+so to us. God deals with men on the moral and spiritual level to
+which they have attained, and, by descending to it, raises them
+higher.
+
+The purpose of the command was to test faith, even more than to test
+whether earthly love or heavenly obedience were the stronger. There
+is a beautiful and instructive climax in the designations of Isaac
+in verse 2, where four times he is referred to, 'thy son, thine only
+son,' in whom all the hopes of fulfilment of the divine promise were
+concentrated, so that, if this fruit from the aged tree were cut
+off, no other could ever grow; 'whom thou lovest,'--there the sharp
+point pierces the father's heart; 'even Isaac,' in which name all
+the ties that knit him to Abraham are gathered up. Each word
+heightens the greatness of the sacrifice demanded, and is a fresh
+thrust of the dagger into Abraham's very life. Each suggests a
+reason for not slaying Isaac, which sense might plead. God does not
+hide the painfulness of surrender from us. The more precious the
+treasure is, the more are we bound to lay it on the altar. But it
+was Abraham's faith even more than his love that was tested. The
+Epistle to the Hebrews lays hold on this as the main element in the
+trial, that he who 'had received the promises' was called to do what
+seemed to blast all hope of their being fulfilled. What a cruel
+position to have God's command and God's promise apparently in
+diametrical opposition! But faith loosened even that seemingly
+inextricable tangle of contradiction, and felt that to obey was for
+man, and to keep His promise was for God. If we do our duty, He will
+see to the consequences. 'Tis mine to obey; 'tis His to provide.'
+
+Nothing in literature is more tenderly touched or more truly
+imagined than that long, torturing journey--Abraham silent, Isaac
+silently wondering, the servants silently following. And, like a
+flash, at last 'the place' was seen afar off. How calmly Abraham
+speaks to the two followers, mastering his heart's throbbing even
+then! 'We will worship, and come again to you'--was that a 'pious
+fraud' or did it not rather indicate that a ray of hope, like pale
+light from a shrouded sun, shone for him? He 'accounted that God was
+able to raise him up even from the dead.' Somehow, he knew not how,
+Isaac slain was still to live and inherit the promises. Anything was
+possible, but that God's word should fail was impossible. That
+picture of the father and son alone, the one bearing the wood, the
+other the fire and the knife, exchanging no word but once, when the
+innocent wonder of Isaac's question must have shaken Abraham's
+steadfastness, and made it hard for him to steady his voice to
+answer, touches the deepest springs of pity and pathetic sublimity.
+But the answer is in the same spirit as that to the servants, and
+indicates the same hope. 'God will provide Himself a lamb, my son.'
+He does not know definitely what he expects; he is ready to slay
+Isaac, but his faith is not quenched, though the end seems so
+inevitable and near. Faith was never more sharply tested, and never
+more triumphantly stood the test.
+
+The divine solution of the riddle was kept back till the last
+moment, as it usually is. The place is slowly reached, the hill
+slowly climbed, the altar built, the unresisting Isaac bound (with
+what deep thoughts in each, who can tell?), the steady hand holding
+the glittering knife lifted--a moment more and it will be red with
+heart's blood, and not till then does God speak. It is ever so. The
+trial has 'its perfect work.' Faith is led to the edge of the
+precipice, one step farther and all is over. Then God speaks, all
+but just too late, and yet 'right early.' The willingness to make
+the sacrifice is tested to the utmost, and being proved, the
+sacrifice is not required.
+
+Abraham had said to Isaac, 'God will provide a lamb,' and the word
+'provide' is that which appears in the name he gave to the
+place--Jehovah-_jireh_. The name, then, commemorated, not the
+servant's faith but the Lord's mercy, and the spirit of it was embodied
+in what became a popular saying, 'In the mount of the Lord it shall
+be provided.' If faith dwells there, its surrenders will be richly
+rewarded. How much more dear was Isaac to Abraham as they journeyed
+back to Beersheba! And whatever we lay on God's altar comes back a
+'hundred-fold more in this life,' and brings in the world to come life
+everlasting.
+
+
+
+
+JEHOVAH-JIREH
+
+
+ 'And Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah-jireh;
+ (that is, The Lord will provide).'-GENESIS xxii. 14.
+
+As these two, Abraham and Isaac, were travelling up the hill, the
+son bearing the wood, and the father with the sad burden of the fire
+and the knife, the boy said: 'Where is the lamb?' and Abraham,
+thrusting down his emotion and steadying his voice, said: 'My son,
+God will provide Himself a lamb.' When the wonderful issue of the
+trial was plain before him, and he looked back upon it, the one
+thought that rose in his mind was of how, beyond his meaning, his
+words had been true. So he named that place by a name that spoke
+nothing of his trial, but everything of God's provision--'The Lord
+will see,' or 'The Lord will provide.'
+
+1. The words have become proverbial and threadbare as a commonplace
+of Christian feeling. But it may be worth our while to ask for a
+moment what it was exactly that Abraham expected the Lord to
+provide. We generally use the expression in reference to outward
+things, and see in it the assurance that we shall not be left
+without the supply of the necessities for which, because God has
+made us to feel them, He has bound Himself to make provision. And
+most blessedly true is that application of them, and many a
+Christian heart in days of famine has been satisfied with the
+promise, when the bread that was given has been scant.
+
+But there is a meaning deeper than that in the words. It is true,
+thank God! that we may cast all our anxiety about all outward things
+upon Him, in the assurance that He who feeds the ravens will feed
+us, and that if lilies can blossom into beauty without care, we
+shall be held by our Father of more value than these. But there is a
+deeper meaning in the provision spoken of here. What was it that God
+provided for Abraham? What is it that God provides for us? A way to
+discharge the arduous duties which, when they are commanded, seem
+all but impossible for us, and which, the nearer we come to them,
+look the more dreadful and seem the more impossible. And yet, when
+the heart has yielded itself in obedience, and we are ready to do
+the thing that is enjoined, there opens up before us a possibility
+provided by God, and strength comes to us equal to our day, and some
+unexpected gift is put into our hand, which enables us to do the
+thing of which Nature said: 'My heart will break before I can do
+it'; and in regard to which even Grace doubted whether it was
+possible for us to carry it through. If our hearts are set in
+obedience to the command, the farther we go on the path of
+obedience, the easier the command will appear, and to try to do it
+is to ensure that God will help us to do it.
+
+This is the main provision that God makes, and it is the highest
+provision that He can make. For there is nothing in this life that
+we need so much as to do the will of our Father in heaven. All
+outward wants are poor compared with that. The one thing worth
+living for, the one thing which being secured we are blessed, and
+being missed we are miserable, is compliance in heart with the
+commandment of our Father; and that compliance wrought out in life.
+So, of all gifts that He bestows upon us, and of all the abundant
+provision out of His rich storehouses, is not this the best, that we
+are made ready for any required service? When we get to the place we
+shall find some lamb 'caught in the thicket by its horns'; and
+heaven itself will supply what is needful for our burnt offering.
+
+And then there is another thought here which, though we cannot
+certainly say it was in the speaker's mind, is distinctly in the
+historian's intention, 'The Lord will provide.' Provide what? The
+lamb for the burnt offering which He has commanded. It seems
+probable that that bare mountain-top which Abraham saw from afar,
+and named Jehovah-jireh, was the mountain-top on which afterwards
+the Temple was built. And perhaps the wood was piled for the altar,
+on which Abraham was called to lay his only son, on that very piece
+of primitive rock which still stands visible, though Temple and
+altar have long since gone; and which for many a day was the place
+of the altar on which the sacrifices of Israel were offered. It is
+no mere forcing of Christian meanings on to old stories, but the
+discerning of that prophetic and spiritual element which God has
+impressed upon these histories of the past, especially in all their
+climaxes and crises, when we see in the fact that God provided the
+ram which became the appointed sacrifice, through which Isaac's life
+was preserved, a dim adumbration of the great truth that the only
+Sacrifice which God accepts for the world's sin is the Sacrifice
+which He Himself has provided.
+
+This is the deepest meaning of all the sacrificial worship, as of
+Israel so of heathen nations--God Himself will provide a Lamb. The
+world had built altars, and Israel, by divine appointment, had its
+altar too. All these express the want which none of them can
+satisfy. They show that man needed a Sacrifice; and that Sacrifice
+God has provided. He asked from Abraham less than He gives to us.
+Abraham's devotion was sealed and certified because he did not
+withhold his son, his only son, from God. And God's love is sealed
+because He hath not withheld His only-begotten Son from us.
+
+So this name that came from Abraham's grateful and wondering lips
+contains a truth which holds true in all regions of our wants. On
+the lowest level, the outward supply of outward needs; on a higher,
+the means of discharging hard duties and a path through sharp
+trials; and, on the highest of all, the spotless sacrifice which
+alone avails for the world's sins--these are the things which God
+provides.
+
+2. So, note again on what conditions He provides them.
+
+The incident and the name became the occasion of a proverb, as the
+historian tells us, which survived down to the period of his
+writing, and probably long after, when men were accustomed to say,
+'In the mount of the Lord it shall be provided.' The provision of
+all sorts that we need has certain conditions as to the when and the
+where of the persons to whom it shall be granted. 'In the mount of
+the Lord it shall be provided.' If we wish to have our outward needs
+supplied, our outward weaknesses strengthened, power and energy
+sufficient for duty, wisdom for perplexity, a share in the Sacrifice
+which taketh away the sins of the world, we receive them all on the
+condition that we are found in the place where all God's provision
+is treasured. If a man chooses to sit outside the baker's shop, he
+may starve on its threshold. If a man will not go into the bank, his
+pockets will be empty, though there may be bursting coffers there to
+which he has a right. And if we will not ascend to the hill of the
+Lord, and stand in His holy place by simple faith, and by true
+communion of heart and life, God's amplest provision is nought to
+us; and we are empty in the midst of affluence. Get near to God if
+you would partake of what He has prepared. Live in fellowship with
+Him by simple love, and often meditate on Him, if you would drink in
+of His fulness. And be sure of this, that howsoever within His house
+the stores are heaped and the treasury full, you will have neither
+part nor lot in the matter, unless you are children of the house.
+'In the mount of the Lord it shall be provided.' And round it there
+is a waste wilderness of famine and of death.
+
+Further, note _when_ the provision is realised.
+
+When the man is standing with the knife in his hand, and next minute
+it will be red with the son's blood--then the call comes: 'Abraham!'
+and then he sees the ram caught in the thicket. There had been a
+long weary journey from their home away down in the dry, sunny
+south, a long tramp over the rough hills, a toilsome climb, with a
+breaking heart in the father's bosom, and a dim foreboding gradually
+stealing on the child's spirit. But there was no sign of respite or
+of deliverance. Slowly he piles together the wood, and yet no sign.
+Slowly he binds his boy, and lays him on it, and still no sign.
+Slowly, reluctantly, and yet resolvedly, he unsheathes the knife,
+and yet no sign. He lifts his hand, and then it comes.
+
+That is God's way always. Up to the very edge we are driven, before
+His hand is put out to help us. Such is the law, not only because
+the next moment is always necessarily dark, nor because God will
+deal with us in any arbitrary fashion, and play with our fears, but
+because it is best for us that we should be forced to desperation,
+and out of desperation should 'pluck the flower, safety.' It is best
+for us that we should be brought to say, 'My foot slippeth!' and
+then, just as our toes are sliding upon the glacier, the help comes
+and 'Thy mercy held me up.' 'The Lord is her helper, and that right
+early.' When He delays, it is not to trifle with us, but to do us
+good by the sense of need, as well as by the experience of
+deliverance. At the last moment, never before it, never until we
+have found out how much we need it, and never too late, comes the
+Helper.
+
+So 'it is provided' for the people that quietly and persistently
+tread the path of duty, and go wherever His hand leads them, without
+asking anything about where it does lead. The condition of the
+provision is our obedience of heart and will. To Abraham doing what
+he was commanded, though his heart was breaking as he did it, the
+help was granted--as it always will be.
+
+3. And so, lastly, note what we are to do with the provision when we
+get it.
+
+Abraham christened the anonymous mountain-top, not by a name that
+reminded him or others of his trial, but by a name that proclaimed
+God's deliverance. He did not say anything about his agony or about
+his obedience. God spoke about that, not Abraham. He did not want
+these to be remembered, but what he desired to hand on to later
+generations was what God had done for him. Oh! dear friends, is that
+the way in which we look back upon life? Many a bare, bald mountain-
+top in your career and mine we have got our names for. Are they
+names that commemorate our sufferings or God's blessings? When we
+look back on the past what do we see? Times of trial or times of
+deliverance? Which side of the wave do we choose to look at, the one
+that is smitten by the sunshine or the one that is all black and
+purple in the shadow? The sea looked at from the one side will be
+all a sunny path, and from the other dark as chaos. Let us name the
+heights that lie behind us, visible to memory, by names that
+commemorate, not the troubles that we had on them, but the
+deliverances that on them we received from God.
+
+This name enshrines the duty of commemoration--ay! and the duty of
+expectation. 'The Lord will provide.' How do you know that, Abraham?
+and his answer is, 'Because the Lord did provide.' That is a shaky
+kind of argument if we use it about one another. Our resources may
+give out, our patience may weary. If it is a storehouse that we have
+to go to, all the corn that is treasured in it will be eaten up some
+day; but if it is to some boundless plain that grows it that we go,
+then we can be sure that there will be a harvest next year as there
+has been a harvest last. And so we have to think of God, not as a
+storehouse, but as the soil from which there comes forth, year by
+year and generation after generation, the same crop of rich
+blessings for the needs and the hungers of every soul. If we have to
+draw from reservoirs we cannot say, 'I have gone with my pitcher to
+the well six times, and I shall get it filled at the seventh.' It is
+more probable that we shall have to say, 'I have gone so often that
+I durst not go any more'; but if we have to go, not to a well, but
+to a fountain, then the oftener we go, the surer we become that its
+crystal cool waters will always be ready for us. 'Thou hast been
+with me in six troubles; and in seven thou wilt not forsake me,' is
+a bad conclusion to draw about one another; but it is the right
+conclusion to draw about God.
+
+And so, as we look back upon our past lives, and see many a peak
+gleaming in the magic light of memory, let us name them all by names
+that will throw a radiance of hope on the unknown and un-climbed
+difficulties before us, and say, as the patriarch did when he went
+down from the mount of his trial and deliverance, 'The Lord will
+provide.'
+
+
+
+
+GUIDANCE IN THE WAY
+
+
+ 'I being in the way, the Lord led me.'--GENESIS xxiv. 27.
+
+So said Abraham's anonymous servant when telling how he had found
+Rebekah at the well, and known her to be the destined bride of his
+master's servant. There is no more beautiful page, even amongst the
+many lovely ones in these ancient stories, than this domestic idyll
+of the mission of the faithful servant from far Canaan across the
+desert. The homely test by which he would determine that the maiden
+should be pointed out to him, the glimpse of old-world ways at the
+well, the gracious courtesy of the fair damsel, and the simple
+devoutness of the speaker, who recognises in what to others were
+trivial commonplaces God's guidance to the end which He had
+appointed, his recognition of the divine hand moving beneath all the
+nothings and littlenesses of daily life--may teach us much.
+
+1. The first thing that these words seem to me to suggest is the
+conditions under which we may be sure that God leads--'I being in
+the way.'
+
+Now, of course, some of you may know that the words of our text are,
+by the Revised Version and others, rendered so as to obliterate the
+clause telling where the speaker was when the Lord led him, and to
+make the whole a continuous expression of the one fact--'As for me,
+the Lord hath led me in the way to the house of my master's
+brethren.' The literal rendering is, 'I in the way, Jehovah led me.'
+No doubt the Hebrew idiom admits of the 'I' being thus emphatically
+premised, and then repeated as 'me' after the verb, and possibly no
+more is to be made of the words than that. But the fuller and more
+impressive meaning is possible, and I venture to retain it, and to
+see in it the expression of the truth that it is when we are 'in the
+way' that God will certainly lead us.
+
+So that suggests, first, how the people that have any right to
+expect any kind of guidance from God are those who have their feet
+upon a path which conscience approves. Many men run into all manner
+of perplexities by their own folly and self-will, and never ask
+whether their acts are right or wrong, wise or foolish, until they
+begin to taste the bitter consequences. Then they cry to God to help
+them, and think themselves very religious because they do. That is
+not the way to get God's help. Such folk are like Italian brigands
+who had an image of the Virgin in their hats, and sometimes had the
+Pope's commission in their pockets, and therefore went out to murder
+and ravish, in sure and certain hope of God's favour and protection.
+
+But when we are 'in the way,' and know that we are doing what we
+ought to do, and conscience says, 'Go on; never mind what stands
+against you,' it is then, and only then, that we have a right to be
+sure that the Lord will lead us. Otherwise, the best thing that can
+happen to us is that the Lord should thwart us when we are on the
+wrong road. Resistance, indeed, may be guidance; and it is often
+God's manner of setting our feet in the way of His steps. We have no
+claim on Him for guidance, indeed, unless we have submitted
+ourselves to His commandments; yet His mercies go beyond our claims.
+Just as the obedient child gets guidance, so the petulant and
+disobedient child gets resistance, which is guidance too. The angel
+of the Lord stands in front of Balaam, amongst the vines, though the
+seer sometimes does not see, and blocks the path for him, and hedges
+up the way with his flaming sword. Only, if we would have the sweet,
+gracious, companionable guidance of our Lord, let us be sure, to
+begin with, that we are 'in the way,' and not in any of the bypaths
+into which arrogance and self-will and fleshly desires and the like
+are only too apt to divert our feet.
+
+Another consideration suggested by these words, 'I being in the
+way,' is that if we expect guidance we must diligently do present
+duty. We are led, thank God, by one step at a time. He does with His
+child, whom He is teaching to read His will, as we sometimes do with
+our children, when we are occupied in teaching them their first
+book-learning: we cover the page up, all but the line that we want
+them to concentrate their eyes upon; and then, when they have got to
+the end of that, slip the hand down, low enough to allow the next
+line to come into view. So often God does with us. One thing at a
+time is enough for the little brains. And this is the condition of
+mortal life, for the most part--though there do come rare
+exceptions. Not that we have to look a long way ahead, and forecast
+what we shall do this time ten years off, or to make decisions that
+involve a distant future--except once or twice in a lifetime--but
+that we have to settle what is to be done in this flying minute, and
+in the one adjacent to it. 'Do the duty that lies nearest thee,' and
+the remoter duty will become clearer. There is nothing that has more
+power to make a man's path plain before his feet than that he should
+concentrate his better self on the manful and complete discharge of
+the present moment's service. And, on the other hand, there is
+nothing that will so fill our sky with mists, and blur the marks of
+the faint track through the moor, as present negligence, or still
+more, present sin. Iron in a ship's hull makes the magnet tremble,
+and point away from its true source. He that has complied with evil
+to-day is the less capable of discerning duty to-morrow; and he that
+does all the duty that he knows will thereby increase the
+probability that he will know all that he needs. 'If any man wills
+to do His will, he shall know of the teaching'--enough, at any rate,
+to direct his steps.
+
+But there is another lesson still in the words; and that is that, if
+we are to be guided, we must see to it that we expect and obey the
+guidance.
+
+This servant of Abraham's, with a very imperfect knowledge of the
+divine will, had, when he set out on his road, prayed very earnestly
+that God would lead him. He had ventured to prescribe a certain
+token, naïve in its simplicity: 'If the girl drops her pitcher, and
+gives us drink gladly, and does not grudge to fill the troughs for
+the cattle, that will show that she is of a good sort, and will make
+the right wife for Isaac.' He had prayed thus, and he was ready to
+accept whomsoever God so designated. He had not made up his mind,
+'Bethuel's daughter is a relation of my master's, and so she will be
+a suitable wife for his son.' He left it all with God, and then he
+went straight on his road, and was perfectly sure that he would get
+the guidance that he had sought. And when it came the good man bowed
+and obeyed.
+
+Now there is a picture for us all. There are many people that say,
+'O Lord! guide me.' when all the while they mean, 'Let me guide
+Thee.' They are perfectly willing to accept the faintest and moat
+questionable indications that may seem to point down the road where
+their inclination drives them, and like Lord Nelson at Copenhagen,
+will put the telescope to the blind eye when the flag is flying at
+the admiral's peak, signalling 'Come out of action,' because they
+are determined to stay where they are.
+
+Do not let us forget that the first condition of securing real
+guidance in our daily life is to ask it, and that the next is to
+look for it, and that a third is to be quite willing to accept it,
+whether the finger points down the broad road that we would like to
+go upon, or through some tangled path amongst the brushwood that we
+would fain avoid. And if you and I, dear brethren, in the
+littlenesses of our daily life, do fulfil these conditions, the
+heavens will crumble, and earth will melt, before God will leave His
+child untaught in the way in which he should go.
+
+Only, let us be patient. Do you remember what Joshua said to the
+Israelites? 'Let there be a good space of vacant ground between you
+and the guiding ark, that you may know by which way you ought to
+go.' When men precipitately press on the heels of half-disclosed
+providences, they are uncommonly apt to mistake the road. We must
+wait till we are sure of God's will before we try to do it. If we
+are not sure of what He would have us do, then, for the present, He
+would have us do nothing until He speaks. 'I being in the way, the
+Lord led me.'
+
+2. Now a word about the manner of the guidance.
+
+There was no miracle, no supernatural voice, no pillar of cloud or
+fire, no hovering glory round the head of the village maiden. All
+the indications were perfectly natural and trivial. A thousand girls
+had gone to the wells that day all about Haran and done the very
+same things that Rebekah did. But the devout man who had prayed for
+guidance, and was sure that he was getting it, was guided by her
+most simple, commonplace act; and that is how we are usually to be
+guided. God leaves a great deal to our common sense. His way of
+speaking to common sense is by very common things. If any of us
+fancy that some glow at the heart, some sudden flash as of
+inspiration, is the test of a divine commandment, we have yet to
+learn the full meaning of the Incarnation of Jesus Christ. For that
+Incarnation, amongst all its other mighty influences, hallowed the
+commonest things of life and turned them into ministers of God's
+purposes. So remember, God's guidance may come to you through so
+insignificant a girl as Rebekah. It may come to you through as
+commonplace an incident as tipping the water of a spring out of an
+earthen pot into a stone trough. None the less is it God's guidance;
+and what we want is the eye to see it. He will guide us by very
+common indications of His providence.
+
+3. And now, the last thing that I would say a word about is the
+realisation in daily life of this guidance as a plain actual fact.
+
+This anonymous trusted servant of Abraham's, whose name we should
+like to have known, had a mere segment of the full orb of the
+knowledge of God that shines upon our path. With true Oriental
+freedom to speak about the deepest matters, he was not afraid nor
+ashamed to stand before Bethuel and Laban, and all these other
+strangers that crowded round the doorway, and say, 'The Lord led
+me.' There is a pattern for some of us tongue-tied, shamefaced
+Christians. Whatever may be the truth about the degradations of
+which heathen religion is full, there is a great deal in heathen
+religion that ought to teach, and does teach, Christendom a lesson,
+as to willingness to recognise and to confess God's working in daily
+life. It may be very superficial; it may be very little connected
+with high morality; but so far as it goes it is a thousand-fold
+better than the dumb religion that characterises such hosts of
+Christian people.
+
+A realisation of the divine guidance is the talisman that makes
+crooked things straight and rough places plain; that brings peace
+and calmness into our hearts, amid all changes, losses, and sorrows.
+If we hold fast by that faith, it will interpret for us the
+mysterious in the providences concerning our own lives, and will
+help us to feel that, as I said, resistance to our progress may be
+true guidance, and thwarting our wills may be our highest good. For
+the road which we travel should, in all its turnings, lead us to
+God; and whatsoever guides us to Him is only and always blessed.
+
+May I, for one moment, turn these words in another direction, and
+remind you, dear friends, of how the sublimest application of them
+is still to be realised? As a climber on a mountain-peak may look
+down the vale up which he had painfully toiled for many days and see
+the dusty path lying, like a sinuous snake, down all along it, so,
+when we get up yonder, 'Thou shalt remember all the way by which the
+Lord thy God hath led thee these many years in the wilderness,' and
+shalt see the green pastures and the still waters, valleys of the
+shadow of death, and burning roads with sharp flints, which have all
+brought thee hither at last. We shall know then what we believe now,
+that the Lord does indeed go before them who desire to follow Him,
+and that the God of Israel is their reward. Then we shall say with
+deepened thankfulness, deepened by complete understanding of life
+here, seen in the light of its attained end, 'I being in the way,
+the Lord led me,' and 'I shall dwell in the house of the Lord for
+ever.'
+
+
+
+
+THE DEATH OF ABRAHAM
+
+
+ 'Then Abraham gave up the ghost, and died in a good old
+ age, an old man, and full of years; and was gathered
+ to his people.'--GENESIS xxv. 8.
+
+'Full of years' does not seem to me to be a mere synonym for
+longevity. That would be an intolerable tautology, for we should
+then have the same thing said three times over--'an old man,' 'in a
+good old age,' 'full of years.' There must be some other idea than
+that in the words. If you notice that the expression is by no means
+a usual one, that it is only applied to one or two of the Old
+Testament characters, and those selected characters, I think you
+will see that there must be some other significance in it than
+merely to point to length of days.
+
+It may be well to note the instances. In addition to our text, we
+find it employed, first, in reference to Isaac, in Genesis xxxv. 29,
+where the words are repeated almost _verbatim_. That calm,
+contemplative life, so unlike the active, varied career of his
+father, also attained to this blessing at its close. Then we find
+that the stormy and adventurous course of the great king David, with
+its wonderful alternations both of moral character and of fortune,
+is represented as being closed at last with this tranquil evening
+glory: 'He died in a good old age, full of days, riches, and
+honour.' Once more we read of the great high priest Jehoiada, whose
+history had been crowded with peril, change, brave resistance, and
+strenuous effort, that with all the storms behind him he died at
+last, 'full of days.' The only other instance of the occurrence of
+the phrase is at the close of the book of Job, the typical record of
+the good man suffering, and of the abundant compensations given by a
+loving God. The fair picture of returning prosperity and family joy,
+like the calm morning sunshine after a night of storm and wreck,
+with which that wonderful book ends, has this for its last touch,
+evidently intended to deepen the impression of peace which is
+breathed over it all: 'So Job died, being old and full of days.'
+These are all the instances of the occurrence of this phrase, and I
+think we may fairly say that in all it is meant to suggest not
+merely length of days, but some characteristic of the long life over
+and above its mere length. We shall, I think, understand its meaning
+a little better if we make a very slight and entirely warranted
+change, and instead of reading '_full_ of years,' read '_satisfied_
+with years.' The men were satisfied with life; having exhausted its
+possibilities, having drunk a full draught, having nothing more left
+to wish for. The words point to a calm close, with all desires
+gratified, with hot wishes stilled, with no desperate clinging to
+life, but a willingness to let it go, because all which it could give
+had been attained.
+
+So much for one of the remarkable expressions in this verse. There
+is another, 'He was gathered to his people,' of which we shall have
+more to say presently. Enough for the present to note the
+peculiarity, and to suggest that it seems to contain some dim hint
+of a future life, and some glimmer of some of the profoundest
+thoughts about it.
+
+We have two main things to consider.
+
+1. The tranquil close of a life.
+
+It is possible, then, at the end of life to feel that it has
+satisfied one's wishes. Whether it does or no will depend mostly on
+ourselves, and very slightly on our circumstances. Length of days,
+competence, health, and friends are important; but neither these nor
+any other externals will make the difference between a life which,
+in the retrospect, will seem to have been sufficient for our
+desires, and one which leaves a hunger in the heart. It is possible
+for us to make our lives of such a sort, that whether they run on to
+the apparent maturity of old age, or whether they are cut short in
+the midst of our days, we may rise from the table feeling that it
+has satisfied our desires, met our anticipation, and been all very
+good.
+
+Possibly, that is not the way in which most of us look at life. That
+is not the way in which a great many of us seem to think that it is
+an eminent part of Christian and religious character to look at
+life. But it is the way in which the highest type of devotion and
+the truest goodness always look at it. There are people, old and
+young, who, whenever they look back, whether it be over a long tract
+of years or over a short one, have nothing to say about it except:
+'Vanity of vanities! all is vanity and vexation of spirit'; a
+retrospect of weary disappointments and thwarted plans.
+
+How different with some of us the forward and the backward look! Are
+there not some listening to me, whose past is so dark that it flings
+black shadows over their future, and who can only cherish hopes for
+to-morrow, by giving the lie to and forgetting the whole of their
+yesterdays? It is hard to paint the regions before us like 'the
+Garden of the Lord,' when we know that the locusts of our own
+godless desires have made all the land behind us desolate. If your
+past has been a selfish past, a godless past, in which passion,
+inclination, whim, anything but conscience and Christ have ruled,
+your remembrances can scarcely be tranquil; nor your hopes bright.
+If you have only 'prospects drear,' when you 'backward cast your
+eye,' it is not wonderful if 'forwards though you cannot see,' you
+will 'guess and fear.' Such lives, when they come towards an end,
+are wont to be full of querulous discontent and bitterness. We have
+all seen godless old men cynical and sour, pleased with nothing,
+grumbling, or feebly complaining, about everything, dissatisfied
+with all which life has thus far yielded them, and yet clinging
+desperately to it, and afraid to go.
+
+Put by the side of such an end this calm picture of the old man
+going down into his grave, and looking back over all those long days
+since he came away from his father's house, and became a pilgrim and
+a stranger. How all the hot anxieties, desires, occupations, of
+youth have quieted themselves down! How far away now seem the
+warlike days when he fought the invading kings! How far away the
+heaviness of heart when he journeyed to Mount Moriah with his boy,
+and whetted the knife to slay his son! His love had all been buried
+in Sarah's grave. He has been a lonely man for many years; and yet
+he looks back, as God looked back over His creative week, and feels
+that all has been good. 'It was all for the best; the great
+procession of my life has been ordered from the beginning to its
+end, by the Hand that shapes beauty everywhere, and has made all
+things blessed and sweet. I have drunk a full draught; I have had
+enough; I bless the Giver of the feast, and push my chair back; and
+get up and go away.' He died an old man, and satisfied with his
+life.
+
+Ay! And what a contrast that makes, dear friends, to another set of
+people. There is nothing more miserable than to see a man, as his
+years go by, gripping harder and tighter at this poor, fleeting
+world that is slipping away from him; nothing sadder than to see
+how, as opportunities and capacities for the enjoyment of life
+dwindle, and dwindle, and dwindle, people become almost fierce in
+the desire to keep it. Why, you can see on the face of many an old
+man and woman a hungry discontent, that has not come from the mere
+wrinkles of old age or care; an eager acquisitiveness looking out of
+the dim old eyes, tragical and awful. It is sad to see a man, as the
+world goes from him, grasping at its skirts as a beggar does at the
+retreating passer-by that refuses him an alms. Are there not some of
+us who feel that this is our case, that the less we have before us
+of life here on earth, the more eagerly we grasp at the little which
+still remains; trying to get some last drops out of the broken
+cistern which we know can hold no water? How different this blessed
+acquiescence in the fleeting away of the fleeting; and this
+contented satisfaction with the portion that has been given him,
+which this man had who died willingly, being satisfied with life!
+
+Sometimes, too, there is satiety--weariness of life which is not
+satisfaction, though it looks like it. Its language is: 'Man
+delights me not; nor woman neither. I am tired of it all.' Those who
+feel thus sit at the table without an appetite. They think that they
+have seen to the bottom of everything, and they have found
+everything a cheat. They expect nothing new under the sun; that
+which is to be hath already been, and it is all vanity and striving
+after the wind. They are at once satiated and dissatisfied. Nothing
+keeps the power to charm.
+
+How different from all this is the temper expressed in this text,
+rightly understood! Abraham had had a richly varied life. It had
+brought him all he wished. He has drunk a full draught, and needs no
+more. He is satisfied, but that does not mean loss of interest in
+present duties, occupations, or enjoyments. It is possible to keep
+ourselves fully alive to all these till the end, and to preserve
+something of the keen edge of youth even in old age, by the magic of
+communion with God, purity of conduct, and a habitual contemplation
+of all events as sent by our Father. When Paul felt himself very
+near his end, he yet had interest enough in common things to tell
+Timothy all about their mutual friends' occupations, and to wish to
+have his books and parchments.
+
+So, calmly, satisfied and yet not sickened, keenly appreciating all
+the good and pleasantness of life, and yet quite willing to let it
+go, Abraham died. So may it be with us too, if we will, no matter
+what the duration or the externals of our life. If we too are his
+children by faith, we shall be 'blessed with faithful Abraham.' And
+I beseech you to ask yourselves whether the course of your life is
+such as that, if at this moment God's great knife were to come down
+and cut it in two, you would be able to say, 'Well! I have had
+enough, and now contentedly I go.'
+
+Again, it is possible at the end of life to feel that it is
+complete, because the days have accomplished for us the highest
+purpose of life. Scaffoldings are for buildings, and the moments and
+days and years of our earthly lives are scaffolding. What are you
+building inside the scaffolding, brother? What kind of a structure
+will be disclosed when the scaffolding is knocked away? What is the
+end for which days and years are given? That they may give us what
+eternity cannot take away--a character built upon the love of God in
+Christ, and moulded into His likeness. 'Man's chief end is to
+glorify God, and to enjoy Him for ever.' Has your life helped you to
+do that? If it has, though you be but a child, you are full of
+years; if it has not, though your hair be whitened with the snows of
+the nineties, you are yet incomplete and immature. The great end of
+life is to make us like Christ, and pleasing to Christ. If life has
+done that for us, we have got the best out of it, and our life is
+completed, whatever may be the number of the days. Quality, not
+quantity, is the thing that determines the perfectness of a life.
+And like as in northern lands, where there is only a week or two
+from the melting of the snow to the cutting of the hay, the whole
+harvest of a life may be gathered in a very little space, and all be
+done which is needed to make the life complete. Has your life this
+completeness? Can you be 'satisfied' with it, because the river of
+the flowing hours has borne down some grains of gold amidst the mass
+of mud, and, notwithstanding many sins and failures, you have thus
+far fulfilled the end of your being, that you are in some measure
+trusting and serving the Lord Jesus Christ?
+
+Again, it is possible, at the end of life, to be _willing_ to
+go as satisfied.
+
+Most men cling to life in grim desperation, like a climber to a
+cliff giving way, or a drowning man clutching at any straw. How
+beautiful the contrast of the placid, tranquil acquiescence
+expressed in that phrase of our text! No doubt there will always be
+the shrinking of the bodily nature from death. But that may be
+overcome. There is no passion so weak but in some case it has 'mated
+and mastered the fear of death,' and it is possible for us all to
+come to that temper in which we shall be ready for either fortune,
+to live and serve Him here, or to die and enjoy Him yonder. Or, to
+return to an earlier illustration, it is possible to be like a man
+sitting at table, who has had his meal, and is quite contented to
+stay on there, restful and cheerful, but is not unwilling to put
+back his chair, to get up and to go away, thanking the Giver for
+what he has received.
+
+Ah! that is the way to face the end, dear brethren, and how is it to
+be done? Such a temper need not be the exclusive possession of the
+old. It may belong to us at all stages of life. How is it won? By a
+life of devout communion with God. The secret of it lies in obeying
+the commandment and realising the truth which Abraham realised and
+obeyed: 'I am the Almighty God, walk before Me, and be thou
+perfect.' 'Fear not, Abram, I am thy shield and thine exceeding
+great reward.' That is to say, a simple communion with God,
+realising His presence and feeling that He is near, will sweeten
+disappointment, will draw from it its hidden blessedness, will make
+us victors over its pains and its woes. Such a faith will make it
+possible to look back and see only blessing; to look forward and see
+a great light of hope burning in the darkness. Such a faith will
+check weariness, avert satiety, promote satisfaction, and will help
+us to feel that life and the great hereafter are but the outer and
+inner mansions of the Father's house, and death the short though
+dark corridor between. So we shall be ready for life or for death.
+
+2. Now I must turn to consider more briefly the glimpse of the
+joyful society beyond, which is given us in that other remarkable
+expression of our text: 'He was gathered to his people'
+
+That phrase is only used in the earlier Old Testament books, and
+there only in reference to a few persons. It is used of Abraham,
+Ishmael, Isaac, Jacob, Moses, and Aaron, and once (Judges ii. 10) of
+a whole generation. If you will weigh the words, I think you will
+see that there is in them a dim intimation of something beyond this
+present life.
+
+'He was gathered to his people' is not the same thing as 'He died,'
+for, in the earlier part of the verse, we read, 'Abraham gave up the
+ghost and died ... and was gathered to his people.' It is not the
+same thing as being buried. For we read in the following verse: 'And
+his sons Isaac and Ishmael buried him in the cave of Machpelah, in
+the field of Ephron, the son of Zohar the Hittite, which is before
+Mamre.' It is then the equivalent neither of death nor of burial. It
+conveys dimly and veiledly that Abraham was buried, and yet that was
+not all that happened to him. He was buried, but also 'he was
+gathered to his people.' Why! his own 'people' were buried in
+Mesopotamia, and his grave was far away from theirs. What is the
+meaning of the expression? Who were the people he was gathered to?
+In death or in burial, 'the dust returns to the earth as it was.'
+What was it that was gathered to his people?
+
+Dimly, vaguely, veiledly, but unmistakably, as it seems to me, is
+here expressed at least a premonition and feeling after the thought
+of an immortal self in Abraham that was not there in what 'his sons
+Isaac and Ishmael laid in the cave at Machpelah,' but was somewhere
+else and was for ever. That is the first thing hinted at here--the
+continuance of the personal being after death.
+
+Is there anything more? I think there is. Now, remember, Abraham's
+whole life was shaped by that commandment, 'Get thee out from thy
+father's house, and from thy kindred, and from thy country.' He
+never dwelt with his kindred; all his days he was a pilgrim and a
+sojourner, a stranger in a strange land. And though he was living in
+the midst of a civilisation which possessed great cities whose walls
+reached to heaven, he pitched his tent beneath the terebinth tree at
+Mamre, and would have nothing to do with the order of things around
+him, but remained an exotic, a waif, an outcast in the midst of
+Canaan all his life. Why? Because he 'looked for the city which hath
+the foundations, whose builder and maker is God.' And now he has
+gone to it, he is gathered to his people. The life of isolation is
+over, the true social life is begun. He is no longer separated from
+those around him, or flung amidst those that are uncongenial to him.
+'He is gathered to his people'; he dwells with his own tribe; he is
+at home; he is in the city.
+
+And so, brethren, life for every Christian man must be lonely. After
+all communion we dwell as upon islands dotted over a great
+archipelago, each upon his little rock, with the sea dashing between
+us; but the time comes when, if our hearts are set upon that great
+Lord, whose presence makes us one, there shall be no more sea, and
+all the isolated rocks shall be parts of a great continent. Death
+sets the solitary in families. We are here like travellers plodding
+lonely through the night and the storm, but soon to cross the
+threshold into the lighted hall, full of friends.
+
+If we cultivate that sense of detachment from the present, and of
+having our true affinities in the unseen, if we dwell here as
+strangers because our citizenship is in heaven, then death will not
+drag us away from our associates, nor hunt us into a lonely land,
+but will bring us where closer bonds shall knit the 'sweet
+societies' together, and the sheep shall couch close by one another,
+because all are gathered round the one shepherd. Then many a broken
+tie shall be rewoven, and the solitary wanderer meet again the dear
+ones whom he had 'loved long since, and lost awhile.'
+
+Further, the expressions suggest that in the future men shall be
+associated according to affinity and character. 'He was gathered to
+his people,' whom he was like and who were like him; the people with
+whom he had sympathy, the people whose lives were shaped after the
+fashion of his own.
+
+Men will be sorted there. Gravitation will come into play
+undisturbed; and the pebbles will be ranged according to their
+weights on the great shore where the sea has cast them up, as they
+are upon Chesil beach, down there in the English Channel, and many
+another coast besides; all the big ones together and sized off to
+the smaller ones, regularly and steadily laid out. Like draws to
+like. Our spiritual affinities, our religious and moral character,
+will settle where we shall be, and who our companions will be when
+we get yonder. Some of us would not altogether like to live with the
+people that are like ourselves, and some of us would not find the
+result of this sorting to be very delightful. Men in the Dantesque
+circles were only made more miserable because all around them were
+of the same sort as, and some of them worse than, themselves. And an
+ordered hell, with no company for the liar but liars, and none for
+the thief but thieves, and none for impure men but the impure, and
+none for the godless but the godless, would be a hell indeed.
+
+'He was gathered to his people,' and you and I will be gathered
+likewise. What is the conclusion of the whole matter? Let us follow
+with our thoughts, and in our lives, those who have gone into the
+light, and cultivate in heart and character those graces and
+excellences which are congruous with the inheritance of the saints
+in light. Above all, let us give our hearts to Christ, by simple
+faith in Him, to be shaped and sanctified by Him. Then our country
+will be where He is, and our people will be the people in whom His
+love abides, and the tribe to which we belong will be the tribe of
+which He is Chieftain. So when our turn comes, we may rise
+thankfully from the table in the wilderness, which He has spread for
+us, having eaten as much as we desired, and quietly follow the dark-
+robed messenger whom His love sends to bring us to the happy
+multitudes that throng the streets of the city. There we shall find
+our true home, our kindred, our King. 'So shall _we_ ever be
+with the Lord.'
+
+
+
+
+A BAD BARGAIN
+
+
+ 'And the boys grew: and Esau was a cunning hunter, a
+ man of the field; and Jacob was a plain man, dwelling
+ in tents. And Isaac loved Esau, because he did eat of
+ his venison: but Rebekah loved Jacob. And Jacob sod
+ pottage: and Esau came from the field, and he was faint:
+ And Esau said to Jacob, Feed me, I pray thee, with that
+ same red pottage; for I am faint: therefore was his name
+ called Edom. And Jacob said, Sell me this day thy
+ birthright. And Esau said, Behold, I am at the point to
+ die: and what profit shall this birthright do to me?
+ And Jacob said, Swear to me this day; and he sware unto
+ him: and he sold his birthright unto Jacob. Then Jacob
+ gave Esau bread and pottage of lentiles; and he did eat
+ and drink, and rose up, and went his way: thus Esau
+ despised his birthright.'
+ GENESIS xxv. 27-34.
+
+Isaac's small household represented a great variety of types of
+character. He himself lacked energy, and seems in later life to have
+been very much of a tool in the hands of others. Rebekah had the
+stronger nature, was persistent, energetic, and managed her husband
+to her heart's content. The twin brothers were strongly opposed in
+character; and, naturally enough, each parent loved best the child
+that was most unlike him or her: Isaac rejoicing in the very
+wildness of the adventurous, dashing Esau; and Rebekah finding an
+outlet for her womanly tenderness in an undue partiality for the
+quiet lad that was always at hand to help her and be petted by her.
+
+One's sympathy goes out to Esau. He was 'a man of the field,'--by
+which is meant, not cultivated ground, but open country, which we
+might call prairie. He was a 'backwoodsman,'--liked the wild
+hunter's life better than sticking at home looking after sheep. He
+had the attractive characteristics of that kind of men, as well as
+their faults. He was frank, impulsive, generous, incapable of
+persevering work or of looking ahead, passionate. His descendants
+prefer cattle-ranching and gold-prospecting to keeping shops or
+sitting with their lungs squeezed against a desk.
+
+Jacob had neither the high spirits nor the animal courage of his
+brother. He was 'a plain man.' The word is literally 'perfect,' but
+cannot be used in its deepest sense; for Jacob was very far indeed
+from being that, but seems to have a lower sense, which might
+perhaps be represented by 'steady-going,' or 'respectable,' in
+modern phraseology. He went quietly about his ordinary work, in
+contrast with his daring brother's escapades and unsettledness.
+
+The two types are intensified by civilisation, and the antagonism
+between them increased. City life tends to produce Jacobs, and its
+Esaus escape from it as soon as they can. But Jacob had the vices as
+well as the virtues of his qualities. He was orderly and domestic,
+but he was tricky, and keenly alive to his own interest. He was
+persevering and almost dogged in his tenacity of purpose, but he was
+not above taking mean advantages and getting at his ends by miry
+roads. He had little love for his brother, in whom he saw an
+obstacle to his ambition. He had the virtues and vices of the
+commercial spirit.
+
+But we judge the two men wrongly if we let ourselves be fascinated,
+as Isaac was, by Esau, and forget that the superficial attractions
+of his character cover a core worthy of disapprobation. They are
+crude judges of character who prefer the type of man who spurns the
+restraints of patient industry and order; and popular authors, who
+make their heroes out of such, err in taste no less than in morals.
+There is a very unwholesome kind of literature, which is devoted to
+glorifying the Esaus as fine fellows, with spirit, generosity, and
+noble carelessness, whereas at bottom they are governed by animal
+impulses, and incapable of estimating any good which does not appeal
+to sense, and that at once.
+
+The great lesson of this story lies on its surface. It is the folly
+and sin of buying present gratification of appetite or sense at the
+price of giving up far greater future good. The details are
+picturesquely told. Esau's eagerness, stimulated by the smell of the
+mess of lentils, is strikingly expressed in the Hebrew: 'Let me
+devour, I pray thee, of that red, that red there.' It is no sin to
+be hungry, but to let appetite speak so clamorously indicates feeble
+self-control. Jacob's coolness is an unpleasant foil to Esau's
+impatience, and his cautious bargaining, before he will sell what a
+brother would have given, shows a mean soul, without generous love
+to his own flesh and blood. Esau lets one ravenous desire hide
+everything else from him. He wants the pottage which smokes there,
+and that one poor dish is for the moment more to him than birthright
+and any future good. Jacob knows the changeableness of Esau's
+character, and is well aware that a hungry man will promise
+anything, and, when fed, will break his promise as easily as he made
+it. So he makes Esau swear; and Esau will do that, or anything
+asked. He gets his meal. The story graphically describes the greedy
+relish with which he ate, the short duration of his enjoyment, and
+the dark meaning of the seemingly insignificant event, by that
+accumulation of verbs, 'He did eat and drink, and rose up and went
+his way: so Esau despised his birthright.'
+
+Now we may learn, first, how profound an influence small
+temptations, yielded to, may exert on a life.
+
+Many scoffs have been directed against this story, as if it were
+unworthy of credence that eating a dish of lentils should have
+shaped the life of a man and of his descendants. But is it not
+always the case that trifles turn out to be determining points?
+Hinges are very small, compared with the doors which move on them.
+Most lives are moulded by insignificant events. No temptation is
+small, for no sin is small; and if the occasion of yielding to sense
+and the present is insignificant, the yielding is not so.
+
+But the main lesson is, as already noted, the madness of flinging
+away greater future good for present gratifications of sense. One
+cannot suppose that the spiritual side of 'the birthright' was in
+the thoughts of either brother. Esau and Jacob alike regarded it
+only as giving the headship of the family. It was merely the right
+of succession, with certain material accompanying advantages, which
+Jacob coveted and Esau parted with. But even in regard to merely
+worldly objects, the man who lives for only the present moment is
+distinctly beneath him who lives for a future good, however material
+it may be. Whoever subordinates the present, and is able steadily to
+set before himself a remote object, for which he is strong enough to
+subdue the desire of immediate gratifications of any sort, is, in so
+far, better than the man who, like a savage or an animal, lives only
+for the instant.
+
+The highest form of that nobility is when time is clearly seen to be
+the 'lackey to eternity,' and life's aims are determined with
+supreme reference to the future beyond the grave. But how many of us
+are every day doing exactly as Esau did--flinging away a great
+future for a small present! A man who lives only for such ends as
+may be attained on this side of the grave is as 'profane' a person
+as Esau, and despises his birthright as truly. He knew that he was
+hungry, and that lentil porridge was good, 'What good shall the
+birthright do me?' He failed to make the effort of mind and
+imagination needed in order to realise how much of the kind of
+'good' that he could appreciate it would do to him. The smell of the
+smoking food was more to him than far greater good which he could
+only appreciate by an effort. A sixpence held close to the eye can
+shut out the sun. Resolute effort is needed to prevent the small,
+intrusive present from blotting out the transcendent greatness of
+the final future. And for lack of such effort men by the thousand
+fling themselves away.
+
+To sell a birthright for a bowl of lentils was plain folly. But is
+it wiser to sell the blessedness and peace of communion with God
+here and of heaven hereafter for anything that earth can yield to
+sense or to soul? How many shrewd 'men of the highest commercial
+standing' are making as bad a bargain as Esau's! The 'pottage' is
+hot and comforting, but it is soon eaten; and when the bowl is
+empty, and the sense of hunger comes back in an hour or two, the
+transaction does not look quite as advantageous as it did. Esau had
+many a minute of rueful meditation on his bad bargain before he in
+vain besought his father's blessing. And suspicions of the folly of
+their choice are apt to haunt men who prefer the present to the
+future, even before the future becomes the present, and the folly is
+manifest. 'What doth it profit a man, to gain the whole world, and
+forfeit his life?'
+
+So a character like Esau's, though it has many fine possibilities
+about it, and attracts liking, is really of a low type, and may very
+easily slide into depths of degrading sensualism, and be dead to all
+nobleness. Enterprise, love of stirring life, impatience of dull
+plodding, are natural to young lives. Unregulated, impulsive
+characters, who live for the moment, and are very sensitive to all
+material delights, have often an air of generosity and joviality
+which hides their essential baseness; for it _is_ base to live
+for flesh, either in more refined or more frankly coarse forms. It
+is base to be incapable of seeing an inch beyond the present. It is
+base to despise any good that cannot minister to fleeting lusts or
+fleshly pleasures, and to say of high thought, of ideal aims of any
+sort, and most of all to say of religion, 'What good will it do me?'
+To estimate such precious things by the standard of gross utility is
+like weighing diamonds in grocers' scales. They will do very well
+for sugar, but not for precious stones. The sacred things of life
+are not those which do what the Esaus recognise as 'good.' They have
+another purpose, and are valuable for other ends. Let us take heed,
+then, that we estimate things according to their true relative
+worth; that we live, not for to-day, but for eternity; and that we
+suppress all greedy cravings. If we do not, we shall be 'profane'
+persons like Esau, 'who for one morsel of meat sold his birthright.'
+
+
+
+
+POTTAGE VERSUS BIRTHRIGHT
+
+
+ 'Esau despised his birthright'--GENESIS xxv. 34.
+
+Broad lessons unmistakable, but points strange and difficult to
+throw oneself back to so different a set of ideas. So
+
+I. Deal with the narrative.
+
+Not to tell it over again, but bring out the following points:--
+
+(_a_) Birthright.--What?
+
+None of them any notion of sacred, spiritual aspect of it.
+
+To all, merely material advantages: headship of the clan. All the
+loftier aspects gone from Isaac, who thought he could give it for
+venison, from Esau, and from the scheming Rebekah and the crafty
+Jacob.
+
+(_b_) The Bargain.
+
+It is not clear whether the transaction was seriously meant, or
+whether it only shows Jacob's wish to possess the birthright and
+Esau's indifference to it.
+
+At any rate, the barter was not supposed to complete Jacob's title,
+as is shown by a subsequent piece of trickery.
+
+Isaac's blessing was conceived to confer it; that blessing, if once
+given, could not be revoked, even if procured by fraud and given in
+error.
+
+The belief would fulfil itself, as far as the chieftainship was
+concerned.
+
+It is significant of the purely 'secular' tone of all the parties
+concerned that only temporal blessings are included in Isaac's
+words.
+
+(_c_) The Scripture judgment on all parties concerned.
+
+Great mistakes are made by forgetting that the Bible is a
+passionless narrator of its heroes' acts, and seldom pauses to
+censure or praise--so people have thought that Scripture gave its
+vote for Jacob as against Esau.
+
+The character of the two men.
+
+Esau--frank, impulsive, generous, chivalrous, careless, and
+sensuous.
+
+Jacob--meditative, reflective, pastoral, timid, crafty, selfish.
+Each has the defects of his qualities.
+
+But the subsequent history of Jacob shows what heaven thought of
+him.
+
+This dirty transaction marred his life, sent him a terrified exile
+from Isaac's tent, and shook his soul long years after with guilty
+apprehensions when he had to meet Esau.
+
+All subsequent career to beat his crafty selfishness out of him and
+to lift him to higher level.
+
+II. Broad General Lessons.
+
+1. The Choice.--Birthright _versus_ Pottage.
+
+(_a_) The Present _versus_ The Future.
+
+Suppose it true that to both brothers the birthright seemed to
+secure merely material advantage, yet even so the better part would
+have been to sacrifice material present for material future. Even on
+plane of worldly things, to live for to-morrow ennobles a man, and
+he is the higher style of man who 'spurns delights and lives
+laborious days' for some issue to be realised in the far future.
+
+The very same principle extended leads to the conviction that the
+highest wisdom is his who lives for the furthest, which is also the
+most certain, Future.
+
+(_b_) The Seen _versus_ The Unseen.
+
+However material the advantages of the birthright were supposed to
+be, they _then_ appealed to imagination, not sense. _There_ was the
+pottage in the pan: 'I can see that and smell it. This birthright, can
+I eat _it_? Let me get the solid realities, and let who will
+have the imaginary.'
+
+So the unseen good things, such as intellectual culture, fair
+reputation, and the like, are better than the gross satisfactions
+that can be handled, or tasted, or seen.
+
+And, on the very same principle, high above the seeker after these--as
+high as he is above the drunkard--is the Christian, whose life is
+shaped by the loftiest Unseen, even 'Him who is invisible.'
+
+2. The grim absurdity of the choice.
+
+The story seems to have a certain undertone of sarcasm, and a keen
+perception of the immense stupidity of the man.
+
+Pottage and a full belly to-day--that was all he got for such a
+sacrifice.
+
+'This their way is their folly.'
+
+3. How well the bargain worked at first, and what came of it at
+last.
+
+No doubt Esau had his meal, and, no doubt, when a man sells his soul
+to the devil (the mediaeval form of the story), he generally gets
+the price for which he bargained, more or less, and oftentimes with
+a dash of vinegar in the porridge, which makes it less palatable.
+
+What comes of it at last. Put side by side the pictures of Esau's
+animal contentment at the moment when he had eaten up his mess, and
+of his despair when he wailed, 'Hast thou not one blessing?'
+
+He finds out his mistake. A sense of the preciousness of the
+despised thing wakes in him.
+
+And it is too late. There _are_ irrevocable consequences of
+every false choice. Youth is gone: cannot alter that. Opportunities
+gone: cannot alter that. Strength gone: cannot alter that. Habits
+formed, associations, reputation, position, character, are all
+determined.
+
+But there is a blessed _contrast_ between Esau's experience and
+what may be ours. The desire to have the birthright is sure to bring
+it to us. No matter how late the desire is of springing, nor how
+long and insultingly we have suppressed it, we never go to our
+Father in vain with the cry, 'Bless me, even me also.'
+
+'What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his
+own soul?'
+
+
+
+
+THE FIRST APOSTLE OF PEACE AT ANY PRICE
+
+
+ 'Then Isaac sowed in that land, and received in the same
+ year an hundredfold, and the Lord blessed him. And the
+ man waxed great, and went forward, and grew until he
+ became very great: For he had possession of flocks, and
+ possession of herds, and great store of servants: and
+ the Philistines envied him. For all the wells which his
+ father's servants had digged in the days of Abraham his
+ father, the Philistines had stopped them, and filled them
+ with earth. And Abimelech said unto Isaac, Go from us;
+ for thou art much mightier than we. And Isaac departed
+ thence, and pitched his tent in the valley of Gerar, and
+ dwelt there. And Isaac digged again the wells of water,
+ which they had digged in the days of Abraham his father;
+ for the Philistines had stopped them after the death of
+ Abraham: and he called their names after the names by
+ which his father had called them. And Isaac's servants
+ digged in the valley, and found there a well of springing
+ water. And the herdmen of Gerar did strive with Isaac's
+ herdmen, saying, The water is ours: and he called the
+ name of the well Esek; because they strove with him. And
+ they digged another well, and strove for that also: and
+ he called the name of it Sitnah. And he removed from
+ thence, and digged another well; and for that they strove
+ not: and be called the name of it Rehoboth; and he said,
+ For now the Lord hath made room for us, and we shall be
+ fruitful in the land. And he went up from thence to
+ Beer-sheba. And the Lord appeared unto him the same
+ night, and said, I am the God of Abraham thy father:
+ fear not, for I am with thee, and will bless thee, and
+ multiply thy seed for my servant Abraham's sake. And he
+ builded an altar there, and called upon the name of the
+ Lord, and pitched his tent there: and there Isaac's
+ servants digged a well.'--GENESIS xxvi. 12-25.
+
+The salient feature of Isaac's life is that it has no salient
+features. He lived out his hundred and eighty years in quiet, with
+little to make history. Few details of his story are given, and some
+of these are not very creditable. He seems never to have wandered
+far from the neighbourhood of Beersheba. These quiet, rolling
+stretches of thinly peopled land contented him, and gave pasture for
+his flocks, as well as fields for his cultivation. Like many of the
+tribes of that district still, he had passed from the purely nomad
+and pastoral life, such as Abraham led, and had begun to 'sow in
+that land.' That marks a stage in progress. His father's life had
+been like a midsummer day, with bursts of splendour and heavy
+thunder-clouds; his was liker a calm day in autumn, windless and
+unchanging from morning till serene evening. The world thinks little
+of such lives, but they are fruitful.
+
+Our text begins with a sweet little picture of peaceful industry,
+blessed by God, and therefore prospering. Travellers tell us that
+the land where Isaac dwelt is still marvellously fertile, even to
+rude farming. But to be merely a successful farmer and sheep-owner
+might have seemed poor work to the heir of such glowing promises,
+and the prospect of a high destiny often disgusts its possessor with
+lowly duties. 'But if we hope for that which we see not, then do we
+with patience wait for it,' and the best way to fit ourselves for
+great things in the future is to bend our backs and wills to humble
+toil in the present. Peter expected every day to see the risen Lord,
+when he said, 'I go a-fishing.'
+
+The Philistines' envy was very natural, since Isaac was an alien,
+and, in some sense, an intruder. Their stopping of the wells was a
+common act of hostility, and an effectual one in that land, where
+everything lives where water comes, and dies if it is cut off.
+Abimelech's reason for 'extraditing' Isaac might have provoked a
+more pugnacious person to stay and defy the Philistines to expel
+him. 'Thou art much mightier than we,' and so he could have said,
+'Try to put me out, then,' and the result might have been that
+Abimelech and his Philistines would have been the ones to go. But
+the same spirit was in the man as had been in the lad, when he let
+his father bind him and lay him on the altar without a struggle or a
+word, and he quietly went, leaving his fields and pastures. 'Very
+poor-spirited,' says the world; what does Christ say?
+
+Isaac was not 'original.' He cleaned out the wells which his father
+had digged, and with filial piety gave them again the old names
+'which his father had called them.' Some of us nowadays get credit
+for being 'advanced and liberal thinkers,' because we regard our
+fathers' wells as much too choked with rubbish to be worth clearing
+out, and the last thing we should dream of would be to revive the
+old names. But the old wells were not enough for the new time, and
+so fresh ones were added. Isaac and his servants did not say, 'We
+will have no water but what is drawn from Abraham's wells. What was
+enough for him is enough for us.' So, like all wise men, they were
+conservatively progressive and progressively conservative. The Gerar
+shepherds were sharp lawyers. They took strong ground in saying,
+'The _water_ is ours; you have dug wells, but we are ground-
+owners, and what is below the surface, as well as what is on it, is
+our property.' Again Isaac fielded, moved on a little way, and tried
+again. A second well was claimed, and given up, and all that Isaac
+did was to name the two 'Contention' and 'Enmity,' as a gentle
+rebuke and memorial. Then, as is generally the result, gentleness
+wearied violence out, and the Philistines tired of annoying before
+Isaac tired of yielding. So he came into a quiet harbour at last,
+and traced his repose to God, naming his last well 'Broad Places,'
+because the Lord had made room for him.
+
+Such a quiet spirit, strong in non-resistance, and ready to yield
+rather than quarrel, was strangely out of place in these wild days
+and lands. He obeyed the Sermon on the Mount millenniums before it
+was spoken. Whether from temperament or from faith, he is the first
+instance of the Christian type of excellence in the Old Testament.
+For there ought to be no question that the spirit of meekness, which
+will not meet violence by violence, is the Christian spirit.
+Christian morals alter the perspective of moral excellences, and
+exalt meekness above the 'heroic virtues' admired by the world. The
+violets and lilies in Christ's garden outshine voluptuous roses and
+flaunting sunflowers. In this day, when there is a recrudescence of
+militarism, and we are tempted to canonise the soldier, we need more
+than ever to insist that the highest type is 'the Lamb of God,' who
+was 'as a sheep before her shearers.' To fight for my rights is not
+the Christian ideal, nor is it the best way to secure them. Isaac
+will generally weary out the Philistines, and get his well at last,
+and will have escaped much friction and many evil passions.
+
+ 'Tis safer being meek than fierce.'
+
+Isaac won the friendship of his opponents by his patience, as the
+verses after the text tell. Their consciences and hearts were
+touched, and they 'saw plainly that the Lord was with him,' and sued
+him for alliance. It is better to turn enemies into friends than to
+beat them and have them as enemies still. 'I'll knock you down
+unless you love me' does not sound a very hopeful way of cementing
+peaceful relations. But 'when a man's ways please the Lord, he
+maketh even his enemies to be at peace with him.' But Isaac won more
+than the Philistines' favour by his meek peacefulness, for 'the Lord
+appeared unto him,' and assured him that, undefended and unresisting
+as he was, he had a strong defence, and need not be afraid: 'Fear
+not, for I am with thee.' The ornament of a meek and quiet spirit
+is, in the sight of God, of great price, and that not only for 'a
+woman'; and it brings visions of God, and assurances of tranquil
+safety to him who cherishes it. The Spirit of God comes down in the
+likeness of a dove, and that bird of peace sits 'brooding "only" on
+the charmed wave' of a heart stilled from strife and wrath, like a
+quiet summer's sea.
+
+Isaac's new home at Beersheba, having been thus hallowed by the
+appearance of the Lord, was consecrated by the building of an altar.
+We should hallow by grateful remembrance the spots where God has
+made Himself known to us. The best beginning of a new undertaking is
+to rear an altar. It is well when new settlers begin their work by
+calling on the name of the Lord. Beersheba and Plymouth Rock are a
+pair. First comes the altar, then the tent can be trustfully
+pitched, but 'except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain
+that build it.' And if the house is built in faith, a well will not
+be lacking; for they who 'seek first the kingdom of God' will have
+all needful 'things added unto them.'
+
+
+
+
+THE HEAVENLY PATHWAY AND THE EARTHLY HEART
+
+
+ 'And Jacob went out from Beer-sheba, and went toward
+ Haran. And he lighted upon a certain place, and tarried
+ there all night, because the sun was set; and he took
+ of the stones of that place, and put them for his pillows,
+ and lay down in that place to sleep. And he dreamed, and
+ behold a ladder set up on the earth, and the top of it
+ reached to heaven; and behold the angels of God ascending
+ and descending on it. And, behold, the Lord stood above
+ it, and said, I am the Lord God of Abraham thy father,
+ and the God of Isaac; the land whereon thou liest, to
+ thee will I give it, and to thy seed; And thy seed shall
+ be as the dust of the earth, and thou shalt spread abroad
+ to the west, and to the east, and to the north, and to
+ the south; and in thee and in thy seed shall all the
+ families of the earth be blessed. And, behold, I am with
+ thee, and will keep thee in all places whither thou
+ goest, and will bring thee again into this land; for I
+ will not leave thee, until I have done that which I have
+ spoken to thee of. And Jacob awaked out of his sleep,
+ and he said, Surely the Lord is in this place; and I
+ knew it not. And he was afraid, and said, How dreadful
+ is this place! this is none other but the house of God,
+ and this is the gate of heaven. And Jacob rose up early
+ in the morning, and took the stone that he had put for
+ his pillows, and set it up for a pillar, and poured oil
+ upon the top of it. And he called the name of that place
+ Beth-el: but the name of that city was called Luz at the
+ first. And Jacob vowed a vow, saying, If God will be with
+ me, and will keep me in this way that I go, and will give
+ me bread to eat, and raiment to put on, So that I come
+ again to my father's house in peace; then shall the Lord
+ be my God; And this stone, which I have set for a pillar,
+ shall be God's house; and of all that Thou shalt give me I
+ will surely give the tenth unto Thee.'--GENESIS xxviii. 10-22.
+
+From Abraham to Jacob is a great descent. The former embodies the
+nobler side of the Jewish character,--its capacity for religious
+ideas; its elevation above, and separation from, the nations; its
+consciousness of, and peaceful satisfaction in, a divine Friend; its
+consequent vocation in the world. These all were deep in the founder
+of the race, and flowed to it from him. Jacob, on the other hand,
+has in him the more ignoble qualities, which Christian treatment of
+the Jew has fostered, and which have become indissolubly attached to
+the name in popular usage. He is a crafty schemer, selfish, over-
+reaching, with a keen eye to the main chance. Whoever deals with him
+has to look sharply after his own interests. Self-advantage in its
+most earthly form is uppermost in him; and, like all timid, selfish
+men, shifty ways and evasions are his natural weapons. The great
+interest of his history lies in the slow process by which the
+patient God purified him, and out of this 'stone raised up a worthy
+child to Abraham.' We see in this context the first step in his
+education, and the very imperfect degree in which he profited by it.
+
+1. Consider the vision and its accompanying promise. Jacob has fled
+from home on account of his nobler brother's fierce wrath at the
+trick which their scheming mother and he had contrived. It was an
+ugly, heartless fraud, a crime against a doting father, as against
+Esau. Rebekah gets alarmed for her favourite; and her fertile brain
+hits upon another device to blind Isaac and get Jacob out of harm's
+way, in the excuse that she cannot bear his marriage with a Hittite
+woman. Her exaggerated expressions of passionate dislike to 'the
+daughters of Heth' have no religious basis. They are partly feigned
+and partly petulance. So the poor old blind father is beguiled once
+more, and sends his son away. Starting under such auspices, and
+coming from such an atmosphere, and journeying back to Haran, the
+hole of the pit whence Abraham had been digged, and turning his back
+on the land where God had been with his house, the wanderer was not
+likely to be cherishing any lofty thoughts. His life was in danger;
+he was alone, a dim future was before him, perhaps his conscience
+was not very comfortable. These things would be in his mind as he
+lay down and gazed into the violet sky so far above him, burning
+with all its stars. Weary, and with a head full of sordid cares,
+plans, and possibly fears, he slept; and then there flamed on 'that
+inward eye, which is the bliss of solitude' to the pure, and its
+terror to the evil, this vision, which speaks indeed to his then
+need, as he discerned it, but reveals to him and to us the truth
+which ennobles all life, burns up the dross of earthward-turned
+aims, and selfish, crafty ways.
+
+We are to conceive of the form of the vision as a broad stair or
+sloping ascent, rather than a ladder, reaching right from the
+sleeper's side to the far-off heaven, its pathway peopled with
+messengers, and its summit touching the place where a glory shone
+that paled even the lustrous constellations of that pure sky. Jacob
+had thought himself alone; the vision peoples the wilderness. He had
+felt himself defenceless; the vision musters armies for his safety.
+He had been grovelling on earth, with no thoughts beyond its
+fleeting goods; the vision lifts his eyes from the low level on
+which they had been gazing. He had been conscious of but little
+connection with heaven; the vision shows him a path from his very
+side right into its depths. He had probably thought that he was
+leaving the presence of his father's God when he left his father's
+tent; the vision burns into his astonished heart the consciousness
+of God as there, in the solitude and the night.
+
+The divine promise is the best commentary on the meaning of the
+vision. The familiar ancestral promise is repeated to him, and the
+blessing and the birthright thus confirmed. In addition, special
+assurances, the translation of the vision into word and adapted to
+his then wants, are given,--God's presence in his wanderings, his
+protection, Jacob's return to the land, and the promise of God's
+persistent presence, working through all paradoxes of providence and
+sins of His servant, and incapable of staying its operations, or
+satisfying God's heart, or vindicating His faithfulness, at any
+point short of complete accomplishment of His plighted word.
+
+We pass from the lone desert and the mysterious twilight of Genesis
+to the beaten ways between Galilee and Jordan, and to the clear
+historic daylight of the gospel, and we hear Christ renewing the
+promise to the crafty Jacob, to one whom He called a son of Jacob in
+his after better days, 'an Israelite indeed, in whom is no guile.'
+The very heart of Christ's work was unveiled in the terms of this
+vision: From henceforth 'ye shall see the heaven opened, and the
+angels of God ascending and descending upon the Son of man.' So,
+then, the fleeting vision was a transient revelation of a permanent
+reality, and a faint foreshadowing of the true communication between
+heaven and earth. Jesus Christ is the ladder between God and man. On
+Him all divine gifts descend; by Him all the angels of human
+devotion, consecration, and aspiration go up. This flat earth is not
+so far from the topmost heaven as sense thinks. The despairing
+question of Jewish wisdom, 'Who hath ascended up into heaven, or
+descended? ... What is his name, and what is his son's name, if thou
+canst tell?'--which has likewise been the question of every age that
+has not been altogether sunk in sensual delights--is answered once
+for all in the incarnate and crucified and ascended Lord, by and in
+whom all heaven has stooped to earth, that earth might be lifted to
+heaven. Every child of man, though lonely and earthly, has the
+ladder-foot by his side,--like the sunbeam, which comes straight
+into the eyes of every gazer, wherever he stands. It becomes
+increasingly evident, in the controversies of these days, that there
+will remain for modern thought only the alternative,--either Jesus
+Christ is the means of communication between God and man, or there
+is no communication. Deism and theism are compromises, and cannot
+live. The cultivated world in both hemispheres is being more and
+more shut up to either accepting Christ as revealer, by whom alone
+we know, and as medium by whom alone we love and approach, God; or
+sinking into abysses of negations where choke-damp will stifle
+enthusiasm and poetry, as well as devotion and immortal hope.
+
+Jacob's vision was meant to teach him, and is meant to teach us, the
+nearness of God, and the swift directness of communication, whereby
+His help comes to us and our desires rise to Him. These and their
+kindred truths were to be to him, and should be to us, the parents
+of much nobleness. Here is the secret of elevation of aim and
+thought above the mean things of sense. We all, and especially the
+young, in whose veins the blood dances, and to whom life is in all
+its glory and freshness, are tempted to think of it as all. It does
+us good to have this vision of the eternal realities blazing in upon
+us, even if it seems to glare at us, rather than to shine with
+lambent light. The seen is but a thin veil of the unseen. Earth,
+which we are too apt to make a workshop, or a mere garden of
+pleasure, is a Bethel,--a house of God. Everywhere the ladder
+stands; everywhere the angels go up and down; everywhere the Face
+looks from the top. Nothing will save life from becoming, sooner or
+later, trivial, monotonous, and infinitely wearisome, but the
+continual vision of the present God, and the continual experience of
+the swift ascent and descent of our aspirations and His blessings.
+
+It is the secret of purity too. How could Jacob indulge in his
+craft, and foul his conscience with sin, as long as he carried the
+memory of what he had seen in the solitary night on the uplands of
+Bethel? The direct result of the vision is the same command as
+Abraham received, 'Walk before Me, and be thou perfect.' Realise My
+presence, and let that kill the motions of sin, and quicken to
+service.
+
+It is also the secret of peace. Hopes and fears, and dim uncertainty
+of the future, no doubt agitated the sleeper's mind as he laid him
+down. His independent life was beginning. He had just left his
+father's tents for the first time; and, though not a youth in years,
+he was in the position which youth holds with us. So to him, and to
+all young persons, here is shown the charm which will keep the heart
+calm, and preserve us from being 'over exquisite to cast the fashion
+of uncertain evils,' or too eagerly longing for possible good. 'I am
+with thee' should be enough to steady our souls; and the confidence
+that God will not leave us till He has accomplished His own purpose
+for us, should make us willing to let Him do as He will with ours.
+
+2. Notice the imperfect reception of the divine teaching. Jacob's
+startled exclamation on awakening from his dream indicates a very
+low level both of religious knowledge and feeling. Nor is there any
+reason for taking the words in any but their most natural sense; for
+it is a mistake to ascribe to him the knowledge of God due to later
+revelation, or, at this stage of his life, any depth of religious
+emotion. He is alarmed at the thought that God is near. Probably he
+had been accustomed to think of God's presence as in some special
+way associated with his father's encampment, and had not risen to
+the belief of His omnipresence. There seems no joyous leaping up of
+his heart at the thought that God is here. Dread, not unmingled with
+the superstitious fear that he had profaned a holy place by laying
+himself down in it, is his prevailing feeling, and he pleads
+ignorance as the excuse for his sacrilege. He does not draw the
+conclusion from the vision that all the earth is hallowed by a near
+God, but only that he has unwittingly stumbled on His house; and he
+does not learn that from every place there is an open door for the
+loving heart into the calm depths where God is throned, but only
+that _here_ he unwittingly stands at the gate of heaven. So he
+misses the very inner purpose of the vision, and rather shrinks from
+it than welcomes it. Was that spasm of fear all that passed through
+his mind that night? Did he sleep again when the glory died out of
+the heaven? So the story would appear to suggest. But, in any case,
+we see here the effect of the sudden blazing in upon a heart not yet
+familiar with the Divine Friend, of the conviction that He is really
+near. Gracious as God's promise was, it did not dissipate the
+creeping awe at His presence. It is an eloquent testimony of man's
+consciousness of sin, that whensoever a present God becomes a
+reality to a worldly man, he trembles. 'This place' would not be
+'dreadful,' but blessed, if it were not for the sense of discord
+between God and me.
+
+The morning light brought other thoughts, when it filled the silent
+heavens, and where the ladder had stretched, there was but empty
+blue. The lesson is sinking into his mind. He lifts the rude stone
+and pours oil on it, as a symbol of consecration, as nameless races
+have done all over the world. His vow shows that he had but begun to
+learn in God's school. He hedges about his promise with a
+punctilious repetition of God's undertaking, as if resolved that
+there should be no mistake. Clause by clause he goes over it all,
+and puts an 'if' to it. God's word should have kindled something
+liker faith than that. What a fall from 'Abram believed in the Lord,
+and He counted it to him for righteousness'! Jacob barely believed,
+and will wait to see whether all will turn out as it has been
+promised. That is not the glad, swift response of a loving, trusting
+heart. Nor is he contented with repeating to God the terms of his
+engagement, but he adds a couple of clauses which strike him as
+being important, and as having been omitted. There was nothing about
+'bread to eat, and raiment to put on,' nor about coming back again
+'in peace,' so he adds these. A true 'Jew,'--great at a bargain, and
+determined to get all he can, and to have no mistake about what he
+must get before he gives anything! Was Jesus thinking at all of the
+ancestor when He warned the descendants, in words which sound
+curiously like an echo of Jacob's, not to be anxious 'what ye shall
+eat,' nor 'what ye shall put on'? As the vow stands in the
+Authorised Version, it is farther open to the charge of suspending
+his worship of God upon the fulfilment of these conditions; but it
+is better to adopt the marginal rendering of the Revised Version,
+according to which the clause 'then shall the Lord be my God' is a
+part of the conditions, not of the vow, and is to be read 'And [if]
+the Lord will be ... then this stone ... shall be,' etc. If this
+rendering be adopted, as I think it should be, the vow proper is
+simply of outward service,--he will rear an altar, and he will tithe
+his substance. Not a very munificent pledge! And where in it is the
+surrender of the heart? Where is the outgoing of love and gratitude?
+Where the clasping of the hand of his heavenly Friend with calm
+rapture of thankful self-yielding, and steadfastness of implicit
+trust? God did not want Jacob's altar, nor his tenths; He wanted
+Jacob. But many a weary year and many a sore sorrow have to leave
+their marks on him before the evil strain is pressed out of his
+blood; and by the unwearied long-suffering of his patient Friend and
+Teacher in heaven, the crafty, earthly-minded Jacob 'the supplanter'
+is turned into 'Israel, the prince with God, in whom is no guile.'
+The slower the scholar, the more wonderful the forbearance of the
+Teacher; and the more may we, who are slow scholars too, take heart
+to believe that He will not be soon angry with us, nor leave us
+until He has done that which He has spoken to us of.
+
+
+
+
+MAHANAIM: THE TWO CAMPS
+
+
+ 'And Jacob went on his way, and the angels of God met
+ him. And when Jacob saw them, he said, This is God's
+ host: and he called the name of that place Mahanaim'
+ (_i.e._ Two camps).--GENESIS xxxii. 1, 2.
+
+This vision came at a crisis in Jacob's life. He has just left the
+house of Laban, his father-in-law, where he had lived for many
+years, and in company with a long caravan, consisting of wives,
+children, servants, and all his wealth turned into cattle, is
+journeying back again to Palestine. His road leads him close by the
+country of Esau. Jacob was no soldier, and he is naturally terrified
+to meet his justly incensed brother. And so, as he plods along with
+his defenceless company trailing behind him, as you may see the Arab
+caravans streaming over the same uplands to-day, all at once, in the
+middle of his march, a bright-harnessed army of angels meets him.
+Whether visible to the eye of sense, or, as would appear, only to
+the eye of faith, they _are_ visible to this troubled man; and,
+in a glow of confident joy, he calls the name of that place
+'Mahanaim,' two camps. One camp was the little one of his down here,
+with the helpless women and children and his own frightened and
+defenceless self, and the other was the great one up there, or
+rather in shadowy but most real spiritual presence around about him,
+as a bodyguard making an impregnable wall between him and every foe.
+We may take some very plain and everlastingly true lessons out of
+this story.
+
+1. First, the angels of God meet us on the dusty road of common
+life. 'Jacob went on his way, and the angels of God met him.'
+
+As he was tramping along there, over the lonely fields of Edom, with
+many a thought on his mind and many a fear at his heart, but feeling
+'There is the path that I have to walk on,' all at once the air was
+filled with the soft rustle of angel wings, and the brightness from
+the flashing armour of the heavenly hosts flamed across his
+unexpecting eye. And so is it evermore. The true place for us to
+receive visions of God is in the path of the homely, prosaic duties
+which He lays upon us. The dusty road is far more likely to be
+trodden by angel feet than the remote summits of the mountain, where
+we sometimes would fain go; and many an hour consecrated to devotion
+has less of the manifest presence of God than is granted to some
+weary heart in its commonplace struggle with the little troubles and
+trials of daily life. These make the doors, as it were, by which the
+visitants draw near to us.
+
+It is the common duties, 'the narrow round, the daily task,' that
+not only give us 'all we ought to ask,' but are the selected means
+and channels by which, ever, God's visitants draw near to us. The
+man that has never seen an angel standing beside him, and driving
+his loom for him, or helping him at his counter and his desk, and
+the woman that has never seen an angel, according to the bold
+realism and homely vision of the old German picture, working with
+her in the kitchen and preparing the meal for the household, have
+little chance of meeting such visitants at any other point of their
+experience or event of their lives.
+
+If the week be empty of the angels, you will never catch sight of a
+feather of their wings on the Sunday. And if we do not recognise
+their presence in the midst of all the prose, and the commonplace,
+and the vulgarity, and the triviality, and the monotony, the dust of
+the small duties, we shall go up to the summit of Sinai itself and
+see nothing there but cold grey stone and everlasting snows. 'Jacob
+went on his way, and the angels of God met him.' The true field for
+religion is the field of common life.
+
+And then another side of the same thought is this, that it is in the
+path where God has bade us walk that we shall find the angels round
+us. We may meet them, indeed, on paths of our own choosing, but it
+will be the sort of angel that Balaam met, with a sword in his hand,
+mighty and beautiful, but wrathful too; and we had better not front
+him! But the friendly helpers, the emissaries of God's love, the
+apostles of His grace, do not haunt the roads that we make for
+ourselves. They confine themselves rigidly to 'the paths in which
+God has before ordained that we should walk in them.' A man has no
+right to expect, and he will not get, blessing and help and divine
+gifts when, self-willedly, he has taken the bit between his teeth,
+and is choosing his own road in the world. But if he will say,
+'Lord! here I am; put me where Thou wilt, and do with me what Thou
+wilt,' then he may be sure that that path, though it may be solitary
+of human companionship, and leading up amongst barren rocks and over
+bare moorlands, where the sun beats down fiercely, will not be
+unvisited by a better presence, so that in sweet consciousness of
+sufficiency of rich grace, he will be able to say, 'I, being in the
+way, the Lord met me.'
+
+2. Still further, we may draw from this incident the lesson that
+God's angels meet us punctually at the hour of need.
+
+Jacob is drawing nearer and nearer to his fear every step. He is now
+just on the borders of Esau's country, and close upon opening
+communications with his brother. At that critical moment, just
+before the finger of the clock has reached the point on the dial at
+which the bell would strike, the needed help comes, the angel guards
+draw near and camp beside him. It is always so. 'The Lord shall help
+her, and that right early.' His hosts come no sooner and no later
+than we need. If they appeared before we had realised our danger and
+our defencelessness, our hearts would not leap up at their coming,
+as men in a beleaguered town do when the guns of the relieving force
+are heard booming from afar. Often God's delays seem to us
+inexplicable, and our prayers to have no more effect than if they
+were spoken to a sleeping Baal. But such delays are merciful. They
+help us to the consciousness of our need. They let us feel the
+presence of the sorrow. They give opportunity of proving the
+weakness of all other supports. They test and increase desire for
+His help. They throw us more unreservedly into His arms. They afford
+room for the sorrow or the burden to work its peaceable fruits. So,
+and in many other ways, delay of succour fits us to receive succour,
+and our God makes no tarrying but for our sakes.
+
+It is His way to let us come almost to the edge of the precipice,
+and then, in the very nick of time, when another minute and we are
+over, to stretch out His strong right hand and save us. So Peter is
+left in prison, though prayer is going up unceasingly for him--and
+no answer comes. The days of the Passover feast slip away, and still
+he is in prison, and prayer does nothing for him. The last day of
+his life, according to Herod's purpose, dawns, and all the day the
+Church lifts up its voice--but apparently there is no answer, nor
+any that regarded. The night comes, and still the vain cry goes up,
+and Heaven seems deaf or apathetic. The night wears on, and still no
+help comes. But in the last watch of that last night, when day is
+almost dawning, at nearly the last minute when escape would have
+been possible, the angel touches the sleeping Apostle, and with
+leisurely calmness, as sure that he had ample time, leads him out to
+freedom and safety. It was precisely because Jesus loved the
+Household at Bethany that, after receiving the sisters' message, He
+abode still for two days in the same place where He was. However our
+impatience may wonder, and our faithlessness venture sometimes
+almost to rebuke Him when He comes, with words like Mary's and
+Martha's--'Lord, if Thou hadst been here, such and such sorrows
+would not have happened, and Thou couldst so easily have been here'--we
+should learn the lesson that even if He has delayed so long that the
+dreaded blow has fallen, He has come soon enough to make it the
+occasion for a still more glorious communication of His power. 'Rest
+in the Lord, wait patiently for Him, and He shall give thee the
+desires of thine heart.'
+
+3. Again, we learn from this incident that the angels of God come in
+the shape which we need.
+
+Jacob's want at the moment was protection. Therefore the angels
+appear in warlike guise, and present before the defenceless man
+another camp, in which he and his unwieldy caravan of women and
+children and cattle may find security. If his special want had been
+of some blessing of another kind, no doubt another form of
+appearance, suited with precision to his need, would have been
+imposed upon these angel helpers. For God's gifts to us change their
+character; as the Rabbis fabled that the manna tasted to each man
+what each most desired. The same pure heavenly bread has the varying
+savour that commends it to varying palates. God's grace is Protean.
+It takes all the forms that man's necessities require. As water
+assumes the shape of any vessel into which it is put, so this great
+blessing comes to each of us, moulded according to the pressure and
+taking the form of our circumstances and necessities. His fulness is
+all-sufficient. It is the same blood that, passing to all the
+members, ministers to each according to the needs and fashion of
+each. And it is the same grace which, passing to our souls, in each
+man is shaped according to his present condition and ministers to
+his present wants.
+
+So, dear brethren, in that great fulness each of us may have the
+thing that we need. The angel who to one man is protection, to
+another shall be teaching and inspiration; to another shall appear
+with chariots of fire and horses of fire to sweep the rapt soul
+heavenward; to another shall draw near as a deliverer from his
+fetters, at whose touch the bonds shall fall from off him; to
+another shall appear as the instructor in duty and the appointer of
+a path of service, like that vision that shone in the castle to the
+Apostle Paul, and said, 'Thou must bear witness for me at Rome'; to
+another shall appear as opening the door of heaven and letting a
+flood of light come down upon his darkened heart, as to the
+Apocalyptic seer in his rocky Patmos. And 'all this worketh that one
+and the self-same' Lord of angels 'dividing to every man severally
+as He will,' and as the man needs. The defenceless Jacob has the
+manifestation of the divine presence in the guise of armed warriors
+that guard his unwarlike camp.
+
+I add one last word. Long centuries after Jacob's experience at
+Mahanaim, another trembling fugitive found himself there, fearful,
+like Jacob, of the vengeance and anger of one who was knit to him by
+blood. When poor King David was flying from the face of Absalom his
+son, the first place where he made a stand, and where he remained
+during the whole of the rebellion, was this town of Mahanaim, away
+on the eastern side of the Jordan. Do you not think that to the
+kingly exile, in his feebleness and his fear, the very name of his
+resting-place would be an omen? Would he not recall the old story,
+and bethink himself of how round that other frightened man
+
+ 'Bright-harnessed angels stood in order serviceable'
+
+and would he not, as he looked on his little band of friends,
+faithful among the faithless, have his eyesight cleared to behold
+the other camp? Such a vision, no doubt, inspired the calm
+confidence of the psalm which evidently belongs to that dark hour of
+his life, and made it possible for the hunted king, with his feeble
+band, to sing even then, 'I will both lay me down in peace and
+sleep, for Thou, Lord, makest me dwell in safety, solitary though I
+am.'
+
+Nor is the vision emptied of its power to stay and make brave by all
+the ages that have passed. The vision was for a moment; the fact is
+for ever. The sun's ray was flashed back from celestial armour, 'the
+next all unreflected shone' on the lonely wastes of the desert--but
+the host of God was there still. The transitory appearance of the
+permanent realities is a revelation to us as truly as to the
+patriarch; and though no angel wings may winnow the air around our
+road, nor any sworded seraphim be seen on our commonplace march, we
+too have all the armies of heaven with us, if we tread the path
+which God has marked out, and in our weakness and trembling commit
+ourselves to Him. The heavenly warriors die not, and hover around us
+to-day, excelling in the strength of their immortal youth, and as
+ready to succour us as they were all these centuries ago to guard
+the solitary Jacob.
+
+Better still, the 'Captain of the Lord's host' is 'come up' to be
+our defence, and our faith has not only to behold the many
+ministering spirits sent forth to minister to us, but One mightier
+than they, whose commands they all obey, and who Himself is the
+companion of our solitude and the shield of our defencelessness. It
+was blessed that Jacob should be met by the many angels of God. It
+is infinitely more blessed that '_the_ Angel of the Lord'--the
+One who is more than the many--'encampeth round about them that fear
+Him, and delivereth them.'
+
+The postscript of the last letter which Gordon sent from Khartoum
+closed with the words, 'The hosts are with me--Mahanaim.' Were they
+not, even though death was near? Was that sublime faith a mistake--the
+vision an optical delusion? No, for their ranks are arrayed around
+God's children to keep them from all evil while He wills that they
+should live, and their chariots of fire and horses of fire are sent
+to bear them to heaven when He wills that they should die.
+
+
+
+
+THE TWOFOLD WRESTLE--GOD'S WITH JACOB AND JACOB'S WITH GOD
+
+
+ 'And Jacob said, O God of my father Abraham, and God of
+ my father Isaac, the Lord which saidst unto me, Return
+ unto thy country, and to thy kindred, and I will deal
+ well with thee: I am not worthy of the least of all the
+ mercies, and of all the truth, which Thou hast shewed
+ unto Thy servant; for with my staff I passed over this
+ Jordan; and now I am become two bands. Deliver me, I
+ pray thee, from the hand of my brother, from the hand
+ of Esau: for I fear him, lest he will come and smite me,
+ and the mother with the children. And Thou saidst, I
+ will surely do thee good, and make thy seed as the sand
+ of the sea, which cannot be numbered for multitude.'
+ --GENESIS xxxii. 9-12.
+
+Jacob's subtlety and craft were, as is often the case, the weapons
+of a timid as well as selfish nature. No wonder, then, that the
+prospect of meeting his wronged and strong brother threw him into a
+panic, notwithstanding the vision of the camp of angels by the side
+of his defenceless caravan of women and children. Esau had received
+his abject message of propitiation in grim silence, sent no welcome
+back, but with ominous haste and ambiguous purpose began his march
+towards him with a strong force. A few hours will decide whether he
+means revenge. Jacob's fright does not rob him of his ready wit; he
+goes to work at once to divide his party, so as to ensure safety for
+half of it. He schemes first, and prays second. The order might have
+been inverted with advantage, but is like the man--in the lowest
+phase of his character. His prayer shows that he is beginning to
+profit by the long years of schooling. Though its burden is only
+deliverance from Esau, it pleads with God on the grounds of His own
+command and promise, of Jacob's unworthiness of God's past mercies,
+and of His firm covenant. A breath of a higher life is stirring in
+the shifty schemer who has all his life been living by his wits. Now
+he has come to a point where he knows that his own power can do
+nothing. With Laban, a man of craft like himself, it was diamond cut
+diamond; and Jacob was equal to the position. But the wild Bedouin
+brother, with his four hundred men, is not to be managed so; and
+Jacob is driven to God by his conscious helplessness. It is the
+germ, but only the germ, and needs much tending and growth before it
+matures. The process by which this faint dawning of a better life is
+broadened into day is begun in the mysterious struggle which forms
+the main part of this lesson, and is God's answer to his prayer.
+
+1. We have, first, the twofold wrestling. The silent night-long
+wrestle with the 'traveller unknown' is generally regarded as
+meaning essentially the same thing as the wonderful colloquy which
+follows. But I venture to take a somewhat different point of view,
+and to suggest that there are here two well-marked stages. In the
+first, which is represented as transacted in unbroken silence, 'a
+man' wrestles with Jacob, and does not prevail; in the second, which
+is represented as an interchange of speech, Jacob strives with the
+'man,' and does prevail. Taken together, the two are a complete
+mirror, not only of the manner of the transformation of Jacob into
+Israel, but of universal eternal truths as to God's dealings with
+us, and our power with Him.
+
+As to the former stage, the language of the narrative is to be
+noted, 'There wrestled a man with him.' The attack, so to speak,
+begins with his mysterious antagonist, not with the patriarch. The
+'man' seeks to overcome Jacob, not Jacob the man. There, beneath the
+deep heavens, in the solemn silence of night, which hides earth and
+reveals heaven, that strange struggle with an unknown Presence is
+carried on. We have no material for pronouncing on the manner of it,
+whether ecstasy, vision, or an objective and bodily fact. The body
+was implicated in the consequences, at all events, and the
+impression which the story leaves is of an outward struggle. But the
+purpose of the incident is the same, however the question as to its
+form be answered. Nor can we pronounce, as some have done, on the
+other question, of the personality of the silent wrestler. Angel, or
+'the angel of the covenant,' who is a transient, and possibly only
+apparent, manifestation in human form of Him who afterwards became
+flesh and dwelt among us, or some other supernatural embodiment, for
+that one purpose, of the divine presence,--any of these hypotheses
+is consistent with the intentionally reticent text. What it leaves
+unspoken, we shall wisely leave undetermined. God acts and speaks
+through 'the man.' That is all we can know or need.
+
+What, then, was the meaning of this struggle? Was it not a
+revelation to Jacob of what God had been doing with him all his
+life, and was still doing? Was not that merciful striving of God
+with him the inmost meaning of all that had befallen him since the
+far-off day when he had left his father's tents, and had seen the
+opened heavens, and the ladder, which he had so often forgotten?
+Were not his disappointments, his successes, and all the swift
+changes of life, God's attempts to lead him to yield himself up, and
+bow his will? And was not God striving with him now, in the
+anxieties which gnawed at his heart, and in his dread of the morrow?
+Was He not trying to teach him how crime always comes home to roost,
+with a brood of pains running behind it? Was not the weird duel in
+the brooding stillness a disclosure, which would more and more
+possess his soul as the night passed on, of a Presence which in
+silence strove with him, and only desired to overcome that He might
+bless? The conception of a Divine manifestation wrestling all night
+long with a man has been declared 'crude,' 'puerile,' and I know not
+how many other disparaging adjectives have been applied to it. But
+is it more unworthy of Him, or derogatory to His nature, than the
+lifelong pleading and striving with each of us, which He undoubtedly
+carries on? The idea of a man contending with God has been similarly
+stigmatised; but is it more mysterious than that awful power which
+the human will does possess of setting at naught His counsels and
+resisting His merciful strivings?
+
+The close of the first stage of the twofold wrestle is marked by the
+laming of Jacob. The paradox that He, who could not overcome, could
+yet lame by a touch, is part of the lesson. If His finger could do
+that, what would the grip of His hand do, if He chose to put out His
+power? It is not for want of strength that He has not crushed the
+antagonist, as Jacob would feel, with deepening wonder and awe. What
+a new light would be thus thrown on all the previous struggle! It
+was the striving of a power which cared not for a mere outward
+victory, nor put forth its whole force, lest it should crush him
+whom it desired to conquer only by his own yielding. As Job says,
+'Will He plead against me with His great power?' No; God mercifully
+restrains His hand, in His merciful striving with men. Desiring to
+overcome them, He desires not to do so by mere superior power, but
+by their willing yielding to Him.
+
+That laming of Jacob's thigh represents the weakening of all the
+life of nature and self which had hitherto been his. He had trusted
+to his own cunning and quick-wittedness; he had been shrewd, not
+over-scrupulous, and successful. But he had to learn that 'by
+strength shall no man prevail,' and to forsake his former weapons.
+Wrestling with his hands and limbs is not the way to prevail either
+with God or man. Fighting with God in his own strength, he is only
+able to thwart God's merciful purpose towards him, but is powerless
+as a reed in a giant's grasp if God chooses to summon His
+destructive powers into exercise. So this failure of natural power
+is the turning-point in the twofold wrestle, and marks as well as
+symbolises the transition in Jacob's life and character from
+reliance upon self and craft to reliance upon his divine Antagonist
+become his Friend. It is the path by which we must all travel if we
+are to become princes with God. The life of nature and of dependence
+on self must be broken and lamed in order that, in the very moment
+of discovered impotence, we may grasp the hand that smites, and find
+immortal power flowing into our weakness from it.
+
+2. So we come to the second stage, in which Jacob strives with God
+and does prevail. 'Let me go, for the day breaketh.' Then did the
+stranger wish to go; and if he did, why could not he, who had lamed
+his antagonist, loose himself from his grasp? The same explanation
+applies here which is required in reference to Christ's action to
+the two disciples at Emmaus: 'He made as though He would have gone
+further.' In like manner, when He came to them on the water, He
+appeared as though He 'would have passed by.' In all three cases the
+principle is the same. God desires to go, if we do not desire Him to
+stay. He will go, unless we keep Him. Then, at last, Jacob betakes
+himself to his true weapons. Then, at last, he strangely wishes to
+keep his apparent foe. He has learned, in some dim fashion, whom he
+has been resisting, and the blessedness of having Him for friend and
+companion. So here comes in the account of the whole scene which
+Hosea gives (Hos. xii. 4): 'He wept, and made supplication unto
+Him.' That does not describe the earlier portion, but is the true
+rendering of the later stage, of which our narrative gives a more
+summary account. The desire to retain God binds Him to us. All His
+struggling with us has been aimed at evoking it, and all His fulness
+responds to it when evoked. Prayer is power. It conquers God. We
+overcome Him when we yield. When we are vanquished, we are victors.
+When the life of nature is broken within us, then from conscious
+weakness springs the longing which God cannot but satisfy. 'When I
+am weak, then am I strong.' As Charles Wesley puts it, in his grand
+hymn on this incident:--
+
+ 'Yield to me now, for I am weak,
+ But confident in self-despair.'
+
+And God prevails when we prevail. His aim in all the process of His
+mercy has been but to overcome our heavy earthliness and
+selfishness, which resists His pleading love. His victory is our
+yielding, and, in that yielding, obtaining power with Him. He
+delights to be held by the hand of faith, and ever gladly yields to
+the heart's cry, 'Abide with me.' I will not let Thee go, except
+Thou bless me,' is music to His ear; and our saying so, in earnest,
+persistent clinging to Him, is His victory as well as ours.
+
+3. We have, next, the new name, which is the prize of Jacob's
+victory, and the sign of a transformation in his character. Before
+this time he had been Jacob, the worker with wiles, who supplanted
+his brother, and met his foes with duplicity and astuteness like
+their own. He had been mainly of the earth, earthy. But that solemn
+hour had led him into the presence-chamber, the old craft had been
+mortally wounded, he had seen some glimpse of God as his friend,
+whose presence was not 'awful,' as he had thought it long ago, nor
+enigmatical and threatening, as he had at first deemed it that
+night, but the fountain of blessing and the one thing needful. A man
+who has once learned that lesson, though imperfectly, has passed
+into a purer region, and left behind him his old crookedness. He has
+learned to pray, not as before, prayers for mere deliverance from
+Esau and the like, but his whole being has gone out in yearning for
+the continual nearness of his mysterious antagonist-friend. So,
+though still the old nature remains, its power is broken, and he is
+a new creature. Therefore he needs a new name, and gets it from Him
+who can name men, because He sees the heart's depths, and because He
+has the right over them. To impose a name is the sign of authority,
+possession, insight into character. The change of name indicates a
+new epoch in a life, or a transformation of the inner man. The
+meaning of 'Israel' is 'He (who) strives with God'; and the reason
+for its being conferred is more accurately given by the Revised
+Version, which translates, 'For thou hast striven with God and with
+men,' than in the Authorised rendering. His victory with God
+involved the certainty of his power with men. All his life he had
+been trying to get the advantage of them, and to conquer them, not
+by spear and sword, but by his brains. But now the true way to true
+sway among men is opened to him. All men are the servants of the
+servant and the friend of God. He who has the ear of the emperor is
+master of many men.
+
+Jacob is not always called Israel in his subsequent history. His new
+name was a name of character and of spiritual standing, and that
+might fluctuate, and the old self resume its power; so he is still
+called by the former appellation, just as, at certain points in his
+life, the apostle forfeits the right to be 'Peter,' and has to hear
+from Christ's lips the old name, the use of which is more poignant
+than many reproachful words; 'Simon, Simon, behold, Satan hath
+desired to have you.' But in the last death-bed scene, when the
+patriarch lifted himself in his bed, and with prophetic dignity
+pronounced his parting benediction on Joseph's sons, the new name
+reappears with solemn pathos.
+
+That name was transmitted to his descendants, and has passed over to
+the company of believing men, who have been overcome by God, and
+have prevailed with God. It is a charter and a promise. It is a
+stringent reminder of duty and a lofty ideal. A true Christian is an
+'Israel.' His office is to wrestle with God. Nor can we forget how
+this mysterious scene was repeated in yet more solemn fashion,
+beneath the gnarled olives of Gethsemane, glistening in the light of
+the paschal full moon, when the true Israel prayed with such sore
+crying and tears that His body partook of the struggle, and 'His
+sweat was as it were great drops of blood falling down to the
+ground.' The word which describes Christ's agony is that which is
+often rendered 'wrestling,' and perhaps is selected with intentional
+allusion to this incident. At all events, when we think of Jacob by
+the brook Jabbok, and of a 'greater than our father Jacob' by the
+brook Kedron, we may well learn what persistence, what earnestness
+and effort of the whole nature, go to make up the ideal of prayer,
+and may well blush for the miserable indifference and torpor of what
+we venture to call our prayers. These are our patterns, 'as many as
+walk according to this rule,' and are thereby shown to be 'the
+Israel of God,'--upon them shall be peace.
+
+4. We have, as the end of all, a deepened desire after closer
+knowledge of God, and the answer to it. Some expositors (as, for
+instance, Robertson of Brighton, in his impressive sermon on this
+section) take the closing petition, 'Tell me, I pray thee, Thy
+name,' as if it were the centre point of the whole incident. But
+this is obviously a partial view. The desire to know that name does
+not come to Jacob, as we might have expected, when he was struggling
+with his unknown foe in the dark there. It is the end, and, in some
+sense, the issue, of all that has gone before. Not that he was in
+any doubt as to the person to whom he spoke; it is just because he
+knows that he is speaking with God, who alone can bless, that he
+longs to have some deeper, clearer knowledge still of Him. He is not
+asking for a word by which he may call Him; the name is the
+expression of the nature, and his parting request is for something
+far more intimate and deep than syllables which could be spoken by
+any lips. The certain sequel of the discovery of God as striving in
+mercy with a man, and of yielding to him, is the thirst for deeper
+acquaintance with Him, and for a fuller, more satisfying knowledge
+of His inmost heart. If the season of mysterious intercourse must
+cease, and day hide more than it discloses, and Jacob go to face
+Esau, and we come down from the mount to sordid cares and mean
+tasks, at least we long to bear with us as a love-token some whisper
+in our inmost hearts that may cheer us with the peaceful truth about
+Him and be a hidden sweetness. The presence of such a desire is a
+sure consequence, and therefore a good test, of real prayer.
+
+The Divine answer, which sounds at first like refusal, is anything
+but that. Why dost thou ask after My name? surely I need not to give
+thee more revelation of My character. Thou hast enough of light;
+what thou needest is insight into what thou hast already. We have in
+what God has made known of Himself already to us--both in His
+outward revelation, which is so much larger and sweeter to us than
+it was to Jacob, but also in His providences, and in the inward
+communion which we have with Him if we have let Him overcome us, and
+have gained power to prevail with Him--sources of certain knowledge
+of Him so abundant and precious that we need nothing but the loving
+eye which shall take in all their beauty and completeness, to have
+our most eager desires after His name more than satisfied. We need
+not ask for more sunshine, but take care to spread ourselves out in
+the full sunshine which we have, and let it drench our eyes and fire
+our hearts. 'And He blessed him there.' Not till now was he capable
+of receiving the full blessing. He needed to have self beaten out of
+him; he needed to recognise God as lovingly striving with Him; he
+needed to yield himself up to Him; he needed to have his heart thus
+cleansed and softened, and then opened wide by panting desire for
+the presence and benediction of God; he needed to be made conscious
+of his new standing, and of the higher life budding within him; he
+needed to experience the yearning for a closer vision of the face, a
+deeper knowledge of the name,--and then it was possible to pour into
+his heart a tenderness and fulness of blessing which before there
+had been no room to receive, and which now answered in sweetest
+fashion the else unanswered desire, 'Tell me, I pray thee, Thy
+name.'
+
+In like manner we may each be blessed with the presence and
+benediction of Him whose merciful strivings, when we knew Him not,
+came to us in the darkness; and to whom, if we yield, there will be
+peace and power in our hearts, and upon us, too, the sun will rise
+as we pass from the place where our foe became our friend, and by
+faith we saw Him face to face, and drank in life by the gaze.
+
+
+
+
+A FORGOTTEN VOW
+
+
+ 'Arise, go up to Beth-el, and dwell there: and make
+ there an altar unto God, that appeared unto thee when
+ thou fleddest from the face of Esau thy brother,'
+ GENESIS XXXV. 1.
+
+Thirty years at least had passed since Jacob's vow; ten or twenty
+since his return. He is in no haste to fulfil it, but has settled
+down at Shechem and bought land there, and seems to have forgotten
+all about Bethel.
+
+1. _The lesson of possible negligence_.
+
+(_a_) We are apt to forget vows when God has fulfilled His side
+of them. Resolutions made in time of trouble are soon forgotten. We
+pray and think about God more then than when things go well with us.
+Religion is in many men's judgment for stormy weather only.
+
+(_b_) We are often more resolved to make sacrifices in the
+beginning of our Christian course than afterwards.
+
+Many a brilliant morning is followed by cloudy day.
+
+Youth is often full of enthusiasms which after-days forget.
+
+2._ The reasons for the negligence_.
+
+Jacob felt a gradual fading away of impressions of need. He was
+comfortably settled at Shechem. He was surrounded by a wild, godless
+household who cherished their idols, and he knew that if he went to
+Bethel idolatry must be given up.
+
+3. _The essentials to communion and service_.
+
+Surrender. Purity. Must bury idols under oak.
+
+4._The reward of sacrifice and of duty discharged_.
+
+The renewed appearance of God. The confirmation of name Israel.
+Enlarged promises. So the old man's vision may be better than the
+youth's, if he lives up to his youthful vows.
+
+
+
+
+THE TRIALS AND VISIONS OF DEVOUT YOUTH
+
+
+ 'And Jacob dwelt in the land wherein his father was a
+ stranger, in the land of Canaan. These are the generations
+ of Jacob. Joseph, being seventeen years old, was feeding
+ the flock with his brethren; and the lad was with the
+ sons of Bilhah, and with the sons of Zilpah, his father's
+ wives: and Joseph brought unto his father their evil
+ report. Now Israel loved Joseph more than all his children,
+ because he was the son of his old age: and he made him
+ a coat of many colours. And when his brethren saw that
+ their father loved him more than all his brethren, they
+ hated him, and could not speak peaceably unto him. And
+ Joseph dreamed a dream, and he told it his brethren: and
+ they hated him yet the more. And he said unto them, Hear,
+ I pray you, this dream which I have dreamed: For, behold,
+ we were binding sheaves in the field, and, lo, my sheaf
+ arose, and also stood upright; and, behold, your sheaves
+ stood round about, and made obeisance to my sheaf. And
+ his brethren said to him, Shalt thou indeed reign over
+ us? or shalt thou Indeed have dominion over us? And they
+ hated him yet the more for his dreams, and for his words.
+ And he dreamed yet another dream, and told it his brethren,
+ and said, Behold, I have dreamed a dream more; and behold,
+ the sun and the moon and the eleven stars made obeisance
+ to me. And he told it to his father, and to his brethren:
+ and his father rebuked him, and said unto him, What is
+ this dream that thou hast dreamed? Shall I and thy mother
+ and thy brethren indeed come to bow down ourselves to
+ thee to the earth? And his brethren envied him; but his
+ father observed the saying.'--GENESIS xxxvii. 1-11.
+
+'The generations of Jacob' are mainly occupied with the history of
+Joseph, because through him mainly was the divine purpose carried
+on. Jacob is now the head of the chosen family, since Isaac's death
+(Gen. xxxv. 29), and therefore the narrative is continued under that
+new heading. There may possibly be intended a contrast in 'dwelt'
+and 'sojourned' in verse 1, the former implying a more complete
+settling down.
+
+There are two principal points in this narrative,--the sad insight
+that it gives into the state of the household in which so much of
+the world's history and hopes was wrapped up, and the preludings of
+Joseph's future in his dreams.
+
+As to the former, the account of it is introduced by the statement
+that Joseph, at seventeen years of age, was set to work, according
+to the wholesome Eastern usage, and so was thrown into the company
+of the sons of the two slave-women, Bilhah and Zilpah. Delitzsch
+understands 'lad' in verse 2 in the sense in which we use 'boy,' as
+meaning an attendant. Joseph was, then, told off to be subordinate
+to these two sets of his rough brothers. The relationship was enough
+to rouse hatred in such coarse souls. And, indeed, the history of
+Jacob's household strikingly illustrates the miserable evils of
+polygamy, which makes families within the family, and turns brothers
+into enemies. Bilhah's and Zilpah's sons reflected in their hatred
+of Rachel's their mothers' envy of the true wife of Jacob's heart.
+The sons of the bondwoman were sure to hate the sons of the free.
+
+If Joseph had been like his brothers, they would have forgiven him
+his mother. But he was horrified at his first glimpse of
+unrestrained young passions, and, in the excitement of disgust and
+surprise, 'told their evil report.' No doubt, his brothers had been
+unwilling enough to be embarrassed by his presence, for there is
+nothing that wild young men dislike more than the constraint put on
+them by the presence of an innocent youth; and when they found out
+that this 'milk-sop' of a brother was a spy and a telltale, their
+wrath blazed up. So Joseph had early experience of the shock which
+meets all young men who have been brought up in godly households
+when they come into contact with sin in fellow-clerks, servants,
+students, or the like. It is a sharp test of what a young man is
+made of, to come forth from the shelter of a father's care and a
+mother's love, and to be forced into witnessing and hearing such
+things as go on wherever a number of young men are thrown together.
+Be not 'partaker of other men's sins.' And the trial is doubly great
+when the tempters are elder brothers, and the only way to escape
+their unkindness is to do as they do. Joseph had an early experience
+of the need of resistance; and, as long as the world is a world,
+love to God will mean hatred from its worst elements. If we are
+'sons of the day,' we cannot but rebuke the darkness.
+
+It is an invidious office to tell other people's evil-doing, and he
+who brings evil reports of others generally and deservedly gets one
+for himself. But there are circumstances in which to do so is plain
+duty, and only a mistaken sense of honour keeps silence. But there
+must be no exaggeration, malice, or personal ends in the informer.
+Classmates in school or college, fellow-servants, employees in great
+businesses, and the like, have not only a duty of loyalty to one
+another, but of loyalty to their superior. We are sometimes bound to
+be blind to, and dumb about, our associates' evil deeds, but
+sometimes silence makes us accomplices.
+
+Jacob had a right to know, and Joseph would have been wrong if he
+had not told him, the truth about his brothers. Their hatred shows
+that his purity had made their doing wrong more difficult. It is a
+grand thing when a young man's presence deprives the Devil of elbow-
+room for his tricks. How much restraining influence such a one may
+exert!
+
+Jacob's somewhat foolish love, and still more foolish way of showing
+it, made matters worse. There were many excuses for him. He
+naturally clung to the son of his lost but never-forgotten first
+love, and as naturally found, in Joseph's freedom from the vices of
+his other sons, a solace and joy. It has been suggested that the
+'long garment with sleeves,' in which he decked the lad, indicated
+an intention of transferring the rights of the first-born to him,
+but in any case it meant distinguishing affection; and the father or
+mother who is weak enough to show partiality in the treatment of
+children need not wonder if their unwise love creates bitter heart-
+burnings. Perhaps, if Bilhah's and Zilpah's sons had had a little
+more sunshine of a father's love, they would have borne brighter
+flowers and sweeter fruit. It is fatal when a child begins to
+suspect that a parent is not fair.
+
+So these surly brothers, who could not even say 'Peace be to thee!'
+(the common salutation) when they came across Joseph, had a good
+deal to say for themselves. It is a sad picture of the internal
+feuds of the house from which all nations were to be blessed. The
+Bible does not idealise its characters, but lets us see the seamy
+side of the tapestry, that we may the more plainly recognise the
+Mercy which forgives, and the mighty Providence which works through,
+such imperfect men. But the great lesson for all young people from
+the picture of Joseph's early days, when his whiteness rebuked the
+soiled lives of his brothers, as new-fallen snow the grimy cake,
+hardened and soiled on the streets, is, 'My son, if sinners entice
+thee, consent thou not.' Never mind a world's hatred, if you have a
+father's love. There is one Father who can draw His obedient
+children into the deepest secrets of His heart without withholding
+their portion from the most prodigal.
+
+Joseph's dreams are the other principal point in the narrative. The
+chief incidents of his life turn on dreams,--his own, his fellow-
+prisoners', Pharaoh's. The narrative recognises them as divinely
+sent, and no higher form of divine communication appears to have
+been made to Joseph, He received no new revelations of religious
+truth. His mission was, not to bring fresh messages from heaven, but
+to effect the transference of the nation to Egypt. Hence the lower
+form of the communications made to him.
+
+The meaning of both dreams is the same, but the second goes beyond
+the first in the grandeur of the emblems, and in the inclusion of
+the parents in the act of obeisance. Both sets of symbols were drawn
+from familiar sights. The homeliness of the 'sheaves' is in striking
+contrast with the grandeur of the 'sun, moon, and stars.' The
+interpretation of the first is ready to hand, because the sheaves
+were 'your sheaves' and 'my sheaf.' There was no similar key
+included in the second, and his brothers do not appear to have
+caught its meaning. It was Jacob who read it. Probably Rachel was
+dead when the dream came, but that need not make a difficulty.
+
+Note that Joseph did not tell his dreams with elation, or with a
+notion that they meant anything particular. It is plainly the
+singularity of them that makes him repeat them, as is clearly
+indicated by the repeated 'behold' in his two reports. With perfect
+innocence of intention, and as he would have told any other strange
+dream, the lad repeats them. The commentary was the work of his
+brothers, who were ready to find proofs of his being put above them,
+and of his wish to humiliate them, in anything he said or did. They
+were wiser than he was. Perhaps they suspected that Jacob meant to
+set him at the head of the clan on his decease, and that the dreams
+were trumped up and told to them to prepare them for the decision
+which the special costume may have already hinted.
+
+At all events, hatred is very suspicious, and ready to prick up its
+ears at every syllable that seems to speak of the advancement of its
+object.
+
+There is a world of contempt, rage, and fear in the questions,
+'Shalt thou indeed reign over us? or shalt thou indeed have dominion
+over us?' The conviction that Joseph was marked out by God for a
+high position seems to have entered these rough souls, and to have
+been fuel to fire. Hatred and envy make a perilous mixture. Any sin
+can come from a heart drenched with these. Jacob seems to have been
+wise enough to make light of the dreams to the lad, though much of
+them in his heart. Youthful visions of coming greatness are often
+best discouraged. The surest way to secure their fulfilment is to
+fill the present with strenuous, humble work. 'Do the duty that is
+nearest thee.' 'The true apprenticeship for a ruler is to serve.'
+'Act, act, in the living present.' The sheaves may come to bow down
+some day, but 'my sheaf' has to be cut and bound first, and the
+sooner the sickle is among the corn, the better.
+
+But yet, on the other hand, let young hearts be true to their early
+visions, whether they say much about them or not. Probably it will
+be wisest to keep silence. But there shine out to many young men and
+women, at their start in life, bright possibilities of no ignoble
+sort, and rising higher than personal ambition, which it is the
+misery and sin of many to see 'fade away into the light of common
+day,' or into the darkness of night. Be not 'disobedient to the
+heavenly vision'; for the dreams of youth are often the prophecies
+of what God means and makes it possible for the dreamer to be, if he
+wakes to work towards that fair thing which shone on him from afar.
+
+
+
+
+MAN'S PASSIONS AND GOD'S PURPOSE
+
+
+ 'And it came to pass, when Joseph was come unto his
+ brethren, that they stript Joseph out of his coat, his
+ coat of many colours that was on him; And they took him,
+ and cast him into a pit: and the pit was empty, there
+ was no water in it. And they sat down to eat bread: and
+ they lifted up their eyes and looked, and, behold, a
+ company of Ishmeelites came from Gilead with their
+ camels bearing spicery and balm and myrrh, going to
+ carry it down to Egypt. And Judah said unto his brethren,
+ What profit is it if we slay our brother, and conceal
+ his blood! Come, and let us sell him to the Ishmeelites,
+ and let not our hand be upon him; for he is our brother
+ and our flesh. And his brethren were content. Then there
+ passed by Midianites merchantmen; and they drew and
+ lifted up Joseph out of the pit, and sold Joseph to the
+ Ishmeelites for twenty pieces of silver: and they brought
+ Joseph into Egypt. And Reuben returned unto the pit; and,
+ behold, Joseph was not in the pit; and he rent his
+ clothes. And he returned unto his brethren, and said,
+ The child is not; and I, whither shall I go? And they
+ took Joseph's coat, and killed a kid of the goats, and
+ dipped the coat in the blood; And they sent the coat of
+ many colours, and they brought it to their father; and
+ said, This have we found: know now whether it be thy
+ son's coat or no. And he knew it, and said, It is my
+ son's coat; an evil beast hath devoured him; Joseph is
+ without doubt rent in pieces. And Jacob rent his clothes,
+ and put sackcloth upon his loins, and mourned for his
+ son many days. And all his sons and all his daughters
+ rose up to comfort him; but he refused to be comforted;
+ and he said, For I will go down into the grave unto my
+ son mourning. Thus his father wept for him. And the
+ Midianites sold him into Egypt unto Potiphar, an officer
+ of Pharaoh's and captain of the guard.'--GENESIS xxxvii. 23-36.
+
+We have left the serene and lofty atmosphere of communion and
+saintship far above us. This narrative takes us down into foul
+depths. It is a hideous story of vulgar hatred and cruelty. God's
+name is never mentioned in it; and he is as far from the actors'
+thoughts as from the writer's words. The crime of the brothers is
+the subject, and the picture is painted in dark tones to teach large
+truths about sin.
+
+1. The broad teaching of the whole story, which is ever being
+reiterated in Old Testament incidents, is that God works out His
+great purposes through even the crimes of unconscious men. There is
+an irony, if we may so say, in making the hatred of these men the
+very means of their brother's advancement, and the occasion of
+blessing to themselves. As coral insects work, not knowing the plan
+of their reef, still less the fair vegetation and smiling homes
+which it will one day carry, but blindly building from the material
+supplied by the ocean a barrier against it; so even evil-doers are
+carrying on God's plan, and sin is made to counterwork itself, and
+be the black channel through which the flashing water of life pours.
+Joseph's words (Gen. 1. 20) give the point of view for the whole
+story: 'Ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good ...
+to save much people alive.' We can scarcely forget the still more
+wonderful example of the same thing, in the crime of crimes, when
+his brethren slew the Son of God--like Joseph, the victim of envy--and,
+by their crime, God's counsel of mercy for them and for all was
+fulfilled.
+
+2. Following the narrative, verses 23, 24, and 25 show us the
+poisonous fruit of brotherly hatred. The family, not the nation, is
+the social unit in Genesis. From the beginning, we find the field on
+which sin works is the family relation. Cain and Abel, Ishmael and
+Isaac, Esau and Jacob, and now the other children of Jacob and
+Joseph, attest the power of sin when it enters there, and illustrate
+the principle that the corruption of the best is the worst. The
+children of Rachel could not but be hated by the children of other
+mothers. Jacob's undisguised partiality for Joseph was a fault too,
+which wrought like yeast on the passions of his wild sons. The long-
+sleeved garment which he gave to the lad probably meant to indicate
+his purpose to bestow on him the right of the first-born forfeited
+by Reuben, and so the violent rage which it excited was not
+altogether baseless. The whole miserable household strife teaches
+the rottenness of the polygamous relation on which it rested, and
+the folly of paternal favouritism. So it carries teaching especially
+needed then, but not out of date now.
+
+The swift passage of the purely inward sin of jealous envy into the
+murderous act, as soon as opportunity offered, teaches the short
+path which connects the inmost passions with the grossest outward
+deeds. Like Jonah's gourd, the smallest seed of hate needs but an
+hour or two of favouring weather to become a great tree, with all
+obscene and blood-seeking birds croaking in its branches. 'Whosoever
+hateth his brother is a murderer,' Therefore the solemn need for
+guarding the heart from the beginnings of envy, and for walking in
+love.
+
+The clumsy contrivance for murder without criminality, which Reuben
+suggested, is an instance of the shallow pretexts with which the
+sophistry of sin fools men before they have done the wrong thing.
+Sin's mask is generally dropped very soon after. The bait is useless
+when the hook is well in the fish's gills. 'Don't let us kill him.
+Let us put him into a cistern. He cannot climb up its bottle-shaped,
+smooth sides. But that is not our fault. Nobody will ever hear his
+muffled cries from its depths. But there will be no blood on our
+hands.' It was not the first time, nor is it the last, that men have
+tried to blink their responsibility for the consequences which they
+hoped would come of their crimes. Such excuses seem sound when we
+are being tempted; but, as soon as the rush of passion is past, they
+are found to be worthless. Like some cheap castings, they are only
+meant to be seen in front, where they are rounded and burnished. Get
+behind them, and you find them hollow.
+
+'They sat down to eat bread,' Thomas Fuller pithily says: 'With what
+heart could they say grace, either before or after meat?' What a
+grim meal! And what an indication of their rude natures, seared
+consciences, and deadened affections!
+
+This picture of the moral condition of the fathers of the Jewish
+tribes is surely a strong argument for the historical accuracy of
+the narrative. It would be strange if the legends of a race, instead
+of glorifying, should blacken, the characters of its founders. No
+motive can be alleged which would explain such a picture; its only
+explanation is its truth. The ugly story, too, throws vivid light on
+that thought, which prophets ever reiterated, 'not for your sakes,
+but for My name's sake.' The divine choice of Israel was grounded,
+not on merit, but on sovereign purpose. And the undisguised
+plainness of the narrative of their sins is but of a piece with the
+tone of Scripture throughout. It never palliates the faults even of
+its best men. It tells its story without comment. It never indulges
+in condemnation any more than in praise. It is a perfect mirror; its
+office is to record, not to criticise. Many misconceptions of Old
+Testament morality would have been avoided by keeping that simple
+fact in view.
+
+3. The ill-omened meal is interrupted by the sudden appearance, so
+picturesquely described, of the caravan of Ishmaelites with their
+loaded camels. Dothan was on or near the great trade route to Egypt,
+where luxury, and especially the custom of embalming, opened a
+profitable market for spices. The traders would probably not be
+particular as to the sort of merchandise they picked up on their
+road, and such an 'unconsidered trifle' as a slave or two would be
+neither here nor there. This opportune advent of the caravan sets a
+thought buzzing in Judah's brain, which brings out a new phase of
+the crime. Hatred darkening to murder is bad enough; but hatred
+which has also an eye to business, and makes a profit out of a
+brother, is a shade or two blacker, because it means cold-blooded
+calculation and selfish advantage instead of raging passion. Judah's
+cynical question avows the real motive of his intervention. He
+prefers the paltry gain from selling Joseph to the unprofitable
+luxury of killing him. It brings in regard to brotherly ties at the
+end, as a kind of homage paid to propriety, as if the obligations
+they involved were not broken as really by his proposal as by
+murder. Certainly it is strange logic which can say in one breath,
+'Let us sell him; ... for he is our brother,' and finds the clause
+between buffer enough to keep these two contradictories from
+collision.
+
+If any touch of conscience made the brothers prefer the less cruel
+alternative, one can only see here another illustration of the
+strange power which men have of limiting the working of conscience,
+and of the fact that when a greater sin has been resolved on, a
+smaller one gets to look almost like a virtue. Perhaps Judah and the
+rest actually thought themselves very kind and brotherly when they
+put their brother into strangers' power, and so went back to their
+meal with renewed cheerfulness, both because they had gained their
+end without bloodshed, and because they had got the money. They did
+not think that every tear and pang which Joseph would shed and feel
+would be laid at their door.
+
+We do not suppose that Joseph was meant to be, in the accurate sense
+of the word, a type of Christ. But the coincidence is not to be
+passed by, that these same powerful motives of envy and of greed
+were combined in His case too, and that there again a Judah (Judas)
+appears as the agent of the perfidy.
+
+We may note that the appearance of the traders in the nick of time,
+suggesting the sale of Joseph, points the familiar lesson that the
+opportunity to do ill deeds often makes ill deeds done. The path for
+entering on evil is made fatally easy at first; that gate always
+stands wide. The Devil knows how to time his approaches. A weak
+nature, with an evil bias in it, finds everywhere occasions and
+suggestions to do wrong. But it is the evil nature which makes
+innocent things opportunities for evil. Therefore we have to be on
+our guard, as knowing that if we fall it is not circumstances, but
+ourselves, that made stumbling-blocks out of what might have been
+stepping-stones.
+
+4. Leaving Joseph to pursue his sad journey, our narrative
+introduces for the first time Reuben, whose counsel, as the verses
+before the text tell us, it had been to cast the poor lad into the
+cistern. His motive had been altogether good; he wished to save
+life, and as soon as the others were out of the way, to bring Joseph
+up again and get him safely back to Jacob. In chapter xlii. 22,
+Reuben himself reminds his brothers of what had passed. There he
+says that he had besought them not to 'sin against the child,' which
+naturally implies that he had wished them to do nothing to him, and
+that they 'would not hear.' In the verses before the text he
+proposes the compromise of the pit, and the others 'hear.' So there
+seem to have been two efforts made by him--first, to shield Joseph
+from any harm, and then that half-and-half measure which was
+adopted. He is absent, while they carry out the plan, and from the
+cruel merriment of the feast--perhaps watching his opportunity to
+rescue, perhaps in sickness of heart and protest against the deed.
+Well meant and kindly motived as his action was--and self-
+sacrificing too, if, as is probable, Joseph was meant by Jacob as
+his successor in the forfeited birthright--his scheme breaks down,
+as attempts to mitigate evil by compliance and to make compromises
+with sinners usually do. The only one of the whole family who had
+some virtue in him, was too timid to take up a position of
+uncompromising condemnation. He thought it more polite to go part of
+the way, and to trust to being able to prevent the worst. That is
+always a dangerous experiment. It is often tried still; it never
+answers. Let a man stand to his guns, and speak out the condemnation
+that is in his heart; otherwise, he will be sure to go farther than
+he meant, he will lose all right of remonstrance, and will generally
+find that the more daring sinners have made his well-meant schemes
+to avert the mischief impossible.
+
+5. The cruel trick by which Jacob was deceived is perhaps the most
+heartless bit of the whole heartless crime. It came as near an
+insult as possible. It was maliciously meant. The snarl about the
+coat, the studied use of 'thy son' as if the brothers disowned the
+brotherhood, the unfeeling harshness of choosing such a way of
+telling their lie--all were meant to give the maximum of pain, and
+betray their savage hatred of father and son, and its causes. Was
+Reuben's mouth shut all this time? Evidently. From his language in
+chapter xlii., 'His blood is required,' he seems to have believed
+until then that Joseph had been killed in his absence. But he dared
+not speak. Had he told what he did know, the brothers had but to
+add, 'And he proposed it himself,' and his protestations of his good
+intentions would have been unheeded. He believed his brother dead,
+and perhaps thought it better that Jacob should think him slain by
+wild beasts than by brothers' hands, as Reuben supposed him to be.
+But his shut mouth teaches again how dangerous his policy had been,
+and how the only road, which it is safe, in view of the
+uncertainties of the future, to take, is the plain road of
+resistance to evil and non-fellowship with its doers.
+
+6. And what of the poor old father? His grief is unworthy of God's
+wrestler. It is not the part of a devout believer in God's
+providence to refuse to be comforted. There was no religious
+submission in his passionate sorrow. How unlike the quiet
+resignation which should have marked the recognition that the God
+who had been his guide was working here too! No doubt the
+hypocritical condolences of his children were as vinegar upon nitre.
+No doubt the loss of Joseph had taken away the one gentle and true
+son on whom his loneliness rested since his Rachel's death, while he
+found no solace in the wild, passionate men who called him 'father'
+and brought him no 'honour.' But still his grief is beyond the
+measure which a true faith in God would have warranted; and we
+cannot but see that the dark picture which we have just been looking
+at gets no lighter or brighter tints from the demeanour of Jacob.
+
+There are few bitterer sorrows than for a parent to see the children
+of his own sin in the sins of his children. Jacob might have felt
+that bitterness, as he looked round on the lovelessness and dark,
+passionate selfishness of his children, and remembered his own early
+crimes against Esau. He might have seen that his unwise fondness for
+the son of his Rachel had led to the brothers' hatred, though he did
+not know that that hatred had plunged the arrow into his soul.
+Whether he knew it or not, his own conduct had feathered the arrow.
+He was drinking as he had brewed; and the heart-broken grief which
+darkened his later years had sprung from seed of his own sowing. So
+it is always. 'Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.'
+
+It is a miserable story of ignoble jealousy and cruel hate; and yet,
+over all this foaming torrent, God's steadfast bow of peace shines.
+These crimes and this 'affliction of Joseph' were the direct path to
+the fulfilment of His purposes. As blind instruments, even in their
+rebellion and sin, men work out His designs. The lesson of Joseph's
+bondage will one day be the summing up of the world's history. 'Thou
+makest the wrath of man to praise Thee: and with the remainder
+thereof Thou girdest Thyself.'
+
+
+
+
+GOODNESS IN A DUNGEON
+
+
+ 'And Joseph's master took him, and put him into the
+ prison, a place where the king's prisoners were bound:
+ and he was there in the prison. But the Lord was with
+ Joseph, and showed him mercy, and gave him favour in
+ the sight of the keeper of the prison. And the keeper
+ of the prison committed to Joseph's hand all the
+ prisoners that were in the prison; and whatsoever they
+ did there, he was the doer of it. The keeper of the
+ prison looked not to any thing that was under his hand;
+ because the Lord was with him, and that which he did,
+ the Lord made it to prosper.'--GENESIS xxxix. 20-23.
+
+'And it came to pass after these things, that the butler of the
+king of Egypt and his baker had offended their lord the king of
+Egypt. And Pharaoh was wroth against two of his officers, against
+the chief of the butlers, and against the chief of the bakers.
+And he put them in ward in the house of the captain of the guard,
+into the prison, the place where Joseph was bound. And the
+captain of the guard charged Joseph with them, and he served
+them: and they continued a season in ward. And they dreamed a
+dream both of them, each man his dream in one night, each man
+according to the interpretation of his dream, the butler and the
+baker of the king of Egypt, which were bound in the prison. And
+Joseph came in unto them in the morning, and looked upon them,
+and, behold, they were sad. And he asked Pharaoh's officers that
+were with him in the ward of his lord's house, saying, Wherefore
+look ye so sadly to day? And they said unto him, We have dreamed
+a dream, and there is no interpreter of it. And Joseph said unto
+them, Do not interpretations belong to God? tell me them, I pray
+you. And the chief butler told his dream to Joseph, and said to
+him, In my dream, behold, a vine was before me; And in the vine
+were three branches: and it was as though it budded, and her
+blossoms shot forth; and the clusters thereof brought forth ripe
+grapes: And Pharaoh's cup was in my hand: and I took the grapes,
+and pressed them into Pharaoh's cup, and I gave the cup into
+Pharaoh's hand. And Joseph said unto him, This is the interpretation
+of it: The three branches are three days: Yet within three days shall
+Pharaoh lift up thine head, and restore thee unto thy place: and thou
+shalt deliver Pharaoh's cup into his hand, after the former manner
+when thou wast his butler. But think on me when it shall be well with
+thee, and shew kindness, I pray thee, unto me, and make mention of
+me unto Pharaoh, and bring me out of this house: For indeed I was
+stolen away out of the land of the Hebrews: and here also have I done
+nothing that they should put me into the dungeon.'--GENESIS xl. 1-15.
+
+Potiphar was 'captain of the guard,' or, as the title literally
+runs, chief of the executioners. In that capacity he had charge of
+the prison, which was connected with his house (Gen. xl. 3). It is,
+therefore, quite intelligible that he should have put Joseph in
+confinement on his own authority, and the distinction drawn between
+such a prisoner and the 'king's prisoners,' who were there by royal
+warrant or due process of law, is natural. Such high-handed
+treatment of a slave was a small matter, and it was merciful as well
+as arrogant, for death would have been the punishment of the crime
+of which Joseph was accused. Either Potiphar was singularly lenient,
+or, as is perhaps more probable, he did not quite believe his wife's
+story, and thought it best to hush up a scandal. The transfer of
+Joseph from the house to the adjoining prison would be quietly
+managed, and then no more need be said about an ugly business.
+
+So now we see him at the lowest ebb of his fortunes, flung down in a
+moment by a lie from the height to which he had slowly been
+climbing, having lost the confidence of his master, and earned the
+unslumbering hatred of a wicked woman. He had wrecked his career by
+his goodness. 'What a fool!' says the world. 'How badly managed
+things are in this life,' say doubters, 'that virtue should not be
+paid by prosperity!' But the end, even the nearer end in this life,
+will show whether he was a fool, and whether things are so badly
+arranged; and the lesson enforced by the picture of Joseph in his
+dungeon, and which young beginners in life have special need to
+learn, is that, come what will of it, right is right, and sin is
+sin, that consequences are never to deter from duty, and that it is
+better to have a clean conscience and be in prison than do
+wickedness and sit at a king's table. A very threadbare lesson, but
+needing to be often repeated.
+
+'But the Lord was with Joseph.' That is one of the eloquent 'buts'
+of Scripture. The prison is light when God is there, and chains do
+not chafe if He wraps His love round them. Many a prisoner for God
+since Joseph's time has had his experience repeated, and received
+tenderer tokens from Him in a dungeon than ever before. Paul the
+prisoner, John in Patmos, Bunyan in Bedford jail, George Fox in
+Lancaster Castle, Rutherford in Aberdeen, and many more, have found
+the Lord with them, and showing them His kindness. We may all be
+sure that, if ever faithfulness to conscience involves us in
+difficulties, the faithfulness and the difficulties will combine to
+bring to us sweet and strong tokens of God's approval and presence,
+the winning of which will make a prison a palace and a gate of
+heaven.
+
+Joseph's relations to jailer and fellow-prisoners are beautiful and
+instructive. The former is called 'the keeper of the prison,' and is
+evidently Potiphar's deputy, in more immediate charge of the prison.
+Of course, the great man had an underling to do the work, and
+probably that underling was not chosen for sweetness of temper or
+facile leniency to his charges. But he fell under the charm of
+Joseph's character--all the more readily, perhaps, because his
+occupation had not brought many good men to his knowledge. This
+jewel would flash all the more brightly for the dark background of
+criminals, and the jailer would wonder at a type of character so
+unlike what he was accustomed to. Eastern prisons to-day present a
+curious mixture of cruelty and companionship. The jailers are on
+intimate terms with prisoners, and yet are ready to torture them.
+There is no discipline, nor any rules, nor inspection. The jailer
+does as he likes. So it seems to have been in Egypt, and there would
+be nothing unnatural in making a prisoner jailer of the rest, and
+leaving everything in his hands. The 'keeper of the prison' was
+lazy, like most of us, and very glad to shift duties on to any
+capable shoulders. Such a thing would, of course, be impossible with
+us, but it is a bit of true local colouring here.
+
+Joseph won hearts because God was with him, as the story is careful
+to point out. Our religion should recommend us, and therefore
+itself, to those who have to do with us. It is not enough that we
+should be severely righteous, as Joseph had been, or ready to meet
+trouble with stoical resignation, but we are to be gentle and
+lovable, gracious towards men, because we receive grace from God. We
+owe it to our Lord and to our fellows, and to ourselves, to be
+magnets to attract to Jesus, by showing how fair He can make a life.
+Joseph in prison found work to do, and he did not shirk it. He might
+have said to himself: 'This is poor work for me, who had all
+Potiphar's house to rule. Shall such a man as I come down to such
+small tasks as this?' He might have sulked or desponded in idleness,
+but he took the kind of work that offered, and did his best by it.
+Many young people nowadays do nothing, because they think themselves
+above the small humdrum duties that lie near them. It would do some
+of us good to remember Joseph in the jail, and his cheerful
+discharge of what his hands found to do there.
+
+Of course, work done 'because the Lord was with him,' in the
+consciousness of His presence, and in obedience to Him, went well.
+'The Lord made it to prosper,' as He always will make such work.
+
+ 'When thou dost favour any action,
+ It runs, it flies.'
+
+And even if, sometimes, work done in the fear of the Lord does not
+outwardly prosper, it does so in deepest truth, if it work in us the
+peaceable fruit of righteousness. We need to have a more Christian
+idea of what constitutes prosperity, and then we shall understand
+that there are no exceptions to the law that, if a man does his work
+by God and with God and for God, 'that which he does, the Lord makes
+it to prosper.'
+
+The help that Joseph gave by interpreting the two high officials'
+dreams cannot be considered here in detail, but we note that the
+names of similar officers, evidently higher in rank than we should
+suppose, with our notions of bakers and butlers, are found in
+Egyptian documents, and that these two were 'king's prisoners,' and
+put in charge of Potiphar, who alleviated their imprisonment by
+detailing Joseph as their attendant, thus showing that his feeling
+to the young Hebrew was friendly still. Dreams are the usual method
+of divine communication in Genesis, and belong to a certain stage in
+the process of revelation. The friend of God, who is in touch with
+Him, can interpret these. 'The secret of the Lord is with them that
+fear Him,' and it is still true that they who live close by God have
+insight into His purposes. Joseph showed sympathy with the two
+dreamers, and his question, 'Why look ye so sadly?' unlocked their
+hearts. He was not so swallowed up in his own trouble as to be blind
+to the signs of another's sorrow, or slow to try to comfort. Grief
+is apt to make us selfish, but it is meant to make us tender of
+heart and quick of hand to help our fellows in calamity. We win
+comfort for our own sorrows by trying to soothe those of others.
+Jesus stooped to suffer that He might succour them that suffer, and
+we are to tread in His steps.
+
+
+
+
+JOSEPH, THE PRIME MINISTER
+
+
+ 'And Pharaoh said unto his servants, Can we find such a
+ one as this is, a man in whom the Spirit of God is? And
+ Pharaoh said unto Joseph, Forasmuch as God hath shewed
+ thee all this, there is none so discreet and wise as thou
+ art: Thou shalt be over my house, and according unto thy
+ word shall all my people be ruled: only in the throne
+ will I be greater than thou. And Pharaoh said unto Joseph,
+ See, I have set thee over all the land of Egypt. And
+ Pharaoh took off his ring from his hand, and put it upon
+ Joseph's hand, and arrayed him in vestures of fine linen,
+ and put a gold chain about his neck; And he made him to
+ ride in the second chariot which he had; and they cried
+ before him, Bow the knee: and he made him ruler over all
+ the land of Egypt. And Pharaoh said unto Joseph, I am
+ Pharaoh, and without thee shall no man lift up his hand
+ or foot in all the land of Egypt. And Pharaoh called
+ Joseph's name Zaphnath-paaneah; and he gave him to wife
+ Asenath the daughter of Poti-pherah priest of On. And
+ Joseph went out over all the land of Egypt. And Joseph
+ was thirty years old when he stood before Pharaoh king
+ of Egypt. And Joseph went out from the presence of
+ Pharaoh, and went throughout all the land of Egypt. And
+ in the seven plenteous years the earth brought forth by
+ handfuls. And he gathered up all the food of the seven
+ years, which were in the land of Egypt, and laid up the
+ food in the cities: the food of the field, which was
+ round about every city, laid he up in the same.'
+ GENESIS xli. 38-48.
+
+At seventeen years of age Joseph was sold for a slave; at thirty he
+was prime minister of Egypt (Gen. xxxvii, 2; xli. 46). How long his
+prison life lasted is uncertain; but it was long enough for the
+promises contained in his early dreams to 'try him' (Ps. cv. 19)
+whether his faith would stand apparent disappointment and weary
+delay. Like all the Scripture narratives, this history of Joseph has
+little to say about feelings, and prefers facts. But we can read
+between the lines, and be tolerably sure that the thirteen years of
+trial were well endured, and that the inward life had grown so as to
+fit him for his advancement. We have here a full-length portrait of
+the prime minister, or vizier, which brings out three points--his
+elevation, his naturalisation, and his administration.
+
+Joseph had not only interpreted Pharaoh's dream, but had suggested a
+policy in preparation for the coming famine. He had recommended the
+appointment of 'a wise and discreet man,' with supreme authority
+over the land. Pharaoh first consulted 'his servants,' and, with
+their consent, possibly not very hearty, appointed the proposer of
+the plan as its carrier-out, quoting to him his own words, 'wise and
+discreet.'
+
+The sudden installing of an unknown prisoner in high office has
+often been thought hard to believe, and has been pointed to as proof
+of the legendary character of the story. But the ground on which
+Pharaoh put it goes far to explain it. He and his servants had come
+to believe that 'God' spoke through this man, that 'the Spirit of
+God' was in him. So here was a divinely sent messenger, whom it
+would be impiety and madness to reject. Observe that Pharaoh and
+Joseph both speak in this chapter of 'God.' There was a common
+ground of recognition of a divine Being on which they met. The local
+colour of the story indicates a period before the fuller revelation,
+which drew so broad a line of demarcation between Israel and the
+other nations.
+
+Joseph's sudden promotion is made the more intelligible by the
+probability which the study of Egyptian history has given, that the
+Pharaoh who made him his second in command was one of the Hyksos
+conquerors who dominated Egypt for a long period. They would have no
+prejudices against Joseph on account of his being a foreigner. A
+dynasty of alien conquerors has generally an open door for talent,
+and cares little who a man's father is, or where he comes from, if
+he can do his work. And Joseph, by not being an Egyptian born, would
+be all the fitter an instrument for carrying out the policy which he
+had suggested.
+
+His ceremonial investiture with the insignia of office is true to
+Egyptian manners. The signet ring, as the emblem of full authority;
+the chain, as a mark of dignity; the robe of 'fine linen' (or rather
+of cotton), which was a priestly dress--all are illustrated by the
+monuments. The proclamation made before him as he rode in the second
+chariot has been very variously interpreted. It has been taken for a
+Hebraised Egyptian word, meaning 'Cast thyself down'; and this
+interpretation was deemed the most probable, until Assyrian
+discovery brought to light 'that _abarakku_ is the Assyrian
+name of the grand vizier' (Fr. Delitzsch, _Hebrew Language Viewed
+in the Light of Assyrian Research_, p. 26). Sayce proposes
+another explanation, also from the cuneiform tablets: 'There was a
+word _abrik_ in the Sumerian language, which signified a seer,
+and was borrowed by the Semitic Babylonians under the varying forms
+of _abrikku_ and _abarakku_. It is _abrikku_ which we have in Genesis,
+and the title applied by the people to the "seer" Joseph proves to be
+the one we should most naturally expect.' The Tel el-Amarna tablets
+show that the knowledge of cuneiform writing was common in Egypt
+(Sayce, _Higher Criticism and the Monuments_, p. 214). This
+explanation is tempting, but it is perhaps scarcely probable that the
+proclamation should have been in any other language than Egyptian,
+or should have had reference to anything but Joseph's new office. It was
+not as seer that he was to be obeyed, but as Pharaoh's representative,
+even though he had become the latter because he had proved himself the
+former.
+
+But in any case, the whole context is accurately and strongly
+Egyptian. Was there any point in the history of Israel, down to an
+impossibly late date, except the time of Moses, at which Jewish
+writers were so familiar with Egypt as to have been capable of
+producing so true a picture?
+
+The lessons of this incident are plain. First stands out, clear and
+full, the witness it bears to God's faithfulness, and to His
+sovereign sway over all events. What are all the persons concerned
+in the narrative but unconscious instruments of His? The fierce
+brothers, the unconcerned slave-dealers, Potiphar, his wife, the
+prisoners, Pharaoh, are so many links in a chain; but they are also
+men, and therefore free to act, and guilty if acting wrongly. Men
+execute God's purposes, even when unconscious or rebellious, but are
+responsible, and often punished, for the acts which He uses to
+effect His designs.
+
+Joseph's thirteen years of trial, crowned with sudden prosperity,
+may read all of us, and especially young men and women, a lesson of
+patience. Many of us have to fight our way through analogous
+difficulties at the outset of our career; and we are apt to lose
+heart and get restive when success seems slow to come, and one
+hindrance after another blocks our road. But hindrances are helps.
+If one of Joseph's misfortunes had been omitted, his good fortune
+would never have come. If his brethren had not hated him, if he had
+not been sold, if he had not been imprisoned, he would never have
+ruled Egypt. Not one thread in the tapestry could have been
+withdrawn without spoiling the pattern. We cannot afford to lose one
+of our sorrows or trials. There would be no summer unless winter had
+gone before. There is a bud or a fruit for every snowflake, and a
+bird's song for every howl of the storm.
+
+Plainly, too, does the story read the lesson of quiet doing of the
+work and accepting the circumstances of the moment. Joseph was being
+prepared for the administration of a kingdom by his oversight of
+Potiphar's house and of the prison. His character was matured by his
+trials, as iron is consolidated by heavy hammers. To resist
+temptation, to do modestly and sedulously whatever work comes to our
+hands, to be content to look after a jail even though we have
+dreamed of sun and moon bowing down to us, is the best
+apprenticeship for whatever elevation circumstances--or, to speak
+more devoutly, God--intends for us. Young men thrown into city life
+far away from their homes, and whispered to by many seducing voices,
+have often to suffer for keeping themselves unspotted; but they are
+being strengthened by rough discipline, and will get such promotion,
+in due time, as is good for them. But outward success is not God's
+best gift. It was better to be the Joseph who deserved his high
+place, than to have the place. The character which he had grown into
+was more than the trappings which Pharaoh put on him. And such a
+character is always the reward of such patience, faith, and self-
+control, whether chains and chariots are added or not.
+
+Little need be said about the other points of the story. Joseph's
+naturalisation as an Egyptian was complete. His name was changed, in
+token that he had completely become a subject of Pharaoh's. The
+meaning of the formidable-looking polysyllable, which Egyptian lips
+found easier than 'Joseph,' is uncertain. 'At present the origin of
+the first syllable is still doubtful, and though the latter part of
+the name is certainly the Egyptian _n-ti-pa-ankh_ ("of the
+life"), it is difficult to say in which of its different senses the
+expression _pa-ankh_ ("the life") is employed' (Sayce, _ut
+supra_, p. 213). The prevailing opinion of Egyptian experts is
+that it means 'Support of life.'
+
+The naturalising was completed by his marriage to Asenath (supposed
+to mean 'One belonging to the goddess Neith'), a daughter of a high
+officer of state, Poti-phera (meaning, like its shortened form,
+Potiphar, 'The gift of Ra' the sun-god). Such an alliance placed him
+at once in the very innermost circle of Egyptian aristocracy. It may
+have been a bitter pill for the priest to swallow, to give his
+daughter to a man of yesterday, and an alien; but, just as probably,
+he too looked to Joseph with some kind of awe, and was not unwilling
+to wed Asenath to the first man in the empire, wherever he had
+started up from.
+
+But should not Joseph's religion have barred such a marriage? The
+narrator gives no judgment on the fact, and we have to form our own
+estimate. But it is not to be estimated as if it had occurred five
+or six centuries later. The family of Jacob was not so fenced off,
+nor was its treasure of revelation so complete, as afterwards. We
+may be fairly sure that Joseph felt no inconsistency between his
+ancestral faith, which had become his own in his trials, and this
+union. He was risking a great deal; that is certain. Whether the
+venture ended well or ill, we know not. Only we may be very sure
+that a marriage in which a common faith is not a strong bond of
+union lacks its highest sanctity, and is perilously apt to find that
+difference in religious convictions is a strong separator.
+
+Joseph's administration opens up questions as to Egyptian land
+tenure, and the like, which cannot be dealt with here. 'In the
+earlier days of the monarchy the country was in the hands of great
+feudal lords; ... the land belonged to them absolutely.... But after
+the convulsion caused by the Hyksos conquest and the war of
+independence, this older system of land tenure was completely
+changed.... The Pharaoh is the fountain head, not only of honour,
+but of property as well.... The people ceased to have any rights of
+their own' (Sayce, _ut supra_, p. 216).
+
+We may note Joseph's immediate entrance upon office and his
+characteristic energy in it. He 'went out from the presence of
+Pharaoh, and went throughout all the land of Egypt.' No grass grew
+under this man's feet. He was ubiquitous, personally overseeing
+everything for seven long years. Wasteful consumption of the
+abundant crops had to be restrained, storehouses to be built,
+careful records of the contents to be made, after Egyptian fashion.
+The people, who could not look so far as seven years ahead, and
+wanted to enjoy, or make money out of, the good harvests, had to be
+looked after, and an army of officials to be kept in order. Dignity
+meant work for him. Like all true men, he thought more of his duty
+than of his honours. Depend on it, he did not wear his fine clothes
+or ride in the second chariot, when he was hurrying about the
+country at his task.
+
+He had come 'out of prison to reign,' and, as we all find, if we are
+God's servants, to reign means to serve, and the higher the place
+the harder the task. The long years of waiting had nourished powers
+which the seven years of busy toil tested. We must make ourselves,
+by God's help, ready, in obscurity, and especially in youth, for
+whatever may be laid on us in after days. And if we understand what
+life here means, we shall be more covetous of spheres of diligent
+service than of places of shining dignity. Whatever our task, let us
+do it, as Joseph did his, with strenuous concentration, knowing, as
+he did, that the years in which it is possible are but few at the
+longest.
+
+
+
+
+RECOGNITION AND RECONCILIATION
+
+
+ 'Then Joseph could not refrain himself before all them
+ that stood by him; and he cried, Cause every man to go
+ out from me. And there stood no man with him, while
+ Joseph made himself known unto his brethren. And he
+ wept aloud: and the Egyptians and the house of Pharaoh
+ heard. And Joseph said unto his brethren, I am Joseph;
+ doth my father yet live? And his brethren could not
+ answer him; for they were troubled at his presence. And
+ Joseph said unto his brethren, Come near to me, I pray
+ you. And they came near. And he said, I am Joseph your
+ brother, whom ye sold into Egypt. Now therefore be not
+ grieved, nor angry with yourselves, that ye sold me
+ hither: for God did send me before you to preserve life.
+ For these two years hath the famine been in the land:
+ and yet there are five years, in the which there shall
+ neither be earing nor harvest. And God sent me before
+ you to preserve you a posterity in the earth, and to
+ save your lives by a great deliverance. So now it was not
+ you that sent me hither, but God: and He hath made me
+ a father to Pharaoh, and lord of all his house, and a
+ ruler throughout all the land of Egypt. Haste ye, and
+ go up to my father, and say unto him. Thus saith thy son
+ Joseph, God hath made me lord of all Egypt: come down
+ unto me, tarry not: And thou shalt dwell in the land of
+ Goshen, and thou shalt be near unto me, thou, and thy
+ children, and thy children's children, and thy flocks,
+ and thy herds, and all that thou hast: And there will I
+ nourish thee; for yet there are five years of famine;
+ lest thou, and thy household, and all that thou hast,
+ come to poverty. And, behold, your eyes see, and the
+ eyes of my brother Benjamin, that it is my mouth that
+ speaketh unto you. And ye shall tell my father of all
+ my glory in Egypt, and of all that ye have seen; and ye
+ shall haste and bring down my father hither. And he fell
+ upon his brother Benjamin's neck, and wept; and Benjamin
+ wept upon his neck. Moreover he kissed all his brethren,
+ and wept upon them: and after that his brethren talked
+ with him.'
+ GENESIS xlv. 1-15.
+
+
+I
+
+
+If the writer of this inimitable scene of Joseph's reconciliation
+with his brethren was not simply an historian, he was one of the
+great dramatic geniuses of the world, master of a vivid minuteness
+like Defoe's, and able to touch the springs of tears by a pathetic
+simplicity like his who painted the death of Lear. Surely theories
+of legend and of mosaic work fail here.
+
+1. We have, first, disclosure. The point at which the impenetrable,
+stern ruler breaks down is significant. It is after Judah's torrent
+of intercession for Benjamin, and self-sacrificing offer of himself
+for a substitute and a slave. Why did this touch Joseph so keenly?
+Was it not because his brother's speech shows that filial and
+fraternal affection was now strong enough in him to conquer self? He
+had sent Joseph to the fate which he is now ready to accept. He and
+the rest had thought nothing of the dagger they plunged into their
+father's heart by selling Joseph; but now he is prepared to accept
+bondage if he may save his father's grey head an ache. The whole of
+Joseph's harsh, enigmatical treatment had been directed to test
+them, and to ascertain if they were the same fierce, cruel men as of
+old. Now, when the doubt is answered, he can no longer dam back the
+flood of forgiving love. The wisest pardoning kindness seeks the
+assurance of sorrow and change in the offender, before it can safely
+and wholesomely enjoy the luxury of letting itself out in tears of
+reconciliation. We do not call Joseph a type of Christ; but the
+plain process of forgiveness in his brotherly heart is moulded by
+the law which applies to God's pardon as to ours. All the wealth of
+yearning pardon is there, before contrition and repentance; but it
+is not good for the offender that it should be lavished on him,
+impenitent.
+
+What a picture that is of the all-powerful ruler, choking down his
+emotion, and hurriedly ordering the audience chamber to be cleared!
+How many curious glances would be cast over their shoulders, by the
+slowly withdrawing crowd, at the strange group--the viceroy, usually
+so calm, thus inexplicably excited, and the huddled, rude shepherds,
+bewildered and afraid of what was coming next, in this unaccountable
+country! How eavesdroppers would linger as near as they durst, and
+how looks would be exchanged as the sounds of passionate weeping
+rewarded their open ears! The deepest feelings are not to be
+flaunted before the world. The man who displays his tears, and the
+man who is too proud to shed them, are both wrong; but perhaps it is
+worse to weep in public than not to weep at all.
+
+'I am Joseph.' Were ever the pathos of simplicity, and the simplicity
+of pathos, more nobly expressed than in these two words?--(There
+are but two in the Hebrew.) Has the highest dramatic genius ever
+winged an arrow which goes more surely to the heart than that?
+The question, which hurries after the disclosure, seems strange and
+needless; but it is beautifully self-revealing, as expressive of
+agitation, and as disclosing a son's longing, and perhaps, too, as
+meant to relieve the brothers' embarrassment, and, as it were, to
+wrap the keen edge of the disclosure in soft wool.
+
+2. We have, next, conscience-stricken silence. No wonder his
+brethren 'could not answer' and 'were troubled at his presence.'
+They had found their brother a ruler; they had found the ruler their
+brother. Their former crime had turned what might have been a joy
+into a terror. Already they had come to know and regret it. It might
+seem to their startled consciences as if now they were about to
+expiate it. They would remember the severity of Joseph's past
+intercourse; they see his power, and cannot but be doubtful of his
+intentions. Had all his strange conduct been manoeuvring to get
+them, Benjamin and all, into his toils, that one blow might perfect
+his revenge? Our suspicions are the reflections of our own hearts.
+So there they stand in open-mouthed, but dumb, wonder and dread. It
+would task the pencil of him who painted, on the mouldering
+refectory wall at Milan, the conflicting emotions of the apostles,
+at the announcement of the betrayer, to portray that silent company
+of abased and trembling criminals. They are an illustration of the
+profitlessness of all crime. Sin is, as one of its Hebrew names
+tells us, missing the mark--whether we think of it as fatally
+failing to reach the ideal of conduct, or as always, by a divine
+nemesis, failing to hit even the shabby end it aims at. 'Every rogue
+is a roundabout fool.' They put Joseph in the pit, and here he is on
+a throne. They have stained their souls, and embittered their
+father's life for twenty-two long years, and the dreams have come
+true, and all their wickedness has not turned the stream of the
+divine purpose, any more than the mud dam built by a child diverts
+the Mississippi. One flash has burned up their whole sinful past,
+and they stand scorched and silent among the ruins. So it always is.
+Sooner or later the same certainty of the futility of his sin will
+overwhelm every sinful man, and dumb self-condemnation will stand in
+silent acknowledgment of evil desert before the throne of the
+Brother, who is now the Prince and the Judge, on whose fiat hangs
+life or death. To see Christ enthroned should be joy; but it may be
+turned into terror and silent anticipation of His just condemnation.
+
+3. We have encouragement and complete forgiveness. That invitation
+to come close up to him, with which Joseph begins the fuller
+disclosure of his heart, is a beautiful touch. We can fancy how
+tender the accents, and how, with some lightening of fear, but still
+hesitatingly and ashamed, the shepherds, unaccustomed to courtly
+splendours, approached. The little pause while they draw near helps
+him to self-command, and he resumes his words in a calmer tone. With
+one sentence of assurance that he is their brother, he passes at
+once into that serene region where all passion and revenge die,
+unable to breathe its keen, pure air. The comfort which he addresses
+to their penitence would have been dangerous, if spoken to men blind
+to the enormity of their past. But it will not make a truly
+repentant conscience less sensitive, though it may alleviate the
+aching of the wound, to think that God has used even its sin for His
+own purposes. It will not take away the sense of the wickedness of
+the motive to know that a wonderful providence has rectified the
+consequences. It will rather deepen the sense of evil, and give new
+cause of adoration of the love that pardons the wrong, and the
+providence that neutralises the harm.
+
+Joseph takes the true point of view, which we are all bound to
+occupy, if we would practise the Christian grace of forgiveness. He
+looks beyond the mere human hate and envy to the divine purpose.
+'The sword is theirs; the hand is Thine.' He can even be grateful to
+his foes who have been unintentionally his benefactors. He thinks of
+the good that has come out of their malice, and anger dies within
+him.
+
+Highest attainment of all, the good for which he is grateful is not
+his all-but-regal dignity, but the power to save and gladden those
+who would fain have slain, and had saddened him for many a weary
+year. We read in these utterances of a lofty piety and of a
+singularly gentle heart, the fruit of sorrow and the expression of
+thoughts which had slowly grown up in his mind, and had now been
+long familiar there. Such a calm, certain grasp of the divine
+shaping and meaning of his life could not have sprung up all at once
+in him, as he looked at the conscience-stricken culprits cowering
+before him. More than natural sweetness and placability must have
+gone to the making of such a temper of forgiveness. He must have
+been living near the Fountain of all mercy to have had so full a cup
+of it to offer. Because he had caught a gleam of the divine pardon,
+he becomes a mirror of it; and we may fairly see in this ill-used
+brother, yearning over the half-sullen sinners, and seeking to open
+a way for his forgiveness to steal into their hearts, and rejoicing
+over his very sorrows which have fitted him to save them alive, and
+satisfy them in the days of famine, an adumbration of our Elder
+Brother's forgiving love and saving tenderness.
+
+4. The second part of Joseph's address is occupied with his message
+to Jacob, and shows how he longed for his father's presence. There
+is something very natural and beautiful in the repeated exhortations
+to haste, as indicating the impatient love of a long-absent son. If
+his heart was so true to his father, why had he sent him no message
+for all these years? Egypt was near enough, and for nine years now
+he had been in power. Surely he could have gratified his heart. But
+he could not have learned by any other means his brethren's
+feelings, and if they were still what they had been, no intercourse
+would be possible. He could only be silent, and yearn for the way to
+open in God's providence, as it did.
+
+The message to Jacob is sent from 'thy son Joseph,' in token that
+the powerful ruler lays his dignity at his father's feet. No
+elevation will ever make a true son forget his reverence for his
+father. If he rise higher in the world, and has to own an old man,
+away in some simple country home, for his sire, he will be proud to
+do it. The enduring sanctity of the family ties is not the least
+valuable lesson from our narrative for this generation, where social
+conditions are so often widely different in parents and in children.
+There is an affectionate spreading out of all his glory before his
+father's old eyes; not that he cared much about it for himself,
+since, as we have seen, elevation to him meant mainly work, but
+because he knew how the eyes would glisten at the sight. His mother,
+who would have been proud of him, is gone, but he has still the joy
+of gladdening his father by the exhibition of his dignity. It
+bespeaks a simple nature, unspoiled by prosperity, to delight thus
+in his father's delight, and to wish the details of all his
+splendour to be told him. A statesman who takes most pleasure in his
+elevation because of the good he can do by it, and because it will
+please the old people at home, must be a pure and lovable man. The
+command has another justification in the necessity to assure his
+father of the wisdom of so great a change. God had set him in the
+Promised Land, and a very plain divine injunction was needed to
+warrant his leaving it. Such a one was afterwards given in vision;
+but the most emphatic account of his son's honour and power was none
+the less required to make the old Jacob willing to abandon so much,
+and go into such strange conditions.
+
+We have another instance of the difference between man's purposes
+and God's counsel in this message. Joseph's only thought is to
+afford his family temporary shelter during the coming five years of
+famine. Neither he nor they knew that this was the fulfilment of the
+covenant with Abraham, and the bringing of them into the land of
+their oppression for four centuries. No shadow of that future was
+cast upon their joy, and yet, the steady march of God's plan was
+effected along the path which they were ignorantly preparing. The
+road-maker does not know what bands of mourners, or crowds of
+holiday makers, or troops of armed men may pass along it.
+
+5. This wonderfully beautiful scene ends with the kiss of full
+reconciliation and frank communion. All the fear is out of the
+brothers' hearts. It has washed away all the envy along with it. The
+history of Jacob's household had hitherto been full of sins against
+family life. Now, at last, they taste the sweetness of fraternal
+love. Joseph, against whom they had sinned, takes the initiative,
+flinging himself with tears on the neck of Benjamin, his own
+mother's son, nearer to him than all the others, crowding his pent-
+up love in one long kiss. Then, with less of passionate affection,
+but more of pardoning love, he kisses his contrite brothers. The
+offender is ever less ready to show love than the offended. The
+first step towards reconciliation, whether of man with man or of man
+with God, comes from the aggrieved. We always hate those whom we
+have harmed; and if enmity were ended only by the advances of the
+wrong-doer, it would be perpetual. The injured has the prerogative
+of praying the injurer to be reconciled. So was it in Pharaoh's
+throne-room on that long past day; so is it still in the audience
+chamber of heaven. 'He that might the vantage best have took found
+out the remedy.' 'We love Him, because He first loved us.'
+
+The pardoned men find their tongues at last. Forgiveness has opened
+their lips, and though their reverence and thanks are no less, their
+confidence and familiarity are more. How they would talk when once
+the terror was melted away! So should it be with the soul which has
+tasted the sweetness of Christ's forgiving love, and has known 'the
+kisses of His mouth.' Long, unrestrained, and happy should be the
+intercourse which we forgiven sinners keep up with our Brother, the
+Prince of all the land. 'After that his brethren talked with him.'
+
+
+
+
+JOSEPH, THE PARDONER AND PRESERVER
+
+
+II
+
+
+THE noble words in which Joseph dissipates his brothers' doubts
+have, as their first characteristic, the recognition of the God by
+whom his career had been shaped, and, for their next, the
+recognition of the purpose for which it had been. There is a world
+of tenderness and forgivingness in the addition made to his first
+words in verse 4, 'Joseph, _your brother_.' He owns the mystic
+bond of kindred, and thereby assures them of his pardon for their
+sin against it. It was right that he should remind them of their
+crime, even while declaring his pardon. But he rises high above all
+personal considerations and graciously takes the place of soother,
+instead of that of accuser. Far from cherishing thoughts of anger or
+revenge, he tries to lighten the reproaches of their own
+consciences. Thrice over in four verses he traces his captivity to
+God. He had learned that wisdom in his long years of servitude, and
+had not forgotten it in those of rule.
+
+There will be little disposition in us to visit offences against
+ourselves on the offenders, if we discern God's purpose working
+through our sorrows, and see, as the Psalmist did, that even our
+foes are 'men which are Thy hand, O Lord.' True, His overruling
+providence does not make their guilt less; but the recognition of it
+destroys all disposition to revenge, and injured and injurer may one
+day unite in adoring the result of what the One suffered at the
+other's hands. Surely, some Christian persecutors and their victims
+have thus joined hands in heaven. If we would cultivate the habit of
+seeing God behind second causes, our hearts would be kept free from
+much wrath and bitterness.
+
+Joseph was as certain of the purpose as of the source of his
+elevation. He saw now what he had been elevated for, and he eagerly
+embraced the task which was a privilege. No doubt, he had often
+brooded over the thought, 'Why am I thus lifted up?' and had felt
+the privilege of being a nation's saviour; but now he realises that
+he has a part to play in fulfilling God's designs in regard to the
+seed of Abraham. Cloudy as his outlook into the future may have
+been, he knew that great promises affecting all nations were
+intertwined with his family, separation from whom had been a sorrow
+for years. But now the thought comes to him with sudden illumination
+and joy: 'This, then, is what it all has meant, that I should be a
+link in the chain of God's workings.' He knows himself to be God's
+instrument for effecting His covenant promises. How small a thing
+honour and position became in comparison!
+
+We cannot all have great tasks in the line of God's purposes, but we
+can all feel that our little ones are made great by being seen to be
+in it. The less we think about chariots and gold chains, and the
+more we try to find out what God means by setting us where we are,
+and to do that, the better for our peace and true dignity. A true
+man does not care for the rewards of work half as much as for the
+work itself. Find out what God intends, and never mind whether He
+puts you in a dungeon or in a palace. Both places lie on the road
+which He has marked and, in either, the main thing is to do His
+will.
+
+Next comes the swiftly devised plan for carrying out God's purpose.
+It sounds as if Joseph, with prompt statesmanship, had struck it out
+then and there. At all events, he pours it forth with contagious
+earnestness and haste. Note how he says over and over again 'My
+father,' as if he loved to dwell on the name, but also as if he had
+not yet completely realised the renewal of the broken ties of
+brotherhood. It was some trial of the stuff he was made of, to have
+to bring his father and his family to be stared at, and perhaps
+mocked at, by the court. Many a successful man would be very much
+annoyed if his old father, in his country clothes, and hands
+roughened by toil, sat down beside him in his prosperity. Joseph had
+none of that baseness. Jacob would come, if at all, as a half-
+starved immigrant, and would be 'an abomination to the Egyptians.'
+But what of that? He was 'my father,' and his son knows no better
+use to make of his dignity than to compel reverence for Jacob's grey
+hairs, which he will take care shall _not_ be 'brought down
+with sorrow to the grave.' It is a very homely lesson--never be
+ashamed of your father. But in these days, when children are often
+better educated than their parents, and rise above them in social
+importance, it is a very needful one.
+
+The first overtures of reconciliation should come from the side of
+the injured party. That is Christ's law, and if it were Christians'
+practice, there would be fewer alienations among them. It is
+Christ's law, because it is Christ's own way of dealing with us. He,
+too, was envied, and sold by His brethren. His sufferings were meant
+'to preserve life.' Stephen's sermon in the Sanhedrin dwells on
+Joseph as a type of Christ; and the typical character is seen not
+least distinctly in this, that He against whom we have sinned pleads
+with us, seeks to draw us nearer to Himself, and to lead us to put
+away all hard thoughts of Him, and to cherish all loving ones
+towards Him, by showing us how void His heart is of anger against
+us, and how full of yearning love and of gracious intention to
+provide for us a dwelling-place, with abundance of all needful good,
+beside Himself, while the years of famine shall last.
+
+
+
+
+GROWTH BY TRANSPLANTING
+
+
+ 'Then Joseph came and told Pharaoh, and said, My father
+ and my brethren, and their flocks, and their herds, and
+ all that they have, are come out of the land of Canaan;
+ and, behold, they are in the land of Goshen. And he took
+ some of his brethren, even five men, and presented them
+ unto Pharaoh. And Pharaoh said unto his brethren, What
+ is your occupation? And they said unto Pharaoh, Thy
+ servants are shepherds, both we, and also our fathers.
+ They said moreover unto Pharaoh, For to sojourn in the
+ land are we come; for thy servants have no pasture for
+ their flocks, for the famine is sore in the land of
+ Canaan: now therefore, we pray thee, let thy servants
+ dwell in the land of Goshen. And Pharaoh spake unto
+ Joseph, saying, Thy father and thy brethren are come
+ unto thee: The land of Egypt is before thee; in the
+ best of the land make thy father and brethren to dwell;
+ in the land of Goshen let them dwell: and if thou knowest
+ any men of activity among them, then make them rulers
+ over my cattle. And Joseph brought in Jacob his father,
+ and set him before Pharaoh: and Jacob blessed Pharaoh.
+ And Pharaoh said unto Jacob, How old art thou? And Jacob
+ said unto Pharaoh, The days of the years of my pilgrimage
+ are an hundred and thirty years: few and evil have the
+ days of the years of my life been, and have not attained
+ unto the days of the years of the life of my fathers in
+ the days of their pilgrimage. And Jacob blessed Pharaoh,
+ and went out from before Pharaoh. And Joseph placed his
+ father and his brethren, and gave them a possession in
+ the land of Egypt, in the best of the land, in the land
+ of Rameses, as Pharaoh had commanded. And Joseph nourished
+ his father, and his brethren, and all his father's
+ household, with bread, according to their families.'
+ --GENESIS xlvii. 1-12.
+
+1. The conduct of Joseph in reference to the settlement in Goshen is
+an example of the possibility of uniting worldly prudence with high
+religious principle and great generosity of nature. He had promised
+his brothers a home in that fertile eastern district, which afforded
+many advantages in its proximity to Canaan, its adaptation to
+pastoral life, and its vicinity to Joseph when in Zoan, the capital.
+But he had not consulted Pharaoh, and, however absolute his
+authority, it scarcely stretched to giving away Egyptian territory
+without leave. So his first care, when the wanderers arrive, is to
+manage the confirmation of the grant. He goes about it with
+considerable astuteness--a hereditary quality, which is redeemed
+from blame because used for unselfish purposes and unstained by
+deceit. He does not tell Pharaoh how far he had gone, but simply
+announces that his family are in Goshen, as if awaiting the
+monarch's further pleasure. Then he introduces a deputation, no
+doubt carefully chosen, of five of his brothers (as if the whole
+number would have been too formidable), previously instructed how to
+answer. He knows what Pharaoh is in the habit of asking, or he knows
+that he can lead him to ask the required question, which will bring
+out the fact of their being shepherds, and utilise the prejudice
+against that occupation, to ensure separation in Goshen. All goes as
+he had arranged. Thanks partly to the indifference of the king, who
+seems to have been rather a _roi fainéant_ in the hands of his
+energetic _maire du palais_, and to have been contented to
+give, with a flourish of formality, as a command to Joseph, what
+Joseph had previously carefully suggested to him (vers. 6, 7). There
+is nothing unfair in all this. It is good, shrewd management, and no
+fault can be found with it; but it is a new trait in the ideal
+character of a servant of God, and contrasts strongly with the type
+shown in Abraham. None the less, it is a legitimate element in the
+character and conduct of a good man, set down to do God's work in
+such a world. Joseph is a saint and a politician. His shrewdness is
+never craft; sagacity is not alien to consecration. No doubt it has
+to be carefully watched lest it degenerate; but prudence is as
+needful as enthusiasm, and he is the complete man who has a burning
+fire down in his heart to generate the force that drives him, and a
+steady hand on the helm, and a keen eye on the chart, to guide him.
+Be ye 'wise as serpents' but also 'harmless as doves.'
+
+2 We may note in Joseph's conduct also an instance of a man in high
+office and not ashamed of his humble relations. One of the great
+lessons meant to be taught by the whole patriarchal period was the
+sacredness of the family. That is, in some sense, the keynote of
+Joseph's history. Here we see family love, which had survived the
+trial of ill-usage and long absence, victorious over the temptation
+of position and high associates. It took some nerve and a great deal
+of affection, for the viceroy, whom envious and sarcastic courtiers
+watched, to own his kin. What a sweet morsel for malicious tongues
+it would be, 'Have you heard? He is only the son of an old shepherd,
+who is down in Goshen, come to pick up some crumbs there!' One can
+fancy the curled lips and the light laugh, as the five brothers, led
+by the great man himself, made their rustic reverences to Pharaoh.
+It is as if some high official in Paris were to walk in half a dozen
+peasants in blouse and sabots, and present them to the president as
+'my brothers.' It was a brave thing to do; and it teaches a lesson
+which many people, who have made their way in the world, would be
+nobler and more esteemed if they learned.
+
+3. The brother's words to Pharaoh are another instance of that
+ignorant carrying out of the divine purposes which we have already
+had to notice. They evidently contemplate only a temporary stay in
+the country. They say that they are come 'to _sojourn_'--the
+verb from which are formed the noun often rendered '_strangers_,' and
+that which Jacob uses in verse 9, 'my _pilgrimage_.' The reason for
+their coming is given as the transient scarcity of pasturage in Canaan,
+which implies the intention of return as soon as that was altered.
+Joseph had the same idea of the short duration of their stay; and
+though Jacob had been taught by vision that the removal was in order
+to their being made a great nation, it does not seem that his sons'
+intentions were affected by that--if they knew it. So mistaken are our
+estimates. We go to a place for a month, and we stay in it for
+twenty years. We go to a place to settle for life, and our tent-pegs
+are pulled up in a week. They thought of five years, and it was to be
+nearly as many centuries. They thought of temporary shelter and food;
+God meant an education of them and their descendants. Over all this
+story the unseen Hand hovers, chastising, guiding, impelling; and the
+human agents are free and yet fulfilling an eternal purpose, blind
+and yet accountable, responsible for motives, and mercifully ignorant
+of consequences. So we all play our little parts. We have no call to
+be curious as to what will come of our deeds. This end of the action,
+the motive of it, is our care; the other end, the outcome of it, is
+God's business to see to.
+
+4. We may also observe how trivial incidents are wrought into God's
+scheme. The Egyptian hatred of the shepherd class secured one of the
+prime reasons for the removal from Canaan--the unimpeded growth of a
+tribe into a nation. There was no room for further peaceful and
+separate expansion in that thickly populated country. Nor would
+there have been in Egypt, unless under the condition of comparative
+isolation, which could not have been obtained in any other way. Thus
+an unreasonable prejudice, possibly connected with religious ideas,
+became an important factor in the development of Israel; and, once
+again, we have to note the wisdom of the great Builder who uses not
+only gold, silver, and precious stones, but even wood, hay,
+stubble--follies and sins--for His edifice.
+
+5. The interview of Jacob with Pharaoh is pathetic and beautiful.
+The old man comports himself, in all the later history of Joseph, as
+if done with the world, and waiting to go. 'Let me die, since I have
+seen thy face,' was his farewell to life. He takes no part in the
+negotiation about Goshen, but has evidently handed over all temporal
+cares to younger hands. A halo of removedness lies round his grey
+hairs, and to Pharaoh he behaves as one withdrawn from fleeting
+things, and, by age and nearness to the end, superior even to a
+king's dignity. As he enters the royal presence he does not do
+reverence, but invokes a blessing upon him. 'The less is blessed of
+the better.' He has nothing to do with court ceremonials or
+conventionalities. The hoary head is a crown of honour, Pharaoh
+recognises his right to address him thus by the kindly question as
+to his age, which implied respect for his years. The answer of the
+'Hebrew Ulysses,' as Stanley calls him, breathes a spirit of
+melancholy not unnatural in one who had once more been uprooted, and
+found himself again a wanderer in his old age. The tremulous voice
+has borne the words across all the centuries, and has everywhere
+evoked a response in the hearts of weary and saddened men. Look at
+the component parts of this pensive retrospect.
+
+Life has been to him a 'pilgrimage'. He thinks of all his wanderings
+from that far-off day when at Bethel he received the promise of
+God's presence 'in all places whither thou goest,' till this last
+happy and yet disturbing change. But he is thinking not only,
+perhaps not chiefly, of the circumstances, but of the spirit, of his
+life. This is, no doubt, the confession 'that they were strangers
+and pilgrims' referred to in the Epistle to the Hebrews. He was a
+pilgrim, not because he had often changed his place of abode, but
+because he sought the 'city which hath foundations,' and therefore
+could not be at home here. The goal of his life lay in the far
+future; and whether he looked for the promises to be fulfilled on
+earth, or had the unformulated consciousness of immortality, and
+saluted the dimly descried coast from afar while tossing on life's
+restless ocean, he was effectually detached from the present, and
+felt himself an alien in the existing order. We have to live by the
+same hope, and to let it work the same estrangement, if we would
+live noble lives. Not because all life is change, nor because it all
+marches steadily on to the grave, but because our true home--the
+community to which we really belong, the metropolis, the mother city
+of our souls--is above, are we to feel ourselves strangers upon
+earth. They who only take into account the transiency of life are
+made sad, or sometimes desperate, by the unwelcome thought. But they
+whose pilgrimage is a journey home may look that transiency full in
+the face, and be as glad because of it as colonists on their voyage
+to the old country which they call 'home,' though they were born on
+the other side of the world and have never seen its green fields.
+
+To Jacob's eyes his days seem 'few.' Abraham's one hundred and
+seventy-five years, Isaac's one hundred and eighty, were in his
+mind. But more than these was in his mind. The law of the moral
+perspective is other than that of the physical. The days in front,
+seen through the glass of anticipation, are drawn out; the days
+behind, viewed through the telescope of memory, are crowded
+together. What a moment looked all the long years of his struggling
+life--shorter now than even had once seemed the seven years of
+service for his Rachel, that love had made to fly past on such swift
+wings! That happy wedded life, how short it looked! A bright light
+for a moment, and
+
+ 'Ere a man could say "Behold!"
+ The jaws of darkness did devour it up.'
+
+It is well to lay the coolness of this thought on our fevered
+hearts, and, whether they be torn by sorrows or gladdened with
+bliss, to remember 'this also will pass' and the longest stretch of
+dreary days be seen in retrospect, in their due relation to
+eternity, as but a moment. That will not paralyse effort nor abate
+sweetness, but it will teach proportion, and deliver from the
+illusions of this solid-seeming shadow which we call life.
+
+The pensive retrospect darkens as the old man's memory dwells upon
+the past. His days have not only been few--that could be borne--but
+they have been 'evil' by which I understand not unfortunate so much
+as faulty. We have seen in preceding pages the slow process by which
+the crafty Jacob had his sins purged out of him, and became 'God's
+wrestler.' Here we learn that old wrong-doing, even when forgiven--or,
+rather, when and because forgiven--leaves regretful memories
+lifelong. The early treachery had been long ago repented of and
+pardoned by God and man. The nature which hatched it had been
+renewed. But here it starts up again, a ghost from the grave, and
+the memory of it is full of bitterness. No lapse of time deprives a
+sin of its power to sting. As in the old story of the man who was
+killed by a rattlesnake's poison fang embedded in a boot which had
+lain forgotten for years, we may be wounded by suddenly coming
+against it, long after it is forgiven by God and almost forgotten by
+ourselves. Many a good man, although he knows that Christ's blood
+has washed away his guilt, is made to possess the iniquities of his
+youth. 'Thou shalt be ashamed and confounded, and never open thy
+mouth any more, when I am pacified toward thee for all that thou
+hast done.'
+
+But this shaded retrospect is one-sided. It is true, and in some
+moods seems all the truth; but Jacob saw more distinctly, and his
+name was rightly Israel, when, laying his trembling hands on the
+heads of Joseph's sons, he laid there the blessing of 'the God which
+fed me all my life long, ... 'the Angel which redeemed me from all
+evil.' That was his last thought about his life, as it began to be
+seen in the breaking light of eternal day. Pensive and penitent
+memory may call the years few and evil, but grateful faith even
+here, and still more the cleared vision of heaven, will discern more
+truly that they have been a long miracle of loving care, and that
+all their seeming evil has been transmuted into good.
+
+
+
+
+TWO RETROSPECTS OF ONE LIFE
+
+
+ 'And Jacob said unto Pharaoh, Few and evil have the
+ days of the years of my life been.'--GENESIS xlvii. 9.
+
+ 'The God which fed me all my life long unto this day;
+ the Angel which redeemed me from all evil.'
+ --GENESIS xlviii. 15,16.
+
+These are two strangely different estimates of the same life to be
+taken by the same man. In the latter Jacob categorically contradicts
+everything that he had said in the former. 'Few and evil,' he said
+before Pharaoh. 'All my life long,' 'the Angel which redeemed me
+from all evil,' he said on his death-bed.
+
+If he meant what he said when he spoke to Pharaoh, and characterised
+his life thus, he was wrong. He was possibly in a melancholy mood.
+Very naturally, the unfamiliar splendours of a court dazzled and
+bewildered the old man, accustomed to a quiet shepherd life down at
+Hebron. He had not come to see Pharaoh, he only cared to meet
+Joseph; and, as was quite natural, the new and uncongenial
+surroundings depressed him. Possibly the words are only a piece of
+the etiquette of an Eastern court, where it is the correct thing for
+the subject to depreciate himself in all respects as far inferior to
+the prince. And there may be little more than conventional humility
+in the words of my first text. But I am rather disposed to think
+that they express the true feeling of the moment, in a mood that
+passed and was followed by a more wholesome one.
+
+I put the two sayings side by side just for the sake of gathering up
+one or two plain lessons from them.
+
+1. We have here two possible views of life.
+
+Now the key to the difference between these two statements and moods
+of feeling seems to me to be a very plain one. In the former of them
+there is nothing about God. It is all Jacob. In the latter we notice
+that there is a great deal more about God than about Jacob, and that
+determines the whole tone of the retrospect. In the first text Jacob
+speaks of 'the days of the years of _my_ pilgrimage,' 'the days
+of the years of _my_ life,' and so on, without a syllable about
+anything except the purely earthly view of life. Of course, when you
+shut out God, the past is all dark enough, grey and dismal, like the
+landscape on some cloudy day, where the woods stand black, and the
+rivers creep melancholy through colourless fields, and the sky is
+grey and formless above. Let the sun come out, and the river flashes
+into a golden mirror, and the woods are alive with twinkling lights
+and shadows, and the sky stretches a blue pavilion above them, and
+all the birds sing. Let God into your life, and its whole complexion
+and characteristics change. The man who sits whining and
+complaining, when he has shut out the thought of a divine Presence,
+finds that everything alters when he brings that in.
+
+And, then, look at the two particulars on which the patriarch
+dwells. 'I am only one hundred and thirty years old,' he says; a
+mere infant compared with Abraham and Isaac! How did he know he was
+not going to live to be as old as either of them? And 'if his days
+were evil,' as he said, was it not a good thing that they were few?
+But, instead of that, he finds reasons for complaint in the brevity
+of the life which, if it were as evil as he made it out to be, must
+often have seemed wearisomely long, and dragged very slowly. Now,
+both things are true--life is short, life is long. Time is elastic--you
+can stretch it or you can contract it. It is short compared with the
+duration of God; it is short, as one of the Psalms puts it pathetically,
+as compared with this Nature round us--'The earth abideth for ever';
+we are strangers upon it, and there is no abiding for us. It is short
+as compared with the capacities and powers of the creatures that possess
+it; but, oh! if we think of our days as a series of gifts of God, if we
+look upon them, as Jacob looked upon them when he was sane, as being one
+continued shepherding by God, they stretch out into blessed length. Life
+is long enough if it manifests that God takes care of us, and if we learn
+that He does. Life is long enough if it serves to build up a God-pleasing
+character.
+
+It is beautiful to see how the thought of God enters into the dying
+man's remembrances in the shape which was natural to him, regard
+being had to his own daily avocations. For the word translated 'fed'
+means much more than supplied with nourishment. It is the word for
+doing the office of shepherd, and we must not forget, if we want to
+understand its beauty, that Jacob's sons said, 'Thy servants are
+shepherds; both we and also our fathers.' So this man, in the
+solitude of his pastoral life, and whilst living amongst his woolly
+people who depended upon his guidance and care, had learned many a
+lesson as to how graciously and tenderly and constantly fed, and
+led, and protected, and fostered by God were the creatures of His
+hand.
+
+It was he, I suppose, who first gave to religious thought that
+metaphor which has survived temple and sacrifice and priesthood, and
+will survive even earth itself; for 'I am the Good Shepherd' is as
+true to-day as when first spoken by Jesus, and 'the Lamb which is in
+the midst of the throne shall lead them,' and be their Shepherd when
+the flock is carried to the upper pastures and the springs that
+never fail. The life which has brought us that thought of a
+Shepherd-God has been long enough; and the days which have been so
+expanded as to contain a continuous series of His benefits and
+protections need never be remembered as 'few,' whatsoever be the
+arithmetic that is applied to them.
+
+The other contradiction is equally eloquent and significant. 'Few
+and evil' have my days been, said Jacob, when he was not thinking
+about God; but when he remembered the Angel of the Presence, that
+mysterious person with whom he had wrestled at Peniel, and whose
+finger had lamed the thigh while His lips proclaimed a blessing, his
+view changed, and instead of talking about 'evil' days, he says,
+'The Angel that redeemed me from all evil.' Yes, his life had been
+evil, whether by that we mean sorrowful or sinful, and the sorrows
+and the sins had been closely connected. A sorely tried man he had
+been. Far away back in the past had been his banishment from home;
+his disappointment and hard service with the churlish Laban; the
+misbehaviour of his sons; the death of Rachel--that wound which was
+never stanched; and then the twenty years' mourning for Rachel's
+son, the heir of his inheritance. These were the evils, the sins
+were as many, for every one of the sorrows, except perhaps the
+chiefest of them all, had its root in some piece of duplicity,
+dishonesty, or failure. But he was there in Egypt beside Joseph. The
+evils had stormed over him, but he was there still. And so at the
+end he says, 'The Angel ... redeemed me from evil, though it smote
+me. Sorrow became chastisement, and I was purged of my sin by my
+calamities.' The sorrows are past, like some raging inundation that
+comes up for a night over the land and then subsides; but the
+blessing of fertility which it brought in its tawny waves abides
+with me yet. Joseph is by my side. 'I had not thought to see thy
+face, and God hath showed me the face of thy seed.' That sorrow is
+over. Rachel's grave is still by the wayside, and that sorest of
+sorrows has wrought with others to purify character. Jacob has been
+tried by sorrows; he has been purged from sins. 'The Angel delivered
+me from all evil.' So, dear friends, sorrow is not evil if it helps
+to strip us from the evil that we love, and the ills that we bear
+are good if they alienate our affections from the ills that we do.
+
+2. Secondly, note the wisdom and the duty of taking the completer
+and brighter view.
+
+These first words of Jacob's are very often quoted as if they were
+the pattern of the kind of thing people ought to say, 'Few and evil
+have been the days of the years of my pilgrimage.' That is a text
+from which many sermons have been preached with approbation of the
+pious resignation expressed in it. But it does not seem to me that
+that is the tone of them. If the man believed what he said, then he
+was very ungrateful and short-sighted, though there were excuses to
+be made for him under the circumstances. If the days had been evil,
+he had made them so.
+
+But the point which I wish to make now is that it is largely a
+matter for our own selection which of the two views of our lives we
+take. We may make our choice whether we shall fix our attention on
+the brighter or on the darker constituents of our past.
+
+Suppose a wall papered with paper of two colours, one black, say,
+and the other gold. You can work your eye and adjust the focus of
+vision so that you may see either a black background or a gold one.
+In the one case the prevailing tone is gloomy, relieved by an
+occasional touch of brightness; and in the other it is brightness,
+heightened by a background of darkness. And so you can do with life,
+fixing attention on its sorrows, and hugging yourselves in the
+contemplation of these with a kind of morbid satisfaction, or
+bravely and thankfully and submissively and wisely resolving that
+you will rather seek to learn what God means by darkness, and not
+forgetting to look at the unenigmatical blessings, and plain,
+obvious mercies, that make up so much of our lives. We have to
+govern memory as well as other faculties, by Christian principle. We
+have to apply the plain teaching of Christian truth to our
+sentimental, and often unwholesome, contemplations of the past.
+There is enough in all our lives to make material for plenty of
+whining and complaining, if we choose to take hold of them by that
+handle. And there is enough in all our lives to make us ashamed of
+one murmuring word, if we are devout and wise and believing enough
+to lay hold of them by that one. Remember that you can make your
+view of your life either a bright one or a dark one, and there will
+be facts for both; but the facts that feed melancholy are partial
+and superficial, and the facts that exhort, 'Rejoice in the Lord
+alway; and again I say, Rejoice,' are deep and fundamental.
+
+3. So, lastly, note how blessed a thing it is when the last look is
+the happiest.
+
+When we are amongst the mountains, or when we are very near them,
+they look barren enough, rough, stony, steep. When we travel away
+from them, and look at them across the plain, they lie blue in the
+distance; and the violet shadows and the golden lights upon them and
+the white peaks above make a dream of beauty. Whilst we are in the
+midst of the struggle, we are often tempted to think that things go
+hardly with us and that the road is very rough. But if we keep near
+our dear Lord, and hold by His hand, and try to shape our lives in
+accordance with His will--whatever be their outward circumstances
+and texture--then we may be very sure of this, that when the end
+comes, and we are far enough away from some of the sorrows to see
+what they lead to and blossom into, then we shall be able to say, It
+was all very good, and to thank Him for all the way by which the
+Lord our God has led us.
+
+In the same conversation in which the patriarch, rising to the
+height of a prophet and organ of divine revelation, gives this his
+dying testimony of the faithfulness of God, and declares that he has
+been delivered from all evil, he recurs to the central sorrow of his
+life; and speaks, though in calm words, of that day when he buried
+Rachel by 'Ephrath, which is Bethel.' But the pain had passed and
+the good was present to him. And so, leaving life, he left it
+according to his own word, 'satisfied with favour, and full of the
+blessing of the Lord.' So we in our turns may, at the last, hope
+that what we know not now will largely be explained; and may seek to
+anticipate our dying verdict by a living confidence, in the midst of
+our toils and our sorrows, that 'all things work together for good
+to them that love God.'
+
+
+
+
+'THE HANDS OF THE MIGHTY GOD OF JACOB'
+
+
+ The archers shot at him, but his bow abode in strength,
+ and the arms of his hands were made strong by the hands
+ of the mighty God of Jacob.'
+ GENESIS xlix. 23, 24.
+
+These picturesque words are part of what purports to be one of the
+oldest pieces of poetry in the Bible--the dying Jacob's prophetic
+blessing on his sons. Of these sons there are two over whom his
+heart seems especially to pour itself--Judah the ancestor of the
+royal tribe, and Joseph. The future fortunes of their descendants
+are painted in most glowing colours. And of these two, the blessing
+on the 'son who was dead and is alive again, who was lost and is
+found' is the fuller of tender desire and glad prediction. The words
+of our text are probably to be taken as prophecy, not as history--as
+referring to the future conflicts and victories of the tribe, not to
+the past trials and triumphs of its father. But be that as it may,
+they contain, in most vivid metaphor, the earliest utterance of a
+very familiar truth. They are the first hint of that thought which
+is caught up and expanded in many a later saying of psalmist, and
+prophet, and apostle. We hear their echoes in the great song
+ascribed to David 'in the day that the Lord delivered him from the
+hand of all his enemies, and from the hand of Saul': 'He teacheth my
+hands to war, so that a bow of steel is broken by mine arms'; and
+the idea receives its fullest carrying out and noblest setting
+forth, in the trumpet-call of the apostle, who had seen more
+formidable weapons and a more terrible military discipline in Rome's
+legions than Jacob knew, and who pressed them into his stimulating
+call: 'Be strong in the Lord, and in the power of His might.' 'Put
+on the whole armour of God.' Strength for conflict by contact with
+the strength of God is the common thought of all these passages--a
+very familiar thought, which may perhaps be freshened for us by the
+singular intensity with which this metaphor of our text presents it.
+Look at the picture.--Here stands the solitary man, ringed all round
+by enemies full of bitter hate. Their arrows are on the string,
+their bows drawn to the ear. The shafts fly thick, and when they
+have whizzed past him, and he can be seen again, he stands unharmed,
+grasping his unbroken bow. The assault has shivered no weapon, has
+given no wound. He has been able to stand in the evil day--and look!
+a pair of great, gentle, strong hands are laid upon his hands and
+arms, and strength passes into his feebleness from the touch of 'the
+hands of the mighty God of Jacob.' So the enemy have two, not one,
+to reckon with. By the side of the hunted man stands a mighty
+figure, and it is His strength, not the mortal's impotence, that has
+to be overcome. Some dream of such divine help in the struggle of
+battle has floated through the minds, and been enshrined in the
+legends, of many people, as when the panoplied Athene has been
+descried leading the Grecian armies, or, through the dust of
+conflict, the gleaming armour and white horses of the Twin Brethren
+were seen far in advance of the armies of Rome. But the dream is for
+us a reality. It _is_ true that we go not to warfare at our own
+charges, nor by our own strength. If we love Him and try to make a
+brave stand against our own evil, and to strike a manful blow for
+God in this world, we shall not have to bear the brunt alone.
+Remember he who fights for God never fights without God.
+
+There is a strange story in a later book of Scripture, which almost
+reads as if it had been modelled on some reminiscence of these words
+of the dying Jacob--and is, at any rate, a remarkable illustration
+of them. The kingdom of Israel, of which the descendants of Joseph
+were the most conspicuous part, was in the very crisis and agony of
+one of its Syrian wars. Its principal human helper was 'fallen sick
+of the sickness whereof he died.' And to his death-bed came, in a
+passion of perplexity and despair, the irresolute weakling who was
+then king, bewailing the impending withdrawal of the nation's best
+defence. The dying Elisha, with curt authority, pays no heed to the
+tears of Joash, but bids him take bow and arrows. 'And he said to
+the king of Israel, Put thine hand upon the bow,' and he put his
+hand upon it; and '_Elisha put his hands upon the king's
+hands_.' Then, when the thin, wasted, transparent fingers of the
+old man were thus laid, guiding and infusing strength, by a strange
+paradox, into the brown, muscular hands of the young king, he tells
+him to open the casement that looked eastward towards the lands of
+the enemy, and, as the blinding sunshine and the warm air streamed
+into the sick-chamber, he bids him draw the bow. He was obeyed, and,
+as the arrow whizzed Jordanwards, the dying prophet followed its
+flight with words brief and rapid like it, 'the arrow of the Lord's
+deliverance.' Here we have all the elements of our text singularly
+repeated--the dying seer, the king the representative of Joseph in
+the royal dignity to which his descendants have come, the arrows and
+the bow, the strength for conflict by the touch of hands that had
+the strength of God in them. The lesson of that paradox that the
+dying gave strength to the living, the feeble to the strong, was the
+old one which is ever new, that mere human power is weakness when it
+is strongest, and that power drawn from God is omnipotent when it
+seems weakest. And the further lesson is the lesson of our text,
+that our hands are then strengthened, when His hands are laid upon
+them, of whom it is written: 'Thou hast a mighty arm: strong is Thy
+hand, and high is Thy right hand.
+
+As a father in old days might have taken his little boy out to the
+butts, and put a bow into his hand, and given him his first lesson
+in archery, directing his unsteady aim by his own firmer finger, and
+lending the strength of his wrist to his child's feebler pull, so
+God does with us. The sure, strong hand is laid on ours, and is
+'profitable to direct.' A wisdom not our own is ever at our side,
+and ready for our service. We but dimly perceive the conditions of
+the conflict, and the mark at which we should aim is ever apt to be
+obscured to our perceptions. But in all cases where conscience is
+perplexed, or where the judgment is at fault, we may, if we will,
+have Him for our teacher. And when we know not where to strike the
+foes that seem invulnerable, like the warrior who was dipped in the
+magic stream, or clothed in mail impenetrable as rhinoceros' hide,
+He will make us wise to know the one spot where a wound is fatal. We
+shall not need to fight as he that beats the air; to strike at
+random; or to draw our bow at a venture, if we will let Him guide
+us.
+
+Or if ever the work be seen clearly enough, but our poor hands
+cannot take aim for very trembling, or shoot for fear of striking
+something very dear to us, He will steady our nerves and make our
+aim sure and true. We have often, in our fight with ourselves, and
+in our struggle to get God's will done in the world, to face as
+cruel a perplexity as the father who had to split the apple on his
+son's head. The evil against which we have to contend is often so
+closely connected with things very precious to us, that it is hard
+to smite the one when there is such danger of grazing the other.
+Many a time our tastes, our likings, our prejudices, our hopes, our
+loves, make our sight dim, and our pulses too tumultuous to allow of
+a good, long, steady gaze and a certain aim. It is hard to keep the
+arrow's point firm when the heart throbs and the hand shakes. But in
+all such difficult times He is ready to help us. 'Behold, we know
+not what to do, but our eyes are upon Thee,' is a prayer never
+offered in vain.
+
+The word that is here rendered 'made strong,' might be translated
+'made pliable,' or 'flexible' conveying the notion of deftness and
+dexterity rather than that of simple strength. It is practised
+strength that He will give, the educated hand and arm, masters of
+the manipulation of the weapon. The stiffness and clumsiness of our
+handling, the obstinate rigidity as well as the throbbing feebleness
+of our arms, the dimness of our sight, may all be overcome. At His
+touch the raw recruit is as the disciplined veteran; the prophet who
+cannot speak because he is a child, gifted with a mouth and wisdom
+which all the adversaries shall not be able to gainsay nor to
+resist. Do not be disheartened by your inexperience, or by your
+ignorance; but as the prophet said to the young king, Take the bow
+and shoot. God's strong hand will hold yours, and the arrow will fly
+true.
+
+That strong hand is laid on ours, and lends its weight to our feeble
+pull. The bow is often too heavy for us to bend, but we do not need
+to strain our strength in the vain attempt to do it alone. Tasks
+seem too much for us. The pressure of our daily work overwhelms us.
+The burden of our daily anxieties and sorrows is too much. Some huge
+obstacle starts up in our path. Some great sacrifice for truth,
+honour, duty, which we feel we cannot make, is demanded of us. Some
+daring defiance of some evil, which has caught us in its toils, or
+which it is unfashionable to fight against, seems laid upon us. We
+cannot rise to the height of the occasion, or bring ourselves to the
+wrench that is required. Or the wearing recurrence of monotonous
+duties seems to take ail freshness out of our lives, and all spring
+out of ourselves; and we are ready to give over struggling any more,
+and let ourselves drift. Can we not feel that large hand laid on
+ours; and does not power, more and other than our own, creep into
+our numb and relaxed fingers? Yes, if we will let Him. His strength
+is made perfect in our weakness; and every man and woman who will
+make life a noble struggle against evil, vanity, or sin, may be very
+sure that God will direct and strengthen their hands to war, and
+their fingers to fight.
+
+But the remarkable metaphor of the text not only gives the fact of
+divine strength being bestowed, but also the _manner_ of the
+gift. What a boldness of reverent familiarity there is in that
+symbol of the hands of God laid on the hands of the man! How
+strongly it puts the contact between us and Him as the condition of
+our reception of power from Him! A true touch, as of hand to hand,
+conveys the grace. It is as when the prophet laid himself down with
+his warm lip on the dead boy's cold mouth, and his heart beating
+against the still heart of the corpse, till the life passed into the
+clay, and the lad lived. So, if we may say it, our Quickener bends
+Himself over all our deadness, and by His own warmth reanimates us.
+
+Perhaps this same thought is one of the lessons which we are meant
+to learn from the frequency with which our Lord wrought His miracles
+of healing by the touch of His hand. 'Come and lay Thy hand on him,
+and he shall live.' 'And He put forth His hand and touched him, and
+said, I will, be thou clean.' 'Many said, He is dead; but Jesus took
+him by the hand and lifted him up, and he arose.' The touch of His
+hand is healing and life. The touch of our hands is faith. In the
+mystery of His incarnation, in the flow of His sympathy, in the
+forth-putting of His power, He lays hold not on angels, but He lays
+hold on the seed of Abraham. By our lowly trust, by the forth-
+putting of our desires, we stretch 'lame hands of faith,' and,
+blessed be God! we do not 'grope,' but we grasp His strong hand and
+are held up.
+
+The contact of our spirits with His Spirit is a contact far more
+real than the touch of earthly hands that grasp each other closest.
+There is ever some film of atmosphere between the palms. But 'he
+that is joined to the Lord is one spirit,' and he that clasps
+Christ's outstretched hand of help with his outstretched hand of
+weakness, holds Him with a closeness to which all unions of earth
+are gaping gulfs of separation. You remember how Mary cast herself
+at Christ's feet on the resurrection morning, and would have flung
+her arms round them in the passion of her joy. The calm word which
+checked her has a wonderful promise in it. 'Touch me not, for I am
+not yet ascended to my Father'; plainly leading to the inference,
+'When I am ascended, then you may touch Me.' And that touch will be
+more reverent, more close, more blessed, than any clasping of His
+feet, even with such loving hands, and is possible for us all for
+evermore.
+
+Nothing but such contact will give us strength for conflict and for
+conquest. And the plain lesson therefore is--see to it, that the
+contact is not broken by you. Put away the metaphor, and the simple
+English of the advice is just this:--First, live in the desire and
+the confidence of His help in all your need, of His strength as all
+your power. As a part of that confidence--its reverse and under
+side, so to speak--cherish the profound sense of your own weakness.
+
+ 'In our own strength we nothing can;
+ Full soon were we down-ridden'--
+
+as Luther has taught us to sing. Let there be a constant renewal, in
+the midst of your duties and trials, of that conscious dependence
+and feeling of insufficiency. Stretch out the empty hands to Him in
+that desire and hope, which, spoken or silent, is prayer. Keep the
+communications open, by which His strength flows into your souls.
+Let them not be choked with self-confidence, with vanities, with the
+rubbish of your own nature, or of the world. Do not twitch away your
+hands from under the strong hands that are laid so gently upon them.
+But let Him cover, direct, cherish, and strengthen your poor fingers
+till they are strong and nimble for all your work and warfare. If
+you go into the fight trusting to your own wit and wisdom, to the
+vigour of your own arm, or the courage of your own heart, that very
+foolhardy confidence is itself defeat, for it is sin as well as
+folly, and nothing can come of it but utter collapse and disaster.
+But if you will only go to your daily fight with yourself and the
+world, with your hand grasping God's hand, you will be able to
+'withstand in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.' The
+enemies may compass you about like bees, but in the name of the Lord
+you can destroy them. Their arrows may fly thick enough to darken
+the sun, but, as the proud old boast has it, 'then we can fight in
+the shade'; and when their harmless points have buried themselves in
+the ground, you will stand unhurt, your unshivered bow ready for the
+next assault, and your hands made strong by the hands of the mighty
+God of Jacob. 'In all these things we are more than conquerors,
+through Him that loved us.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL
+
+
+ '... The mighty God of Jacob. From thence is the Shepherd,
+ the stone of Israel.'--GENESIS xlix. 24.
+
+A slight alteration in the rendering will probably bring out the
+meaning of these words more correctly. The last two clauses should
+perhaps not be read as a separate sentence. Striking out the
+supplement 'is,' and letting the previous sentence run on to the end
+of the verse, we get a series of names of God, in apposition with
+each other, as the sources of the strength promised to the arms of
+the hands of the warlike sons of Joseph. From the hands of the
+mighty God of Jacob--from thence, from the Shepherd, the stone of
+Israel--the power will come for conflict and for conquest. This
+exuberant heaping together of names of God is the mark of the flash
+of rapturous confidence which lit up the dying man's thoughts when
+they turned to God. When he begins to think of Him he cannot stay
+his tongue. So many aspects of His character, so many remembrances
+of His deeds, come crowding into his mind; so familiar and so dear
+are they, that he must linger over the words, and strive by this
+triple repetition to express the manifold preciousness of Him whom
+no name, nor crowd of names, can rightly praise. So earthly love
+ever does with its earthly objects, inventing and reiterating
+epithets which are caresses. Such repetitions are not tautologies,
+for each utters some new aspect of the one subject, and comes from a
+new gush of heart's love towards it. And something of the same
+rapture and unwearied recurrence to the Name that is above every
+name should mark the communion of devout souls with their heavenly
+Love. What a wonderful burst of such praise flowed out from David's
+thankful heart, in his day of deliverance, like some strong current,
+with its sevenfold wave, each crested with the Name--'The Lord is my
+rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my strength, in
+whom I will trust; my buckler, and the horn of my salvation, and my
+high tower.'
+
+Those three names which we find here are striking and beautiful in
+themselves; in their juxtaposition; in their use on Jacob's lips.
+They seem to have been all coined by him, for, if we accept this
+song as a true prophecy uttered by him, we have here the earliest
+instance of their occurrence. They all have a history, and appear
+again expanded and deepened in the subsequent revelation. Let us
+look at them as they stand.
+
+1. _The Mighty God of Jacob_.--The meaning of such a name is
+clear enough. It is He who has shown Himself mighty and mine by His
+deeds for me all through my life. The dying man's thoughts are busy
+with all that past from the day when he went forth from the tent of
+Isaac, and took of the stones of the field for his pillow when the
+sun went down. A perplexed history it had been, with many a bitter
+sorrow, and many a yet bitterer sin. Passionate grief and despairing
+murmurs he had felt and flung out, while it slowly unfolded itself.
+When the Pharaoh had asked, 'How old art thou?' he had answered in
+words which owe their sombreness partly to obsequious assumption of
+insignificance in such a presence, but have a strong tinge of
+genuine sadness in them too: 'Few and evil have the days of the
+years of my life been.' But lying dying there, with it all well
+behind him, he has become wiser; and now it all looks to him as one
+long showing forth of the might of his God, who had been with him
+all his life long, and had redeemed him from all evil. He has got
+far enough away to see the lie of the land, as he could not do while
+he was toiling along the road. The barren rocks and white snow glow
+with purple as the setting sun touches them. The struggles with
+Laban; the fear of Esau; the weary work of toilsome years; the sad
+day when Rachel died, and left to him the 'son of her sorrow'; the
+heart sickness of the long years of Joseph's loss--all have faded
+away, or been changed into thankful wonder at God's guidance. The
+one thought which the dying man carries out of life with him is: God
+has shown Himself mighty, and He has shown Himself mine.
+
+For each of us, our own experience should be a revelation of God.
+The things about Him which we read in the Bible are never living and
+real to us till we have verified them in the facts of our own
+history. Many a word lies on the page, or in our memories, fully
+believed and utterly shadowy, until in some soul's conflict we have
+had to grasp it, and found it true. Only so much of our creed as we
+have proved in life is really ours. If we will only open our eyes
+and reflect upon our history as it passes before us, we shall find
+every corner of it filled with the manifestations to our hearts and
+to our minds of a present God. But our folly, our stupidity, our
+impatience, our absorption with the mere outsides of things, our
+self-will, blind us to the Angel with the drawn sword who resists
+us, as well as to the Angel with the lily who would lead us. So we
+waste our days; are deaf to His voice speaking through all the
+clatter of tongues, and blind to His bright presence shining through
+all the dimness of earth; and, for far too many of us, we never can
+see God in the present, but only discern Him when He has passed by,
+like Moses from his cleft. Like this same Jacob, we have to say:
+'Surely God was in this place, and I knew it not.' Hence we miss the
+educational worth of our lives, are tortured with needless cares,
+are beaten by the poorest adversaries, and grope amidst what seems
+to us a chaos of pathless perplexities, when we might be marching on
+assured and strong, with God for our guide, and the hands of the
+Mighty One of Jacob for our defence.
+
+Notice, too, how distinctly the thought comes out in this name--that
+the very vital centre of a man's religion is his conviction that God
+is his. Jacob will not be content with thinking of God as the God of
+his fathers; he will not even be content with associating himself
+with them in the common possession; but he must feel the full force
+of the intensely personal bond that knits him to God, and God to
+him. Of course such a feeling does not ignore the blessed fellowship
+and family who also are held in this bond. The God of Jacob is to
+the patriarch also the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob.
+But that comes second, and this comes first. Each man for himself
+must put forth the hand of his own faith, and grasp that great hand
+for his own guide. '_My_ Lord and _my_ God' is the true form of the
+confession. 'He loved _me_ and gave Himself for _me_,' is the shape in
+which the Gospel of Christ melts the soul. God is mine because His
+love individualises me, and I have a distinct place in His heart, His
+purposes, and His deeds. God is mine, because by my own individual
+act--the most personal which I can perform--I cast myself on Him, by
+my faith appropriate the common salvation, and open my being to the
+inflow of His power. God is mine, and I am His, in that wonderful
+mutual possession, with perpetual interchange of giving and receiving
+not only gifts but selves, which makes the very life of love, whether
+it be love on earth or love in heaven.
+
+Remember, too, the profound use which our Lord made of this name,
+wherein Jacob claims to possess God. Because Moses at the bush
+called God, the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob, they
+cannot have ceased to be. The personal relations, which subsist
+between God and the soul that clasps Him for its own, demand an
+immortal life for their adequate expression, and make it impossible
+that Death's skeleton fingers should have power to untie such a
+bond. Anything is conceivable, rather than that the soul which can
+say 'God is mine' should perish. And that continued existence
+demands, too, a state of being which shall correspond to itself, in
+which its powers shall all be exercised, its desires fulfilled, its
+possibilities made facts. Therefore there must be the resurrection.
+'God is not ashamed to be called their God, for He hath prepared for
+them a city.'
+
+The dying patriarch left to his descendants the legacy of this great
+name, and often, in later times, it was used to quicken faith by the
+remembrance of the great deeds of God in the past. One instance may
+serve as a sample of the whole. 'The Lord of Hosts is with us, the
+God of Jacob is our refuge.' The first of these two names lays the
+foundation of our confidence in the thought of the boundless power
+of Him whom all the forces of the universe, personal and impersonal,
+angels and stars, in their marshalled order, obey and serve. The
+second bids later generations claim as theirs all that the old
+history reveals as having belonged to the 'world's grey fathers.'
+They had no special prerogative of nearness or of possession. The
+arm that guided them is unwearied, and all the past is true still,
+and will for evermore be true for all who love God. So the venerable
+name is full of promise and of hope for us: 'The God of Jacob is our
+refuge.'
+
+2. _The Shepherd_.--How that name sums up the lessons that
+Jacob had learned from the work of himself and of his sons! 'Thy
+servants are shepherds' they said to Pharaoh; 'both we, and also our
+sons.' For fourteen long, weary years he had toiled at that task.
+'In the day the drought consumed me, and the frost by night; and my
+sleep departed from mine eyes,' and his own sleepless vigilance and
+patient endurance seem to him to be but shadows of the loving care,
+the watchful protection, the strong defence, which 'the God, who has
+been my Shepherd all my life long,' had extended to him and his.
+Long before the shepherd king, who had been taken from the
+sheepcotes to rule over Israel, sang his immortal psalm, the same
+occupation had suggested the same thought to the shepherd patriarch.
+Happy they whose daily work may picture for them some aspect of
+God's care--or rather, happy they whose eyes are open to see the dim
+likeness of God's care which every man's earthly relations, and some
+part of his work, most certainly present.
+
+There can be no need to draw out at length the thoughts which that
+sweet and familiar emblem has conveyed to so many generations.
+Loving care, wise guidance, fitting food, are promised by it; and
+docile submission, close following at the Shepherd's heels,
+patience, innocence, meekness, trust, are required. But I may put
+emphasis for a moment on the connection between the thought of 'the
+mighty God of Jacob' and that of 'the Shepherd.' The occupation, as
+we see it, does not call for a strong arm, or much courage, except
+now and then to wade through snowdrifts, and dig out the buried and
+half-dead creatures. But the shepherds whom Jacob knew, had to be
+hardy, bold fighters. There were marauders lurking ready to sweep
+away a weakly guarded flock. There were wild beasts in the gorges of
+the hills. There was danger in the sun by day on these burning
+plains, and in the night the wolves prowled round the flock. We
+remember how David's earliest exploits were against the lion and the
+bear, and how he felt that even his duel with the Philistine bully
+was not more formidable than these had been. If we will read into
+our English notions of a shepherd this element of danger and of
+daring, we shall feel that these two clauses are not to be taken as
+giving the contrasted ideas of strength and gentleness, but the
+connected ones of strength, and therefore protection and security.
+We have the same connection in later echoes of this name. 'Behold,
+the Lord God shall come with _strong_ hand; He shall feed His
+flock like a shepherd.' And our Lord's use of the figure brings into
+all but exclusive prominence the good shepherd's conflict with the
+ravening wolves--a conflict in which he must not hesitate even 'to
+lay down his life for the sheep.' As long as the flock are here,
+amidst dangers and foes, and wild weather, the arm that guides must
+be an arm that can guard; and none less mighty than the Mighty One
+of Jacob can be the Shepherd of men. But a higher fulfilment yet
+awaits this venerable emblem, when in other pastures, where no lion
+nor any ravening beast shall come, the 'Lamb, which is in the midst
+of the throne,' and is Shepherd as well as Lamb, 'shall feed them,
+and lead them by living fountains of waters.'
+
+3. _The Stone of Israel_.--Here, again, we have a name, that
+after-ages have caught up and cherished, used for the first time. I
+suppose the Stone of Israel means much the same thing as the Rock.
+If so, that symbol, too, which is full of such large meanings, was
+coined by Jacob. It is, perhaps, not fanciful to suppose that it
+owes its origin to the scenery of Palestine. The wild cliffs of the
+eastern region where Peniel lay, or the savage fastnesses in the
+southern wilderness, a day's march from Hebron, where he lived so
+long, came back to his memory amid the flat, clay land of Egypt; and
+their towering height, their immovable firmness, their cool shade,
+their safe shelter, spoke to him of the unalterable might and
+impregnable defence which he had found in God. So there is in this
+name the same devout, reflective laying-hold upon experience which
+we have observed in the preceding.
+
+There is also the same individualising grasp of God as his very own;
+for 'Israel' here is, of course, to be taken not as the name of the
+nation but as his own name, and the intention of the phrase is
+evidently to express what God had been to him personally.
+
+The general idea of this symbol is perhaps firmness, solidity. And
+that general idea may be followed out in various details. God is a
+rock for a foundation. Build your lives, your thoughts, your
+efforts, your hopes there. The house founded on the rock will stand
+though wind and rain from above smite it, and floods from beneath
+beat on it like battering rams. God is a rock for a fortress. Flee
+to Him to hide, and your defence shall be the 'munitions of rocks,'
+which shall laugh to scorn all assault, and never be stormed by any
+foe. God is a rock for shade and refreshment. Come close to Him from
+out of the scorching heat, and you will find coolness and verdure
+and moisture in the clefts, when all outside that grateful shadow is
+parched and dry.
+
+The word of the dying Jacob was caught up by the great law-giver in
+his dying song. 'Ascribe ye greatness to our God. He is the Rock.'
+It reappears in the last words of the shepherd king, whose grand
+prophetic picture of the true King is heralded by 'The Book of
+Israel spake to me.' It is heard once more from the lips of the
+greatest of the prophets in his glowing prophecy of the song of the
+final days: 'Trust ye in the Lord for ever; for in the Lord Jehovah
+is the Rock of Ages,' as well as in his solemn prophecy of the Stone
+which God would lay in Zion. We hear it again from the lips that
+cannot lie: 'Did ye never read in the Scriptures, The Stone which
+the builders rejected, the same is become the headstone of the
+corner?' And for the last time the venerable metaphor which has
+cheered so many ages appears in the words of that Apostle who was
+'surnamed Cephas, which is by interpretation a stone': 'To whom
+coming as unto a living Stone, yea also as living stones are built
+up.' As on some rocky site in Palestine, where a hundred generations
+in succession have made their fortresses, one may see stones with
+the bevel that tells of early Jewish masonry, and above them Roman
+work, and higher still masonry of crusading times, and above it the
+building of to-day; so we, each age in our turn, build on this great
+rock foundation, dwell safe there for our little lives, and are laid
+to peaceful rest in a sepulchre in the rock. On Christ we may build.
+In Him we may dwell and rest secure. We may die in Jesus, and be
+gathered to our own people, who, having died, live in Him. And
+though so many generations have reared their dwellings on that great
+rock, there is ample room for us too to build. We have not to
+content ourselves with an uncertain foundation among the shifting
+rubbish of perished dwellings, but can get down to the firm virgin
+rock for ourselves. None that ever builded there have been
+confounded. We clasp hands with all who have gone before us. At one
+end of the long chain this dim figure of the dying Jacob, amid the
+strange vanished life of Egypt, stretches out his withered hands to
+God the Stone of Israel; at the other end, we lift up ours to Jesus,
+and cry:--
+
+ 'Rock of Ages! cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee.'
+
+The faith is one. One will be the answer and the reward. May it be
+yours and mine!
+
+
+
+
+A CALM EVENING, PROMISING A BRIGHT MORNING
+
+
+ 'And Joseph returned into Egypt, he, and his brethren,
+ and all that went up with him to bury his father, after
+ he had buried his father. And when Joseph's brethren
+ saw that their father was dead, they said, Joseph will
+ peradventure hate us, and will certainly requite us all
+ the evil which we did unto him. And they sent a messenger
+ unto Joseph, saying, Thy father did command before he
+ died, saying, So shall ye say unto Joseph, Forgive, I
+ pray thee now, the trespass of thy brethren, and their
+ sin; for they did unto thee evil: and now, we pray thee,
+ forgive the trespass of the servants of the God of thy
+ father. And Joseph wept when they spake unto him. And
+ his brethren also went and fell down before his face;
+ and they said, Behold, we be thy servants. And Joseph
+ said unto them, Fear not: for am I in the place of God?
+ But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God
+ meant it unto good, to bring to pass, as it is this day,
+ to save much people alive Now therefore fear ye not: I
+ will nourish you, and your little ones. And he comforted
+ them, and spake kindly unto them. And Joseph dwelt in
+ Egypt, he, and his father's house: and Joseph lived an
+ hundred and ten years. And Joseph saw Ephraim's children
+ of the third generation: the children also of Machir the
+ son of Manasseh were brought up upon Joseph's knees. And
+ Joseph said unto his brethren, I die: and God will surely
+ visit you, and bring you out of this land unto the land
+ which he sware to Abraham, to Isaac, and to Jacob. And
+ Joseph took an oath of the children of Israel, saying,
+ God will surely visit you, and ye shall carry up my bones
+ from hence. So Joseph died, being an hundred and ten
+ years old: and they embalmed him, and he was put in a
+ coffin in Egypt.'--GENESIS l. 14-26.
+
+Joseph's brothers were right in thinking that he loved Jacob better
+than he did them; and they knew only too well that he had reasons
+for doing so. But their fear that Jacob's death would be followed by
+an outbreak of long-smothered revenge betrayed but too clearly their
+own base natures. They thought him like themselves, and they knew
+themselves capable of nursing wrath to keep it warm through long
+years of apparent kindliness. They had no room in their hearts for
+frank, full forgiveness. So they had lived on through numberless
+signs of their brother's love and care, and still kept the old
+dread, and, probably, not a little of the old envy. How much
+happiness they had lost by their slowness to believe in Joseph's
+love!
+
+Is there nothing like this in our thoughts of God? Do men not live
+for years on His bounty, and all the while cherish suspicions of His
+heart? 'Thou thoughtest that I was altogether such an one as
+thyself.' It is hard to believe in a love which has no faintest
+trace of desire for vengeance for all past slights. It is hard for
+hearts conscious of their own slowness to pardon, to realise
+undoubtingly God's infinite placability.
+
+The brothers' procedure is marked by unwarrantable lack of trust in
+Joseph. Why did they not go to him at once, and appeal to his
+brotherly affection? Their roundabout way of going to work by
+sending a messenger was an insult to their brother, though it may
+have been meant as honour to the viceroy. The craft which was their
+father's by nature seems to have been amply transmitted. The story
+of Jacob's dying wish looks very apocryphal. If he had been afraid
+of Joseph's behaviour when he was gone, he was much more likely to
+have spoken to Joseph about it before he went, than to have left the
+gun loaded and bid them fire it after his death. Jacob knew his son
+better, and trusted him more than his brothers did.
+
+We note, too, the ingenious way of slipping in motives for
+forgiving, first in putting the mention of their relationship into
+Jacob's mouth, and then claiming to be worshippers of 'thy (not our)
+father's God.' They had proved how truly they were both, when they
+sold him to the Midianites!
+
+Joseph's tears were a good answer. No doubt they were partly drawn
+out by the shock of finding that he had been so misunderstood, but
+they were omens of his pardon. So, when they were reported to the
+brothers, they came themselves, and fulfilled the old dream by
+falling down before him in abjectness. They do not call themselves
+his brethren, but his slaves, as if grovelling was the way to win
+love or to show it. A little affection would have gone farther than
+much submission. If their attitude truly expressed their feelings,
+their hearts were as untouched by Joseph's years of magnanimous
+kindness as a rock by falling rain. If it was a theatrical display
+of feigned subjection, it was still worse. Our Brother, against whom
+we have sinned, wants love, not cowering; and if we believe in His
+forgiveness, we shall give Him the hearts which He desires, and
+after that shall render the unconditional submission which only
+trust and love can yield.
+
+Joseph's answer is but the reiteration of his words at his first
+making himself known. He soothes unworthy fears, says not a word of
+reproach for their misunderstanding of him, waives all pretension to
+deal out that retribution which God alone sends, and shows that he
+has lost all bitterness in thinking of the past, since he sees in
+it, not the working of their malice, but of God's providence, and is
+ready to thank, if not them, at any rate Him, for having, by even so
+painful a way, made him the instrument of widespread good. A man who
+sees God's hand in his past, and thinks lightly of his sorrows and
+nobly of the opportunities of service which they have brought him,
+will waste no feeling on the men who were God's tools. If we want to
+live high above low hatreds and revenges, let us cultivate the habit
+of looking behind men to God. So we shall be saved from many
+fruitless pangs over irrevocable losses and from many disturbing
+feelings about other people.
+
+The sweet little picture of the great minister's last days is very
+tenderly touched. Surrounded by his kindred, probably finding in a
+younger generation the reverence and affection which the elder had
+failed to give, he wears away the calm evening of the life which had
+opened so stormily. It 'came in like a lion, it goes out like a
+lamb.' The strong domestic instincts so characteristic of the Hebrew
+race had full gratification. Honours and power at court and kingdom
+probably continued, but these did not make the genial warmth which
+cheered the closing years. It was that he saw his children's
+children's children, and that they gathered round his knees in
+confidence, and received from him his benediction.
+
+But it is in his death that the flame shoots up most brightly at the
+last. 'By faith Joseph, when he died, made mention of the departing
+of the children of Israel; and gave commandment concerning his
+bones.' He had been an Egyptian to all appearance all his life from
+the day of his captivity, filling his place at court, marrying an
+Egyptian woman, and bearing an Egyptian name, but his dying words
+show how he had been a stranger in the midst of it all. As truly as
+his fathers who dwelt in tents, he too felt that he here had no
+continuing city. He lived by faith in God's promises, and therefore
+his heart was in the unseen future far more than in the present.
+
+He died with the ancestral assurance on his lips. Jacob, dying, had
+said to him, 'Behold, I die; but God shall be with you, and bring
+you again unto the land of your fathers' (Gen. xlviii. 21). Joseph
+hands on the hope to his descendants. It is a grand instance of
+indomitable confidence in God's word, not nonplussed, bewildered, or
+weakened, though the man who cherishes it dies without seeing even a
+beginning of fulfilment. Such a faith bridges the gulf of death as a
+very small matter. In the strength of it we may drop our unfinished
+tasks, and, needful as we may seem to wider or narrower circles, may
+be sure that God and His word live, though we die. No man is
+necessary. Israel was safe in Egypt, and sure to come out of it,
+though Joseph's powerful protection was withdrawn.
+
+His career may teach another lesson; namely, that true faith does
+not detach us from strenuous interest and toil in the present.
+Though the great hope burned in his heart, he did all his work as
+prime minister all the better because of it. It should always be so.
+Life here is not worth living if there is not another. The distance
+dignifies the foreground. The highest importance and nobleness of
+the life that now is, lie in its being preparation or apprenticeship
+for the greater future. The Egyptian vizier, with Canaan written on
+his heart, and Egypt administered by his hands, is a type of what
+every Christian should be.
+
+Possibly Joseph's 'commandment concerning his bones may have been
+somewhat influenced by the Egyptian belief which underlies their
+practice of embalming the body. He, too, may have thought that, in
+some mysterious way, he would share in the possession of the land in
+which his bones were to be laid. Or he may simply have been yielding
+to natural sentiment. It is noteworthy that Jacob desired to be laid
+beside his ancestors, and Joseph to be kept in Egypt for a time.
+Both had the same assurance as to future possession of Canaan, but
+it led to different wishes as to burial. Perhaps Joseph felt that
+his position in Egypt required that his embalmed body should for a
+while remain there. Perhaps he wished to leave with his people a
+silent witness of his own hope, and a preacher, eloquent in its
+dumbness, of the duty of their keeping alive that hope, whatever
+might come upon them.
+
+'In a coffin in Egypt'--so the book ends. It might seem that that
+mummy-case proclaimed rather the futility of the hope of restoration
+to the land, and, as centuries rolled away, and the bondage became
+heavier, no doubt many a wondering and doubting look was turned to
+it. But there it lay, perhaps neglected, for more than three hundred
+years, the visible embodiment of a hope which smiled at death and
+counted centuries as nothing. At last the day came which vindicated
+the long-deferred confidence; and, as the fugitives in their haste
+shouldered the heavy sarcophagus, and set out with it for the Land
+of Promise, surely some thrill of trust would pass through their
+ranks, and in some hearts would sound the exhortation, 'If the
+vision tarry, wait for it; because it will surely come, it will not
+tarry.'
+
+We have not a dead Joseph to bid us wait with patience and never
+lose our firm grip of God's promises, but we have a living Jesus.
+Our march to the land of rest is headed, not by the bones of a
+departed leader, but by the Forerunner, 'who is for us entered'
+whither He will bring all who trust in Him. Therefore we should
+live, as Joseph lived, with desires and trust reaching out beyond
+things seen to the land assured to us by God's promise, doing our
+day's task all the more vigorously because we do not belong to the
+order of things in the midst of which we live; and then, when we lie
+down at the end of our life's work, we shall not be saddened by
+disappointed hopes, nor reluctantly close our eyes on good to come,
+when we shall not be there to share it, but be sure that we shall
+'see the good of Thy chosen,' and 'rejoice in the gladness of Thy
+nation.'
+
+
+
+
+JOSEPH'S FAITH
+
+
+ 'Joseph took an oath of the children of Israel, saying,
+ God will surely visit you, and ye shall carry up my bones
+ from hence.'--GENESIS l. 25.
+
+This is the one act of Joseph's life which the author of the Epistle
+to the Hebrews selects as the sign that he too lived by faith. 'By
+faith Joseph, when he died, made mention of the departing of the
+children of Israel; and gave commandment concerning his bones.'
+
+It was at once a proof of how entirely he believed God's promise,
+and of how earnestly he longed for its fulfilment. It was a sign too
+of how little he felt himself at home in Egypt, though to outward
+appearance he had become completely one of its people. The ancestral
+spirit was in him true and strong though he was 'separate from his
+brethren.' He bore an Egyptian name, a swelling title, he married an
+Egyptian woman, he had an Egyptian priest for father-in-law, but he
+was an Israelite in heart; and in the midst of official cares and a
+surfeit of honours, his desires turned away from them all towards
+the land promised by God to his fathers.
+
+And when he lay dying, he could not bear to think that his bones
+should moulder in the country where his life had been spent. 'I know
+that this is not our land after all; swear to me that when the
+promise that has tarried so long comes at last, you will take me,
+all that is left of me, and carry it up, and lay it in some corner
+of the blessed soil, that I too may somehow share in the inheritance
+of His people. God shall surely visit you. Carry my bones up hence.'
+
+Perhaps there is in this wish a trace of something besides faith in
+God's promises. Of course, there is a natural sentiment which no
+clearness of knowledge of a future state wholly dispels. We all feel
+as if somehow our bodies remain a part of ourselves even after
+death, and we have wishes where they shall lie. But perhaps Joseph
+had a more definite belief on the matter than that. What theory of
+another life does an Egyptian mummy express? Why all that sedulous
+care to preserve the poor relics? Was it not a consequence of the
+belief that somehow or other there could be no life without a body,
+and that in some mysterious way the preservation of that contributed
+to the continuance of this? And so Joseph, who was himself going to
+be embalmed and put into a mummy-case, may have caught something of
+the tone of thought prevalent around him, and have believed that to
+carry his bones to the land of promise was, in some obscure manner,
+to carry _him_ thither. Be that as it may, whether the wish
+came from a mistake about the relation of flesh and spirit, or only
+from the natural desire which we too possess, that our graves may
+not be among strangers, but beside our father's and our mother's--that
+is not the main thing in this fact. The main thing is that this
+dying man believed God's promise, and claimed his share in it.
+
+And on this the writer of the Epistle to the Hebrews, whoever he
+was, fastens. Neglecting the differences in knowledge between Joseph
+and the Christians whom he addresses, and pointing back to the
+strong confidence in God and longing for participation in the
+promises which brightened the glazing eye and gave _him_ 'hope
+in his death,' he declares that the principle of action which guided
+this man in the dim twilight of early revelation, is that same faith
+which ought to guide us who live in the full light of the unsetting
+sun.
+
+Taking, then, this incident, with the New Testament commentary upon
+it, it leads us to a truth which we often lose sight of, but which
+is indispensable if we would understand the relations of the earlier
+and later days.
+
+1. _Faith is always the same, though knowledge varies._--There
+is a vast difference between a man's creed and a man's faith. The
+one may vary, does vary within very wide limits; the other remains
+the same. The things believed have been growing from the beginning--the
+attitude of mind and will by which they have been grasped has
+been the same from the beginning, and will be the same to the end.
+And not only so, but it will be substantially the same in heaven as
+it is on earth. For there is but one bond which unites men to God;
+and that emotion of loving trust is one and the same in the dim
+twilight of the world's morning, and amid the blaze of the noonday
+of heaven. The contents of faith, that on which it relies, the
+treasure it grasps, changes; the essence of faith, the act of
+reliance, the grasp which holds the treasure, does not change.
+
+It is difficult to decide how much Joseph's gospel contained. From
+our point of view it was very imperfect. The spiritual life was
+nourished in him and in the rest of 'the world's grey fathers' on
+what looks to us but like seven basketsful of fragments. They had
+promises, indeed, in which we, looking at them with the light of
+fulfilment blazing upon them, can see the broad outlines of the
+latest revelation, and can trace the future flower all folded
+together and pale in the swelling bud. But we shall err greatly if
+we suppose, as we are apt to do, that those promises were to them
+anything like what they are to us. It requires a very vigorous
+exercise of very rare gifts to throw ourselves back to their
+position, and to gain any vivid and approximately accurate notion of
+the theology of these ancient lovers of God.
+
+This, at any rate, we may, perhaps, say: they had a sure and clear
+knowledge of the living God, who had talked with them as with a
+friend; they knew His inspiring, guiding presence; they knew the
+forgiveness of sins; they knew, though they very dimly understood,
+the promise, 'In thy seed shall all the families of the earth be
+blessed.' How far they looked across the gulf of death and beheld
+anything--even cloudland--on the other side, is a question very hard
+to answer, and about which confident dogmatism, either affirmative
+or negative, is unwarranted. But it is to be remembered that,
+whether they had any notion of a future state or no, they had a
+promise which fulfilled for them substantially the same office as
+that does for us. The promise of the land of Canaan gleaming before
+them through the mists, bare and 'earthly' as it seems to us when
+compared with our hope of an inheritance incorruptible in the
+heavens, is, by the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, identified
+with that hope of ours, for he expressly says that, whilst they were
+looking for an earthly Canaan, they were 'desiring a better country,
+that is an heavenly.' So that, whether they definitely expected a
+life after death or not, the anticipation of the land promised to
+them and to their fathers held the same place in their creed, and as
+a moral agent in their lives, which the rest that remains for the
+people of God ought to do in ours.
+
+And it is to be taken into account also that fellowship with God has
+in it the germ of the assurance of immortality. It seems almost
+impossible to suppose a state of mind in which a man living in
+actual communion with God shall believe that death is to end it all.
+Christ's proof that immortal life was revealed in the Pentateuch,
+was the fact that God there called Himself the God of Abraham and of
+Isaac and of Jacob; by which our Lord meant us to learn that men who
+are brought into personal relations with God can never die, that it
+is impossible that a soul which has looked up to the face of the
+unseen Father with filial love should be left in the grave, or that
+those who are separated to be His, as He is theirs, should see
+corruption. The relation once established is eternal, and some more
+or less definite expectation of that eternity seems inseparable from
+the consciousness of the relation.
+
+But be that as it may, and even taking the widest possible view of
+the contents of the patriarchal creed, what a rude outline it looks
+beside ours! Can there be anything in common between us? Can they be
+in any way a pattern for us? Yes; as I said, faith is one thing,
+creed is another. Joseph and his ancestors were joined to God by the
+very same bond which unites us to Him. There has never been but one
+path of life: 'They _trusted_ God and were lightened, and their
+faces were not ashamed.' In that Old Covenant the one thing needful
+was trust in the living Jehovah. In the New, the one thing needful
+is the very same emotion, directed to the very same Lord, manifested
+now and incarnate in the divine Son, our Saviour. In this exercise
+of loving confidence, in which reason and will and affection blend
+in the highest energy and holiest action, Joseph and we are one.
+Across the gulf of centuries we clasp hands; and in despite of all
+superficial differences of culture and civilisation, and all deeper
+differences in knowledge of God and His loving will, Pharaoh's prime
+minister, and the English workman, and the Hindoo ryot, may be alike
+in what is deepest--the faith which grasps God. How all that
+mysterious Egyptian life fades away as we think of the fundamental
+identity of religious emotion then and now! It disguises our brother
+from us, as it did from the wandering Arabs who came to buy corn,
+and could not recognise in the swarthy, imperious Egyptian, with
+strange head-dress and unknown emblems hanging by chains of gold
+about his neck, the fair boy whom they had sold to the merchants.
+But beneath it all is the brother's heart, fed by the same life-
+blood which feeds ours. He trusts in God, he expects a future
+because God has promised it, and, therefore, he is separated from
+those among whom he dwells, and knit to us in this far-off island of
+the sea, who so many centuries after are partakers of like precious
+faith.
+
+And incomplete as his creed was, Joseph may have been a better
+Christian than some of us, and was so, if what he knew nourished his
+spiritual life more than what we know nourishes ours, and if his
+heart and will twined more tenaciously round the fragments of
+revelation which he possessed, and drew from them more support and
+strength than we do from the complete Gospel which we have.
+
+Brethren, what makes us Christians is not the theology we have in
+our heads, but the faith and love we have in our hearts. We must,
+indeed, have a clear statement of truth in orderly propositions--that
+is, a system of dogmas--to have anything to trust to at all.
+There can be no saving faith in an unseen Person, except through the
+medium of thoughts concerning Him, which thoughts put into words are
+a creed. The antithesis which is often eagerly urged upon us--not
+doctrines, but Christ--is a very incomplete and misleading one.
+'Christ' is a mere name, empty of all significance till it is filled
+with definite statements of who and what Christ is. But whilst I,
+for my part, believe that we must have doctrines to make Christ a
+reality and an object of faith to grasp at all, I would urge all the
+more earnestly, because I thus believe, that, when we have these
+doctrines, it is not the creed that saves, but the faith. We are
+united to Christ, not by the doctrine of His nature and work,
+needful as that is, but by trusting in Him as that which the
+doctrine declares Him to be--Redeemer, Friend, Sacrifice, Divine
+Lover of our souls. Let us always remember that it is not the amount
+of religious knowledge which I have got, but the amount which I use,
+that determines my religious position and character. Most of us have
+in our creeds principles that have no influence upon our moral and
+active life; and, if so, it matters not one whit how pure, how
+accurate, how comprehensive, how consistent, how scriptural my
+conceptions of the Gospel may be. If they are not powers in my soul,
+they only increase my responsibility and my liability to
+condemnation. The dry light of the understanding is of no use to
+anybody. You must turn your creed into a faith before it has power
+to bless and save.
+
+There are hosts of so-called Christians who get no more good out of
+the most solemn articles of their orthodox belief than if they were
+heathens. What in the use of your saying that you believe in God the
+Father Almighty, when there is no child's love and happy confidence
+in your heart? What the better are you for believing in Jesus
+Christ, His divine nature, His death and glory, when you have no
+reliance on Him, nor any least flutter of trembling love towards
+Him? Is your belief in the Holy Ghost of the smallest consequence,
+if you do not yield to His hallowing power? What does it matter that
+you believe in the forgiveness of sins, so long as you do not care a
+rush whether yours are pardoned or no? And is it anything to you or
+to God that you believe in the life everlasting, if all your work,
+and hopes, and longings are confined to 'this bank and shoal of
+time'? Are you any more a Christian because of all that intellectual
+assent to these solemn verities? Is not your life like some
+secularised monastic chamber, with holy texts carved on the walls,
+and saintly images looking down from glowing windows on revellers
+and hucksters who defile its floor? Your faith, not your creed,
+determines your religion. Many a 'true believer' is a real
+'infidel.'
+
+Thank God that the soul may be wedded to Christ, even while a very
+partial conception of Christ is in the understanding. The more
+complete and adequate the creed, indeed, the mightier and more
+fruitful in blessing will the faith naturally be; and every portion
+of the full orb of the Sun of Righteousness which is eclipsed by the
+shadow of our intellectual misconceptions, will diminish the light
+and warmth which falls upon our souls. It is no part of our duty to
+pronounce what is the minimum of a creed which faith needs for its
+object. For myself, I confess that I do not understand how the
+spiritual life can be sustained in its freshness and fervour, in its
+fulness and reality, without a belief in the divinity and saving
+work of Jesus Christ. But with that belief for the centre which
+faith grasps, the rest may vary indefinitely. All who stand around
+that centre, some nearer, some further off, some mazed in errors
+which others have cast behind them, some of them seeing and
+understanding more, and some less of Him and of His work--are His.
+He loves them, and will save them all. Knowledge varies. The faith
+which unites to God remains the same.
+
+2. We may gather from this incident another consideration, namely,
+that _Faith has its noblest office in detaching from the
+present_.
+
+All his life long, from the day of his captivity, Joseph was an
+Egyptian in outward seeming. He filled his place at Pharaoh's court,
+but his dying words open a window into his soul, and betray how
+little he had felt that he belonged to the order of things in the
+midst of which he had been content to live. This man, too,
+surrounded by an ancient civilisation, and dwelling among granite
+temples and solid pyramids and firm-based sphinxes, the very emblems
+of eternity, confessed that here he had no continuing city, but
+sought one to come. As truly as his ancestors who dwelt in
+tabernacles, like Abraham journeying with his camels and herds, and
+pitching his tent outside the walls of Hebron, like Isaac in the
+grassy plains of the South country, like Jacob keeping himself apart
+from the families of the land, their descendant, an heir with them
+of the same promise, showed that he too regarded himself as a
+'stranger and a sojourner.' Dying, he said, 'Carry my bones up from
+hence. Therefore we may be sure that, living, the hope of the
+inheritance must have burned in his heart as a hidden light, and
+made him an alien everywhere but on its blessed soil.
+
+And faith will always produce just such effects. In exact proportion
+to its strength, that living trust in God will direct our thoughts
+and desires to the 'King in His beauty, and the land that is very
+far off.' In proportion as our thoughts and desires are thus
+directed, they will be averted from what is round about us; and the
+more longingly our eyes are fixed on the furthest horizon, the less
+shall we see the flowers at our feet. To behold God pales the
+otherwise dazzling lustre of created brightness. They whose souls
+are fed with heavenly manna, and who have learned that it is their
+necessary food, will scent no dainties in the fleshpots of Egypt,
+for all their rank garlic and leeks. It is simply a question as to
+which of two classes of ideas occupies the thoughts, and which of
+two sets of affections engages the heart. If vulgar brawling and
+rude merrymakers fill the inn, there will be no room for the pilgrim
+thoughts which bear the Christ in their bosom, and have angels for
+their guard; and if these holy wayfarers enter, their serene
+presence will drive forth the noisy crowd, and turn the place into a
+temple. Nothing but Christian faith gives to the furthest future the
+solidity and definiteness which it must have, if it is to be a
+breakwater for us against the fluctuating sea of present cares and
+thoughts.
+
+If the unseen is ever to rule in men's lives, it must be through
+their thoughts. It must become intelligible, clear, real. It must be
+brought out of the flickering moonlight of fancy and surmises, into
+the sunlight of certitude and knowledge. Dreams, and hopes, and
+peradventures are too unsubstantial stuff to be a bulwark against
+the very real, undeniable present. And such certitude is given
+through faith which grasps the promises of God, and twines the soul
+round the risen Saviour so closely that it sits with Him in heavenly
+places. Such certitude is given by faith alone.
+
+If the unseen is ever to rule in men's lives, it must become not
+only an object for certain knowledge, but also for ardent wishes.
+The vague sense of possible evils lurking in its mysteries must be
+taken out of the soul, and there must come somehow an assurance that
+all it wraps in its folds is joy and peace. It must cease to be
+doubtful, and must seem infinitely desirable. Does anything but
+Christian faith engage the heart to love, and all the longing wishes
+to set towards, the things that are unseen and eternal? Where
+besides, then, can there be found a counterpoise weighty enough to
+heave up the souls that are laden with the material, and cleaving to
+the dust? Nowhere. The only possible deliverance from the tyrannous
+pressure of the trifles amidst which we live is in having the
+thoughts familiarised with Christ in heaven, which will dwarf all
+that is on earth, and in having the affections fixed on Him, which
+will emancipate them from the pains and sorrows that ever wait upon
+love of the mutable and finite creatures.
+
+Let us remember that such deliverance from the present is the
+condition of all noble, joyous, pure life. It needs Christianity to
+effect it indeed, but it does not need Christianity to see how
+desirable it is, and how closely connected with whatever is lovely
+and of good report is this detachment from the near and the visible.
+A man that is living for remote objects is, in so far, a better man
+than one who is living for the present. He will become thereby the
+subject of a mental and moral discipline that will do him good. And,
+on the other hand, a life which has no far-off light for its guiding
+star, has none of the unity, of the self-restraint, of the tension,
+of the conscious power which makes our days noble and strong.
+Whether he accomplish them or fail, whether they be high or low, the
+man who lets future objects rule present action is in advance of
+others. 'To scorn delights and live laborious days,' which is the
+prerogative of the man with a future, is always best. He is rather a
+beast than a man, who floats lazily on the warm, sunny wavelets as
+they lift him in their roll, and does not raise his head high enough
+above them to see and steer for the solid shore where they break.
+But only he has found the full, controlling, blessing, quickening
+power that lies in the thought of the future, and in life directed
+by it, to whom that future is all summed in the name of his Saviour.
+Whatever makes a man live in the past and in the future raises him;
+but high above all others stand those to whom the past is an
+apocalypse of God, with Calvary for its centre, and all the future
+is fellowship with Christ, and joy in the heavens. Having these
+hopes, it will be our own faults if we are not pure and gentle, calm
+in changes and sorrows, armed against frowning dangers, and proof
+against smiling temptations. They are our armour--'Put on the
+breastplate of faith ... and for an helmet the hope of salvation.'
+
+A very sharp test for us all lies in these thoughts. This change of
+the centre of interest from earth to heaven is the uniform effect of
+faith. What, then, of us? On Sundays we profess to seek for a city;
+but what about the week, from Monday morning to Saturday night? What
+difference does our faith make in the current of our lives? How far
+are they unlike--I do not mean externally and in occupations, but in
+principle--the lives of men who 'have no hope'? Are you living for
+other objects than theirs? Are you nurturing other hopes in your
+hearts, as a man may guard a little spark of fire with both his
+hands, to light him amid the darkness and the howling storm? Do you
+care to detach yourself from the world? or are you really 'men of
+this world, which have their portion in this life,' even while
+Christians by profession? A question which I have no right to ask,
+and no power to answer but for myself; a question which it concerns
+your souls to ask and to answer very definitely for yourselves.
+There is no need to preach an exaggerated and impossible abstinence
+from work and enjoyment in the world where God has put us, or to set
+up a standard 'too high for mortal life beneath the sky.' Whatever
+call there may have sometimes been to protest against a false
+asceticism, and withdrawing from active life for the sake of one's
+personal salvation, times are changed now. What we want to-day is:
+'Come ye out and be ye separate, and touch not the unclean thing.'
+In my conscience I believe that multitudes are having the very heart
+of the Christian life eaten out by absorption in earthly pursuits
+and loves, and by the effacing of all distinction in outward life,
+in occupation, in recreation, in tastes and habits, between people
+who call themselves Christians, and people who do not care at all
+whether there is another world or not. There can be but little
+strength in our faith if it does not compel us to separation. If it
+has any power to do anything at all, it will certainly do that. If
+we are naturalised as citizens there, we cannot help being aliens
+here. 'Abraham,' says the New Testament, 'dwelt in tabernacles,
+_for_ he looked for a city.' Just so! The tent life will always
+be the natural one for those who feel that their mother-country is
+beyond the stars. We should be like the wandering Swiss, who hear in
+a strange land the rude, old melody that used to echo among the
+Alpine pastures. The sweet, sad tones kindle home-sickness that will
+not let them rest. No matter where they are, or what they are doing,
+no matter what honour they have carved out for themselves with their
+swords, they throw off the livery of the alien king which they have
+worn, and turning their backs upon pomp and courts, seek the free
+air of the mountains, and find home better than a place by a foreign
+throne. Let us esteem the reproach of Christ greater riches than the
+treasures of Egypt, and go forth to Him without the camp, for here
+have we no continuing city.
+
+3. Again, we have here an instance that _Faith makes men energetic
+in the duties of the present_.
+
+The remarks which I have been making must be completed by that
+consideration, or they become hurtful and one-sided. You know that
+common sarcasm, that Christianity degrades this present life by
+making it merely the portal to a better, and teaches men to think of
+it as only evil, to be scrambled through anyhow. I confess that I
+wish the sneer were a less striking contrast to what Christian
+people really think. But it is almost as gross a caricature of the
+teaching of Christianity as it is of the practice of Christians.
+
+Take this story of Joseph as giving us a truer view of the effect on
+present action of faith in, and longing for, God's future. He was,
+as I said, a true Hebrew all his days. But that did not make him run
+away from Pharaoh's service. He lived by hope, and that made him the
+better worker in the passing moment, and kept him tugging away all
+his life at the oar, administering the affairs of a kingdom.
+
+Of course it is so. The one thing which saves this life from being
+contemptible is the thought of another. The more profoundly we feel
+the reality of the great eternity whither we are being drawn, the
+greater do all things here become. They are made less in their power
+to absorb or trouble, but they are made infinitely greater in
+importance as preparations for what is beyond. When they are first
+they are small, when they are second they are great. When the mist
+lifts, and shows the snowy summits of the 'mountains of God,' the
+nearer lower ranges, which we thought the highest, dwindle indeed,
+but gain in sublimity and meaning by the loftier peaks to which they
+lead up. Unless men and women live for eternity, they _are_
+'merely players,' and all their busy days 'like a tale told by an
+idiot, full of sound and fury, _signifying nothing_.' How
+absurd, how monotonous, how trivial it all is, all this fret and
+fume, all these dying joys and only less fleeting pains, all this
+mill-horse round of work which we pace, unless we are, mill-horse-
+like, driving a shaft that goes _through the wall_, and grinds
+something that falls into 'bags that wax not old' on the other side.
+The true Christian faith teaches us that this world is the workshop
+where God makes men, and the next, the palace where He shows them.
+All here is apprenticeship and training. It is of no more value than
+the attitudes into which gymnasts throw themselves, but as a
+discipline most precious. The end makes the means important; and if
+we believe that God is preparing us for immortal life with Him by
+all our work, then we shall do it with a will: otherwise we may well
+be languid as we go on for thirty or forty years, some of us, doing
+the same trivial things, and getting nothing out of them but food,
+occupation of time, and a mechanical aptitude for doing what is not
+worth doing.
+
+It is the horizon that gives dignity to the foreground. A picture
+without sky has no glory. This present, unless we see gleaming
+beyond it the eternal calm of the heavens, above the tossing tree-
+tops with withering leaves, and the smoky chimneys, is a poor thing
+for our eyes to gaze at, or our hearts to love, or our hands to toil
+on. But when we see that all paths lead to heaven, and that our
+eternity is affected by our acts in time, then it is blessed to
+gaze, it is possible to love, the earthly shadows of the uncreated
+beauty, it is worth while to work.
+
+Remember, too, that faith will energise us for any sort of work,
+seeing that it raises all to one level and brings all under one
+sanction, and shows all as cooperating to one end. Look at that
+muster-roll of heroes of faith in the Epistle to the Hebrews, and
+mark the variety of grades of human life represented there--statesmen,
+soldiers, prophets, shepherds, widow women, martyrs--all fitted for
+their tasks and delivered from the snare that was in their calling,
+by that faith which raised them above the world, and therefore
+fitted them to come down on the world with stronger strokes of duty.
+This is the secret of doing with our might whatsoever our hand finds
+to do-to trust Christ, to live _with_ Him, and _by_ the hope of the
+inheritance.
+
+Then, brethren, let us see that our clearer revelation bears fruit
+in a faith in the great divine promises as calm and firm as this
+dying patriarch had. Then the same power will work not only the same
+detachment and energy in life, but the same calmness and solemn
+light of hope in death. It is very beautiful to notice how Joseph
+dying almost overleaps the thought of death as a very small matter.
+His brethren who stood by his bedside might well fear what might be
+the consequences to their people when the powerful protector, the
+prime minister of the kingdom, was gone. But the dying man has firm
+hold of God's promises, and he knows that these will be fulfilled,
+whether he live or no. 'I die,' says he, 'but God shall surely visit
+you. _He_ is not going to die; and though I stand no more
+before Pharaoh, you will be safe.'
+
+Thus we may contemplate our own going away, or the departure of the
+dearest from our homes, and of the most powerful for good in human
+affairs, and in the faith of God's true promises may feel that no
+one is indispensable to our well-being or to the world's good. God's
+chariot is self-moving. One after another, who lays his hand upon
+the ropes, and hauls for a little space, drops out of the ranks. But
+it will go on, and in His majesty He will ride prosperously.
+
+And for himself, too, the dying man felt that death was a very small
+matter. 'Whether I live or die I shall have a share in the promise.
+Living, perhaps my feet would stand upon its soil; dying, my bones
+will rest there.' And we, who know a resurrection, have in it that
+which makes Joseph's fond fancy a reality, and reduces the
+importance of that last enemy to nothing. Some will be alive and
+remain till the coming of the Lord, some will be laid in the grave
+till His voice calls them forth, and carries their bones up from
+hence to the land of the inheritance. But whether we be of
+generations that fell on sleep looking for the promise of His
+coming, or whether of the generation that go forth to meet Him when
+He comes, it matters not. All who have lived by faith will then be
+gathered at last. The brightest hopes of the present will be
+forgotten. Then, when we too shall stand in the latter day, wearing
+the likeness of His glory, and extricated wholly from the bondage of
+corruption and the dust of death, we, perfected in body, soul, and
+spirit, shall enter the calm home, where we shall change the
+solitude of the desert and the transitoriness of the tent and the
+dangers of the journey, for the society and the stability and the
+security of the city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker
+is God.
+
+
+
+
+A COFFIN IN EGYPT
+
+
+ 'They embalmed him, and he was put in a coffin in Egypt.'
+ --GENESIS l. 26.
+
+So closes the book of Genesis. All its recorded dealings of God with
+Israel, and all the promises and the glories of the patriarchal
+line, end with 'a coffin in Egypt'. Such an ending is the more
+striking, when we remember that a space of three hundred years
+intervenes between the last events in Genesis and the first in
+Exodus, or almost as long a time as parts the Old Testament from the
+New. And, during all that period, Israel was left with a mummy and a
+hope. The elaborately embalmed body of Joseph lay in its gilded and
+pictured case, somewhere in Goshen, and was, no doubt, in the care
+of the Israelites, as is plain from the fact that they carried it
+with them at the exodus. For three centuries, that silent 'coffin in
+Egypt' preached its impressive messages. What did it say? It spoke,
+no doubt, to ears often deaf, but still some faint whispers of its
+speechless testimony would sound in some hearts, and help to keep
+vivid some hopes.
+
+First, it was a silent reminder of mortality. Egyptian consciousness
+was much occupied with death. The land was peopled with tombs. But
+the corpse of Joseph was perhaps not laid in one of these, but
+remained housed somewhere in sight, as it were, of all Israel. Many
+a passer-by would pause for a moment, and think; Here is the end of
+dignity second only to Pharaoh's, to this has come that strong
+brain, that true heart, Israel's pride and protection is shut up in
+that wooden case.
+
+ 'The glories of our birth and state
+ Are shadows, not substantial things;
+ There is no armour against fate,
+ Death lays his icy hand on kings.'
+
+Yes, but let us remember that while that silent sarcophagus enforced
+the old, old lesson to the successive generations that looked on it
+and little heeded its stern, sad teaching of mortality, it had other
+brighter truths to tell. For the shrivelled, colourless lips that
+lay in it, covered with many a fold of linen, had left as their last
+utterance, 'I die, but God will surely visit you,' No man is
+necessary. Israel can survive the loss of the strongest and wisest.
+God lives, though a hundred Josephs die. It is pure gain to lose
+human helpers, if thereby we become more fully conscious of our need
+of a divine arm and heart, and more truly feel that we have these
+for our all-sufficient stay. Blessed is the fleeting of all that can
+pass, if its withdrawal lets the calm light of the Eternal, which
+cannot pass, stream in uninterrupted on us! When the leaves fall, we
+see more clearly the rock which their short-lived greenness in its
+pride veiled. When the many-hued and ever-shifting clouds are swept
+out of the sky by the wind, the sun that lent them all their colour
+shines the more brightly. The message of every death-bed and grave
+is meant to be, 'This and that man dies, but God lives.' The last
+result of our contemplation of mortality, as affecting our dearest
+and most needful ones, and as sure to include ourselves in its far-
+reaching, close-woven net, ought to be to drive us to God's breast,
+that there we may find a Friend who does not pass, and may dwell in
+'the land of the living,' on whose soil the foot of all-conquering
+Death dare never tread.
+
+Nor are these thoughts all the message of that 'coffin in Egypt.' In
+the first verses of the next book, that of Exodus, there is a
+remarkable juxtaposition of ideas, when we read that 'Joseph died
+and all his brethren and all that generation.' But was that the end
+of Israel? By no means, for the narrative goes on immediately to
+say--linking the two things together by a simple 'and'--that 'the
+children of Israel were fruitful, and increased abundantly, and
+multiplied and waxed exceeding mighty.'
+
+So life springs side by side with death. There are cradles as well
+as graves.
+
+ 'The individual withers,
+ And the race is more and more.'
+
+Leaves drop and new leaves come. The April days are not darkened,
+and the tender green of the fresh leaf-buds is all the more vigorous
+and luxuriant, because it is fed from the decaying leaves that
+litter the roots of the long-lived oak. Thus through the ages the
+pathetic alternation goes on. Penelope's web is ever being woven and
+run down and woven again. Joseph dies; Israel grows. Let us not take
+half-views, nor either fix our thoughts on the universal law of
+dissolution and decay, nor on the other side of the process--the
+universal emergence of life from death, reconstruction from
+dissolution. In our individual histories and on the wider field of
+the world's history, the same large law is at work, which is
+expressed in the simplest terms by these old words, 'Joseph died,
+and all his brethren and all that generation'--and 'the children of
+Israel were fruitful and increased abundantly.' So the wholesome
+lesson of mortality is stripped of much of its sadness, and retains
+all its pathos, solemnity, and power to purify the heart.
+
+Again, that 'coffin in Egypt' was a herald of Hope. The reason for
+Joseph's dying injunction that his body should be preserved after
+the Egyptian fashion, and laid where it could be lifted and carried
+away, when the long-expected deliverance was effected, was the dying
+patriarch's firm confidence that, though he died, he had still
+somehow a share in God's faithful promise. We do not know the
+precise shape which his thought of that share took. It may have been
+merely the natural sentiment which desires that the unconscious
+frame shall moulder quietly beside the mouldering forms which once
+held our dear ones. This naturalised Egyptian did his work manfully
+in the land of his adoption, and flung himself eagerly into its
+interests, but his heart turned to the cave at Machpelah, and,
+though he lived in Egypt, he could not bear to think of lying there
+for ever when dead, especially of being left there alone. There may
+have been some trace in his wish of the peculiar Egyptian belief
+that the preservation of the body contributed in some way to the
+continuance of personal life, and that a certain shadowy self
+hovered about the spot where the mummy was laid. Our knowledge of
+the large place filled by a doctrine of a future life in Egyptian
+thought makes it most probable that Joseph had at least some
+forecast of that hope of immortality, which seems to us to be
+inseparable from the consciousness of present communion with God.
+
+But, in any case, Israel had charge of that coffin because the dead
+man that lay in it had, on the very edge of the gulf of death,
+believed that he had still a portion in Israel's hope, and that,
+when he had taken the plunge into the great darkness, he had not
+sunk below the reach of God's power to give him personal fulfilment
+of His yet unfulfilled promise. His dying command was the expression
+of his unshaken faith that, though he was dead, God would visit him
+with His salvation, and give him to see the prosperity of His
+chosen, that he might rejoice in the gladness of the nation, and
+glory with His inheritance. He had lived, trusting in God's bare
+promise, and, as he lived, he died. The Epistle to the Hebrews lays
+hold of the true motive power in the incident, when it points to
+Joseph's dying 'commandment concerning his bones' as a noble
+instance of Faith.
+
+Thus, through slow creeping centuries, this silent preacher said--'Hope
+on, though the vision tarry, wait for it, for it will surely
+come. God is faithful, and will perform His word.' There was much to
+make hope faint. To bring Israel out of Canaan seemed a strange way
+of investing it with the possession of Canaan. As the tardy years
+trickled away, drop by drop, and the promise seemed no nearer
+fulfilment, some film of doubt must have crept over Hope's bright
+eyes. When new dynasties reigned, and Israel slowly sank into the
+state of bondage, it must have been still harder to believe that the
+shortest road to the inheritance was round by Goshen. But through
+all the darkening course of Israel in these sad centuries, there
+stood the 'coffin,' the token of a triumphant faith which had leapt,
+as a trifle, over the barrier of death, and grasped as real the good
+which lay beyond that frowning wall. We have a better Herald of hope
+than a mummy-case and a pyramid built round it. We have an empty
+grave and an occupied Throne, by which to nourish our confidence in
+Immortality and our estimate of the insignificance of death. Our
+Joseph does not say--'I die, but God will surely visit you,' but He
+gives us the wonderful assurance of identification with Himself, and
+consequent participation in His glory--'Because I live, ye shall
+live also.' Therefore our hope should be as much brighter and more
+confirmed than this ancient one was as that on which it is based is
+better and more joyous. But, alas, there is no invariable proportion
+between food supplied and strength derived. An orchid can fling out
+gorgeous blooms, though it grows on a piece of dry wood, but plants
+set in rich soil often show poor flowers. Our hope will be worthy of
+its foundation, only on condition of our habitually reflecting on
+the firmness of that foundation, and cultivating familiarity with
+the things hoped for.
+
+There are many ways in which the apostle's great saying that 'we are
+saved by hope' approves itself as true. Whatever leads us to grasp
+the future rather than the present, even if it is but an earthly
+future, and to live by hope rather than by fruition, even if it is
+but a short-reaching hope, lifts us in the scale of being, ennobles,
+dignifies, and in some respects purifies us. Even men whose
+expectations have not wing-power enough to cross the dreadful ravine
+of Death, are elevated in the degree in which they work towards a
+distant goal. Short-sighted hopes are better than blind absorption
+in the present. Whatever puts the centre of gravity of our lives in
+the future is a gain, and most of all is that hope blessed, which
+bids us look forward to an eternal sitting with Jesus at the right
+hand of God.
+
+If such hope has any solidity in it, it will certainly detach us
+from the order of things in which we dwell. The world is always
+tempting us to 'forget the imperial palace' whither we go. The
+Israelites must have been swayed by many inducements to settle down
+for good and all in the low levels of fertile Goshen, and to think
+themselves better off there than if going out on a perilous
+enterprise to win no richer pastures than they already possessed. In
+fact, when the deliverance came, it was not particularly welcome,
+oven though oppression was embittering the peoples' lives. But, when
+hope had died down in them, and desire had become languid, and
+ignoble contentment with their flocks and herds had dulled their
+spirits, Joseph's silent coffin must have pealed in their ears--'This
+is not your rest; arise and claim your inheritance.' In like
+manner, the pressure of the apparently solid realities of to-day,
+the growth of the 'scientific' temper of mind which confines
+knowledge to physical facts, the drift of tendency among religious
+people to regard Christianity mainly in its aspect of dealing with
+social questions and bringing present good, powerfully reinforce our
+natural sluggishness of Hope, and have brought it about that the
+average Christian of this day has fewer of his thoughts directed to
+the future life than his predecessors had, or than it is good for
+him to have.
+
+Among the many truths which almost need to be rediscovered by their
+professed believers, that of the rest that remains for the people of
+God is one. For the test of believing a truth is its influence on
+conduct, and no one can affirm that the conduct of the average
+Christian of our times bears marks of being deeply influenced by
+that Future, or by the hope of winning it. Does he live as if he
+felt that he was an alien among the material things surrounding him?
+Does it look as if his true affinities were beyond the grave and
+above the stars? If we did thus feel, not at rare intervals, when
+'in seasons of calm weather, our souls have sight of that immortal
+sea,' which lies glassy before the throne, and on whose banks the
+minstrels stand singing the song of Moses and of the Lamb, but
+habitually and with a vivid realisation, which makes the things
+hoped for more solid than what we touch and handle, our lives would
+be far other than they are. We should not work less, but more,
+earnestly at our present duties, whatever these may be, for they
+would be seen in new importance as bearing on our place in that
+world of consequences. The more our goal and prize are seen gleaming
+through the dust of the race-ground, the more strenuous our effort
+here. Nothing ennobles the trifles of our lives in time like the
+streaming in on these of the light of eternity. That vision ever
+present with us will not sadden. The fact of mortality is grim
+enough, if forced upon us unaccompanied by the other fact that Death
+opens the gate of our Home. But when the else depressing thought
+that 'here we have no continuing city' is but the obverse and result
+of the fact that 'we seek one to come,' it is freed from its
+sadness, and becomes powerful for good and even for joy. We need,
+even more than Israel in its bondage did, to realise that we are
+strangers and pilgrims. It concerns the depth of our religion and
+the reality of our profiting by the discipline, as well as of our
+securing the enjoyment of the blessings, of the fleeting and else
+trivial present, that we shall keep very clear in view the great
+future which dignifies and interprets this enigmatical earthly life.
+
+Further, that 'coffin in Egypt' was a preacher of patience. As we
+have seen, three centuries at least, probably a somewhat longer
+period, passed between the time when Joseph's corpse was laid in it,
+and the night when it was lifted out of it by the departing
+Israelites. No doubt, hope deferred had made many a heart sick, and
+the weary question, 'Where is the promise of His coming?' had in
+some cases changed into bitter disbelief that the promise would ever
+be fulfilled. But, for all these years, the dumb monitor stood there
+proclaiming, 'If the vision tarry, wait for it.'
+
+Surely we need the same lesson. It is hard for us to acquiesce in
+the slow march of the divine purposes. Life is short, and desire
+would fain see the great harvests reaped before death seals our
+eyes. Sometimes the very prospect of the great things that shall one
+day be accomplished in the world, and we not there to see, weighs
+heavily on us. Reformers, philanthropists, idealists of all sorts
+are constitutionally impatient, and in their generous haste to see
+their ideals realised, forget that 'raw haste' is 'half-sister to
+delay' and are indignant with man for his sluggishness and with God
+for His majestic slowness. Not less do we fret and fume and think
+the days drag with intolerable slowness, before some eagerly
+expected good rises like a star on our individual lives. But there
+is deep truth in Paul's apparent paradox, that 'if we hope for that
+we see not, then do we with patience wait for it.' The more sure the
+confidence, the more quiet the patient waiting. It is uncertainty
+which makes earthly hope short of breath, and impatient of delay.
+
+But since a Christian man's hope is consolidated into certainty, and
+when it is set on God, cannot only say, I trust that it will be so
+and so, but, I know that it shall, it may well be content to be
+patient for the fulfilment, 'as the husbandman waiteth for the
+precious fruit of the earth, and hath long patience for it.' 'One
+day is with the Lord as a thousand years' in respect of the
+magnitude of the changes which may be wrought by the instantaneous
+operation of His hand when the appointed hour shall strike, and
+therefore it should not strain our patience nor stagger our faith
+that 'a thousand years' should be 'as one day,' in respect of the
+visible approximation achieved in them, towards the establishment of
+His purpose. The world was prepared for man through countless
+millenniums. Man was prepared for the advent of Christ through long
+centuries. Nineteen hundred years have effected comparatively little
+in incorporating the issues of Christ's work in the consciousness
+and characters of mankind. Much of the slowness of that progress of
+Christianity is due to the faithlessness and sloth of professing
+Christians. But it still remains true that God lifts His foot
+slowly, and plants it firmly, in His march through the world. So,
+both in regard to the progress of truth, and the diffusion of the
+highest, and of the secondary, blessings of Christianity through the
+nations, and in respect to the reception of individual good gifts,
+we shall do wisely to leave God to settle the 'when' since we are
+sure that He has bound Himself to accomplish the fact.
+
+Finally, that 'coffin in Egypt' was a pledge of possession. It lay
+long among the Israelites to uphold fainting faith, and at last was
+carried up before their host, and reverently guarded during forty
+years' wanderings, till it was deposited in the cave at Machpelah,
+beside the tombs of the fathers of the nation. Thus it became to the
+nation, and remains for us, a symbol of the truth that no hope based
+upon God's bare word is ever finally disappointed. From all other
+anticipations grounded on anything less solid, the element of
+uncertainty is inseparable, and Fear is ever the sister of Hope.
+With keen insight Spenser makes these two march side by side, in his
+wonderful procession of the attendants of earthly Love. There is
+always a lurking sadness in Hope's smiles, and a nameless dread in
+her eyes. And all expectations busied with or based upon the
+contingencies of this poor life, whether they are fulfilled or
+disappointed, prove less sweet in fruition than in prospect, and
+often turn to ashes in the eating, instead of the sweet bread which
+we had thought them to be. One basis alone is sure, and that is the
+foundation on which Joseph rested and risked everything--the plain
+promise of God. He who builds on that rock will never be put to
+shame, and when floods sweep away every refuge built on sand, he
+will not need to 'make haste' to find, amid darkness and storm, some
+less precarious shelter, but will look down serenely on the wildest
+torrent, and know it to be impotent to wash away his fortress home.
+
+There is no nobler example of victorious faith which prolonged
+confident expectation beyond the insignificant accident of death
+than Joseph's dying 'commandment concerning his bones.' His
+confidence, indeed, grasped a far lower blessing than ours should
+reach out to clasp. It was evoked by less clear and full promises
+and pledges than we have. The magnitude and loftiness of the
+Christian hope of Immortality, and the certitude of the fact on
+which it reposes, the resurrection of Jesus Christ, should result in
+a corresponding increase in the firmness and clearness of our hope,
+and in its power in our lives. The average Christian of to-day may
+well be sent to school to Joseph on his death-bed. Is our faith as
+strong as--I will not ask if it is stronger than--that of this man
+who, in the morning twilight of revelation, and with a hope of an
+eternal possession of an earthly inheritance, which, one might have
+thought, would be shattered by death, was able to fling his anchor
+clean across the gulf when he gave injunction, 'Carry my bones up
+hence'? We have a better inheritance, and fuller, clearer promises
+and facts on which to trust. Shame to us if we have a feebler faith.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE
+
+ALEXANDER MACLAREN, D. D., Litt. D.
+
+EXODUS, LEVITICUS AND NUMBERS
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+THE BOOK OF EXODUS
+
+FOUR SHAPING CENTURIES (Exodus i. 1-14)
+
+DEATH AND GROWTH (Exodus i. 6, 7)
+
+THE ARK AMONG THE FLAGS (Exodus ii. 1-10)
+
+THE BUSH THAT BURNED, AND DID NOT BURN OUT (Exodus iii. 2)
+
+THE CALL OF MOSES (Exodus iii. 10-20)
+
+A LAST MERCIFUL WARNING (Exodus xi. 1-10)
+
+THE PASSOVER: AN EXPIATION AND A FEAST, A MEMORIAL AND A PROPHECY
+(Exodus xii. 1-14)
+
+THOUGHT, DEED, WORD (Exodus xiii. 9)
+
+A PATH IN THE SEA (Exodus xiv. 19-31)
+
+'MY STRENGTH AND SONG' (Exodus xv. 2)
+
+THE SHEPHERD AND THE FOLD (Exodus xv. 13)
+
+THE ULTIMATE HOPE (Exodus xv. 17)
+
+MARAH (Exodus xv. 23-25)
+
+THE BREAD OF GOD (Exodus xvi. 4-12)
+
+JEHOVAH NISSI (Exodus xvii. 15)
+
+GERSHOM AND ELIEZER (Exodus xviii. 3, 4)
+
+THE IDEAL STATESMAN (Exodus xviii. 21)
+
+THE DECALOGUE:--I. MAN AND GOD (Exodus xx. 1-11)
+
+THE DECALOGUE:--II. MAN AND MAN (Exodus xx. 12-21)
+
+THE FEAST OF INGATHERING IN THE END OF THE YEAR (Exodus xxiii. 16)
+
+'THE LOVE OF THINE ESPOUSALS' (Exodus xxiv. 1-12)
+
+THE BREAD OF THE PRESENCE (Exodus xxv. 30)
+
+THE GOLDEN LAMPSTAND (Exodus xxv. 31)
+
+THE NAMES ON AARON'S BREASTPLATE (Exodus xxviii. 12,29)
+
+THREE INSCRIPTIONS WITH ONE MEANING (Exodus xxviii. 36; Zech. xiv.
+20; Rev. xxii. 4)
+
+THE ALTAR OF INCENSE (Exodus xxx. 1)
+
+RANSOM FOR SOULS--I. (Exodus xxx. 12)
+
+RANSOM FOR SOULS--II. (Exodus xxx. 15)
+
+THE GOLDEN CALF (Exodus xxxii. 1-8, 30-35)
+
+THE SWIFT DECAY OF LOVE (Exodus xxxii. 15-26)
+
+THE MEDIATOR'S THREEFOLD PRAYER (Exodus xxxiii. 12-23)
+
+GOD PROCLAIMING HIS OWN NAME (Exodus xxxiv. 6)
+
+SIN AND FORGIVENESS (Exodus xxxiv. 7)
+
+BLESSED AND TRAGIC UNCONSCIOUSNESS (Exodus xxxiv. 29; Judges xvi.
+20)
+
+AN OLD SUBSCRIPTION LIST (Exodus xxxv. 21)
+
+THE COPIES OF THINGS IN THE HEAVENS (Exodus xl. 1-16)
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF LEVITICUS
+
+
+THE BURNT OFFERING A PICTURE AND A PROPHECY (Lev. i. 1-9)
+
+STRANGE FIRE (Lev. x. 1-11)
+
+THE FIRST STAGE IN THE LEPER'S CLEANSING (Lev. xiv 1-7)
+
+THE DAY OF ATONEMENT (Lev. xvi. 1-19)
+
+'THE SCAPEGOAT' (Lev. xvi. 22)
+
+THE CONSECRATION OF JOY (Lev. xxiii. 33-44)
+
+SOJOURNERS WITH GOD (Lev. xxv. 23)
+
+GOD'S SLAVES (Lev. xxv. 42)
+
+THE KINSMAN REDEEMER (Lev. xxv. 48)
+
+THE OLD STORE AND THE NEW (Lev. xxvi. 10)
+
+EMANCIPATED SLAVES (Lev. xxvi. 13)
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF NUMBERS
+
+
+THE WARFARE OF CHRISTIAN SERVICE (Num. iv. 23)
+
+THE GUIDING PILLAR (Num. ix. 16)
+
+HOBAB (Num. x. 29)
+
+THE HALLOWING OF WORK AND OF REST (Num. x. 35, 36)
+
+MOSES DESPONDENT (Num. xi. 14)
+
+AFRAID OF GIANTS (Num. xiii. 17-33)
+
+WEIGHED, AND FOUND WANTING (Num. xiv. 1-10)
+
+MOSES THE INTERCESSOR (Num. xiv. 19)
+
+SERVICE A GIFT (Num. xviii. 7)
+
+THE WATERS OF MERIBAH (Num. xx. 1-13)
+
+THE POISON AND THE ANTIDOTE (Num. xxi. 4-9)
+
+BALAAM (Num. xxii. 5)
+
+AN UNFULFILLED DESIRE (Num. xxiii. 10; xxxi. 8)
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF EXODUS
+
+
+
+
+FOUR SHAPING CENTURIES
+
+
+ 'Now these are the names of the children of Israel,
+ which came into Egypt: every man and his household
+ came with Jacob. 2. Reuben, Simeon, Levi, and Judah,
+ 3. Issachar, Zebulun, and Benjamin, 4. Dan and Naphtali,
+ Gad and Asher. 5. And all the souls that came out of
+ the loins of Jacob were seventy souls: for Joseph was
+ in Egypt already. 6. And Joseph died, and all his
+ brethren, and all that generation. 7, And the children
+ of Israel were fruitful, and increased abundantly, and
+ multiplied, and waxed exceeding mighty; and the land
+ was filled with them. 8. Now there arose up a new king
+ over Egypt, which knew not Joseph. 9. And he said unto
+ his people, Behold, the people of the children of Israel
+ are more and mightier than we: 10. Come on, let us deal
+ wisely with them; lest they multiply, and it come to
+ pass, that, when there falleth out any war, they join
+ also unto our enemies, and fight against us, and so get
+ them up out of the land. 11. Therefore they did set over
+ them taskmasters to afflict them with their burdens. And
+ they built for Pharaoh treasure-cities, Pithom and
+ Raamses. 12. But the more they afflicted them, the more
+ they multiplied and grew. And they were grieved because
+ of the children of Israel. 13. And the Egyptians made
+ the children of Israel to serve with rigour: 14. And
+ they made their lives bitter with hard bondage, in
+ mortar, and in brick, and in all manner of service in
+ the field: all their service, wherein they made them
+ serve, was with rigour.'--EXODUS i. 1-14.
+
+The four hundred years of Israel's stay in Egypt were divided into
+two unequal periods, in the former and longer of which they were
+prosperous and favoured, while in the latter they were oppressed.
+Both periods had their uses and place in the shaping of the nation
+and its preparation for the Exodus. Both carry permanent lessons.
+
+I. The long days of unclouded prosperity. These extended over
+centuries, the whole history of which is summed up in two words:
+death and growth. The calm years glided on, and the shepherds in
+Goshen had the happiness of having no annals. All that needed to be
+recorded was that, one by one, the first generation died off, and
+that the new generations 'were fruitful, and increased abundantly,
+and multiplied, and waxed exceeding mighty.' The emphatic
+repetitions recall the original promises in Genesis xii. 2, xvii.
+4,5, xviii. 18. The preceding specification of the number of the
+original settlers (repeated from Genesis xlvi. 27) brings into
+impressive contrast the small beginnings and the rapid increase. We
+may note that eloquent setting side by side of the two processes
+which are ever going on simultaneously, death and birth.
+
+One by one men pass out of the warmth and light into the darkness,
+and so gradually does the withdrawal proceed that we scarcely are
+aware of its going on, but at last 'all that generation' has
+vanished. The old trees are all cleared off the ground, and
+everywhere their place is taken by the young saplings. The web is
+ever being woven at one end, and run down at the other. 'The
+individual withers, but the race is more and more.' How solemn that
+continual play of opposing movements is, and how blind we are to its
+solemnity!
+
+That long period of growth may be regarded in two lights. It
+effected the conversion of a horde into a nation by numerical
+increase, and so was a link in the chain of the divine working. The
+great increase, of which the writer speaks so strongly, was, no
+doubt, due to the favourable circumstances of the life in Goshen,
+but was none the less regarded by him, and rightly so, as God's
+doing. As the Psalmist sings, '_He_ increased His people
+greatly.' 'Natural processes' are the implements of a supernatural
+will. So Israel was being multiplied, and the end for which it was
+peacefully growing into a multitude was hidden from all but God. But
+there was another end, in reference to which the years of peaceful
+prosperity may be regarded; namely, the schooling of the people to
+patient trust in the long-delayed fulfilment of the promise. That
+hope had burned bright in Joseph when he died, and he being dead yet
+spake of it from his coffin to the successive generations. Delay is
+fitted and intended to strengthen faith and make hope more eager.
+But that part of the divine purpose, alas! was not effected as the
+former was. In the moral region every circumstance has two opposite
+results possible. Each condition has, as it were, two handles, and
+we can take it by either, and generally take it by the wrong one.
+Whatever is meant to better us may be so used by us as to worsen us.
+And the history of Israel in Egypt and in the desert shows only too
+plainly that ease weakened, if it did not kill, faith, and that
+Goshen was so pleasant that it drove the hope and the wish for
+Canaan out of mind. 'While the bridegroom tarried they all slumbered
+and slept.' Is not Israel in Egypt, slackening hold of the promise
+because it tarried, a mirror in which the Church may see itself? and
+do _we_ not know the enervating influence of Goshen, making us
+reluctant to shoulder our packs and turn out for the pilgrimage? The
+desert repels more strongly than Canaan attracts.
+
+II. The shorter period of oppression. Probably the rise of a 'new
+king' means a revolution in which a native dynasty expelled foreign
+monarchs. The Pharaoh of the oppression was, perhaps, the great
+Rameses II., whose long reign of sixty-seven years gives ample room
+for protracted and grinding oppression of Israel. The policy adopted
+was characteristic of these early despotisms, in its utter disregard
+of humanity and of everything but making the kingdom safe. It was
+not intentionally cruel, it was merely indifferent to the suffering
+it occasioned. 'Let us deal _wisely_ with them'--never mind
+about justice, not to say kindness. Pharaoh's 'politics,' like those
+of some other rulers who divorce them from morality, turned out to
+be impolitic, and his 'wisdom' proved to be roundabout folly. He was
+afraid that the Israelites, if they were allowed to grow, might find
+out their strength and seek to emigrate; and so he set to work to
+weaken them with hard bondage, not seeing that that was sure to make
+them wish the very thing that he was blunderingly trying to prevent.
+The only way to make men glad to remain in a community is to make
+them at home there. The sense of injustice is the strongest
+disintegrating force. If there is a 'dangerous class' the surest way
+to make them more dangerous is to treat them harshly. It was a
+blunder to make 'lives bitter,' for hearts also were embittered. So
+the people were ripened for revolt, and Goshen became less
+attractive.
+
+God used Pharaoh's foolish wisdom, as He had used natural laws, to
+prepare for the Exodus. The long years of ease had multiplied the
+nation. The period of oppression was to stir them up out of their
+comfortable nest, and make them willing to risk the bold dash for
+freedom. Is not that the explanation, too, of the similar times in
+our lives? It needs that we should experience life's sorrows and
+burdens, and find how hard the world's service is, and how quickly
+our Goshens may become places of grievous toil, in order that the
+weak hearts, which cling so tightly to earth, may be detached from
+it, and taught to reach upwards to God. 'Blessed is the man ... in
+whose heart are thy ways,' and happy is he who so profits by his
+sorrows that they stir in him the pilgrim's spirit, and make him
+yearn after Canaan, and not grudge to leave Goshen. Our ease and our
+troubles, opposite though they seem and are, are meant to further
+the same end,--to make us fit for the journey which leads to rest
+and home. We often misuse them both, letting the one sink us in
+earthly delights and oblivion of the great hope, and the other
+embitter our spirits without impelling them to seek the things that
+are above. Let us use the one for thankfulness, growth, and patient
+hope, and the other for writing deep the conviction that this is not
+our rest, and making firm the resolve that we will gird our loins
+and, staff in hand, go forth on the pilgrim road, not shrinking from
+the wilderness, because we see the mountains of Canaan across its
+sandy flats.
+
+
+
+
+DEATH AND GROWTH
+
+
+ 'And Joseph died, and all his brethren, and all that
+ generation. 7. And the children of Israel were fruitful,
+ and increased abundantly, and multiplied, and waxed
+ exceeding mighty....'--EXODUS i. 6, 7.
+
+These remarkable words occur in a short section which makes the link
+between the Books of Genesis and of Exodus. The writer recapitulates
+the list of the immigrants into Egypt, in the household of Jacob,
+and then, as it were, having got them there, he clears the stage to
+prepare for a new set of actors. These few words are all that he
+cares to tell us about a period somewhat longer than that which
+separates us from the great Protestant Reformation. He notes but two
+processes--silent dropping away and silent growth. 'Joseph died, and
+all his brethren, and all that generation.' Plant by plant the
+leaves drop, and the stem rots and its place is empty. Seed by seed
+the tender green spikelets pierce the mould, and the field waves
+luxuriant in the breeze and the sunshine. 'The children of Israel
+were fruitful, and increased abundantly.'
+
+I. Now, then, let us look at this twofold process which is always at
+work--silent dropping away and silent growth.
+
+It seems to me that the writer, probably unconsciously, being
+profoundly impressed with certain features of that dropping away,
+reproduces them most strikingly in the very structure of his
+sentence: 'Joseph died, and all his brethren, and all that
+generation.' The uniformity of the fate, and the separate times at
+which it befell individuals, are strongly set forth in the clauses,
+which sound like the threefold falls of earth on a coffin. They all
+died, but not all at the same time. They went one by one, one by
+one, till, at the end, they were all gone. The two things that
+appeal to our imagination, and ought to appeal to our consciences
+and wills, in reference to the succession of the generations of men,
+are given very strikingly, I think, in the language of my text--namely,
+the stealthy assaults of death upon the individuals, and its
+final complete victory.
+
+If any of you were ever out at sea, and looked over a somewhat
+stormy water, you will have noticed, I dare say, how strangely the
+white crests of the breakers disappear, as if some force, acting
+from beneath, had plucked them under, and over the spot where they
+gleamed for a moment runs the blue sea. So the waves break over the
+great ocean of time; I might say, like swimmers pulled under by
+sharks, man after man, man after man, gets twitched down, till at
+the end--'Joseph died, and all his brethren, and _all_ that
+generation.'
+
+There is another process going on side by side with this. In the
+vegetable world, spring and autumn are two different seasons: May
+rejoices in green leaves and opening buds, and nests with their
+young broods; but winter days are coming when the greenery drops and
+the nests are empty, and the birds flown. But the singular and
+impressive thing (which we should see if we were not so foolish and
+blind) which the writer of our text lays his finger upon is that at
+the same time the two opposite processes of death and renewal are
+going on, so that if you look at the facts from the one side it
+seems nothing but a charnel-house and a Golgotha that we live in,
+while, seen from the other side, it is a scene of rejoicing, budding
+young life, and growth.
+
+You get these two processes in the closest juxtaposition in ordinary
+life. There is many a house where there is a coffin upstairs and a
+cradle downstairs. The churchyard is often the children's
+playground. The web is being run down at the one end and woven at
+the other. Wherever we look--
+
+ 'Every moment dies a man,
+ Every moment one is born.'
+
+'Joseph died, and all his brethren, and all that generation. And the
+children of Israel ... multiplied ... exceedingly.'
+
+But there is another thought here than that of the
+contemporaneousness of the two processes, and that is, as it is
+written on John Wesley's monument in Westminster Abbey, 'God buries
+the workmen and carries on the work.' The great Vizier who seemed to
+be the only protection of Israel is lying in 'a coffin in Egypt.'
+And all these truculent brothers of his that had tormented him, they
+are gone, and the whole generation is swept away. What of that? They
+were the depositories of God's purposes for a little while. Are
+God's purposes dead because the instruments that in part wrought
+them are gone? By no means. If I might use a very vulgar proverb,
+'There are as good fish in the sea as ever came out of it,'
+especially if God casts the net. So when the one generation has
+passed away there is the other to take up the work. Thus the text is
+a fitting introduction to the continuance of the history of the
+further unfolding of God's plan which occupies the Book of Exodus.
+
+II. Such being the twofold process suggested by this text, let us
+next note the lessons which it enforces.
+
+In the first place, let us be quite sure that we give it its due
+weight in our thoughts and lives. Let us be quite sure that we never
+give an undue weight to the one half of the whole truth. There are
+plenty of people who are far too much, constitutionally and (perhaps
+by reason of a mistaken notion of religion) religiously, inclined to
+the contemplation of the more melancholy side of these truths; and
+there are a great many people who are far too exclusively disposed
+to the contemplation of the other. But the bulk of us never trouble
+our heads about either the one or the other, but go on, forgetting
+altogether that swift, sudden, stealthy, skinny hand that, if I
+might go back to my former metaphor, is put out to lay hold of the
+swimmer and then pull him underneath the water, and which will clasp
+us by the ankles one day and drag us down. Do you ever think about
+it? If not, surely, surely you are leaving out of sight one of what
+ought to be the formative elements in our lives.
+
+And then, on the other hand, when our hearts are faint, or when the
+pressure of human mortality--our own, that of our dear ones, or that
+of others--seems to weigh us down, or when it looks to us as if
+God's work was failing for want of people to do it, let us remember
+the other side--'And the children of Israel ... increased ... and
+waxed exceeding mighty; ... and the land was filled with them.' So
+we shall keep the middle path, which is the path of safety, and so
+avoid the folly of extremes.
+
+But then, more particularly, let me say that this double
+contemplation of the two processes under which we live ought to
+stimulate us to service. It ought to say to us, 'Do you cast in your
+lot with that work which is going to be carried on through the ages.
+Do you see to it that your little task is in the same line of
+direction as the great purpose which God is working out--the
+increasing purpose which runs through the ages.' An individual life
+is a mere little backwater, as it were, in the great ocean. But its
+minuteness does not matter, if only the great tidal wave which rolls
+away out there, in the depths and the distance amongst the
+fathomless abysses, tells also on the tiny pool far inland and yet
+connected with the sea by some narrow, long fiord.
+
+If my little life is part of that great ocean, then the ebb and flow
+will alike act on it and make it wholesome. If my work is done in
+and for God, I shall never have to look back and say, as we
+certainly shall say one day, either here or yonder, unless our lives
+be thus part of the divine plan, 'What a fool I was! Seventy years
+of toiling and moiling and effort and sweat, and it has all come to
+nothing; like a long algebraic sum that covers pages of intricate
+calculations, and the _pluses_ and _minuses_ just balance each other;
+and the net result is a great round nought.' So let us remember the
+twofold process, and let it stir us to make sure that 'in our embers'
+shall be 'something that doth live,' and that not 'Nature,' but
+something better--God--'remembers what was so fugitive.' It is not
+fugitive if it is a part of the mighty whole.
+
+But further, let this double contemplation make us very content with
+doing insignificant and unfinished work.
+
+Joseph might have said, when he lay dying: 'Well! perhaps I made a
+mistake after all. I should not have brought this people down here,
+even if I have been led hither. I do not see that I have helped them
+one step towards the possession of the land.' Do you remember the
+old proverb about certain people who should not see half-finished
+work? All our work in this world has to be only what the
+physiologists call functional. God has a great scheme running on
+through ages. Joseph gives it a helping hand for a time, and then
+somebody else takes up the running, and carries the purpose forward
+a little further. A great many hands are placed on the ropes that
+draw the car of the Ruler of the world. And one after another they
+get stiffened in death; but the car goes on. We should be contented
+to do our little bit of the work. Never mind whether it is complete
+and smooth and rounded or not. Never mind whether it can be isolated
+from the rest and held up, and people can say, 'He did that entire
+thing unaided.' That is not the way for most of us. A great many
+threads go to make the piece of cloth, and a great many throws of
+the shuttle to weave the web. A great many bits of glass make up the
+mosaic pattern; and there is no reason for the red bit to pride
+itself on its fiery glow, or the grey bit to boast of its silvery
+coolness. They are all parts of the pattern, and as long as they
+keep their right places they complete the artist's design. Thus, if
+we think of how 'one soweth and another reapeth,' we may be content
+to receive half-done works from our fathers, and to hand on
+unfinished tasks to them that come after us. It is not a great trial
+of a man's modesty, if he lives near Jesus Christ, to be content to
+do but a very small bit of the Master's work.
+
+And the last thing that I would say is, let this double process
+going on all round us lift our thoughts to Him who lives for ever.
+Moses dies; Joshua catches the torch from his hand. And the reason
+why he catches the torch from his hand is because God said, 'As I
+was with Moses so I will be with thee.' Therefore we have to turn
+away in our contemplations from the mortality that has swallowed up
+so much wisdom and strength, eloquence and power, which the Church
+or our own hearts seem so sorely to want: and, whilst we do, we have
+to look up to Jesus Christ and say, 'He lives! He lives! No man is
+indispensable for public work or for private affection and solace so
+long at there is a living Christ for us to hold by.'
+
+Dear brethren, we need that conviction for ourselves often. When
+life seems empty and hope dead, and nothing is able to fill the
+vacuity or still the pain, we have to look to the vision of the Lord
+sitting on the empty throne, high and lifted up, and yet very near
+the aching and void heart. Christ lives, and that is enough.
+
+So the separated workers in all the generations, who did their
+little bit of service, like the many generations of builders who
+laboured through centuries upon the completion of some great
+cathedral, will be united at the last; 'and he that soweth, and he
+that reapeth, shall rejoice together' in the harvest which was
+produced by neither the sower nor the reaper, but by Him who blessed
+the toils of both.
+
+'Joseph died, and all his brethren, and all that generation'; but
+Jesus lives, and therefore His people 'grow and multiply,' and His
+servants' work is blessed; and at the end they shall be knit
+together in the common joy of the great harvest, and of the day when
+the headstone is brought forth with shoutings of 'Grace! grace unto
+it.'
+
+
+
+
+THE ARK AMONG THE FLAGS
+
+
+ 'And there went a man of the house of Levi, and took to
+ wife a daughter of Levi. 2. And the woman conceived, and
+ bare a son: and when she saw him that he was a goodly
+ child, she hid him three months. 3. And when she could
+ not longer hide him, she took for him an ark of bulrushes,
+ and daubed it with slime and with pitch, and put the
+ child therein; and she laid it in the flags by the river's
+ brink. 4. And his sister stood afar off, to wit what would
+ be done to him. 5. And the daughter of Pharaoh came down
+ to wash herself at the river; and her maidens walked
+ along by the river's side; and when she saw the ark among
+ the flags, she sent her maid to fetch it. 6. And when
+ she had opened it, she saw the child: and, behold, the
+ babe wept. And she had compassion on him, and said, This
+ is one of the Hebrews' children. 7. Then said his sister
+ to Pharaoh's daughter, Shall I go and call to thee a nurse
+ of the Hebrew women, that she may nurse the child for
+ thee? 8. And Pharaoh's daughter said to her, Go. And the
+ maid went and called the child's mother. 9. And Pharaoh's
+ daughter said unto her, Take this child away, and nurse
+ it for me, and I will give thee thy wages. And the woman
+ took the child, and nursed it. 10. And the child grew,
+ and she brought him unto Pharaoh's daughter, and he
+ became her son. And she called his name Moses: and she
+ said, Because I drew him out of the water.'--EXODUS ii. 1-10.
+
+I. It is remarkable that all the persons in this narrative are
+anonymous. We know that the names of 'the man of the house of Levi'
+and his wife were Amram and Jochebed. Miriam was probably the
+anxious sister who watched what became of the little coffer. The
+daughter of Pharaoh has two names in Jewish tradition, one of which
+corresponds to that which Brugsch has found to have been borne by
+one of Rameses' very numerous daughters. One likes to think that the
+name of the gentle-hearted woman has come down to us; but, whether
+she was called 'Meri' or not, she and the others have no name here.
+The reason can scarcely have been ignorance. But they are, as it
+were, kept in shadow, because the historian saw, and wished us to
+see, that a higher Hand was at work, and that over all the events
+recorded in these verses there brooded the informing, guiding Spirit
+of God Himself, the sole actor.
+
+ 'Each only as God wills
+ Can work--God's puppets, best and worst,
+ Are we: there is no last nor first.'
+
+II. The mother's motive in braving the danger to herself involved in
+keeping the child is remarkably put. 'When she saw that he was a
+goodly child, she hid him.' It was not only a mother's love that
+emboldened her, as it does all weak creatures, to shelter her
+offspring at her own peril, but something in the look of the infant,
+as it lay on her bosom, touched her with a dim hope. According to
+the Septuagint translation, both parents shared in this. And so the
+Epistle to the Hebrews unites them in that which is here attributed
+to the mother only. Stephen, too, speaks of Moses as 'fair in God's
+sight.' As if the prescient eyes of the parents were not blinded by
+love, but rather cleared to see some token of divine benediction
+resting on him. The writer of the _Hebrews_ lifts the deed out
+of the category of instinctive maternal affection up to the higher
+level of faith. So we may believe that the aspect of her child woke
+some prophetic vision in the mother's soul, and that she and her
+husband were of those who cherished the hopes naturally born from
+the promise to Abraham, nurtured by Jacob's and Joseph's dying wish
+to be buried in Canaan, and matured by the tyranny of Pharaoh. Their
+faith, at all events, grasped the unseen God as their helper, and
+made Jochebed bold to break the terrible law, as a hen will fly in
+the face of a mastiff to shield her brood. Their faith perhaps also
+grasped the future deliverance, and linked it in some way with their
+child. We may learn how transfiguring and ennobling to the gentlest
+and weakest is faith in God, especially when it is allied with
+unselfish human love. These two are the strongest powers. If they
+are at war, the struggle is terrible: if they are united, 'the
+weakest is as David, and David as an angel of God.' Let us seek ever
+to blend their united strength in our own lives.
+
+Will it be thought too fanciful if we suggest that we are taught
+another lesson,--namely, that the faith which surrenders its earthly
+treasures to God, in confidence of His care, is generally rewarded
+and vindicated by receiving them back again, glorified and
+sanctified by the altar on which they have been laid? Jochebed
+clasped her recovered darling to her bosom with a deeper gladness,
+and held him by a surer title, when Miriam brought him back as the
+princess's charge, than ever before. We never feel the preciousness
+of dear ones so much, nor are so calm in the joy of possession, as
+when we have laid them in God's hands, and have learned how wise and
+wonderful His care is.
+
+III. How much of the world's history that tiny coffer among the
+reeds held! How different that history would have been if, as might
+easily have happened, it had floated away, or if the feeble life
+within it had wailed itself dead unheard! The solemn possibilities
+folded and slumbering in an infant are always awful to a thoughtful
+mind. But, except the manger at Bethlehem, did ever cradle hold the
+seed of so much as did that papyrus chest? The set of opinion at
+present minimises the importance of the individual, and exalts the
+spirit of the period, as a factor in history. Standing beside
+Miriam, we may learn a truer view, and see that great epochs require
+great men, and that, without such for leaders, no solid advance in
+the world's progress is achieved. Think of the strange cradle
+floating on the Nile; then think of the strange grave among the
+mountains of Moab, and of all between, and ponder the same lesson as
+is taught in yet higher fashion by Bethlehem and Calvary, that God's
+way of blessing the world is to fill men with His message, and let
+others draw from them. Whether it be 'law,' or 'grace and truth,' a
+man is needed through whom it may fructify to all.
+
+IV. The sweet picture of womanly compassion in Pharaoh's daughter is
+full of suggestions. We have already noticed that her name is handed
+down by one tradition as 'Merris,' and that 'Meri' has been found as
+the appellation of a princess of the period. A rabbinical authority
+calls her 'Bithiah,' that is, 'Daughter of Jehovah'; by which was,
+no doubt, intended to imply that she became in some sense a
+proselyte. This may have been only an inference from her protection
+of Moses. There is a singular and very obscure passage in I
+Chronicles iv. 17, 18, relating the genealogy of a certain Mered,
+who seems to have had two wives, one 'the Jewess,' the other
+'Bithiah, the daughter of Pharaoh.' We know no more about him or
+her, but Keil thinks that Mered probably 'lived before the exodus';
+but it can scarcely be that the 'daughter of Pharaoh,' his wife, is
+our princess, and that she actually became a 'daughter of Jehovah,'
+and, like her adopted child, refused royal dignity and preferred
+reproach. In any case, the legend of her name is a tender and
+beautiful way of putting the belief that in her 'there was some good
+thing towards the God of Israel.'
+
+But, passing from that, how the true woman's heart changes languid
+curiosity into tenderness, and how compassion conquers pride of race
+and station, as well as regard for her father's edict, as soon as
+the infant's cry, which touches every good woman's feelings, falls
+on her ear! 'One touch of nature makes the whole world kin.' All the
+centuries are as nothing; the strange garb and the stranger mental
+and spiritual dress fade, and we have here a mere woman, affected,
+as every true sister of hers to-day would be, by the helpless
+wailing. God has put that instinct there. Alas that it ever should
+be choked by frivolity or pride, and frozen by indifference and
+self-indulgence! Gentle souls spring up in unfavourable soil.
+Rameses was a strange father for such a daughter. How came this dove
+in the vulture's cage? Her sweet pity beside his cold craft and
+cruelty is like the lamb couching by the lion. Note, too, that
+gentlest pity makes the gentlest brave. She sees the child is a
+Hebrew. Her quick wit understands why it has been exposed, and she
+takes its part, and the part of the poor weeping parents, whom she
+can fancy, against the savage law. No doubt, as Egyptologists tell
+us, the princesses of the royal house had separate households and
+abundant liberty of action. Still, it was bold to override the
+strict commands of such a monarch. But it was not a self-willed
+sense of power, but the beautiful daring of a compassionate woman,
+to which God committed the execution of His purposes.
+
+And that is a force which has much like work trusted to it in modern
+society too. Our great cities swarm with children exposed to a worse
+fate than the baby among the flags. Legislation and official charity
+have far too rough hands and too clumsy ways to lift the little life
+out of the coffer, and to dry the tears. We must look to Christian
+women to take a leaf out of 'Bithiah's' book. First, they should use
+their eyes to see the facts, and not be so busy about their own
+luxury and comfort that they pass the poor pitch-covered box
+unnoticed. Then they should let the pitiful call touch their heart,
+and not steel themselves in indifference or ease. Then they should
+conquer prejudices of race, pride of station, fear of lowering
+themselves, loathing, or contempt. And then they should yield to the
+impulses of their compassion, and never mind what difficulties or
+opponents may stand in the way of their saving the children. If
+Christian women knew their obligations and their power, and lived up
+to them as bravely as this Egyptian princess, there would be fewer
+little ones flung out to be eaten by crocodiles, and many a poor
+child, who is now abandoned from infancy to the Devil, would be
+rescued to grow up a servant of God. She, there by the Nile waters,
+in her gracious pity and prompt wisdom, is the type of what
+Christian womanhood, and, indeed, the whole Christian community,
+should be in relation to child life.
+
+V. The great lesson of this incident, as of so much before, is the
+presence of God's wonderful providence, working out its designs by
+all the play of human motives. In accordance with a law, often seen
+in His dealings, it was needful that the deliverer should come from
+the heart of the system from which he was to set his brethren free.
+The same principle which sent Saul of Tarsus to be trained at the
+feet of Gamaliel, and made Luther a monk in the Augustinian convent
+at Erfurt, planted Moses in Pharaoh's palace and taught him the
+wisdom of Egypt, against which he was to contend. It was a strange
+irony of Providence that put him so close to the throne which he was
+to shake. For his future work he needed to be lifted above his
+people, and to be familiar with the Egyptian court as well as with
+Egyptian learning. If he was to hate and to war against idolatry,
+and to rescue an unwilling people from it, he must know the
+rottenness of the system, and must have lived close enough to it to
+know what went on behind the scenes, and how foully it smelled when
+near. He would gain influence over his countrymen by his connection
+with Pharaoh, whilst his very separation from them would at once
+prevent his spirit from being broken by oppression, and would give
+him a keener sympathy with his people than if he had himself been
+crushed by slavery. His culture, heathen as it was, supplied the
+material on which the divine Spirit worked. God fashioned the
+vessel, and then filled it. Education is not the antagonist of
+inspiration. For the most part, the men whom God has used for His
+highest service have been trained in all the wisdom of their age.
+When it has been piled up into an altar, then 'the fire of the Lord'
+falls.
+
+Our story teaches us that God's chosen instruments are immortal till
+their work is done. No matter how forlorn may seem their outlook,
+how small the probabilities in their favour, how divergent from the
+goal may seem the road He leads them, He watches them. Around that
+frail ark, half lost among the reeds, is cast the impregnable shield
+of His purpose. All things serve that Will. The current in the full
+river, the lie of the flags that stop it from being borne down, the
+hour of the princess's bath, the direction of her idle glance, the
+cry of the child at the right moment, the impulse welling up in her
+heart, the swift resolve, the innocent diplomacy of the sister, the
+shelter of the happy mother's breast, the safety of the palace,--all
+these and a hundred more trivial and unrelated things are spun into
+the strong cable wherewith God draws slowly but surely His secret
+purpose into act. So ever His children are secure as long as He has
+work for them, and His mighty plan strides on to its accomplishment
+over all the barriers that men can raise.
+
+How deeply this story had impressed on devout minds the truth of the
+divine protection for all who serve Him, is shown by the fact that
+the word employed in the last verse of our lesson, and there
+translated 'drawn,' of which the name 'Moses' is a form, is used on
+the only occasion of its occurrence in the Old Testament (namely
+Psalm xviii. 16, and in the duplicate in 2 Sam. xxii. 17) with plain
+reference to our narrative. The Psalmist describes his own
+deliverance, in answer to his cry, by a grand manifestation of God's
+majesty; and this is the climax and the purpose of the earthquake
+and the lightning, the darkness and the storm: 'He sent from above,
+He took me, He drew me out of many waters.' So that scene by the
+margin of the Nile, so many years ago, is but one transient instance
+of the working of the power which secures deliverance from
+encompassing perils, and for strenuous, though it may be
+undistinguished, service to all who call upon Him. God, who put the
+compassion into the heart of Pharaoh's dusky daughter, is not less
+tender of heart than she, and when He hears us, though our cry be
+but as of an infant, 'with no language but a cry,' He will come in
+His majesty and draw us from encompassing dangers and impending
+death. We cannot all be lawgivers and deliverers; but we may all
+appeal to His great pity, and partake of deliverance like that of
+Moses and of David.
+
+
+
+
+THE BUSH THAT BURNED, AND DID NOT BURN OUT
+
+
+ 'And, behold, the bush burned with fire, and the bush
+ was not consumed.' EXODUS iii. 1
+
+It was a very sharp descent from Pharaoh's palace to the wilderness,
+and forty years of a shepherd's life were a strange contrast to the
+brilliant future that once seemed likely for Moses. But God tests
+His weapons before He uses them, and great men are generally
+prepared for great deeds by great sorrows. Solitude is 'the mother-
+country of the strong,' and the wilderness, with its savage crags,
+its awful silence, and the unbroken round of its blue heaven, was a
+better place to meet God than in the heavy air of a palace, or the
+profitless splendours of a court.
+
+So as this lonely shepherd is passing slowly in front of his flock,
+he sees a strange light that asserted itself, even in the brightness
+of the desert sunshine. 'The bush' does not mean one single shrub.
+Rather, it implies some little group, or cluster, or copse, of the
+dry thorny acacias, which are characteristic of the country, and
+over which any ordinary fire would have passed like a flash, leaving
+them all in grey ashes. But this steady light persists long enough
+to draw the attention of the shepherd, and to admit of his
+travelling some distance to reach it. And then--and then--the Lord
+speaks.
+
+The significance of this bush, burning but not consumed, is my main
+subject now, for I think it carries great and blessed lessons for
+us.
+
+Now, first, I do not think that the bush burning but not consumed,
+stands as it is ordinarily understood to stand, for the symbolical
+representation of the preservation of Israel, even in the midst of
+the fiery furnace of persecution and sorrow.
+
+Beautiful as that idea is, I do not think it is the true
+explanation; because if so, this symbol is altogether out of keeping
+with the law that applies to all the rest of the symbolical
+accompaniments of divine appearances, all of which, without
+exception, set forth in symbol some truth about God, and not about
+His Church; and all of which, without exception, are a
+representation in visible and symbolical form of the same truth
+which was proclaimed in articulate words along with them. The symbol
+and the accompanying voice of God in all other cases have one and
+the same meaning.
+
+That, I think, is the case here also; and we learn from the Bush,
+not something about God's Church, however precious that may be, but
+what is a great deal more important, something about God Himself;
+namely, the same thing that immediately afterwards was spoken in
+articulate words.
+
+In the next place, let me observe that the fire is distinctly a
+divine symbol, a symbol of God not of affliction, as the ordinary
+explanation implies. I need not do more than remind you of the
+stream of emblem which runs all through Scripture, as confirming
+this point. There are the smoking lamp and the blazing furnace in
+the early vision granted to Abraham. There is the pillar of fire by
+night, that lay over the desert camp of the wandering Israelites.
+There is Isaiah's word, 'The light of Israel shall be a flaming
+fire.' There is the whole of the New Testament teaching, turning on
+the manifestation of God through His Spirit. There are John the
+Baptist's words, 'He shall baptize you with the Holy Ghost and with
+fire.' There is the day of Pentecost, when the 'tongues of fire sat
+upon each of them.' And what is meant by the great word of the
+Epistle to the Hebrews, 'Our God is a consuming fire'?
+
+Not Israel only, but many other lands--it would scarcely be an
+exaggeration to say, all other lands--have used the same emblem with
+the same meaning. In almost every religion on the face of the earth,
+you will find a sacred significance attached to fire. That
+significance is not primarily destruction, as we sometimes suppose,
+an error which has led to ghastly misunderstandings of some
+Scriptures, and of the God whom they reveal. When, for instance,
+Isaiah (xxxiii. 14) asks, 'Who among us shall dwell with the
+devouring fire? who among us shall dwell with everlasting burnings?'
+he has been supposed to be asking what human soul is there that can
+endure the terrors of God's consuming and unending wrath. But a
+little attention to the words would have shown that 'the devouring
+fire' and the 'everlasting burnings' mean God and not hell, and that
+the divine nature is by them not represented as too fierce to be
+approached, but as the true dwelling-place of men, which indeed only
+the holy can inhabit, but which for them is life. Precisely parallel
+is the Psalmist's question, 'Who shall ascend into the hill of the
+Lord, and who shall stand in His holy place?'
+
+Fire is the source of warmth, and so, in a sense, of life. It is
+full of quick energy, it transmutes all kinds of dead matter into
+its own ruddy likeness, sending up the fat of the sacrifices in
+wreathes of smoke that aspire heavenward; and changing all the
+gross, heavy, earthly dullness into flame, more akin to the heaven
+into which it rises.
+
+Therefore, as cleansing, as the source of life, light, warmth,
+change, as glorifying, transmuting, purifying, refining, fire is the
+fitting symbol of the mightiest of all creative energy. And the
+Bible has consecrated the symbolism, and bade us think of the Lord
+Himself as the central fiery Spirit of the whole universe, a spark
+from whom irradiates and vitalises everything that lives.
+
+Nor should we forget, on the other side, that the very felicity of
+this emblem is, that along with all these blessed thoughts of life-
+giving and purifying, there does come likewise the more solemn
+teaching of God's destructive power. 'What maketh heaven, that
+maketh hell'; and the same God is the fire to quicken, to sanctify,
+to bless; and resisted, rejected, neglected, is the fire that
+consumes; the savour of life unto life, or the savour of death unto
+death.
+
+And then, still further, notice that this flame is undying--steady,
+unflickering. What does that mean? Adopting the principle which I
+have already taken as our guide, that the symbol and the following
+oral revelation teach the same truth, there can be no question as to
+that answer. 'I am the God of thy fathers, the God of Abraham, of
+Isaac, and of Jacob. 'I AM THAT I AM.'
+
+That is to say, the fire that burns and does not burn out, which has
+no tendency to destruction in its very energy, and is not consumed
+by its own activity, is surely a symbol of the one Being whose being
+derives its law and its source from Himself, who only can say--'I AM
+THAT I AM'--the law of His nature, the foundation of His being, the
+only conditions of His existence being, as it were, enclosed within
+the limits of His own nature. You and I have to say, 'I am that
+which I have become,' or 'I am that which I was born,' or 'I am that
+which circumstances have made me.' He says, 'I AM THAT I AM.' All
+other creatures are links; this is the staple from which they all
+hang. All other being is derived, and therefore limited and
+changeful; this Being is underived, absolute, self-dependent, and
+therefore unalterable for evermore. Because we live we die. In
+living the process is going on of which death is the end. But God
+lives for evermore, a flame that does not burn out; therefore His
+resources are inexhaustible, His power unwearied. He needs no rest
+for recuperation of wasted energy. His gifts diminish not the store
+which He has to bestow. He gives, and is none the poorer; He works,
+and is never weary; He operates unspent; He loves, and He loves for
+ever; and through the ages the fire burns on, unconsumed and
+undecayed.
+
+O brethren! is not that a revelation--familiar as it sounds to our
+ears now, blessed be God!--is not that a revelation of which, when
+we apprehend the depth and the preciousness, we may well fix an
+unalterable faith upon it, and feel that for us, in our fleeting
+days and shadowy moments, the one means to secure blessedness, rest,
+strength, life, is to grasp and knit ourselves to Him who lives for
+ever, and whose love is lasting as His life? 'The eternal God, the
+Lord ... fainteth not, neither is weary. They that wait upon Him
+shall renew their strength.'
+
+The last thought suggested to me by this symbol is this. Regarding
+the lowly thorn-bush as an emblem of Israel--which unquestionably it
+is, though the fire be the symbol of God--in the fact that the
+symbolical manifestation of the divine energy lived in so lowly a
+shrine, and flamed in it, and preserved it by its burning, there is
+a great and blessed truth.
+
+It is the same truth which Jesus Christ, with a depth of
+interpretation that put to shame the cavilling listeners, found in
+the words that accompanied this vision: 'I am the God of Abraham,
+the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob.' He said to the sneering
+Sadducees, who, like all other sneerers, saw only the surface of
+what they were sarcastic about, 'Did not Moses teach you,' in the
+section about the bush, 'that the dead rise, when he said: I AM the
+God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of Jacob.' A man, about whom it
+can once be said that God is his God, cannot die. Such a bond can
+never be broken. The communion of earth, imperfect as it is, is the
+prophecy of Heaven and the pledge of immortality. And so from that
+relationship which subsisted between the fathers and God, Christ
+infers the certainty of their resurrection. It seems a great leap,
+but there are intervening steps not stated by our Lord, which
+securely bridge the gulf between the premises and the conclusion.
+Such communion is, in its very nature, unaffected by the accident of
+death, for it cannot be supposed that a man who can say that God is
+_His_ God can be reduced to nothingness, and such a bond be
+snapped by such a cause. Therefore Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob are
+still living, 'for all' those whom we call dead, as well as those
+whom we call living, 'live unto Him,' and though so many centuries
+have passed, God still _is_, not _was_, their God. The relation between
+them is eternal and guarantees their immortal life. But immortality
+without corporeity is not conceivable as the perfect state, and if the
+dead live still, there must come a time when the whole man shall partake
+of redemption; and in body, soul, and spirit the glorified and risen
+saints shall be 'for ever with the Lord.'
+
+That is but the fuller working out of the same truth that is taught
+us in the symbol 'the bush burned and was not consumed.' God dwelt
+in it, therefore it flamed; God dwelt in it, therefore though it
+flamed it never flamed out. Or in other words, the Church, the
+individual in whom He dwells, partakes of the immortality of the
+indwelling God. 'Every one shall be salted with fire,' which shall
+be preservative and not destructive; or, as Christ has said,
+'Because I live ye shall live also.'
+
+Humble as was the little, ragged, sapless thorn-bush, springing up
+and living its solitary life amidst the sands of the desert, it was
+not too humble to hold God; it was not too gross to burst into flame
+when He came; it was not too fragile to be gifted with undying
+being; like His that abode in it. And for us each the emblem may be
+true. If He dwell in us we shall live as long as He lives, and the
+fire that He puts in our heart shall be a fountain of fire springing
+up into life everlasting.
+
+
+
+
+THE CALL OF MOSES
+
+
+ 'Come now therefore, and I will send thee unto Pharaoh,
+ that thou mayest bring forth My people the children of
+ Israel, out of Egypt. 11. And Moses said unto God, Who
+ am I, that I should go unto Pharaoh, and that I should
+ bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt? 12.
+ And He said, Certainly I will be with thee; and this
+ shall be a token unto thee, that I have sent thee: When
+ thou hast brought forth the people out of Egypt, ye shall
+ serve God upon this mountain. 13. And Moses said unto
+ God, Behold, when I come unto the children of Israel,
+ and shall say unto them, The God of your fathers hath
+ sent me unto you; and they shall say to me, What is His
+ name? what shall I say unto them? 14. And God said unto
+ Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and He said, thus shalt thou say
+ unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you.
+ 15. And God said moreover unto Moses, Thus shalt thou
+ say unto the children of Israel, The Lord God of your
+ fathers, the God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the
+ God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you: this is my name for
+ ever, and this is my memorial unto all generations.
+ 16. Go, and gather the elders of Israel together, and
+ say unto them, The Lord God of your fathers, the God of
+ Abraham, of Isaac, and of Jacob, appeared unto me,
+ saying, I have surely visited you, and seen that which
+ is done to you in Egypt: 17. And I have said, I will
+ bring you up out of the affliction of Egypt unto the
+ land of the Canaanites, and the Hittites, and the
+ Amorites, and the Perizzites, and the Hivites, and the
+ Jebusites, unto a land flowing with milk and honey.
+ 18. And they shall hearken to thy voice: and thou shalt
+ come, thou and the elders of Israel, unto the king of
+ Egypt, and ye shall say unto him, The Lord God of the
+ Hebrews hath met with us: and now let us go, we beseech
+ Thee, three days' journey into the wilderness, that we
+ may sacrifice to the Lord our God. 19. And I am sure
+ that the king of Egypt will not let you go, no, not by
+ a mighty hand. 20. And I will stretch out my hand, and
+ smite Egypt with all My wonders which I will do in the
+ midst thereof: and after that he will let you go.'
+ --EXODUS iii 10-20.
+
+The 'son of Pharaoh's daughter' had been transformed, by nearly
+forty years of desert life, into an Arab shepherd. The influences of
+the Egyptian court had faded from him, like colour from cloth
+exposed to the weather; nor is it probable that, after the failure
+of his early attempt to play the deliverer to Israel, he nourished
+further designs of that sort. He appears to have settled down
+quietly to be Jethro's son-in-law, and to have lived a modest, still
+life of humble toil. He had flung away fair prospects,--and what had
+he made of it? The world would say 'Nothing,' as it ever does about
+those who despise material advantages and covet higher good. Looking
+after sheep in the desert was a sad downcome from the possibility of
+sitting on the throne of Egypt. Yes, but it was in the desert that
+the vision of the bush burning, and not burning out, came; and it
+would not have come if Moses had been in a palace.
+
+This passage begins in the midst of the divine communication which
+followed and interpreted the vision. We note, first, the divine
+charge and the human shrinking from the task. It was a startling
+transition from verse 9, which declares God's pitying knowledge of
+Israel's oppression, to verse 10, which thrusts Moses forward into
+the thick of dangers and difficulties, as God's instrument. 'I will
+send thee' must have come like a thunder-clap. The commander's
+summons which brings a man from the rear rank and sets him in the
+van of a storming-party may well make its receiver shrink. It was
+not cowardice which prompted Moses' answer, but lowliness. His
+former impetuous confidence had all been beaten out of him. Time was
+when he was ready to take up the _rôle_ of deliverer at his own
+hand; but these hot days were past, and age and solitude and
+communion with God had mellowed him into humility. His recoil was
+but one instance of the shrinking which all true, devout men feel
+when designated for tasks which may probably make life short, and
+will certainly make it hard. All prophets and reformers till to-day
+have had the same feeling. Men who can do such work as the
+Jeremiahs, Pauls, Luthers, Cromwells, can do, are never forward to
+begin it.
+
+Self-confidence is not the temper which God uses for His
+instruments. He works with 'bruised reeds,' and breathes His
+strength into them. It is when a man says 'I can do nothing,' that
+he is fit for God to employ. 'When I am weak, then I am strong.'
+Moses remembered enough of Egypt to know that it was no slight peril
+to front Pharaoh, and enough of Israel not to be particularly eager
+to have the task of leading them. But mark that there is no refusal
+of the charge, though there is profound consciousness of inadequacy.
+If we have reason to believe that any duty, great or small, is laid
+on us by God, it is wholesome that we should drive home to ourselves
+our own weakness, but not that we should try to shuffle out of the
+duty because we are weak. Moses' answer was more of a prayer for
+help than of a remonstrance, and it was answered accordingly.
+
+God deals very gently with conscious weakness. 'Certainly I will be
+with thee.' Moses' estimate of himself is quite correct, and it is
+the condition of his obtaining God's help. If he had been self-
+confident, he would have had no longing for, and no promise of,
+God's presence. In all our little tasks we may have the same
+assurance, and, whenever we feel that they are too great for us, the
+strength of that promise may be ours. God sends no man on errands
+which He does not give him power to do. So Moses had not to
+calculate the difference between his feebleness and the strength of
+a kingdom. Such arithmetic left out one element, which made all the
+difference in the sum total. 'Pharaoh _versus_ Moses' did not
+look a very hopeful cause, but 'Pharaoh _versus_ Moses and
+Another'--that other being God--was a very different matter. God and
+I are always stronger than any antagonists. It was needless to
+discuss whether Moses was able to cope with the king. That was not
+the right way of putting the problem. The right way was, Is God able
+to do it?
+
+The sign given to Moses is at first sight singular, inasmuch as it
+requires faith, and can only be a confirmation of his mission when
+that mission is well accomplished. But there was a help to present
+faith even in it, for the very sacredness of the spot hallowed now
+by the burning bush was a kind of external sign of the promise.
+
+One difficulty being solved, Moses raised another, but not in the
+spirit of captiousness or reluctance. God is very patient with us
+when we tell Him the obstacles which we seem to see to our doing His
+work. As long as these are presented in good faith, and with the
+wish to have them cleared up, He listens and answers. The second
+question asked by Moses was eminently reasonable. He pictures to
+himself his addressing the Israelites, and their question, What is
+the name of this God who has sent you? Apparently the children of
+Israel had lost much of their ancestral faith, and probably had in
+many instances fallen into idolatry. We do not know enough to
+pronounce with confidence on that point, nor how far the great name
+of Jehovah had been used before the time of Moses, or had been
+forgotten in Egypt.
+
+The questions connected with these points and with the history of
+the name do not enter into our present purpose. My task is rather to
+point out the religious significance of the self-revelation of God
+contained in the name, and how it becomes the foundation of Israel's
+deliverance, existence, and prerogatives. Whatever opinions are
+adopted as to the correct form of the name and other grammatical and
+philological questions, there is no doubt that it mainly reveals God
+as self-existent and unchangeable. He draws His being from no
+external source, nor 'borrows leave to be.' Creatures are what they
+are made or grow to be; they are what they were not; they are what
+they will some time not any more be. But He is what He is. Lifted
+above time and change, self-existing and self-determined, He is the
+fountain of life, the same for ever.
+
+This underived, independent, immutable being is a Person who can
+speak to men, and can say 'I am.' Being such, He has entered into
+close covenant relations with men, and has permitted Himself to be
+called 'the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.' The name Jehovah
+lifts Him high above all creatures; the name 'the God of your
+fathers' brings Him into tender proximity with men, and, in
+combination with the former designation, guarantees that He will
+forever be what He has been, even to all generations of children's
+children. That mighty name is, indeed, His 'memorial to all
+generations,' and is as fresh and full of blessedness to us as to
+the patriarchs. Christ has made us understand more of the treasures
+for heart and mind and life which are stored in it. 'Our Father
+which art in heaven' is the unfolding of its inmost meaning.
+
+We may note that the bush burning but not consumed expressed in
+symbol the same truth which the name reveals. It seems a mistake to
+take the bush as the emblem of Israel surviving persecution. Rather
+the revelation to the eye says the same thing as that to the ear, as
+is generally the case. As the desert shrub flamed, and yet did not
+burn away, so that divine nature is not wearied by action nor
+exhausted by bestowing, nor has its life any tendency towards ending
+or extinction, as all creatural life has.
+
+The closing verses of this passage (vs. 16-20) are a programme of
+Moses' mission, in which one or two points deserve notice. First,
+the general course of it is made known from the beginning. Therein
+Moses was blessed beyond most of God's servants, who have to risk
+much and to labour on, not knowing which shall prosper. If we could
+see, as he did, the lie of the country beforehand, our journeys
+would be easier. So we often think, but we know enough of what shall
+be to enable us to have quiet hearts; and it is best for us not to
+see what is to fail and what to succeed. Our ignorance stimulates
+effort, and drives to clinging to God's hand.
+
+Then we may note the full assurances to be given to the 'elders of
+Israel.' Apparently some kind of civic organisation had been kept
+up, and there were principal people among the slaves who had to be
+galvanised first into enthusiasm. So they are to be told two
+things,--that Jehovah has appeared to Moses, and that He, not Moses
+only, will deliver them and plant them in the land. The enumeration
+of the many tribes (v. 17) might discourage, but it is intended to
+fire by the thought of the breadth of the land, which is further
+described as fertile. The more exalted our conceptions of the
+inheritance, the more willing shall we be to enter on the pilgrimage
+towards it. The more we realise that Jehovah has promised to lead us
+thither, the more willing shall we be to face difficulties and
+dangers.
+
+The directions as to the opening of communications with Pharaoh have
+often been made a difficulty, as if there was trickery in the modest
+request for permission to go three days' journey into the
+wilderness. But that request was to be made, knowing that it would
+not be granted. It was to be a test of Pharaoh's willingness to
+submit to Jehovah. Its very smallness made it so more effectually.
+If he had any disposition to listen to the voice speaking through
+Moses, he would yield that small point. It is useless to speculate
+on what would have happened if he had done so. But probably the
+Israelites would have come back from their sacrificing.
+
+Of more importance is it to note that the failure of the request was
+foreseen, and yet the effort was to be made. Is not that the same
+paradox which meets us in all the divine efforts to win over hard-
+hearted men to His service? Is it not exactly what our Lord did when
+He appealed to Judas, while knowing that all would be vain?
+
+The expression in verse 19, 'not by a mighty hand,' is very obscure.
+It may possibly mean that Pharaoh was so obstinate that no human
+power was strong enough to bend his will. Therefore, in contrast to
+the 'mighty hand' of man, which was not mighty enough for this work,
+God will stretch out His hand, and that will suffice to compel
+obedience from the proudest. God can force men by His might to
+comply with His will, so far as external acts go; but He does not
+regard that as obedience, nor delight in it. We can steel ourselves
+against men's power, but God's hand can crush and break the
+strongest will. 'It is a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the
+living God.' It is a blessed thing to put ourselves into them, in
+order to be moulded by their loving touch. The alternative is laid
+before every soul of man.
+
+
+
+
+A LAST MERCIFUL WARNING
+
+
+ 'And the Lord said unto Moses, Yet will I bring one
+ plague more upon Pharaoh, and upon Egypt; afterwards
+ he will let you go hence: when he shall let you go, he
+ shall surely thrust you out hence altogether. 2. Speak
+ now in the ears of the people, and let every man borrow
+ of his neighbour, and every woman of her neighbour,
+ jewels of silver, and jewels of gold. 3. And the Lord
+ gave the people favour in the sight of the Egyptians.
+ Moreover, the man Moses was very great in the land of
+ Egypt, in the sight of Pharaoh's servants, and in the
+ sight of the people. 4. And Moses said, Thus saith the
+ Lord, About midnight will I go out into the midst of
+ Egypt; 5. And all the first-born in the land of Egypt
+ shall die, from the first-born of Pharaoh that sitteth
+ upon his throne, even unto the first-born of the
+ maid-servant that is behind the mill; and all the
+ first-born of beasts. 6. And there shall be a great cry
+ throughout all the land of Egypt, such as there was none
+ like it, nor shall be like it any more. 7. But against
+ any of the children of Israel shall not a dog move his
+ tongue, against man or beast: that ye may know how that
+ the Lord doth put a difference between the Egyptians and
+ Israel. 8. And all these thy servants shall come down
+ unto Me, and bow themselves unto Me, saying, Get Thee
+ out, and all the people that follow Thee: and after that
+ I will go out. And he went out from Pharaoh in a great
+ anger. 9. And the Lord said unto Moses, Pharaoh shall
+ not hearken unto you; that My wonders may be multiplied
+ in the land of Egypt. 10. And Moses and Aaron did all
+ these wonders before Pharaoh: and the Lord hardened
+ Pharaoh's heart, so that he would not let the children
+ of Israel go out of his land.'--EXODUS xi. 1-10.
+
+The first point to be noted in this passage is that it interposes a
+solemn pause between the preceding ineffectual plagues and the last
+effectual one. There is an awful lull in the storm before the last
+crashing hurricane which lays every obstacle flat. 'There is silence
+in heaven' before the final peal of thunder. Verses 1 to 3 seem, at
+first sight, out of place, as interrupting the narrative, since
+Moses' denunciation and prophecy in verses 4 to 8 must have been
+spoken at the interview with Pharaoh which we find going on at the
+end of the preceding chapter. But it is legitimate to suppose that,
+at the very moment when Pharaoh was blustering and threatening, and
+Moses was bearding him, giving back scorn for scorn, the latter
+heard with the inward ear the voice which made Pharaoh's words empty
+wind, and gave him the assurances and commands contained in verses 1
+to 3, and that thus it was given him in that hour what he should
+speak; namely, the prediction that follows in verses 4 to 8. Such a
+view of the sequence of the passage makes it much more vivid,
+dramatic, and natural, than to suppose that the first verses are
+either interpolation or an awkward break referring to a revelation
+at some indefinite previous moment. When a Pharaoh or a Herod or an
+Agrippa threatens, God speaks to the heart of a Moses or a Paul, and
+makes His servant's face 'strong against their faces.'
+
+The same purpose of parting off the preceding plagues from the past
+ones explains the introduction of verses 9 and 10, which stand as a
+summary of the whole account of these, and, as it were, draw a line
+across the page, before beginning the story of that eventful day and
+night of Israel's deliverance.
+
+Moses' conviction, which he knew to be not his own thought but God's
+revelation of His purpose, pointed first to the final blow which was
+to finish Pharaoh's resistance. He had been vacillating between
+compliance and refusal, like an elastic ball which yields to
+compression and starts back to its swelling rotundity as soon as the
+pressure is taken off. But at last he will collapse altogether, like
+the same ball when a slit is cut in it, and it shrivels into a
+shapeless lump. Weak people's obstinate fits end like that. He will
+be as extreme in his eagerness to get rid of the Israelites as he
+had been in his determination to keep them. The sail that is filled
+one moment tumbles in a heap the next, when the halyards are cut. It
+is a poor affair when a man's actions are shaped mainly by fear of
+consequences. Fright always drives to extremes. 'When he shall let
+you go, he shall surely thrust you out hence altogether.' Many a
+stout, God-opposing will collapses altogether when God's finger
+touches it. 'Can thy heart endure in the days that I shall deal with
+thee?'
+
+Verses 2 and 3 appear irrelevant here, but the command to collect
+from the Egyptians jewels, which might be bartered for necessaries,
+may well have been given to Moses simultaneously with the assurance
+that he would lead forth the people after the next plague, and the
+particulars of the people's favour and of Moses' influence in the
+eyes of the native inhabitants, come in anticipatively to explain
+why the request for such contributions was granted when made.
+
+With the new divine command swelling in his heart, Moses speaks his
+last word to Pharaoh, towering above him in righteous wrath, and
+dwindling his empty threats into nothingness. What a contrast
+between the impotent rage of the despot, with his vain threat, 'Thou
+shalt die,' and the unblenching boldness of the man with God at his
+back! One cannot but note in Moses' prediction of the last plague
+the solemn enlargement on the details of the widespread calamity,
+which is not unfeeling gloating over an oppressor's misery, but a
+yearning to save from hideous misery by timely and plain depicting
+of it. There is a flash of national triumph in the further contrast
+between the universal wailing in Egypt and the untouched security of
+the children of Israel, but that feeling merges at once into the
+higher one of 'the Lord's' gracious action in establishing the
+'difference' between them and their oppressors. It is not safe to
+dwell on superiority over others, either as to condition or
+character, unless we print in very large letters that it is 'the
+Lord' who has made it. There is a flash, too, of natural triumph in
+the picture of the proud courtiers brought down to prostrate
+themselves before the shepherd from Horeb, and to pray him to do
+what their master and they had so long fought against his doing. And
+there is a most natural assertion of non-dependence on their leave
+in that emphatic 'After that _I will_ go out.' He is not
+asserting himself against God, but against the cowering courtiers.
+'Hot anger' was excusable, but it was not the best mood in which to
+leave Pharaoh. Better if he had gone out unmoved, or moved only to
+'great heaviness and sorrow of heart' at the sight of men setting
+themselves against God, and rushing on the 'thick bosses of the
+Almighty's buckler' to their own ruin. Moses' anger we naturally
+sympathise with, Christ's meekness we should try to copy.
+
+The closing verses, as we have already noticed, are a kind of
+summing-up of the whole narrative of the plagues and their effects
+on Pharaoh. They open two difficult questions, as to how and why it
+was that the effect of the successive strokes was so slight and
+transient. They give the 'how' very emphatically as being that
+'Jehovah hardened Pharaoh's heart.' Does that not free Pharaoh from
+guilt? And does it not suggest an unworthy conception of God? It
+must be remembered that the preceding narrative employs not only the
+phrase that 'Jehovah hardened Pharaoh's heart,' but also the
+expression that Pharaoh hardened his own heart. And it is further to
+be noted that the latter expression is employed in the accounts of
+the earlier plagues, and that the former one appears only towards
+the close of the series. So then, even if we are to suppose that it
+means that there was a direct hardening action by God on the man's
+heart, such action was not first, but subsequent to obstinate
+hardening by himself. God hardens no man's heart who has not first
+hardened it himself. But we do not need to conclude that any inward
+action on the will is meant. Was not the accumulation of plagues,
+intended, as they were, to soften, a cause of hardening? Does not
+the Gospel, if rejected, harden, making consciences and wills less
+susceptible? Is it not a 'savour of death unto death,' as our
+fathers recognised in speaking of 'gospel-hardened sinners'? The
+same fire softens wax and hardens clay. Whosoever is not brought
+near is driven farther off, by the influences which God brings to
+bear on us.
+
+The 'why' is stated in terms which may suggest difficulties,--'that
+my wonders may be multiplied in the land of Egypt.' But we have to
+remember that the Old Testament writers are not wont to distinguish
+so sharply as more logical Westerns do between the actual result of
+an event and its purpose. With their deep faith in the all-ruling
+power of God, whatever had come to pass was what He had meant to
+come to pass. In fact, Pharaoh's obstinacy had not thwarted the
+divine purpose, but had been the dark background against which the
+blaze of God's irresistible might had shone the brighter. He makes
+the wrath of man to praise Him, and turns opposition into the
+occasion of more conspicuously putting forth His omnipotence.
+
+
+
+
+THE PASSOVER: AN EXPIATION AND A FEAST, A MEMORIAL AND A PROPHECY
+
+
+ 'And the Lord spake unto Moses and Aaron in the land
+ of Egypt, saying, 2. This month shall be unto you the
+ beginning of months: it shall be the first month of the
+ year to you. 3. Speak ye unto all the congregation of
+ Israel, saying, In the tenth day of this month they
+ shall take to them every man a lamb, according to the
+ house of their fathers, a lamb for an house: 4. And if
+ the household be too little for the lamb, let him and
+ his neighbour next unto his house take it according to
+ the number of the souls; every man according to his
+ eating shall make your count for the lamb. 5. Your lamb
+ shall be without blemish, a male of the first year: ye
+ shall take it out from the sheep, or from the goats:
+ 6. And ye shall keep it up until the fourteenth day of
+ the same month: and the whole assembly of the congregation
+ of Israel shall kill it in the evening. 7. And they shall
+ take of the blood, and strike it on the two side posts
+ and on the upper door post of the houses, wherein they
+ shall eat it. 8. And they shall eat the flesh in that
+ night, roast with fire, and unleavened bread; and with
+ bitter herbs they shall eat it. 9. Eat not of it raw,
+ nor sodden at all with water, but roast with fire; his
+ head with his legs, and with the purtenance thereof.
+ 10. And ye shall let nothing of it remain until the
+ morning; and that which remaineth of it until the morning
+ ye shall burn with fire. 11. And thus shall ye eat it;
+ with your loins girded, your shoes on your feet, and
+ your staff in your hand; and ye shall eat it in haste:
+ it is the Lord's passover. 12. For I will pass through
+ the land of Egypt this night, and will smite all the
+ firstborn in the land of Egypt, both man and beast; and
+ against all the gods of Egypt I will execute judgment:
+ I am the Lord. 13. And the blood shall be to you for a
+ token upon the houses where ye are: and when I see the
+ blood, I will pass over you, and the plague shall not be
+ upon you to destroy you, when I smite the land of Egypt.
+ 14. And this day shall be unto you for a memorial; and
+ ye shall keep it a feast to the Lord throughout your
+ generations; ye shall keep it a feast by an ordinance
+ for ever.'--EXODUS xii. 1-14.
+
+The Passover ritual, as appointed here, divides itself into two main
+parts--the sprinkling of the sacrificial blood on the door-posts and
+lintels, and the feast on the sacrifice. These can best be dealt
+with separately. They were separated in the later form of the
+ritual; for, when there was a central sanctuary, the lambs were
+slain there, and the blood sprinkled, as in other expiatory
+sacrifices, on the altar, while the domestic feast remained
+unaltered. The former was more especially meant to preserve the
+Israelites from the destruction of their first-born; the latter as a
+permanent memorial of their deliverance. But both have perpetual
+fitness as prophetic of varying aspects of the Christian redemption.
+
+I. The ritual of the protecting blood.
+
+In the hurry and agitation of that eventful day, it must have seemed
+strange to the excited people that they should be called upon to
+observe such a service. But its institution at that crisis is in
+accordance with the whole tone of the story of the Exodus, in which
+man is nothing and God all. Surely, never was national deliverance
+effected so absolutely without effort or blow struck. If we try to
+realise the state of mind of the Israelites on that night, we shall
+feel how significant of the true nature of their deliverance this
+summons to an act of worship, in the midst of their hurry, must have
+been.
+
+The domestic character of the rite is its first marked feature. Of
+course, there were neither temple nor priests then; but that does
+not wholly account for the provision that every household, unless
+too few in number to consume a whole lamb, should have its own
+sacrifice, slain by its head. The first purpose of the rite, to
+provide for the safety of each house by the sprinkled blood, partly
+explains it; but the deepest reason is, no doubt, the witness which
+was thereby borne to the universal priesthood of the nation. The
+patriarchal order made each man the priest of his house. This rite,
+which lay at the foundation of Israel's nationality, proclaimed that
+a restricted priestly class was a later expedient. The primitive
+formation crops out here, as witness that, even where hid beneath
+later deposits, it underlies them all.
+
+We have called the Passover a sacrifice. That has been disputed, but
+unreasonably. No doubt, it was a peculiar kind of sacrifice, unlike
+those of the later ritual in many respects, and scarcely capable of
+being classified among them. But it is important to keep its
+strictly sacrificial character in view; for it is essential to its
+meaning and to its typical aspect. The proofs of its sacrificial
+nature are abundant. The instructions as to the selection of the
+lamb; the method of disposing of the blood, which was sprinkled with
+hyssop--a peculiarly sacrificial usage; the treatment of the
+remainder after the feast; the very feast itself,--all testify that
+it was a sacrifice in the most accurate use of the word. The
+designation of it as 'a passover to the Lord,' and in set terms as a
+'sacrifice,' in verse 27 and elsewhere, to say nothing of its later
+form when it became a regular Temple sacrifice, or of Paul's
+distinct language in 1 Corinthians v. 7, or of Peter's quotation of
+the very words of verse 5, applied to Christ, 'a lamb without
+blemish,' all point in the same direction.
+
+But if a sacrifice, what kind of sacrifice was it? Clearly, the
+first purpose was that the blood might be sprinkled on the door-
+posts and lintels, and so the house be safe when the destroying
+angel passed through the land. Such is the explanation given in
+verse 13, which is the divine declaration of its meaning. This is
+the centre of the rite; from it the name was derived. Whether
+readers accept the doctrines of substitution and expiation or not,
+it ought to be impossible for an honest reader of these verses to
+deny that these doctrines or thoughts are there. They may be only
+the barbarous notions of a half-savage age and people. But, whatever
+they are, there they are. The lamb without blemish carefully chosen
+and kept for four days, till it had become as it were part of the
+household, and then solemnly slain by the head of the family, was
+their representative. When they sprinkled its blood on the posts,
+they confessed that they stood in peril of the destroying angel by
+reason of their impurity, and they presented the blood as their
+expiation. In so far, their act was an act of confession,
+deprecation, and faith. It accepted the divinely appointed means of
+safety. The consequence was exemption from the fatal stroke, which
+fell on all homes from the palace to the slaves' hovel, where that
+red streak was not found. If any son of Abraham had despised the
+provision for safety, he would have been partaker of the plague.
+
+All this refers only to exemption from outward punishment, and we
+are not obliged to attribute to these terrified bondmen any higher
+thoughts. But clearly their obedience to the command implied a
+measure of belief in the divine voice; and the command embodied,
+though in application to a transient judgment, the broad principles
+of sacrificial substitution, of expiation by blood, and of safety by
+the individual application of that shed blood.
+
+In other words, the Passover is a Gospel before the Gospel. We are
+sometimes told that in its sacrificial ideas Christianity is still
+dressing itself in 'Hebrew old clothes.' We believe, on the
+contrary, that the whole sacrificial system of Judaism had for its
+highest purpose to shadow forth the coming redemption. Christ is not
+spoken of as 'our Passover,' because the Mosaic ritual had happened
+to have that ceremonial; but the Mosaic ritual had that ceremonial
+mainly because Christ is our Passover, and, by His blood shed on the
+Cross and sprinkled on our consciences, does in spiritual reality
+that which the Jewish Passover only did in outward form. All other
+questions about the Old Testament, however interesting and hotly
+contested, are of secondary importance compared with this. Is its
+chief purpose to prophesy of Christ, His atoning death, His kingdom
+and church, or is it not? The New Testament has no doubt of the
+answer. The Evangelist John finds in the singular swiftness of our
+Lord's death, which secured the exemption of His sacred body from
+the violence inflicted on His fellow-sufferers, a fulfilment of the
+paschal injunction that not a bone should be broken; and so, by one
+passing allusion, shows that he recognised Christ as the true
+Passover. John the Baptist's rapturous exclamation, 'Behold the Lamb
+of God!' blends allusions to the Passover, the daily sacrifice, and
+Isaiah's great prophecy. The day of the Crucifixion, regarded as
+fixed by divine Providence, may be taken as God's own finger
+pointing to the Lamb whom He has provided. Paul's language already
+referred to attests the same truth. And even the last lofty visions
+of the Apocalypse, where the old man in Patmos so touchingly recurs
+to the earliest words which brought him to Jesus, echo the same
+conviction, and disclose, amidst the glories of the throne, 'a Lamb
+as it had been slain.'
+
+II. The festal meal on the sacrifice.
+
+After the sprinkling of the blood came the feast. Only when the
+house was secure from the destruction which walked in the darkness
+of that fateful night, could a delivered household gather round the
+board. That which had become their safety now became their food.
+Other sacrifices were, at a later period, modelled on the same type;
+and in all cases the symbolism is the same, namely, joyful
+participation in the sacrifice, and communion with God based upon
+expiation. In the Passover, this second stage received for future
+ages the further meaning of a memorial. But on that first night it
+was only such by anticipation, seeing that it preceded the
+deliverance which it was afterwards to commemorate.
+
+The manner of preparing the feast and the manner of partaking of it
+are both significant. The former provided that the lamb should be
+roasted, not boiled, apparently in order to secure its being kept
+whole; and the same purpose suggested the other prescriptions that
+it was to be served up entire, and with bones unbroken. The reason
+for this seems to be that thus the unity of the partakers was more
+plainly shown. All ate of one undivided whole, and were thus, in a
+real sense, one. So the Apostle deduces the unity of the Church from
+the oneness of the bread of which they in the Christian Passover
+partake.
+
+It was to be eaten with the accompaniments of bitter herbs, usually
+explained as memorials of the bondage, which had made the lives
+bitter, and the remembrance of which would sweeten their
+deliverance, even as the pungent condiments brought out the savour
+of the food. The further accompaniment of unleavened bread seems to
+have the same signification as the appointment that they were to eat
+with their garments gathered round their loins, their feet shod, and
+staves in hand. All these were partly necessities in their urgent
+hurry, and partly a dramatic representation for later days of the
+very scene of the first Passover. A strange feast indeed, held while
+the beat of the pinions of the destroying angel could almost be
+heard, devoured in hot haste by anxious men standing ready for a
+perilous journey, the end whereof none knew! The gladness would be
+strangely dashed with terror and foreboding. Truly, though they
+feasted on a sacrifice, they had bitter herbs with it, and,
+standing, swallowed their portions, expecting every moment to be
+summoned to the march.
+
+The Passover as a feast is a prophecy of the great Sacrifice, by
+virtue of whose sprinkled blood we all may be sheltered from the
+sweep of the divine judgment, and on which we all have to feed if
+there is to be any life in us. Our propitiation is our food. 'Christ
+for us' must become 'Christ in us,' received and appropriated by our
+faith as the strength of our lives. The Christian life is meant to
+be a joyful feast on the Sacrifice, and communion with God based
+upon it. We feast on Christ when the mind feeds on Him as truth,
+when the heart is filled and satisfied with His love, when the
+conscience clings to Him as its peace, when the will esteems the
+'words of His mouth more than' its 'necessary food,' when all
+desires, hopes, and inward powers draw their supplies from Him, and
+find their object in His sweet sufficiency.
+
+Nor will the accompaniments of the first Passover be wanting. Here
+we feast in the night; the dawn will bring freedom and escape. Here
+we eat the glad Bread of God, not unseasoned with bitter herbs of
+sorrow and memories of the bondage, whose chains are dropping from
+our uplifted hands. Here we should partake of that hidden
+nourishment, in such manner that it hinders not our readiness for
+outward service. It is not yet time to sit at His table, but to
+stand with loins girt, and feet shod, and hands grasping the pilgrim
+staff. Here we are to eat for strength, and to blend with our secret
+hours of meditation the holy activities of the pilgrim life.
+
+That feast was, further, appointed with a view to its future use as
+a memorial. It was held before the deliverance which it commemorated
+had been accomplished. A new era was to be reckoned from it. The
+month of the Exodus was thenceforward to be the first of the year.
+The memorial purpose of the rite has been accomplished. All over the
+world it is still observed, so many hundred years after its
+institution, being thus, probably, the oldest religious ceremonial
+in existence. Once more aliens in many lands, the Jewish race still,
+year by year, celebrate that deliverance, so tragically unlike their
+homeless present, and with indomitable hope, at each successive
+celebration, repeat the expectation, so long cherished in vain,
+'This year, here; next year, in the land of Israel. This year,
+slaves; next year, freemen.' There can be few stronger attestations
+of historical events than the keeping of days commemorating them, if
+traced back to the event they commemorate. So this Passover, like
+Guy Fawkes' Day in England, or Thanksgiving Day in America, remains
+for a witness even now.
+
+What an incomprehensible stretch of authority Christ put forth, if
+He were no more than a teacher, when He brushed aside the Passover,
+and put in its place the Lord's Supper, as commemorating His own
+death! Thereby He said, 'Forget that past deliverance; instead,
+remember Me.' Surely this was either audacity approaching insanity,
+or divine consciousness that He Himself was the true Paschal Lamb,
+whose blood shields the world from judgment, and on whom the world
+may feast and be satisfied. Christ's deliberate intention to
+represent His death as expiation, and to fix the reverential,
+grateful gaze of all future ages on His Cross, cannot be eliminated
+from His founding of that memorial rite in substitution for the God-
+appointed ceremonial, so hoary with age and sacred in its
+significance. Like the Passover, the Lord's Supper was established
+before the deliverance was accomplished. It remains a witness at
+once of the historical fact of the death of Jesus, and of the
+meaning and power which Jesus Himself bade us to see in that death.
+For us, redeemed by His blood, the past should be filled with His
+sacrifice. For us, fed on Himself, all the present should be
+communion with Him, based upon His death for us. For us, freed
+bondmen, the memorial of deliverance begun by His Cross should be
+the prophecy of deliverance to be completed at the side of His
+throne, and the hasty meal, eaten with bitter herbs, the adumbration
+of the feast when all the pilgrims shall sit with Him at His table
+in His kingdom. Past, present, and future should all be to us
+saturated with Jesus Christ. Memory should furnish hope with
+colours, canvas, and subjects for her fair pictures, and both be
+fixed on 'Christ our Passover, sacrificed for us.'
+
+
+
+
+THOUGHT, DEED, WORD
+
+
+ 'It shall be for a sign unto thee upon thine hand, and
+ for a memorial between thine eyes, that the Lord's law
+ may be in thy mouth.'--EXODUS xiii. 9.
+
+The question may be asked, whether this command is to be taken
+metaphorically or literally. No doubt the remembrance of the great
+deliverance was intrusted to acts. Besides the annual Passover
+feasts, inscriptions on the door-posts and fringes on the dress were
+appointed for this purpose. And the Jews from a very early period,
+certainly before our Lord's time, wore phylacteries fastened, as
+this and other places prescribe, on the left arm and on the
+forehead, and alleged these words as the commandment which they
+therein obeyed. But it seems more probable that the meaning is
+metaphorical, and that what is enjoined is rather a constant
+remembrance of the great deliverance, and a constant regulation of
+the practical life by it. For what is it that is to be 'a sign'? It
+is the Passover feast. And the 'therefore' of the next verse seems
+to say that keeping this ordinance in its season is the fulfilment
+of this precept. Besides, the expression 'for a sign,' 'for a
+memorial,' may just as well mean 'it shall serve as,' or 'it shall
+be like,' as 'you shall wear.' So I think we must say that this is a
+figure, not a fact; the enjoining of an object for thought and a
+motive for life, not of a formal observance. And it is very
+characteristic of the Jew, and of the universal tendency to harden
+and lower religion into outward rites, that a command so wide and
+profound was supposed to be kept by fastening little boxes with four
+slips of parchment containing extracts from the Pentateuch on arm
+and forehead. Jewish rabbis are not the only people who treat God's
+law like that. Even if literal, the injunction is for the purpose of
+remembering. Taking that meaning, then, the text sets forth
+principles that apply quite as much to us. You will observe 'hand,'
+'eyes,' 'mouth'; the symbols of practice, knowledge, expression;
+work, thought, and word. Observe also that there is a slight change
+in construction in the three clauses; the two former are to be done
+in order that the latter may come to pass. Then the memorial of the
+great deliverance is to be 'on the hand' and 'before the eyes,' in
+order that 'the Lord's law' may be 'in the mouth.' Keeping these
+points in view--
+
+I. God's great deliverance should be constantly before our thoughts.
+It is more than an accident that both Judaism and Christianity
+should begin with a great act of deliverance; that that act of
+deliverance should constitute a community, and that a memorial rite
+should be the centre of the ritual of both. The Lord's Supper
+historically took the place of the Passover. It was instituted at
+the Passover and instead of it. It is precisely the same in design,
+a memorial feast appointed to keep up the vivid remembrance of the
+historical fact to which redemption is traced; and not only to keep
+up its remembrance, but to proclaim the importance of extending that
+remembrance through all life.
+
+Notice the peculiarity of both the Jewish and the Christian rite,
+that the centre point of both is a historical fact, a redeeming act.
+Judaism and Christianity are the only religions in regard to which
+this is true to anything like the same extent or in the same way.
+Christianity as a revelation is not so much the utterance in words
+of great religious thoughts as the history of a life and a death, a
+fact wrought upon the earth, which is at once the means of
+revelation and the means of redemption. This is a feature unshared
+by other religions.
+
+This characteristic determines the principal object of our religious
+thought. The true object for religious thought is Christ, and His
+life and death.
+
+All religious truth flows from and is wrapped up in that:
+_e.g._ theology, or the nature of God; anthropology, or the
+nature of man; soteriology, morality, etc. All truth for the
+individual and for the race has its source in God's great redeeming
+act. Religious emotion is best fed at this source, _e.g._
+thankfulness, wonder, love: all these transcendent feelings which
+are melted together in adoration. Here is where they are kindled.
+You cannot pump them up, or bring them into existence by willing, or
+scourge yourself into them, any more than you can make a seed grow
+by pulling at the germ with a pair of pincers, but this gives the
+warmth and moisture which make it germinate.
+
+The clear perception of this truth is valuable, as correcting false
+tendencies in religion, _e.g._ the tendency to be much occupied
+with the derived truths, and to think of them almost to the
+exclusion of the great fact from which they come; the tendency to
+substitute melancholy self-inspection for objective facts; the
+tendency to run out into mere feeling.
+
+The command requires of us a habitual occupation of mind with the
+great deliverance.
+
+And the habitual presence of this thought will be best secured by
+specific times of occupation with it. Let every Christian practise
+the habit of meditation, which in an age of so many books,
+newspapers, and the distractions of our busy modern life, is apt to
+become obsolete.
+
+II. The great deliverance is to be ever present in practical life.
+
+The 'hand' is clearly the seat and home of power and practical
+effort. So the remembrance is to be present and to preside over our
+practical work.
+
+How it is fitted to do so.
+
+_(a)_ It gives the law for all our activity.
+
+The pattern. The death as well as the life of Christ teaches us what
+we ought to be.
+
+The motive. He died for me! Shall I not serve Him who redeemed me?
+
+_(b)_ That remembered deliverance arms us against temptations,
+and lifts us above sinking into sin.
+
+How blessed such a life would be! How victorious over the small
+motives that rule one's life, the deadening influence of routine,
+the duties that are felt to be overwhelmingly great and those that
+are felt to be wearisomely and monotonously small! How this unity of
+motive would give unity to life and simplify its problems! How it
+would free us from many a perplexity! There are so many things that
+seem doubtful because we do not bring the test of the highest motive
+to bear on them. Complications would fall away when we only wished
+to know and be like Christ. Many a tempting amusement, or
+occupation, or speculation would start up in its own shape when this
+Ithuriel spear touched it. How it would save from distractions! How
+strong it would make us, like a belt round the waist bracing the
+muscles tighter! 'This one thing I do' is always a strengthening
+principle.
+
+How far is this possible? Not absolutely, but we may approximate
+very closely and indefinitely towards it. For there is the
+possibility of such thought blending with common motives, like a
+finer perfume in the scentless air, or some richer elixir in a cup.
+There is the possibility of its doing to other motives what light
+does to landscape when a sudden sunbeam gleams across the plain, and
+everything leaps into increased depth of colour. Let us try more and
+more to rescue life from the slavery of habit and the distractions
+of all these smaller forces, and to bring it into the greatness and
+power of submission to the dominion of this sovereign, unifying
+motive. Our lives would thus be greatened and strengthened, even as
+Germany and Italy have been, by being delivered from a rabble of
+petty dukes and brought under the sway of one emperor or king. Let
+us try to approach nearer and nearer to the fusion of action and
+contemplation, and to the blending with all other motives of this
+supreme one.
+
+This command supplies us with an easily applied and effective test.
+Is there any place where you cannot take it, any act which you feel
+it would be impossible to do for His sake? Avoid such. Where the
+safety-lamp burns blue and goes out, is no place for you.
+
+It is a beautiful thought that Jesus does for us what we are thus
+commanded to do for Him. The high priest bore the names of the
+tribes on his shoulders and in his heart. 'I have graven thee on the
+palms of my hands.' We bear Him in our hands and in our hearts. 'I
+bear in my body the marks of the Lord Jesus.'
+
+III. The great deliverance is to be ever on our lips.
+
+The three regions here named are the inward thought, the outward
+practice, and the testimony of the lips. Note that that testimony is
+a consequence of thought and practice.
+
+1. The purpose of the deliverance is to make 'prophets of His law.'
+Such was the divine intention as to Israel. Such is God's purpose as
+to all Christians. The very meaning of redemption is there. He has
+'opened our lips' that we 'should show forth His praise.' He has
+regard to 'His own name.' He desires to make us vocal, for the same
+purpose for which a man strings a harp, to bring sweet music out of
+it. Words of testimony are a form of love.
+
+2. The other two are incomplete without this vocal testimony.
+
+3. The utterance of the lips, to be worth anything, must rest on and
+follow the other two. How noble, then, and blessed, how strong and
+calm and simple our lives would be, if we had this for the one great
+object of our thoughts, of our practical endeavour, of our words, if
+all our being was sustained, impelled, made vocal, by one thought,
+one love!
+
+O my brother, see to it that you give yourself to Him. That great
+Light will gladden your eyes, will guide your activity, and, like
+the sunrise striking Memnon's voiceless, stony lips, will bring
+music. Thought will have one boundless home of 'many mansions.' Work
+will have one law, one motive, its consecration and strength; and as
+in some solemn procession, all our steps and all our movements will
+keep time to the music of our praise to 'Him who loved us.'
+
+
+
+
+A PATH IN THE SEA
+
+
+ 'And the angel of God, which went before the camp of
+ Israel, removed and went behind them; and the pillar of
+ the cloud went from before their face, and stood behind
+ them: 20. And it came between the camp of the Egyptians
+ and the camp of Israel; and it was a cloud and darkness
+ to them, but it gave light by night to these: so that
+ the one came not near the other all the night. 21. And
+ Moses stretched out his hand over the sea; and the Lord
+ caused the sea to go back by a strong east wind all that
+ night, and made the sea dry land, and the waters were
+ divided. 22. And the children of Israel went into the
+ midst of the sea upon the dry ground: and the waters
+ were a wall unto them on their right hand, and on their
+ left. 23. And the Egyptians pursued, and went in after
+ them to the midst of the sea, even all Pharaoh's horses,
+ his chariots, and his horsemen. 24. And it came to pass,
+ that in the morning watch the Lord looked unto the host
+ of the Egyptians through the pillar of fire and of the
+ cloud, and troubled the host of the Egyptians, 25. And
+ took off their chariot-wheels, that they drave them
+ heavily: so that the Egyptians said, Let us flee from
+ the face of Israel; for the Lord fighteth for them
+ against the Egyptians. 26. And the Lord said unto Moses,
+ Stretch out thine hand over the sea, that the waters may
+ come again upon the Egyptians, upon their chariots, and
+ upon their horsemen. 27. And Moses stretched forth his
+ hand over the sea, and the sea returned to his strength
+ when the morning appeared; and the Egyptians fled against
+ it; and the Lord overthrew the Egyptians in the midst of
+ the sea. 28. And the waters returned, and covered the
+ chariots, and the horsemen, and all the host of Pharaoh
+ that came into the sea after them; there remained not
+ so much as one of them. 29. But the children of Israel
+ walked upon dry land in the midst of the sea; and the
+ waters were a wall unto them on their right hand, and
+ on their left. 30. Thus the Lord saved Israel that day
+ out of the hand of the Egyptians; and Israel saw the
+ Egyptians dead upon the sea-shore. 31. And Israel saw
+ that great work which the Lord did upon the Egyptians:
+ and the people feared the Lord, and believed the Lord,
+ and His servant Moses.'--EXODUS xiv. 19-31.
+
+This passage begins at the point where the fierce charge of the
+Egyptian chariots and cavalry on the straggling masses of the
+fugitives is inexplicably arrested. The weary day's march, which
+must have seemed as suicidal to the Israelites as it did to their
+pursuers, had ended in bringing them into a position where, as
+Luther puts it, they were like a mouse in a trap or a partridge in a
+snare. The desert, the sea, the enemy, were their alternatives. And,
+as they camped, they saw in the distance the rapid advance of the
+dreaded force of chariots, probably the vanguard of an army. No
+wonder that they lost heart. Moses alone keeps his head and his
+faith. He is rewarded with the fuller promise of deliverance, and
+receives the power accompanying the command, to stretch forth his
+hand, and part the sea. Then begins the marvellous series of
+incidents here recorded.
+
+I. The first step in the leisurely march of the divine deliverance
+is the provision for checking the Egyptian advance and securing the
+safe breaking up of the Israelitish camp. The pursuers had been
+coming whirling along at full speed, and would soon have been
+amongst the disorderly mass, dealing destruction. There was no
+possibility of getting the crossing effected unless they were held
+at bay. When an army has to ford a river in the face of hostile
+forces, the hazardous operation is possible only if a strong
+rearguard is left on the enemy's side, to cover the passage. This is
+exactly what is done here. The pillar of fire and cloud, the symbol
+of the divine presence, passed from the van to the rear. Its
+guidance was not needed, when but one path through the sea was
+possible. Its defence was needed when the foe was pressing eagerly
+on the heels of the host. His people's needs determined then, as
+they ever do, the form of the divine presence and help. Long after,
+the prophet seized the great lesson of this event, when he broke
+into the triumphant anticipation of a yet future deliverance,--which
+should repeat in fresh experience the ancient victory, 'The Lord
+will go before you; and the God of Israel will be your rearward,' In
+the place where the need is sorest, and in the form most required,
+there and that will God ever be to those who trust Him.
+
+We can see here, too, a frequent characteristic of the miraculous
+element in Scripture, namely, its reaching its end not by a leap,
+but by a process. Once admit miracle, and it appears as if
+adaptation of means to ends was unnecessary. It would have been as
+easy to have transported the Israelites bodily and instantaneously
+to the other side of the sea, as to have taken these precautions and
+then cleft the ocean, and made them march through it. Legendary
+miracle would have preferred the former way. The Bible miracle
+usually adapts methods to aims, and is content to travel to its goal
+step by step.
+
+Nor can we omit to notice the double effect of the one manifestation
+of the divine presence. The same pillar was light and darkness. The
+side which was cloud was turned to the pursuers; that which was
+light, to Israel. The former were paralysed, and hindered from
+advancing a step, or from seeing what the latter were doing; these,
+on the other hand, had light thrown on their strange path, and were
+encouraged and helped to plunge into the mysterious road, by the
+ruddy gleam which disclosed it. So every revelation is either light
+or darkness to men, according to the use they make of it. The ark,
+which slew Philistines, and flung Dagon prone on his own threshold,
+brought blessing to the house of Obededom. The Child who was to be
+'set for the fall,' was also for 'the rising of many.' The stone
+laid in Zion is 'a sure foundation,' and 'a stone of stumbling.' The
+Gospel is the savour of life unto life, or of death unto death. The
+same fire melts wax and hardens clay. The same Christ is salvation
+and destruction. God is to each of us either our joy or our dread.
+
+II. The sudden march of the Egyptians having thus been arrested,
+there is leisure, behind the shelter of the fiery barrier, to take
+the next step in the deliverance. The sea is not divided in a
+moment. Again, we have a process to note, and that brought about by
+two things,--Moses' outstretched rod, and the strong wind which blew
+all night. The chronology of that fateful night is difficult to
+adjust from our narrative. It would appear, from verse 20, that the
+Egyptians were barred advancing until morning; and, from verse 21,
+that the wind which ploughed with its strong ploughshare a furrow
+through the sea, took all night for its work. But, on the other
+hand, the Israelites must have been well across, and the Egyptians
+in the very midst of the passage, 'in the morning watch,' and all
+was over soon after 'the morning appeared.' Probably the wind
+continued all the night, so as to keep up the pressure which dammed
+back the waters, but the path was passable some hours before the
+gale abated. It must have been a broad way to admit of some two
+million frightened people with wives and children effecting a
+crossing in the short hours of part of one night.
+
+But though God used the wind as His besom to sweep a road clear for
+His people, the effect produced by ordinary means was extraordinary.
+No wind that ever blew would blow water in two opposite directions
+at once, as a man might shovel snow to right and left, and heap it
+in mounds by the sides of the path that he dug. That was what the
+text tells us was done. The miracle is none the less a miracle
+because God employed physical agents, just as Christ's miracles were
+no less miraculous when He anointed blind eyes with moistened clay,
+or sent men to wash in Siloam, than when His bare word raised the
+dead or stilled the ocean. Wind or no wind, Moses' rod or no rod,
+the true explanation of that broad path cleared through the sea is--'the
+waters saw Thee, O God.' The use of natural means may have been
+an aid to feeble faith, encouraging it to step down on to the
+untrodden and slippery road. The employment of Moses and his rod was
+to attest his commission to act as God's mouthpiece.
+
+III. Then comes the safe passage. It is hard to imagine the scene.
+The vivid impression made by our story is all the more remarkable
+when we notice how wanting in detail it is. We do not know the time
+nor the place. We have no information about how the fugitives got
+across, the breadth of the path, or its length. Characteristically
+enough, Jewish legends know all about both, and assure us that the
+waters were parted into twelve ways, one for each tribe, and that
+the length of the road was three hundred miles! But Scripture, with
+characteristic reticence, is silent about all but the fact. That is
+enough. We gather, from the much later and poetical picture of it in
+Psalm lxxvii., that the passage was accomplished in the midst of
+crashing thunder and flashing lightnings; though it may be doubted
+whether these are meant to be taken as real or ideal. At all events,
+we have to think of these two millions of people--women, children,
+and followers--plunging into the depths in the night.
+
+What a scene! The awestruck crowds, the howling wind, perhaps the
+thunderstorm, the glow of the pillar glistening on the wet and slimy
+way, the full paschal moon shining on the heaped waters! How the awe
+and the hope must both have increased with each step deeper in the
+abyss, and nearer to safety! The Epistle to the Hebrews takes this
+as an instance of 'faith' on the part of the Israelites; and truly
+we can feel that it must have taken some trust in God's protecting
+hand to venture on such a road, where, at any moment, the walls
+might collapse and drown them all. They were driven to venture by
+their fear of Pharaoh; but faith, as well as fear, wrought in them.
+Our faith, too, is often called upon to venture upon perilous paths.
+We may trust Him to hold back the watery walls from falling. The
+picture of the crossing carries eternal truth for us all. The way of
+safety does not open till we are hemmed in, and Pharaoh's chariots
+are almost come up. It often leads into the very thick of what we
+deem perils. It often has to be ventured on in the dark, and with
+the wind in our faces. But if we tread it in faith, the fluid will
+be made solid, and the pathless passable, or any other apparent
+impossibility be realised, before our confidence shall be put to
+shame, or one real evil reach us.
+
+IV. The next stage is the hot pursuit and the panic of the
+Egyptians. The narrative does not mark the point at which the pillar
+lifted and disclosed the escape of the prey. It must have been in
+the night. The baffled pursuers dash after them, either not seeing,
+or too excited and furious to heed where they were going. The rough
+sea bottom was no place for chariots, and they would be hopelessly
+distanced by the fugitives on foot. How long they stumbled and
+weltered we are not told, but 'in the morning watch,' that is, while
+it was yet dark, some awful movement in the fiery pillar awed even
+their anger into stillness, and drove home the conviction that they
+were fighting against God. There is something very terrible in the
+vagueness, if we may call it so, of that phrase 'the Lord looked ...
+through the pillar.' It curdles the blood as no minuteness of
+narrative would do. And what a thought that His look should be a
+trouble! 'The steady whole of the judge's face' is awful, and some
+creeping terror laid hold on that host of mad pursuers floundering
+in the dark, as that more than natural light flared on their path.
+The panic to which all bodies of soldiers in strange circumstances
+are exposed, was increased by the growing difficulty of advance, as
+the chariot wheels became clogged or the ground more of quicksand.
+At last it culminates in a shout of '_Sauve qui peut!_' We may
+learn how close together lie daring rebellion against God and abject
+terror of Him; and how in a moment, a glance of His face, a turn of
+His hand, bring the wildest blasphemer to cower in fear. We may
+learn, too, to keep clear of courses which cannot be followed a
+moment longer, if once a thought that God sees us comes in. And we
+may learn the miserable result of all departure from Him, in making
+what ought to be our peace and blessing, our misery and terror, and
+turning the brightness of His face into a consuming fire.
+
+V. Then comes, at last, the awful act of destruction, of which a man
+is the agent and an army the victim. We must suppose the Israelites
+all safe on the Arabian coast, when the level sunlight streams from
+the east on the wild hurry of the fleeing crowd making for the
+Egyptian shore. What a solemn sight that young morning looked on!
+The wind had dropped, the rod is stretched out, the sea returns to
+its strength; and after a few moments' despairing struggle all is
+over, and the sun, as it climbs, looks down upon the unbroken
+stretch of quiet sea, bearing no trace of the awful work which it
+had done, or of the quenched hatred and fury which slept beneath.
+
+We can understand the stern joy which throbs so vehemently in every
+pulse of that great song, the first blossom of Hebrew poetry, which
+the ransomed people sang that day. We can sympathise with the many
+echoes in psalm and prophecy, which repeated the lessons of faith
+and gratitude. But some will be ready to ask, Was that triumphant
+song anything more than narrow national feeling, and has
+Christianity not taught us another and tenderer thought of God than
+that which this lesson carries? We may ask in return, Was it divine
+providence that swept the Spanish Armada from the sea, fulfilling,
+as the medal struck to commemorate it bore, the very words of Moses'
+song, 'Thou didst blow with Thy wind, the sea covered them'? Was it
+God who overwhelmed Napoleon's army in the Russian snows? Were
+these, and many like acts in the world's history, causes for
+thankfulness to God? Is it not true that, as has been well said,
+'The history of the world is the judgment of the world'? And does
+Christianity forbid us to rejoice when some mighty and ancient
+system of wrong and oppression, with its tools and accomplices, is
+cleared from off the face of the earth? 'When the wicked perish,
+there is shouting.' Let us not forget that the love and gentleness
+of the Gospel are accompanied by the revelation of divine judgment
+and righteous retribution. This very incident has for its last echo
+in Scripture that wonderful scene in the Apocalypse, where, in the
+pause before the seven angels bearing the seven plagues go forth,
+the seer beholds a company of choristers, like those who on that
+morning stood on the Red Sea shore, standing on the bank of the 'sea
+of glass mingled with fire,'--which symbolises the clear and
+crystalline depth of the stable divine judgments, shot with fiery
+retribution,--and lifting up by anticipation a song of thanksgiving
+for the judgments about to be wrought. That song is expressly called
+'the song of Moses' and 'of the Lamb,' in token of the essential
+unity of the two dispensations, and especially of the harmony of
+both in their view of the divine judgments. Its ringing praises are
+modelled on the ancient lyric. It, too, triumphs in God's judgments,
+regards them as means of making known His name, as done not for
+destruction, but that His character may be known and honoured by
+men, to whom it is life and peace to know and love Him for what He
+is.
+
+That final victory over 'the beast,' whether he be a person or a
+tendency, is to reproduce in higher fashion that old conquest by the
+Red Sea. There is hope for the world that its oppressors shall not
+always tyrannise; there is hope for each soul that, if we take
+Christ for our deliverer and our guide, He will break the chains
+from off our wrists, and bring us at last to the eternal shore,
+where we may stand, like the ransomed people, and, as the unsetting
+morning dawns, see its beams touching with golden light the calm
+ocean, beneath which our oppressors lie buried for ever, and lift up
+glad thanksgivings to Him who has 'led us through fire and through
+water, and brought us out into a wealthy place.'
+
+
+
+
+'MY STRENGTH AND SONG'
+
+
+ 'The Lord is my strength and song, and He is become my
+ salvation....'
+ EXODUS xv. 2.
+
+These words occur three times in the Bible: here, in Isaiah xii. 2,
+and in Psalm cxviii. 14.
+
+I. The lessons from the various instances of their occurrence. The
+first and second teach that the Mosaic deliverance is a picture-
+prophecy of the redemption in Christ. The third (Psalm cxviii. 14),
+long after, and the utterance of some private person, teaches that
+each age and each soul has the same mighty Hand working for it. 'As
+we have heard, so have we seen.'
+
+II. The lessons from the words themselves.
+
+_(a)_ True faith appropriates God's universal mercy as a
+personal possession. '_My_ Lord and _my_ God!' 'He loved
+_me_, and gave Himself for _me_.'
+
+_(b)_ Each single act of mercy should reveal God more clearly
+as 'My strength.' The 'and' in the second clause is substantially
+equivalent to 'for.' It assigns the reason for the assurance
+expressed in the first. Because of the experienced deliverance and
+God's manifestation of Himself in it as the author of 'salvation,'
+my faith wins happy increase of confidence that He 'is the strength
+of my heart.' Blessed they who bring that treasure out of all the
+sorrows of life!
+
+_(c)_ The end of His deliverances is 'praise.' 'He is my song.'
+This is true for earth and for heaven. The 'Song of Moses and the
+Lamb.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SHEPHERD AND THE FOLD
+
+
+ '... Thou hast guided them in Thy strength unto Thy
+ holy habitation.'
+ EXODUS XV. 13.
+
+What a grand triumphal ode! The picture of Moses and the children of
+Israel singing, and Miriam and the women answering: a gush of
+national pride and of worship! We belong to a better time, but still
+we can feel its grandeur. The deliverance has made the singer look
+forward to the end, and his confidence in the issue is confirmed.
+
+I. The guiding God: or the picture of the leading. The original is
+'lead gently.' _Cf._ Isaiah xl. 11, Psalm xxiii. 2. The emblem
+of a flock underlies the word. There is not only guidance, but
+gentle guidance. The guidance was gentle, though accompanied with so
+tremendous and heart-curdling a judgment. The drowned Egyptians were
+strange examples of gentle leading. But God's redemptive acts are
+like the guiding pillar of fire, in that they have a side that
+reveals wrath and evokes terror, and a side that radiates lambent
+love and kindles happy trust.
+
+'In Thy strength.' _Cf._ Isaiah xl. 10, 'with strong hand.' 'He
+shall gently lead.' Note the combination with gentleness. That
+divine strength is the only power which is able to guide. We are so
+weak that it takes all His might to hold us up. It is His strength,
+not ours. 'My strength is made perfect in (thy) weakness.'
+
+'To the resting-place of Thy holiness.' The word is used for
+pasture, or resting-places for cattle. Here it meant Canaan; for us
+it means Heaven--'the green pastures' of real participation in His
+holiness.
+
+II. The triumphant confidence as to the future based upon the
+deliverance of the past. _'Hast,'_ a past tense. It is as good
+as done. The believing use of God's great past, and initial mercy,
+to make us sure of His future.
+
+_(a)_ In that He will certainly accomplish it.
+
+_(b)_ In that even now there is a foretaste--rest in toil. He
+guides to the 'waters of resting.' A rest now (Heb. iv. 3); a rest
+'that remaineth' (Heb. iv. 3, 9).
+
+III. The warning against confidence in self. These people who sang
+thus perished in the wilderness! They let go hold of God's hand, so
+they 'sank like lead.' So He will fulfil begun work (Philippians i.
+6). Let us cleave to Him. In Hebrews iii. and iv. lessons are drawn
+from the Israelites not 'entering in.' See also Psalm xcv.
+
+
+
+
+THE ULTIMATE HOPE
+
+
+ 'Thou shalt bring them in and plant them in the mountain
+ of Thine inheritance....'--EXODUS xv. 17.
+
+I. The lesson taught by each present deliverance and kindness is
+that we shall be brought to His rest at last.
+
+_(a)_ Daily mercies are a pledge and a pattern of His
+continuous acts. The confidence that we shall be kept is based upon
+no hard doctrine of final perseverance, but on the assurance that
+God is always the same, like the sunshine which has poured out for
+all these millenniums and still rushes on with the same force.
+Consider--
+
+The inexhaustibleness of the divine resources.
+
+The steadfastness of the divine purposes.
+
+The long-suffering of the divine patience.
+
+_(b)_ Thus daily mercies should lead on our thoughts to
+heavenly things. They should not prison us in their own sweetness.
+We should see the great Future shining through them as a
+transparent, not an opaque medium.
+
+_(c)_ That ultimate future should be the great object of our
+hope. Surely it is chiefly in order that we may have the light of
+that great to-morrow brightening and magnifying our dusty to-days,
+that we are endowed with the faculty of looking forward and 'calling
+things that are not as though they were.' So we should engage and
+enlarge our minds with it.
+
+II. The form which that ultimate future assumes.
+
+The Israelites thought of Canaan, and in particular of 'Zion,' its
+centre-point.
+
+_(a)_ Perpetual rest. 'Bring in and plant'--a contrast to the
+desert nomad life.
+
+_(b)_ Perpetual safety. 'The sanctuary which Thy hands have
+established,' _i.e._ made firm.
+
+_(c)_ Perpetual dwelling in God. 'Thy dwelling,' 'Thy
+mountain,' '_Thy_ holy habitation' (ver. 13), rather than
+'_our_ land.' For Israel their communion with Jehovah was
+perfected on Zion by the Temple and the sacrifices, including the
+revelation of (priestly) national service.
+
+_(d)_ Perpetual purity. 'Thy sanctuary.' 'Without' holiness 'no
+man shall see the Lord.'
+
+
+
+
+MARAH
+
+
+ 'And when they came to Marah, they could not drink of
+ the waters of Marah, for they were bitter: therefore
+ the name of it was called Marah. 24. And the people
+ murmured against Moses, saying, What shall we drink?
+ 25. And he cried unto the Lord; and the Lord showed him
+ a tree, which when he had cast into the waters, the
+ waters were made sweet....'--EXODUS xv. 23-25.
+
+I. The time of reaching Marah--just after the Red Sea. The
+Israelites were encamped for a few days on the shore to shake
+themselves together, and then at this, their very first station,
+they began to experience the privations which were to be their lot
+for forty years. Their course was like that of a ship that is in the
+stormy Channel as soon as it leaves the shelter of the pier at
+Dover, not like that of one that glides down the Thames for miles.
+
+After great moments and high triumphs in life comes Marah.
+
+Marah was just before Elim--the alternation, how blessed! The shade
+of palms and cool water of the wells, one for each tribe and one for
+each 'elder.' So we have alternations in life and experience.
+
+II. The wrong and the right ways of taking the bitter experience.
+The people grumbled: Moses cried to the Lord. The quick
+forgetfulness of deliverances. The true use of speech is not
+complaint, but prayer.
+
+III. The power that changes bitter to sweet. The manner of the
+miracle is singular. God hides Himself behind Moses, and His
+miraculous power behind the material agent. Perhaps the manner of
+the miracle was intended to suggest a parallel with the first
+plague. There the rod made the Nile water undrinkable. There is a
+characteristic economy in the miraculous, and outward things are
+used, as Christ used the pool and the saliva and the touch, to help
+the weak faith of the deaf and dumb man.
+
+What changes bitter to sweet for us?--the Cross, the remembrance of
+Christ's death. 'Consider Him that endured.' The Cross is the true
+tree which, when 'cast into the waters, the waters were made sweet.'
+
+Recognition of and yielding to God's will: that is the one thing
+which for us changes all. The one secret of peace and of getting
+sweetness out of bitterness is loving acceptance of the will of God.
+
+Discernment of purpose in God's 'bitter' dealings--'for our profit.'
+The dry rod 'budded.' The Prophet's roll was first bitter, then
+sweet. Affliction 'afterwards yieldeth the peaceable fruit.'
+
+
+
+
+THE BREAD OF GOD
+
+
+ 'Then said the Lord unto Moses, Behold, I will rain
+ bread from heaven for you; and the people shall go out
+ and gather a certain rate every day, that I may prove
+ them, whether they will walk in My law, or no. 5. And
+ it shall come to pass, that on the sixth day they shall
+ prepare that which they bring in; and it shall be twice
+ as much as they gather daily. 6. And Moses and Aaron said
+ unto all the children of Israel, At even, then ye shall
+ know that the Lord hath brought you out from the land of
+ Egypt: 7. And in the morning, then ye shall see the glory
+ of the Lord; for that He heareth your murmurings against
+ the Lord: and what are we, that ye murmur against us?
+ 8. And Moses said, This shall be, when the Lord shall give
+ you in the evening flesh to eat, and in the morning bread
+ to the full; for that the Lord heareth your murmurings
+ which ye murmur against Him: and what are we? your murmurings
+ are not against us, but against the Lord, 9. And Moses
+ spake unto Aaron, Say unto all the congregation of the
+ children of Israel, Come near before the Lord: for He
+ hath heard your murmurings. 10. And it came to pass, as
+ Aaron spake unto the whole congregation of the children
+ of Israel, that they looked toward the wilderness, and,
+ behold, the glory of the Lord appeared in the cloud.
+ 11. And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 12. I have
+ heard the murmurings of the children of Israel: speak
+ unto them, saying, At even ye shall eat flesh, and in
+ the morning ye shall be filled with bread; and ye shall
+ know that I am the Lord your God.'--EXODUS xvi. 4-12.
+
+Unbelief has a short memory. The Red Sea is forgotten in a month.
+The Israelites could strike their timbrels and sing their lyric of
+praise, but they could not believe that to-day's hunger could be
+satisfied. Discontent has a slippery memory. They wish to get back
+to the flesh-pots, of which the savour is in their nostrils, and
+they have forgotten the bitter sauce of affliction. When they were
+in Egypt, they shrieked about their oppression, and were ready to
+give up anything for liberty; when they have got it, they are ready
+to put their necks in the yoke again, if only they can have their
+stomachs filled. Men do not know how happy they are till they cease
+to be so. Our present miseries and our past blessings are the themes
+on which unbelief harps. Let him that is without similar sin cast
+the first stone at these grumbling Israelites. Without following
+closely the text of the narrative, we may throw together the lessons
+of the manna.
+
+I. Observe God's purpose in the gift, as distinctly expressed in the
+promise of it.
+
+'That I may prove them, whether they will walk in My law or no.' How
+did the manna become a test of this? By means of the law prescribed
+for gathering it. There was to be a given quantity daily, and twice
+as much on the sixth day. If a man trusted God for to-morrow, he
+would be content to stop collecting when he had filled his omer,
+tempting as the easily gathered abundance would be. Greed and
+unbelief would masquerade then as now, under the guise of prudent
+foresight. The old Egyptian parallels to 'make hay while the sun
+shines,' and suchlike wise sayings of the philosophy of distrust,
+would be solemnly spoken, and listened to as pearls of wisdom. When
+experience had taught that, however much a man gathered, he had no
+more than his omer full, after all,--and is not that true yet?--then
+the next temptation would be to practise economy, and have something
+over for to-morrow. Only he who absolutely trusted God to provide
+for him would eat up his portion, and lie down at night with a quiet
+heart, knowing that He who had fed him would feed. When experience
+had taught that what was saved rotted, then laziness would come in
+and say, 'What is the use of gathering twice as much on the sixth
+day? Don't we know that it will not keep?' So the whole of the gift
+was a continual training of, and therefore a continual test for,
+faith. God willed to let His gifts come in this hand-to-mouth
+fashion, though He could have provided at once what would have
+obviously lasted them all their wilderness life, in order that they
+might be habituated to cling to Him, and that their daily bread
+might be doubly for their nourishment, feeding their bodies and
+strengthening that faith which, to them as to us, is the condition
+of all blessedness. God lets our blessings, too, trickle to us drop
+by drop, instead of pouring them in a flood all at once upon us, for
+the same reason. He does so, not because of any good to Him from our
+faith, except that the Infinite love loves infinitely to be loved;
+but for our sakes, that we may taste the peace and strength of
+continual dependence, and the joy of continual receiving. He could
+give us the principal down; but He prefers to pay us the interest,
+as we need it.
+
+Christianity does not absolutely forbid laying up money or other
+resources for future wants. But the love of accumulating, which is
+so strong in many professing Christians, and the habit of amassing
+beyond all reasonable future wants, is surely scarcely permitted to
+those who profess to believe that incarnate wisdom forbade taking
+anxious care for the morrow, and sent its disciples to lilies and
+birds to learn the happy immunities of faith. We too get our daily
+mercies to prove us. The letter of the law for the manna is not
+applicable to us who gain our bread by God's blessing on our labour.
+But the spirit is, and the members of great commercial nations have
+surely little need to be reminded that still the portion put away is
+apt to breed worms. How often it vanishes, or, if it lasts, tortures
+its owner, who has more trouble keeping it than he had in getting
+it; or fatally corrupts his own character, or ruins his children!
+All God's gifts are tests, which--thanks be to Him--is the same as
+to say that they are means of increasing faith, and so adding to
+joy.
+
+II. The manna was further a disclosure of the depth of patient long-
+suffering in God.
+
+Very strikingly the 'murmurings' of the children of Israel are four
+times referred to in this context, and on each occasion are stated
+as the reason for the gift of the manna. It was God's answer to the
+peevish complaints of greedy appetites. When they were summoned to
+come near to the Lord, with the ominous warning that 'He hath heard
+your murmurings,' no doubt many a heart began to quake; and when the
+Glory flashed from the Shechinah cloud, it would burn lurid to their
+trembling consciences. But the message which comes from it is sweet
+in its gentleness, as it promises the manna because they have
+murmured, and in order that they may know the Lord. A mother soothes
+her crying infant by feeding it from her own bosom. God does not
+take the rod to His whimpering children, but rather tries to win
+them by patience, and to shame their unbelief by His swift and over-
+abundant answers to their complaints. When He must, He punishes; but
+when He can, He complies. Faith is the condition of our receiving
+His highest gifts; but even unbelief touches His heart with pity,
+and what He can give to it, He does, if it may be melted into trust.
+The farther men stray from Him, the more tender and penetrating His
+recalling voice. We multiply transgressions, He multiplies mercies.
+
+III. The manna was a revelation in miraculous and transient form of
+an eternal truth.
+
+The God who sent it sends daily bread. The words which Christ quoted
+in His wilderness hunger are the explanation of its meaning as a
+witness to this truth: 'Man doth not live by bread alone, but by
+every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God.' To a Christian,
+the divine power is present and operative in all natural processes
+as really as in those which we call miraculous. God is separable
+from the universe, but the universe is not separable from God. If it
+were separated, it would cease. So far as the reality of the divine
+operation is concerned, it matters not whether He works in the
+established fashion, through material things, or whether His will
+acts directly. The chain which binds a phenomenon to the divine will
+may be long or short; the intervening links may be many, or they may
+be abolished, and the divine cause and the visible effect may touch
+without anything between. But in either case the power is of God.
+Bread made out of flour grown on the other side of the world, and
+fashioned by the baker, and bought by the fruits of my industry, is
+as truly the gift of God as was the manna. For once, He showed these
+men His hand at work, that we all might know that it was at work,
+when hidden. The lesson of the 'angel's food' eaten in the
+wilderness is that men are fed by the power of God's expressed and
+active will,--for that is the meaning of 'the word that proceedeth
+out of the mouth of God,'--in whatever fashion they get their food.
+The gift of it is from Him; its power to nourish is from Him. It is
+as true to-day as ever it was: 'Thou openest Thine hand, and
+satisfiest the desire of every living thing.' The manna ceased when
+the people came near cornfields and settled homes. Miracles end when
+means are possible. But the God of the miracle is the God of the
+means.
+
+Commentators make much of what is supposed to be a natural
+substratum for the manna, in a certain vegetable product, found in
+small quantities in parts of the Arabian peninsula. No doubt, we are
+to recognise in the plagues of Egypt, and in the dividing of the Red
+Sea, the extraordinary action of ordinary causes; and there is no
+objection in principle to doing so here. But that an exudation from
+the bark of a shrub, which has no nutritive properties at all, is
+found only in one or two places in Arabia, and that only at certain
+seasons and in infinitesimal quantity, seems a singularly thin
+'substratum' on which to build up the feeding of two millions of
+people, more or less exclusively and continuously for forty years,
+by means of a substance which has nothing to do with tamarisk-trees,
+and is like the natural product in nothing but sweetness and name.
+Whether we admit connection between the two, or not, the miraculous
+character of the manna of the Israelites is unaffected. It was
+miraculous in its origin--'rained from heaven,' in its quantity, in
+its observance of times and seasons, in its putrefaction and
+preservation,--as rotting when kept for greed, and remaining sweet
+when preserved for the Sabbath. It came straight from the creative
+will of God, and whether its name means 'What is it?' or 'It is a
+gift,' the designation is equally true and appropriate, pointing, in
+the one case, to the mystery of its nature; in the other, to the
+love of the Giver, and in both referring it directly to the hand of
+God.
+
+IV. The manna was typical of Christ.
+
+Our Lord Himself has laid His hand upon it, and claimed it as a
+faint foreshadowing of what He is. The Jews, not satisfied with the
+miracle of the loaves, demand from Him a greater sign, as the
+condition of what they are pleased to call 'belief'--which is
+nothing but accepting the testimony of sense. They quote Moses as
+giving the manna, and imply that Messiah is expected to repeat the
+miracle. Christ accepts the challenge, and goes on to claim that He
+not only gives, but Himself is, for all men's souls, all and more
+than all which the manna had been to the bodies of that dead
+generation. Like it, He came--but in how much more profound a
+sense!--from heaven. Like it, He was food. But unlike it, He could
+still for ever the craving of the else famishing soul; unlike it, He
+not only nourished a bodily life already possessed, but communicated
+a spiritual life which never dies; and, unlike it, He was meant to
+be the food of the whole world. His teaching passed beyond the
+symbolism of the manna, when He not only declared Himself to be the
+'true bread from heaven which gives life to the world,' but opened a
+glimpse into the solemn mystery of His atoning death by the
+startling and apparently repulsive paradox that 'His flesh was food
+indeed and His blood drink indeed.' The manna does not typically
+teach Christ's atonement, but it does set Him forth as the true
+sustenance and life-giver, sweet as honey to the soul, sent from
+heaven for us each, but needing to be made ours by the act of our
+faith. An Israelite would have starved, though the manna lay all
+round the camp, if he did not go forth and secure his portion; and
+he might no less have starved, if he did not eat what Heaven had
+sent. 'Crede et manducasti,' 'Believe, and thou hast eaten,'--as St.
+Augustine says. The personal appropriating act of faith is essential
+to our having Christ for the food of our souls. The bread that
+nourishes our bodies is assimilated to their substance, and so
+becomes sustenance. This bread of God, entering into our souls by
+faith, transforms them into its substance, and so gives and feeds an
+immortal life. The manna was for a generation; this bread is 'the
+same yesterday, and to-day, and for ever.' That was for a handful of
+men; this is for the world. Nor is the prophetic value of the manna
+exhausted when we recognise its witness to Christ. The food of the
+wilderness is the food of the city. The bread that is laid on the
+table, 'spread in the presence of the enemy,' is the bread that
+makes the feast in the king's palace. The Christ who feeds the
+pilgrim soldiers is the Christ on whom the conquerors banquet. 'To
+him that overcometh will I give to eat of the hidden manna.'
+
+
+
+
+JEHOVAH NISSI
+
+
+ 'And Moses built an altar, and called the name of it
+ Jehovah Nissi [that is, the Lord is my Banner].'
+ --EXODUS xvii. 15.
+
+We are all familiar with that picturesque incident of the conflict
+between Israel and Amalek, which ended in victory and the erection
+of this memorial trophy. Moses, as you remember, went up on the
+mount whilst Joshua and the men of war fought in the plain. But I
+question whether we usually attach the right meaning to the
+symbolism of this event. We ordinarily, I suppose, think of Moses as
+interceding on the mountain with God. But there is no word about
+prayer in the story, and the attitude of Moses is contrary to the
+idea that his occupation was intercession. He sat there, with the
+rod of God in his hand, and the rod of God was the symbol and the
+vehicle of divine power. When he lifted the rod Amalek fled before
+Israel; when the rod dropped Israel fled before Amalek. That is to
+say, the uplifted hand was not the hand of intercession, but the
+hand which communicated power and victory. And so, when the conflict
+is over, Moses builds this memorial of thanksgiving to God, and
+piles together these great stones--which, perhaps, still stand in
+some of the unexplored valleys of that weird desert land--to teach
+Israel the laws of conflict and the conditions of victory. These
+laws and conditions are implied in the name which he gave to the
+altar that he built--Jehovah Nissi, 'the Lord is my Banner.'
+
+Now, then, what do these stones, with their significant name, teach
+us, as they taught the ancient Israelites? Let me throw these
+lessons into three brief exhortations.
+
+I. First, realise for whose cause you fight.
+
+The Banner was the symbol of the cause for which an army fought, or
+the cognizance of the king or commander whom it followed. So Moses,
+by that name given to the altar, would impress upon the minds of the
+cowardly mob that he had brought out of Egypt--and who now had
+looked into an enemy's eyes for the first time--the elevating and
+bracing thought that they were God's soldiers, and that the warfare
+which they waged was not for themselves, nor for the conquest of the
+country for their own sake, nor for mere outward liberty, but that
+they were fighting that the will of God might prevail, and that He
+might be the King now of one land--a mere corner of the earth--and
+thereby might come to be King of all the earth. That rude altar said
+to Israel: 'Remember, when you go into the battle, that the battle
+is the Lord's; and that the standard under which you war is the God
+for whose cause you contend--none else and none less than Jehovah
+Himself. You are consecrated soldiers, set apart to fight for God.'
+
+Such is the destination of all Christians. They have a battle to
+fight, of which they do not think loftily enough, unless they
+clearly and constantly recognise that they are fighting on God's
+side.
+
+I need not dwell upon the particulars of this conflict, or run into
+details of the way in which it is to be waged. Only let us remember
+that the first field upon which we have to fight for God we carry
+about within ourselves; and that there will be no victories for us
+over other enemies until we have, first of all, subdued the foes
+that are within. And then let us remember that the absorbing
+importance of inward conflict absolves no Christian man from the
+duty of strenuously contending for all things that are 'lovely and
+of good report,' and from waging war against every form of sorrow
+and sin which his influence can touch. There is no surer way of
+securing victory in the warfare within and conquering self than to
+throw myself into the service of others, and lose myself in their
+sorrows and needs. There is no possibility of my taking my share in
+the merciful warfare against sin and sorrow, the tyrants that
+oppress my fellows, unless I conquer myself. These two fields of the
+Christian warfare are not two in the sense of being separable from
+one another, but they are two in the sense of being the inside and
+the outside of the same fabric. The warfare is one, though the
+fields are two.
+
+Let us remember, on the other hand, that whilst it is our simple
+bounden duty, as Christian men and women, to reckon ourselves as
+anointed and called for the purpose of warring against sin and
+sorrow, wherever we can assail them, there is nothing more
+dangerous, and few things more common, than the hasty identification
+of fighting for some whim, or prejudice, or narrow view, or partial
+conception of our own, with contending for the establishment of the
+will of God. How many wicked things have been done in this world for
+God's glory! How many obstinate men, who were really only forcing
+their own opinions down people's throats because they were theirs,
+have fancied themselves to be pure-minded warriors for God! How easy
+it has been, in all generations, to make the sign of the Cross over
+what had none of the spirit of the Cross in it; and to say, 'The
+cause is God's, and therefore I war for it'; when the reality was,
+'The cause is mine, and therefore I take it for granted that it is
+God's.'
+
+Let us beware of the 'wolf in sheep's clothing,' the pretence of
+sanctity which is only selfishness with a mask on. And, above all,
+let us beware of the uncharitableness and narrowness of view, the
+vehemence of temper, the fighting for our own hands, the enforcing
+of our own notions and whims and peculiarities, which have often
+done duty as being true Christian service for the Master's sake. We
+are God's host, but we are not to suppose that every notion that we
+take into our heads, and for which we may contend, is part of the
+cause of God.
+
+And then remember what sort of men the soldiers in such an army
+ought to be. 'Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord.' These
+bearers may either be regarded as a solemn procession of priests
+carrying the sacrificial vessels; or, as is more probable from the
+context of the original, as the armour-bearers of the great King.
+They must be pure who bear His weapons, for these are His righteous
+love, His loving purity. If our camp is the camp of the Lord, no
+violence should be there. What sanctity, what purity, what patience,
+what long-suffering, what self-denial, and what enthusiastic
+confidence of victory there should be in those who can say, 'We are
+the Lord's host, Jehovah is our Banner!' He always wins who sides
+with God. And he only worthily takes his place in the ranks of the
+sacramental host of the Most High who goes into the warfare knowing
+that, because He is God's soldier, he will come out of it, bringing
+his victorious shield with him, and ready for the laurels to be
+twined round his undinted helmet. That is the first of the thoughts,
+then, that are here.
+
+II. The second of the exhortations which come from the altar and its
+name is, Remember whose commands you follow.
+
+The banner in ancient warfare, even more than in modern, moved in
+front of the host, and determined the movements of the army. And so,
+by the stones that he piled and the name which he gave them, Moses
+taught Israel and us that they and we are under the command of God,
+and that it is the movements of His staff that are to be followed.
+Absolute obedience is the first duty of the Christian soldier, and
+absolute obedience means the entire suppression of my own will, the
+holding of it in equilibrium until He puts His finger on the side
+that He desires to dip and lets the other rise. They only understand
+their place as Christ's servants and soldiers who have learned to
+hush their own will until they know their Captain's. In order to be
+blessed, to be strong, to be victorious, the indispensable condition
+is that our inmost desire shall be, 'Not my will, but Thine be
+done.'
+
+Sometimes, and often, there will be perplexities in our daily lives,
+and conflicts very hard to unravel. We shall often be brought to a
+point where we cannot see which way the Banner is leading us. What
+then? 'It is good that a man should both hope and quietly wait' for
+the salvation and for the guidance of his God. And we shall
+generally find that it is when we are looking too far ahead that we
+do not get guidance. You will not get guidance to-day for this day
+next week. When this day next week comes, it will bring its own
+enlightenment with it.
+
+ 'Lead, kindly Light, ...
+ ... One step enough for me.'
+
+Let us take short views both of duty and of hope, and we shall not
+so often have to complain that we are left without knowing what the
+Commander's orders are. Sometimes we are so left, and that is a
+lesson in patience, and is generally God's way of telling us that it
+is not His will that we should do anything at all just yet.
+Sometimes we are so left in order that we may put our hand out
+through the darkness, and hold on by Him, and say, 'I know not what
+to do, but mine eyes are towards Thee.'
+
+And be sure of this, brethren, that He will not desert His own
+promise, and that they who in their inmost hearts can say, 'The Lord
+is my Banner,' will never have to complain that He led them into a
+'pathless wilderness where there was no way.' It is sometimes a very
+narrow track, it is often a very rough one, it is sometimes a
+dreadfully solitary one; but He always goes before us, and they who
+hold His hand will not hold it in vain. 'The Lord is my Banner';
+obey His orders and do not take anybody else's; nor, above all, the
+suggestions of that impatient, talkative heart of yours, instead of
+His commandments.
+
+III. Lastly, the third lesson that these grey stones preach to us
+is, Recognise by whose power you conquer.
+
+The banner, I suppose, to us English people, suggests a false idea.
+It suggests the notion of a flag, or some bit of flexible drapery
+which fluttered and flapped in the wind; but the banner of old-world
+armies was a rigid pole, with some solid ornament of bright metal on
+the top, so as to catch the light. The banner-staff spoken of in the
+text links itself with the preceding incident. I said that Moses
+stood on the mountain-top with the rod in his hand. Now that rod was
+exactly a miniature banner, and when he lifted it, victory came to
+Israel; and when it fell, victory deserted their arms. So by the
+altar's name he would say, Do not suppose that it was Moses that won
+the battle, nor that it was the rod that Moses carried in his hand
+that brought you strength. The true Victor was Jehovah, and it was
+He who was Moses' Banner. It was by Him that the lifted rod brought
+victory; as for Moses, he had nothing to do with it; and the people
+had to look higher than the hill-top where he sat.
+
+This thought puts stress on the first word of the phrase instead of
+on the last, as in my previous remarks. 'The Lord is my Banner,'--no
+Moses, no outward symbol, no man or thing, but only He Himself.
+Therefore, in all our duties, and in all our difficulties, and in
+all our conflicts, and for all our conquests, we are to look away
+from creatures, self, externals, and to look only to God. We are all
+too apt to trust in rods instead of in Him, in Moses instead of in
+Moses' Lord.
+
+We are all too apt to trust in externals, in organisations,
+sacraments, services, committees, outside aids of all sorts, as our
+means for doing God's work, and bringing power to us and blessing to
+the world. Let us get away from them all, dig deeper down than any
+of these, be sure that these are but surface reservoirs, but that
+the fountain which fills them with any refreshing liquid which they
+may bear lies in God Himself. Why should we trouble ourselves about
+reservoirs when we can go to the Fountain? Why should we put such
+reliance on churches and services and preaching and sermons and
+schemes and institutions and organisations when we have the divine
+Lord Himself for our strength? 'Jehovah is my Banner,' and Moses'
+rod is only a symbol. At most it is like a lightning-conductor, but
+it is not the lightning. The lightning will come without the rod, if
+our eyes are to the heaven, for the true power that brings God down
+to men is that forsaking of externals and waiting upon Him which He
+never refuses to answer.
+
+In like manner we are too apt to put far too much confidence in
+human teachers and human helpers of various kinds. And when God
+takes them away we say to ourselves that there is a gap that can
+never be filled. Ay! but the great sea can come in and fill any gap,
+and make the deepest and the driest of the excavations in the desert
+to abound in sweet water.
+
+So let us turn away from everything external, gather in our souls
+and fix our hopes on Him; let us recognise the imperative duty of
+the Christian warfare which is laid upon us; let us docilely submit
+ourselves to His sweet commands, and trust in His sufficient and
+punctual guidance, and not expect from any outward sources that
+which no outward sources can ever give, but which He Himself will
+give--strength to our fingers to fight, and weapons for the warfare,
+and covering for our heads in the day of battle.
+
+And then, when our lives are done, may the only inscription on the
+stone that covers us be 'Jehovah Nissi: the Lord is my banner'! The
+trophy that commemorates the Christian's victory should bear no name
+but His by whose grace we are more than conquerors. 'Thanks be to
+God who giveth us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ.'
+
+
+
+
+GERSHOM AND ELIEZER
+
+
+ 'The name of the one [of Moses' sons] was Gershom ... and
+ the name of the other was Eliezer....'--EXODUS xviii. 3, 4.
+
+In old times parents often used to give expression to their hopes or
+their emotions in the names of their children. Very clearly that was
+the case in Moses' naming of his two sons, who seem to have been the
+whole of his family. The significance of each name is appended to it
+in the text. The explanation of the first is, 'For he said, I have
+been an alien in a strange land'; and that of the second, 'For the
+God of my fathers, said he, was mine help, and delivered me from the
+sword of Pharaoh.' These two names give us a pathetic glimpse of the
+feelings with which Moses began his exile, and of the better
+thoughts into which these gradually cleared. The first child's name
+expresses his father's discontent, and suggests the bitter contrast
+between Sinai and Egypt; the court and the sheepfold; the gloomy,
+verdureless, gaunt peaks of Sinai, blazing in the fierce sunshine,
+and the cool, luscious vegetation of Goshen, the land for cattle.
+The exile felt himself all out of joint with his surroundings, and
+so he called the little child that came to him 'Gershom,' which,
+according to one explanation, means 'banishment,' and, according to
+another (a kind of punning etymology), means 'a stranger here'; in
+the other case expressing the same sense of homelessness and want of
+harmony with his surroundings. But as the years went on, Moses began
+to acclimatise himself, and to become more reconciled to his
+position and to see things more as they really were. So, when the
+second child is born, all his murmuring has been hushed, and he
+looks beyond circumstances, and lays his hand upon God. 'And the
+name of the second was Eliezer, for, he said, the God of my fathers
+was my help.'
+
+Now, there are the two main streams of thought that filled these
+forty years; and it was worth while to put Moses into the desert for
+all that time, and to break off the purposes and hopes of his life
+sharp and short, and to condemn him to comparative idleness, or work
+that was all unfitted to bring out his special powers, for that huge
+scantling out of his life, one-third of the whole of it, in order
+that there might be burnt into him, not either of these two thoughts
+separately, but the two of them in their blessed conjunction; 'I am
+a stranger here'; 'God is my Help.' And so these are the thoughts
+which, in like juxtaposition, ought to be ours; and in higher
+fashion with regard to the former of them than was experienced by
+Moses. Let me say a word or two about each of these two things. Let
+us think of the strangers, and of the divine helper that is with the
+strangers.
+
+I. 'A stranger here.'
+
+Now, that is true, in the deepest sense, about all men; for the one
+thing that makes the difference between the man and the beast is
+that the beast is perfectly at home in his surroundings, and gets
+all that he needs out of them, and finds in them a field for all
+that he can do, and is fully developed to the very highest point of
+his capacity by what people nowadays call the 'environment' in which
+he is put. But the very opposite is the case in regard to us men.
+'Foxes have holes,' and they are quite comfortable there; 'and the
+birds of the air have roosting-places,' and tuck their heads under
+their wings and go to sleep without a care and without a
+consciousness. 'But the Son of man,' the ideal Humanity as well as
+the realised ideal in the person of Jesus Christ, 'hath not where to
+lay His head.' No; because He is so 'much better than they.' Their
+immunity from care is not a prerogative--it is an inferiority. We
+are plunged into the midst of a scene of things which obviously does
+not match our capacities. There is a great deal more in every man
+than can ever find a field of expression, of work, or of
+satisfaction in anything beneath the stars. And no man that
+understands, even superficially, his own character, his own
+requirements, can fail to feel in his sane and quiet moments, when
+the rush of temptation and the illusions of this fleeting life have
+lost their grip upon him: 'This is not the place that can bring out
+all that is in me, or that can yield me all that I desire.' Our
+capacities transcend the present, and the experiences of the present
+are all unintelligible, unless the true end of every human life is
+not here at all, but in another region, for which these experiences
+are fitting us.
+
+But, then, the temptations of life, the strong appeals of flesh and
+sense, the duties which in their proper place are lofty and
+elevating and refining, and put out of their place, are contemptible
+and degrading, all come in to make it hard for any of us to keep
+clearly before us what our consciousness tells us when it is
+strongly appealed to, that we are strangers and sojourners here and
+that this is not 'our rest, because it is polluted.' Therefore it
+comes to be the great glory and blessedness of the Christian
+Revelation that it obviously shifts the centre for us, and makes
+that future, and not this present, the aim for which, and in the
+pursuit of which, we are to live. So, Christian people, in a far
+higher sense than Moses, who only felt himself 'a stranger there,'
+because he did not like Midian as well as Egypt, have to say, 'We
+are strangers here'; and the very aim, in one aspect, of our
+Christian discipline of ourselves is that we shall keep vivid, in
+the face of all the temptations to forget it, this consciousness of
+being away from our true home.
+
+One means of doing that is to think rather oftener than the most of
+us do, about our true home. You have heard, I dare say, of half-
+reclaimed gipsies, who for a while have been coaxed out of the free
+life of the woods and the moors, and have gone into settled homes.
+After a while there has come over them a rush of feeling, a
+remembrance of how blessed it used to be out in the open and away
+from the squalor and filth where men 'sit and hear each other groan'
+and they have flung off 'as if they were fetters' the trappings of
+'civilisation,' and gone back to liberty. That is what we ought to
+do--not going back from the higher to the lower, but smitten with
+what the Germans call the _heimweh_, the home-sickness, that
+makes us feel that we must get clearer sight of that land to which
+we truly belong.
+
+Do you think about it, do you feel that where Jesus Christ is, is
+your home? I have no doubt that most of you have, or have had, dear
+ones here on earth about whom you could say that, 'Where my husband,
+my wife is; where my beloved is, or my children are, that is my
+home, wherever my abode may be.' Are you, Christian people, saying
+the same thing about heaven and Jesus Christ? Do you feel that you
+are strangers here, not only because you, reflecting upon your
+character and capacities and on human life, see that all these
+require another life for their explanation and development, but
+because your hearts are knit to Him, and 'where your treasure is
+there your heart is also'; and where your heart is there you are? We
+go home when we come into communion with Jesus Christ. Do you ever,
+in the course of the rush of your daily work, think about the calm
+city beyond the sea, and about its King, and that you belong to it?
+'Our citizenship is in heaven' and here we are strangers.
+
+II. Now let me say a word about the other child's name.
+
+'God is Helper.' We do not know what interval of time elapsed
+between the birth of these two children. There are some indications
+that the second of them was in years very much the junior. Perhaps
+the transition from the mood represented in the one name to that
+represented in the other, was a long and slow process. But be that
+as it may, note the connection between these two names. You can
+never say 'We are strangers here' without feeling a little prick of
+pain, unless you say too 'God is my Helper.' There is a beautiful
+variation of the former word which will occur to many of you, I have
+no doubt, in one of the old psalms: 'I am a stranger _with
+Thee_, and a sojourner, as were all my fathers.' There is the
+secret that takes away all the mourning, all the possible discomfort
+and pain, out of the thought: 'Here we have no continuing city,' and
+makes it all blessed. It does not matter whether we are in a foreign
+land or no, if we have that Companion with us. His presence will
+make blessedness in Midian, or in Thebes. It does not matter whether
+it is Goshen or the wilderness, if the Lord is by our side. So
+sweetness is breathed into the thought, and bitterness is sucked out
+of it, when the name of the second child is braided into the name of
+the first; and we can contemplate quietly all else of tragic and
+limiting and sad that is involved in the thought that we are
+sojourners and pilgrims, when we say 'Yes! we are; but the Lord is
+my Helper.'
+
+Then, on the other hand, we shall never say and feel 'the Lord is my
+Helper,' as we ought to do, until we have got deep in our hearts,
+and settled in our consciousness, the other conviction that we are
+strangers here. It is only when we realise that there is no other
+permanence for us that we put out our hands and grasp at the
+Eternal, in order not to be swept away upon the dark waves of the
+rushing stream of Time. It is only when all other props are stricken
+from us that we rest our whole weight upon that one strong central
+pillar, which can never be moved. Learn that God helps, for that
+makes it possible to say 'I am a stranger,' and not to weep. Learn
+that you are strangers, for that stimulates to take God for out
+help. Just as when the floods are out, men are driven to the highest
+ground to save their lives; so when the billows of the waters of
+time are seen to be rolling over all creatural things, we take our
+flight to the Rock of Ages. Put the two together, and they fit one
+another and strengthen us.
+
+This second conviction was the illuminating light upon a perplexed
+and problematic past. Moses, when he fled from Egypt, thought that
+his life's work was rent in twain. He had believed that his brethren
+would have seen that it was God's purpose to use him as the
+deliverer. For the sake of being such, he had surrendered the court
+and its delights. But on his young ambition and innocent enthusiasm
+there came this _douche_ of cold water, which lasted for forty
+years, and sent him away into the wilderness, to be a shepherd under
+an Arab sheikh, with nothing to look forward to. At first he said,
+'This is not what I was meant for; I am out of my element here.' But
+before the forty years were over he said, 'The God of my father was
+my help, and He delivered me from the sword of Pharaoh.' What had
+looked a disaster turned out to be a deliverance, a manifestation of
+divine help, and not a hindrance. He had got far enough away from
+that past to look at it sanely, that is to say gratefully. So we,
+when we get far enough away from our sorrows, can look back at them,
+sometimes even here on earth, and say, 'The mercy of the Lord
+compassed me about.' Here is the key that unlocks all the
+perplexities of providence, 'The Lord was my Helper.'
+
+And that conviction will steady and uphold a man in a present,
+however dark. It was no small exercise of his faith and patience
+that the great lawgiver should for so many years have such unworthy
+work to do as he had in Midian. But even then he gathered into his
+heart this confidence, and brought summer about him into the mid-
+winter of his life, and light into the midst of darkness; 'for he
+said'--even then, when there was no work for him to do that seemed
+much to need a divine help--'the Lord is my Helper.'
+
+And so, however dark may be our present moment, and however obscure
+or repulsive our own tasks, let us fall back upon that old word,
+'Thou hast been my Help; leave me not, neither forsake me, O God of
+my salvation.'
+
+When Moses named his boy, his gratitude was allied with faith in
+favours to come; and when he said 'was,' he meant also 'will be.'
+And he was right. He dreamt very little of what was coming, but this
+confidence that was expressed in his second child's name was
+warranted by that great future that lay before him, though he did
+not know it. When the pinch came his confidence faltered. It was
+easy to say 'The Lord is my Helper,' when there was nothing very
+special for which God's help was needed, and nothing harder to do
+than to look after a few sheep in the wilderness. But when God said
+to him, 'Go and stand before Pharaoh,' Moses for the moment forgot
+all about God's being his helper, and was full of all manner of
+cowardly excuses, which, like the excuses of a great many more of us
+for not doing our plain duty, took the shape of a very engaging
+modesty and diffidence as to his capacities. But God said to him,
+'Surely I will be with thee.' He gave him back 'Eliezer' in a little
+different form. 'You used to say that I was your helper. What has
+become of your faith now? Has it all evaporated when the trial
+comes? Surely I will be with thee.' If we will set ourselves to our
+tasks, not doubting God's help, we shall have occasion in the event
+to be sure that God did help us.
+
+So, brethren, let us cherish these two thoughts, and never keep them
+apart, and God will be, as our good old hymn has it--
+
+ 'Our help while troubles last,
+ And our eternal home.'
+
+
+
+
+THE IDEAL STATESMAN
+[Footnote: Preached on occasion of Mr. Gladstone's death.]
+
+ 'Thou shalt provide out of all the people able men,
+ such as fear God, men of truth, hating covetousness;
+ and place such over them.'--EXODUS xviii. 21.
+
+You will have anticipated my purpose in selecting this text. I
+should be doing violence to your feelings and mine if I made no
+reference to the event which has united the Empire and the world in
+one sentiment. The great tree has fallen, and the crash has for the
+moment silenced all the sounds of the forest. Wars abroad and
+controversies at home are hushed. All men, of all schools of
+opinion, creeds, and parties, see now, in the calm face of the dead,
+'the likeness to the great of old'; and it says something, with all
+our faults, for the soundness of the heart of English opinion, that
+all sorts and conditions of men have brought their sad wreaths to
+lay them on that coffin.
+
+But, whilst much has been said, far more eloquently and
+authoritatively than I can say it, about the many aspects of that
+many-sided life, surely it becomes us, as Christian people, to look
+at it from the distinctively Christian point of view, and to gather
+some of the lessons which, so regarded, it teaches us.
+
+My text is part of the sagacious advice which Jethro, the father-in-
+law of Moses, gave him about the sort of men that he should pick out
+to be his lieutenants in civic government. Its old-fashioned, simple
+phraseology may hide from some of us the elevation and
+comprehensiveness of the ideal that it sets forth. But it is a grand
+ideal; and amongst the great names of Englishmen who have guided the
+destinies of this land, none have approached more nearly to it than
+he whose death has taken away the most striking personality from our
+public life.
+
+So let me ask you to look with me, first, at the ideal of a
+politician that is set forth here.
+
+The free life of the desert, far away from the oppressions of
+surrounding military despotisms, that remarkable and antique
+constitution of the clan, with all its beautiful loyalty, had given
+this Arab sheikh a far loftier conception of what a ruler of men was
+than he could have found exemplified at Pharaoh's court; or than,
+alas! has been common in many so-called Christian countries. The
+field upon which he intended that these great qualities should be
+exercised was a very limited one, to manage the little affairs of a
+handful of fugitives in the desert. But the scale on which we work
+has nothing to do with the principles by which we work, and the laws
+of perspective and colouring are the same, whether you paint the
+minutest miniature or a gigantic fresco. So what was needed for
+managing the little concerns of Moses' wanderers in the wilderness
+is the ideal of what is needed for the men who direct the public
+affairs of world-wide empires.
+
+Let me run over the details. They must be 'able men,' or, as the
+original has it, 'men of strength.' There is the intellectual basis,
+and especially the basis of firm, brave, strongly-set will which
+will grasp convictions, and, whatever comes, will follow them to
+their conclusions. The statesman is not one that puts his ear down
+to the ground to hear the tramp of some advancing host, and then
+makes up his mind to follow in their paths; he is not sensitive to
+the varying winds of public opinion, nor does he trim his sails to
+suit them, but he comes to his convictions by first-hand approach
+to, and meditation on, the great principles that are to guide, and
+then holds to them with a strength that nothing can weaken, and a
+courage that nothing can daunt. 'Men of strength' is what
+democracies like ours do most need in their leaders; a 'strong man,
+in a blatant land,' who knows his own mind, and is faithful to it
+for ever. That is a great demand.
+
+'Such as fear God'--there is the secret of strength, not merely in
+reference to the intellectual powers which are not dependent for
+their origin, though they may be for the health and vigour of their
+work, upon any religious sentiment, but in regard to all true power.
+He that would govern others must first be lord of himself, and he
+only is lord of himself who is consciously and habitually the
+servant of God. So that whatever natural endowment we start with, it
+must be heightened, purified, deepened, enlarged, by the presence in
+our lives of a deep and vital religious conviction. That is true
+about all men, leaders and led, large and small. That is the bottom-
+heat in the greenhouse, as it were, that will make riper and sweeter
+all the fruits which are the natural result of natural capacities.
+That is the amulet and the charm which will keep a man from the
+temptations incident to his position and the weaknesses incident to
+his character. The fear of God underlies the noblest lives. That is
+not to-day's theory. We are familiar with the fact, and familiar
+with the doctrine formulated out of it, that there may be men of
+strong and noble lives and great leaders in many a department of
+human activity without any reference to the Unseen. Yes, there may
+be, but they are all fragments, and the complete man comes only when
+the fear of the Lord is guide, leader, impulse, polestar, regulator,
+corrector, and inspirer of all that he is and all that he does.
+
+'Men of truth'--that, of course, glances at the crooked ways which
+belong not only to Eastern statesmanship, but it does more than
+that. He that is to lead men must himself be led by an eager haste
+to follow after, and to apprehend, the very truth of things. And
+there must be in him clear transparent willingness to render his
+utmost allegiance, at any sacrifice, to the dawning convictions that
+may grow upon him. It is only fools that do not change. Freshness of
+enthusiasm, and fidelity to new convictions opening upon a man, to
+the end of his life, are not the least important of the requirements
+in him who would persuade and guide individuals or a nation.
+
+'Hating covetousness'; or, as it might be rendered, 'unjust gain.'
+That reference to the 'oiling of the palms' of Eastern judges may be
+taken in a loftier signification. If a man is to stand forth as the
+leader of a people, he must be clear, as old Samuel said that he
+was, from all suspicion of having been following out his career for
+any form of personal advantage. 'Clean hands,' and that not only
+from the vulgar filth of wealth, but from the more subtle advantages
+which may accrue from a lofty position, are demanded of the leader
+of men.
+
+Such is the ideal. The requirements are stern and high, and they
+exclude the vermin that infest 'politics,' as they are called, and
+cause them to stink in many nostrils. The self-seeking schemer, the
+one-eyed partisan, the cynic who disbelieves in ideals of any sort,
+the charlatan who assumes virtues that he does not possess, and
+mouths noble sentiments that go no deeper than his teeth, are all
+shut out by them. The doctrine that a man may do in his public
+capacity things which would be disgraceful in private life, and yet
+retain his personal honour untarnished, is blown to atoms by this
+ideal. It is much to be regretted, and in some senses to be
+censured, that so many of our wisest, best, and most influential men
+stand apart from public life. Much of that is due to personal bias,
+much more of it is due to the pressure of more congenial duties, and
+not a little of it is due to the disregard of Jethro's ideal, and to
+the degradation of public life which has ensued thereby. But there
+have been great men in our history whose lives have helped to lift
+up the ideal of a statesman, who have made such a sketch as Jethro
+outlined, though they may not have used his words, their polestar;
+and amongst the highest of these has been the man whose loss we to-
+day lament.
+
+Let me try to vindicate that expression of opinion in a word or two.
+I cannot hope to vie in literary grace, or in completeness, with the
+eulogies that have been abundantly poured out; and I should not have
+thought it right to divert this hour of worship from its ordinary
+themes, if I had had no more to say than has been far better said a
+thousand times in these last days. But I cannot help noticing that,
+though there has been a consensus of admiration of, and a
+practically unanimous pointing to, character as after all the secret
+of the spell which Mr. Gladstone has exercised for two generations,
+there has not been, as it seems to me, equal and due prominence
+given to what was, and what he himself would have said was, the real
+root of his character and the productive cause of his achievements.
+
+And so I venture now to say a word or two about the religion of the
+man that to his own consciousness underlay all the rest of him. It
+is not for me to speak, and there is no need to speak, about the
+marvellous natural endowments and the equally marvellous, many-sided
+equipment of attainment which enriched the rich, natural soil.
+Intermeddling as he did with all knowledge, he must necessarily have
+been but an amateur in many of the subjects into which he rushed
+with such generous eagerness. But none the less is the example of
+all but omnivorous acquisitiveness of everything that was to be
+known, a protest, very needful in these days, against the possible
+evils of an excessive specialising which the very progress of
+knowledge in all departments seems to make inevitable. I do not need
+to speak, either, of the flow, and sometimes the torrent, of
+eloquence ever at his command, nor of the lithe and sinewy force of
+his extraordinarily nimble, as well as massive, mind; nor need I say
+more than one word about the remarkable combination of qualities so
+generally held and seen to be incompatible, which put into one
+personality a genius for dry arithmetical figures and a genius for
+enthusiasm and sympathy with all the oppressed. All these things
+have been said far better than I can say them, and I do not repeat
+them.
+
+But I desire to hammer this one conviction into your hearts and my
+own, that the inmost secret of that noble life, of all that wealth
+of capacity, all that load of learning, which he bore lightly like a
+flower, was the fact that the man was, to the very depths of his
+nature, a devout Christian. He would have been as capable, as
+eloquent, and all the rest of it, if he had been an unbeliever. But
+he would never have been nor done what he was and did, and he would
+never have left the dint of an impressive and lofty personality upon
+a whole nation and a world, if beneath the intellect there had not
+been character, and beneath character Christianity.
+
+He was far removed, in ecclesiastical connections, from us
+Nonconformists, and he held opinions in regard to some very
+important ecclesiastical questions which cut straight across some of
+our deepest convictions. We never had to look for much favour from
+his hands, because his intellectual atmosphere removed him far from
+sympathy with many of the truths which are dearest to the members of
+the Free Evangelical Churches. But none the less we recognise in him
+a brother in Jesus Christ, and rejoice that there, on the high
+places of a careless and sceptical generation, there stood a
+Christian man.
+
+In this connection I cannot but, though I have no right to do so,
+express how profoundly thankful I, for one, was to the present Prime
+Minister of England that in his brief eulogium on, I was going to
+say, his great rival, he ended all by the emphatic declaration that
+Mr. Gladstone was, first and foremost, a great Christian man. Yes;
+and there was the secret, as I have already said, not of his merely
+political eminence, but of the universal reverence which a nation
+expresses to-day. All detraction is silenced, and all calumnies have
+dropped away, as filth from the white wings of a swan as it soars,
+and with one voice the Empire and the world confess that he was a
+great and a good man.
+
+I need not dwell in detail on the thoughts of how, by reason of this
+deep underlying fear of God, the other qualifications which are
+sketched in our ideal found their realisation in him; how those who,
+all through his career, smiled most at the successive enthusiasms
+which monopolised his mind, and sometimes at the contrasts between
+these, are now ready to admit that, whether the enthusiasms were
+right or wrong, there is something noble in the spectacle of a man
+ever keeping his mind, even when its windows were beginning to be
+dimmed by the frosts of age, open to the beams of new truth. And the
+greatest, as some people think, of his political blunders, as we are
+beginning, all of us, to recognise, now that party strife is hushed,
+was the direct consequence of that ever fresh and youthful
+enthusiasm for new thoughts and new lines of action. Innovators aged
+eighty are not too numerous.
+
+Nor need I say more than one word about the other part of the ideal,
+'hating covetousness.' The giver of peerages by the bushel died a
+commoner. The man that had everything at his command made no money,
+nor anything else, out of his long years of office, except the
+satisfaction of having been permitted to render what he believed to
+be the highest of service to the nation that he loved so well. Like
+our whilom neighbour, the other great commoner, John Bright, he
+lived among his own people; and like Samuel, of whom I have already
+spoken, he could stretch out his old hands and say, 'They are
+clean.' One scarcely feels as if, to such a life, a State funeral in
+Westminster Abbey was congruous. One had rather have seen him laid
+among the humble villagers who were his friends and companions, and
+in the quiet churchyard which his steps had so often traversed. But
+at all events the ideal was realised, and we all know what it was.
+
+Might I say one word more? As this great figure passes out of men's
+sight to nobler work, be sure, on widened horizons corresponding to
+his tutored and exercised powers, does he leave no lessons behind
+for us? He leaves one very plain, homely one, and that is, 'Work
+while it is called to-day.' No opulence of endowment tempted this
+man to indolence, and no poverty of endowment will excuse us for
+sloth. Work is the law of our lives; and the more highly we are
+gifted, the more are we bound to serve.
+
+He leaves us another lesson. Follow convictions as they open before
+you, and never think that you have done growing, or have reached
+your final stage.
+
+He leaves another lesson. Do not suppose that the Gospel of Jesus
+Christ cannot satisfy the keenest intellect, nor dominate the
+strongest will. It has come to be a mark of narrowness and
+fossilhood to be a devout believer in Christ and His Cross. Some of
+you young men make an easy reputation for cleverness and advanced
+thought by the short and simple process of disbelieving what your
+mother taught you. Here is a man, probably as great as you are, with
+as keen an intellect, and he clung to the Cross of Christ, and had
+for his favourite hymn--
+
+ 'Rock of Ages, cleft for me,
+ Let me hide myself in Thee.'
+
+He leaves another lesson. If you desire to make your characters all
+that it is in them to be made, you must, like him, go to Jesus
+Christ, and get your teaching and your inspiration from that great
+Lord. We cannot all be great men. Never mind. It is character that
+tells; we can all be good men, and we can all be Christian men. And
+whether we build cottages or palaces, if we build on one foundation,
+and only if we do, they will stand.
+
+Moses leaves another lesson, as he glides into the past. 'This man,
+having served his generation by the will of God, fell on sleep, and
+was gathered to his fathers, and saw corruption'; but He 'whom God
+hath raised up saw no corruption.' The lamps are quenched, the sun
+shines. Moses dies, 'The prophets, do they live for ever?' but when
+Moses and Elias faded from the Mount of Transfiguration 'the
+apostles saw no man any more, save Jesus only,' and the voice said,
+'This is My beloved Son; hear ye Him.'
+
+
+
+
+THE DECALOGUE: I--MAN AND GOD
+
+
+ 'And God spake all these words, saying, 2. I am the Lord
+ thy God, which have brought thee out of the land of
+ Egypt, out of the house of bondage. 3. Thou shalt have
+ no other gods before me. 4. Thou shalt not make unto
+ thee any graven image, or any likeness of any thing
+ that is in the heaven above, or that is in the earth
+ beneath, or that is in the water under the earth: 5.
+ Thou shalt not bow down thyself to them, nor serve them:
+ for I the Lord thy God am a jealous God, visiting the
+ iniquity of the fathers upon the children unto the third
+ and fourth generation of them that hate me; 6. And
+ shewing mercy unto thousands of them that love me, and
+ keep my commandments. 7. Thou shalt not take the name of
+ the Lord thy God in vain: for the Lord will not hold him
+ guiltless that taketh his name in vain. 8. Remember the
+ sabbath-day, to keep it holy. 9. Six days shalt thou
+ labour, and do all thy work: 10. But the seventh day is
+ the sabbath of the Lord thy God: in it thou shalt not do
+ any work, thou, nor thy son, nor thy daughter, thy
+ man-servant, nor thy maid-servant, nor thy cattle, nor
+ thy stranger that is within thy gates: 11. For in six
+ days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all
+ that in them is, and rested the seventh day: wherefore
+ the Lord blessed the sabbath-day, and hallowed it.'
+ --EXODUS xx. 1-11.
+
+An obscure tribe of Egyptian slaves plunges into the desert to hide
+from pursuit, and emerges, after forty years, with a code gathered
+into 'ten words,' so brief, so complete, so intertwining morality
+and religion, so free from local or national peculiarities, so close
+fitting to fundamental duties, that it is to-day, after more than
+three thousand years, authoritative in the most enlightened peoples.
+The voice that spoke from Sinai reverberates in all lands. The Old
+World had other lawgivers who professed to formulate their precepts
+by divine inspiration: they are all fallen silent. But this voice,
+like the trumpet on that day, waxes louder and louder as the years
+roll. Whose voice was it? The only answer explaining the supreme
+purity of the commandments, and their immortal freshness, is found
+in the first sentence of this paragraph, 'God spake all these
+words.'
+
+I. We have first the revelation, which precedes and lays the
+foundation for the commandments; 'I am the Lord thy God, which have
+brought thee out of the land of Egypt.' God speaks to the nation as
+a whole, establishing a special relation between Himself and them,
+which is founded on His redeeming act, and is reciprocal, requiring
+that they should be His people, as He is their God. The
+manifestation in act of His power and of His love precedes the claim
+for reverence and obedience. This is a universal truth. God gives
+before He asks us to give. He is not a hard taskmaster, 'gathering
+where He has not strawn.' Even in that system which is eminently
+'the law,' the foundation is a divine act of deliverance, and only
+when He has won the people for Himself by redeeming them from
+bondage does He call on them for obedience. His rule is built on
+benefits. He urges no mere right of the mightier, nor cares for
+service which is not the glad answer of gratitude. The flashing
+flames which ran as swift heralds before His descending chariot
+wheels, the quaking mountain, the long-drawn blasts of the trumpet,
+awed the gathered crowd. But the first articulate words made a
+tenderer appeal, and sought to found His right to command on His
+love, and their duty to obey on their gratitude. The great gospel
+principle, that the Redeemer is the lawgiver, and the redeemed are
+joyful subjects because their hearts are touched with love,
+underlies the apparently sterner system of the Old Testament. God
+opens His heart first, and then asks for men's.
+
+This prelude certainly confines the Decalogue to the people of
+Israel. Their deliverance is the ground on which the law is rested,
+therefore, plainly, the obligation can be no wider than the benefit.
+But though we are not bound to obey any of the Ten Commandments,
+because they were given to Israel, they are all, with one exception,
+demonstrably, a transcript of laws written on the heart of mankind;
+and this fact carries with it a strong presumption that the law of
+the Sabbath, which is the exception referred to, should be regarded
+as not an exception, but as a statute of the primeval law, witnessed
+to by conscience, republished in wondrous precision and completeness
+in these venerable precepts. The Ten Commandments are binding on us;
+but they are not binding as part, though the fundamental part, of
+the Jewish law.
+
+Two general observations may be made. One is on the negative
+character of the commandments as a whole. Law prohibits because men
+are sinful. But prohibitions pre-suppose as their foundation
+positive commands. We are forbidden to do something because we are
+inclined to do it, and because we ought to do the opposite. Every
+'thou shalt not' implies a deeper 'thou shalt.' The cold negation
+really rests on the converse affirmative command.
+
+The second remark on the law as a whole is as to the relation which
+it establishes between religion and morality, making the latter a
+part of the former, but regarding it as secured only by the prior
+discharge of the obligations of the former. Morality is the garb of
+religion; religion is the animating principle of morality. The
+attempts to build up a theory of ethics without reference to our
+relations to God, or to secure the practice of righteousness without
+such reference, or to substitute, with a late champion of unbelief,
+'the service of man' for the worship of God, are all condemned by
+the deeper and simpler wisdom of this law. Christians should learn
+the lesson, which the most Jewish of the New Testament writers had
+drawn from it, that, 'pure and undefiled service' of God is the
+service of man, and should beware of putting asunder what God has
+joined so closely.
+
+II. The first commandment bears in its negative form marks of the
+condition of the world when it was spoken, and of the strong
+temptation to polytheism which the Israelites were to resist.
+Everywhere but in that corner among the wild rocks of Sinai, men
+believed in 'gods many.' Egypt swarmed with them; and, no doubt, the
+purity of Abraham's faith had been sadly tarnished in his sons. We
+cannot understand the strange fascination of polytheism. It is a
+disease of humanity in an earlier stage than ours. But how strong it
+was and is, all history shows. All these many gods were on amicable
+terms with one another, and ready to welcome newcomers. But the
+monotheism, which was here laid at the very foundation of Israel's
+national life, parted it by a deep gulf from all the world, and
+determined its history.
+
+The prohibition has little force for us; but the positive command
+which underlies it is of eternal force. We should rather think of it
+as a revelation and an invitation than as a mere command. For what
+is it but the declaration that at the centre of things is throned,
+not a rabble of godlings, nor a stony impersonal somewhat, nor a
+hypothetical unknowable entity, nor a shadowy abstraction, but a
+living Person, who can say 'Me,' and whom we can call on as 'Thou,'
+and be sure that He hears? No accumulation of finite excellences,
+however fair, can satisfy the imagination, which feels after one
+Being, the personal ideal of all perfectness. The understanding
+needs one ultimate Cause on which it can rest amid the dance of
+fleeting phenomena; the heart cannot pour out its love to be shared
+among many. No string of goodly pearls will ever give the
+merchantman assurance that his quest is complete. Only when human
+nature finds all in One, and that One a living Person, the Lover and
+Friend of all souls, does it fold its wings and rest as a bird after
+long flight.
+
+The first commandment enjoins, or rather blesses us by showing us
+that we may cherish, supreme affection, worship, trust, self-
+surrender, aspiration, towards one God. After all, our God is that
+which we think most precious, for which we are ready to make the
+greatest sacrifices, which draws our warmest love; which, lost,
+would leave us desolate; which, possessed, makes us blessed. If we
+search our hearts with this 'candle of the Lord,' we shall find many
+an idol set up in their dark corners, and be startled to discover
+how much we need to bring ourselves to be judged and condemned by
+this commandment It is the foundation of all human duty. Obedience
+to it is the condition of peace and blessedness, light and leading
+for mind, heart, will, affections, desires, hopes, fears, and all
+the world within, that longs for one living Person even when it
+least knows the meaning of its longings and the reason of its
+unrest.
+
+III. The second commandment forbids all representations, whether of
+the one God or of false deities. The golden calf, which was a symbol
+of Jehovah, is condemned equally with the fair forms that haunted
+the Greek Olympus, or the half-bestial shapes of Egyptian mythology.
+The reasons for the prohibition may be considered as two,--the
+impossibility of setting forth the glory of the Infinite Spirit in
+any form, and the certainty that the attempt will sink the
+worshipper deeper in the mire of sense. An image degrades God and
+damages men. By it religion reverses its nature, and becomes another
+clog to keep the soul among the things seen, and an ally of all
+fleshly inclinations. We know how idolatry seemed to cast a spell
+over the Israelites from Egypt to Babylon, and how their first
+relapse into it took place almost before the voice which 'spake all
+these words' had ceased.
+
+In its grosser form, we have no temptation to it. But there are
+other ways of breaking the commandment than setting up an image. All
+sensuous worship in which the treacherous aid of art is called in to
+elevate the soul, comes perilously near to contradicting its spirit,
+if not its letter. The attempt to make of the senses a ladder for
+the soul to climb to God by, is a great deal more likely to end in
+the soul's going down the ladder than up it. The history of public
+worship in the Christian Church teaches that the less it has to do
+with such slippery help the better. There is a strong current
+running in England, at all events, in the direction of bringing in a
+more artistic, or, as it is called, a 'less bare,' form of service.
+We need to remember that the God who is a Spirit is worshipped 'in
+spirit,' and that outward forms may easily choke, and outward aids
+hinder, that worship.
+
+The especial difficulty of obedience to this commandment is marked
+by the reason or sanction annexed. That opens a wide field, on which
+it would be folly to venture here. There is a glimpse of God's
+character, and a statement of a law of His working. He is a
+'jealous' God, We need not be afraid of the word. It means nothing
+but what is congruous with the loftiest conception of a loving God.
+It means that He allows of no rival in our hearts' affection, or in
+our submission for love's sake to Him. A half trust in God is no
+trust. How can worship be shared, or love be parted out, among a
+pantheon? Our poor hearts ask of one another and get from one
+another, wherever a man and a woman truly love, just what God
+asks,--'All in all, or not at all.' His jealousy is but infinite
+love seeking to be known as such, and asking for a whole heart.
+
+The law of His providence sounds hard, but it is nothing more than
+stating in plain words the course of the world's history, which
+cannot be otherwise if there is to be any bond of human society at
+all. We hear a great deal in modern language about solidarity (and
+sometimes it is spelled with a final 'e,' to look more
+philosophical) and heredity. The teaching of this commandment is
+simply a statement of the same facts, with the addition that the
+Lawgiver is visible behind the law. The consequences of conduct do
+not die with the doers. 'The evil that men do, lives after them.'
+The generations are so knit together, and the full results of deeds
+are often so slow-growing, that one generation sows and another
+reaps. Who sowed the seed that fruited in misery, and was gathered
+in a bitter harvest of horrors and crimes in the French Revolution?
+Who planted the tree under which the citizens of the United States
+sit? Did not the seedling go over in the _Mayflower_? As long
+as the generations of men are more closely connected than those of
+sheep or birds, this solemn word must be true. Let us see that we
+sow no tares to poison our children when we are in our graves. The
+saying had immediate application to the consequences of idolatry in
+the history of Israel, and was a forecast of their future. But it is
+true evermore and everywhere.
+
+IV. The third commandment must be so understood as to bring it into
+line with the two preceding, as of equal breadth and equally
+fundamental. It cannot, therefore, be confined to the use of the
+name of God in oaths, whether false or trivial. No doubt, perjury
+and profane swearing are included in the sweep of the prohibition;
+but it reaches far beyond them. The name of God is the declaration
+of His being and character. We take His name 'in vain' when we speak
+of Him unworthily. Many a glib and formal prayer, many a mechanical
+or self-glorifying sermon, many an erudite controversy, comes under
+the lash of this prohibition. Professions of devotion far more
+fervid than real, confessions in which the conscience is not
+stricken, orthodox teachings with no throb of life in them,
+unconscious hypocrisies of worship, and much besides, are gibbeted
+here. The most vain of all words are those which have become
+traditional stock in trade for religious people, which once
+expressed deep convictions, and are now a world too wide for the
+shrunk faith which wears them.
+
+The positive side underlying the negative is the requirement that
+our speech of God shall fit our thought of God, and our thought of
+Him shall fit His Name; that our words shall mirror our affections,
+and our affection be a true reflection of His beauty and sweetness;
+that cleansed lips shall reverently utter the Name above every name,
+which, after all speech, must remain unspoken; and that we shall
+feel it to be not the least wonderful or merciful of His
+condescensions that He 'is extolled with our tongues.'
+
+V. The series of commandments referring to Israel's relations with
+God is distinctly progressive from the first to the fourth, which
+deals with the Sabbath. The fact that it appears here, side by side
+with these absolutely universal and first principles of religion and
+worship, clearly shows that the giver of the code regarded it as of
+equal comprehensiveness. If we believe that the giver of the code
+was God, we seem shut up to the conclusion that, though the Sabbath
+is a positive institution, and in so far unlike the preceding
+commandments, it is to be taken as not merely a temporary or Jewish
+ordinance. The ground on which it is rested here points to the same
+conclusion. The version of the Decalogue in Deuteronomy bases it on
+the Egyptian deliverance, but this, on the divine rest after
+creation. As we have already said, we do not regard the Decalogue as
+binding on us because given to Israel; but we do regard it as
+containing laws universally binding, which are written by God's
+finger, not on tables of stone, but on 'the fleshly tables of the
+heart.' All the others are admittedly of this nature. Is not the
+Sabbath law likewise? It is not, indeed, inscribed on the
+conscience, but is the need for it not stamped on the physical
+nature? The human organism requires the seventh-day rest, whether
+men toil with hand or brain. Historically, it is not true that the
+Sabbath was founded by this legislation. The traces of its
+observance in Genesis are few and doubtful; but we know from the
+inscriptions that the seventh, fourteenth, twenty-first, and twenty-
+eighth days of the moon were set apart by the Assyrians, and
+scholars can supply other instances. The 'Remember' of this
+commandment can scarcely be urged as establishing this, for it may
+quite as naturally be explained to mean 'Remember, as each
+successive seventh day comes round, to consecrate it.' But apart
+from that, the law written on body, mind, and soul says plainly to
+all men, 'Rest on the seventh day.' Body and mind need repose; the
+soul needs quiet communion with God. No vigorous physical,
+intellectual, or religious life will long be kept up, if that need
+be disregarded. The week was meant to be given to work, which is
+blessed and right if done after the pattern of God's. The Sabbath
+was meant to lift to a share in His rest, to bring eternity into
+time, to renew wasted strength 'by a wise passiveness,' and to draw
+hearts dissipated by contact with fleeting tasks back into the
+stillness where they can find themselves in fellowship with God.
+
+We have not the Jewish Sabbath, nor is it binding on us. But as men
+we ought to rest, and resting, to worship, on one day in the week.
+The unwritten law of Christianity, moulding all outward forms by its
+own free spirit, gradually, and without premeditation, slid from the
+seventh to the first day, as it had clear right to do. It was the
+day of Christ's resurrection, probably of His ascension, and of
+Pentecost. It is 'the Lord's Day.' In observing it, we unite both
+the reasons for the Sabbath given in Exodus and Deuteronomy,--the
+completion of a higher creation in the resurrection rest of the Son
+of God, and the deliverance from a sorer bondage by a better Moses.
+The Christian Sunday and its religious observance are indispensable
+to the religious life of individuals and nations. The day of rest is
+indispensable to their well-being. Our hard-working millions will
+bitterly rue their folly, if they are tempted to cast it away on the
+plea of obtaining opportunities for intellectual culture and
+enjoyment. It is
+
+ 'The couch of time, care's balm and bay,'
+
+and we shall be wise if we hold fast by it; not because the Jews
+were bid to hallow the seventh day, but because we need it for
+repose, and we need it for religion.
+
+
+
+
+THE DECALOGUE: II.--MAN AND MAN
+
+
+ 'Honour thy father and thy mother; that thy days may be
+ long upon the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee.
+ 13. Thou shalt not kill. 14. Thou shalt not commit
+ adultery. 15. Thou shalt not steal. 16. Thou shalt not
+ bear false witness against thy neighbour. 17. Thou
+ shalt not covet thy neighbour's house, thou shalt not
+ covet thy neighbour's wife, nor his man-servant, nor
+ his maid-servant, nor his ox, nor his ass, nor any thing
+ that is thy neighbour's. 18. And all the people saw the
+ thunderings and the lightnings, and the noise of the
+ trumpet, and the mountain smoking; and, when the people
+ saw it, they removed, and stood afar off. 19. And they
+ said unto Moses, Speak thou with us, and we will hear:
+ but let not God speak with us, lest we die. 20. And Moses
+ said unto the people, Fear not: for God is come to prove
+ you, and that His fear may be before your faces, that ye
+ sin not. 21. And the people stood afar off: and Moses
+ drew near unto the thick darkness where God was.'
+ --EXODUS xx. 12-21.
+
+I. The broad distinction between the two halves of the Decalogue is
+that the former deals with man's relations to God, and the latter
+with His relations to men. This double division is recognised in the
+New Testament summary of 'all the law,' as found in two
+commandments, and is probably implied in the two tables on which it
+was inscribed. Commentators have been much exercised, however, about
+how to divide the commandments between these two parts. The fifth,
+which is the first in this division, belongs in substance to the
+second half, but its form connects it with the first table. It is
+like the preceding ones in having a reason appended, and in naming
+'the Lord thy God'; while the following are all bare, curt
+prohibitions. The fact seems to be that it is a transition
+commandment, and meant to cast special sacredness round the parental
+relationship, by paralleling it, in some sense, with that to God, of
+which it is a reflection. Other duties to other men stand on a
+different level from duties to parents. 'Honour,' which is to be
+theirs, is not remote from the reverence due to God. They are, as it
+were, His shadows to the child. The fatherhood of God is dimly
+revealed in that parting off the commandment from the second table,
+and assimilating it in form to the laws of the first.
+
+II. The connection of the two halves of the Decalogue teaches some
+important truth. Josephus said a wise thing when he remarked that,
+'whereas other legislators had made religion a department of virtue,
+Moses made virtue a department of religion.' No theory of morals is
+built upon the deepest foundation which does not recognise the final
+ground of the obligation of duty in the voice of God. Duty is
+_debitum_-debt. Who is the creditor? Myself? An impersonal law?
+Society? No, God. The practice of morality depends, like its theory,
+on religion. In the long-run, and on the wide scale, nations and
+periods which have lost the latter will not long keep the former in
+any vigour or purity. He who begins by erasing the first commandment
+will sooner or later make a clean sweep of all the ten. And, on the
+other hand, wherever there is true worship of the one God, there all
+fair charities between man and man will flourish and fruit. The two
+tables are one law. Duties to God come first, and those to man, who
+is made in the image of God, flow from these.
+
+III. The order of these human duties is significant. We have, next
+after the law of parental reverence, three commandments, which, in a
+descending series of importance, forbid crimes against life,
+marriage, and property. Then the law passes from deeds to the more
+subtle, and, as men think, less grave, offences of the tongue. Next
+it crosses the boundary which divides human from divine law, and
+crimes from sins, to take cognisance of unspoken and unacted
+desires. So the order of progress in the first table is exactly the
+reverse of that in the second. There we begin with inward devotion,
+and travel outwards by deed and word to the sabbatical institution;
+here we begin with overt acts, and travel inwards, through words, to
+the hidden desire. The end touches the beginning. For that which we
+'covet' is our God; and the first commandment is only obeyed when
+our hearts hunger after Him, and not after earth. The sequence here
+corresponds to the order of progress in our knowledge and practice
+of our human duties. The first thing that the rudest state of
+society has to do is to establish some kind of security for life and
+property and woman's honour. The worst men know that much as their
+duty, however foul may be their lips, and hot their passions. Then
+the recognition of the sanctity of the great gift of speech, and the
+supreme obligations of veracity, grow upon men as they get above the
+earlier stage. Most children pass through a phase when they tell
+lies as pastime, and most rude societies and half-moralised men have
+a similar epoch. Last of all, when actions have been bridled and the
+tongue taught the law of truth, comes the full recognition that the
+work is not done till the silent longing of a hungry heart is
+stilled, and that unselfish love of our neighbour is only perfect
+when we can rejoice in his good and wish none of it for ourselves.
+The second table is a chart of moral progress.
+
+IV. The scope of these laws has often been violently stretched so as
+to include all human duty; but without tugging at them so as to make
+them cover everything, we may note briefly how far they extend. We
+are scarcely warranted in taking any of them but the last, as going
+deeper than overt acts, for, though our Lord has taught in the
+Sermon on the Mount that hatred is murder, and impure desire
+adultery, that is His deepening of the commandment. But it is quite
+fair to bring out the positive precept which, in each case,
+underlies the stern, short prohibition.
+
+The fifth commandment shares with the fourth the distinction of
+being a positive command. It enjoins 'honour,' not 'love,' partly
+because, in olden times, the father was a prince in his house in a
+sense that has long since ceased to be true, partly because there
+was less need to enjoin the affection which is in some degree
+instinctive, than the submission and respect which the children are
+tempted to withhold, partly in order to suggest the analogy with
+reverence to God. A strange change has passed over the relations of
+parents and children, even within a generation. There is more,
+perhaps, of frank familiar intercourse, which, no doubt, is an
+improvement on the old style. But there is a great deal less of what
+the commandment enjoins. City life, education, the general impairing
+of the idea of authority, which we see everywhere, have told upon
+many families; and many a father who, by indulgence or by too much
+engrossment in business, lets the children twitch the reins out of
+his hands, might lament, as his grown-up children spurn control, 'If
+then I be a father, where is mine honour?' There is no one of the
+commandments which it is more needful to preach in England than
+this.
+
+The promise attached to it has another side of threatening. It is a
+plain fact that when the paternal relation is corrupted, a powerful
+solvent has been introduced which rapidly tends to disintegrate
+society. The most ancient empire in the world today, China, has,
+amid many vices and follies, been preserved mainly by the profound
+reverence to ancestors which is largely its real working religion.
+The most vigorous power in the old world, Rome, owed its iron might
+not only to its early simplicity of life and its iron tenacity, but
+to the strength of paternal authority and the willingness of filial
+obedience. No more serious damage can be inflicted on society or on
+individuals than the weakening of the honour paid to fathers and
+mothers.
+
+'Thou shalt not kill' forbids not only the act of murder, but all
+that endangers life. It enjoins all care, diligence, and effort to
+preserve it. A man who looks on while another drowns, or who sends a
+ship out half manned and overloaded, breaks it as really as a red-
+handed murderer. But the commandment was not intended to touch the
+questions of capital punishment or of war. These were allowed under
+the Jewish code, and cannot therefore be supposed to be prohibited
+here. How far either is consistent with the deepest meaning of the
+law, as expanded and reconsecrated in Christianity, is another
+question. Their defenders have to execute some startling feats of
+gymnastics to harmonise either with the New Testament.
+
+ 'Curus kind o' Christian dooty,
+ This 'ere cuttin' folks's throats.'
+
+The ground of the commandment is not given, seeing that conscience
+is expected to admit its force as soon as stated. But its place at
+the head of the second table brings it into connection with the
+first commandment, and suggests that man's life is sacred because he
+is the image of God. As Christians, we are bound to interpret it on
+the lines which Christ has laid down; according to which, hatred is
+murder, and love is the fulfilling of this as of all other laws. So
+Luther's comprehensive summing up of the duties enjoined may be
+accepted: 'Patience, gentleness, kindliness, peaceableness, pity,
+and, of all things, a sweet, friendly heart, without any hate,
+anger, bitterness, toward any, even enemies.'
+
+In like manner, the seventh commandment sanctifies wedded life, and is
+the first step in that true reverence of woman which marked the Jewish
+people through all their history, and was in such contrast to her
+position in all other ancient societies. Purity in all the relations
+of the sexes, the control of passion, the reverence for marriage, are
+subjects difficult to speak of in public. But modern society sorely
+needs some plain speaking on these subjects--abundance of bread and
+idleness, facilities for divorce, the filth which newspapers lay down
+on every breakfast-table, the insidious sensuality of much fiction and
+art, the licence of the stage. The opportunities for secret profligacy
+in great cities conspire to loosen the bonds of morality. I would
+venture to ask public teachers seriously to consider their duty in this
+matter, and to seek for opportunities wisely to warn budding youth of
+the pitfalls in its path.
+
+What is 'stealing'? As Luther says, 'It is the smallest part of the
+thieves that are hung. If we are to hang them all, where shall we
+get rope enough? We must make all our belts and straps into
+halters.'
+
+Theft is the taking or keeping what is not 'mine.' But what do we
+mean by 'mine'? Communists tell us that 'property is theft.' But
+that is the exaggeration of the scriptural teaching that all
+property is trust property, that possessions are 'mine' on
+conditions and for purposes, that I cannot 'do what I will with mine
+own,' but am a steward, set to dispense it to those who want. The
+Christian doctrine of stewardship extends this commandment over much
+ground which we seldom think of as affected by it. All sharp
+practice in business, the shopkeeper's false weights and the
+merchant's equivalents of these, adulterations, pirating trademarks,
+imitating a rival's goods, infringing patents, and the like, however
+disguised by fine names, are neither more nor less than stealing.
+Many a prosperous gentleman says solemnly every Sunday of his life,
+'Incline our hearts to keep this law,' who would have to live in a
+much more modest fashion if his prayer were, by any unfortunate
+accident, answered.
+
+False witness is not only given in court. The sins of the tongue
+against the law of love are more subtle and common than those of
+act. 'Come, let us enjoy ourselves, and abuse our neighbours,' is
+the real meaning of many an invitation to social intercourse. If
+some fairy could treat our newspapers as the Russian censors do, and
+erase all the lies about the opposite side, which they report and
+coin, how many blank columns there would be! If all the words of
+ill-natured calumny, of uncharitable construction of their friends
+which people speak, could be made inaudible, what stretches of
+silence would open out in much animated talk! 'A man that beareth
+false witness against his neighbour is a maul, and a sword, and a
+sharp arrow.'
+
+But deed and word will not be right unless the heart be right; and
+the heart will be wrong unless it be purged of the bitter black drop
+of covetousness. The desire to make my neighbour's goods mine is the
+parent of all breaches of neighbourly duty, even as its converse
+'love' is the fulfilling of it all; for such desire implies that I
+am ruled by selfishness, and that I would willingly deprive another
+of goods, for my own gratification. Such a temper, like a wild boar
+among vineyards, will trample down all the rich clusters in order to
+slake its own thirst. Find a man who yields to his desires after his
+neighbour's goods, and you find a man who will break all
+commandments like a hornet in a spider's web. Be he a Napoleon, and
+glorified as a conqueror and hero, or be he some poor thief in a
+jail, he has let his covetousness get the upper hand, and so all
+wrong-doing is possible. Nor is it only the second table which
+covetousness dashes to fragments. It serves the first in the same
+fashion; for, as St. Paul puts it, the covetous man 'is an
+idolater,' and is as incapable of loving God as of loving his
+neighbour. This final commandment, overleaping the boundary between
+conduct and character, and carrying the light of duty into the dark
+places of the heart, where deeds are fashioned, sets the whole flock
+of bats and twilight-loving creatures in agitation. It does what is
+the main work of the law, in compelling us to search our hearts, and
+in convincing of sin. It is the converse of the thought that all the
+law is contained in love; for it closes the list of sins with one
+which begets them all, and points us away from actions and words
+which are its children to selfish desire as in itself the
+transgression of all the law, whether it be that which prescribes
+our relations to God or that which enjoins our duties to man,
+
+
+
+
+THE FEAST OF INGATHERING IN THE END OF THE YEAR
+
+
+ 'And the feast of harvest, the first-fruits of thy
+ labours, which them hast sown In thy field: and the
+ feast of ingathering, which is in the end of the year,
+ when thou hast gathered in thy labours out of the field.'
+ --EXODUS xxiii. 16.
+
+The Israelites seem to have had a double beginning of the year--one
+in spring, one at the close of harvest; or it may only be that here
+the year is regarded from the natural point of view--a farmer's
+year. This feast was at the gathering in of the fruits, which was
+the natural close of the agricultural year.
+
+This festival of ingathering was the Feast of Tabernacles. It is
+remarkable that the three great sacred festivals, the Passover,
+Pentecost, Tabernacles, had all a reference to agriculture, though
+two of them also received a reference to national deliverances. This
+fact may show that they were in existence before Moses, and that he
+simply imposed a new meaning on them.
+
+Be that as it may, I take these words now simply as a starting-point
+for some thoughts naturally suggested by the period at which we
+stand. We have come to the end of another year--looked for so long,
+passed so swiftly, and now seeming to have so utterly departed!
+
+I desire to recall to you and to myself the solemn real sense in
+which for us too the end of the year is a 'time of ingathering' and
+'harvest.' We too begin the new year with the accumulated
+consequences of these past days in our 'barns and garners.'
+
+Now, in dealing with this thought, let me put it in two or three
+forms.
+
+I. Think of the past as still living in and shaping the present.
+
+It is a mere illusion of sense that the past is gone utterly. 'Thou
+carriest them away, as with a flood.' We speak of it as irrevocable,
+unalterable, that dreadful past. It is solemnly true that 'ye shall
+no more return that way.'
+
+But there is a deeper truth in the converse thought that the
+apparently transient is permanent, that nothing human ever dies,
+that the past is present. 'The grass withereth, the flower fadeth,'--yes,
+but only its petals drop, and as they fall, the fruit which they
+sheltered swells and matures.
+
+The thought of the present as the harvest from the past brings out
+in vivid and picturesque form two solemn truths.
+
+The first is the passing away of all the external, but of it only.
+It has all gone where the winter's cold, the spring rains, the
+summer's heats have gone. But just as these live in the fruitful
+results that have accrued from them, just as the glowing sunshine of
+the departed ardent summer is in the yellow, bending wheat-ear or
+glows in the cluster, so, in a very solemn sense, 'that which hath
+been is now' in regard to every life. The great law of continuity
+makes the present the inheritor of the past. That law operates in
+national life, in which national characteristics are largely
+precipitates, so to speak, from national history. But it works even
+more energetically, and with yet graver consequences, in our
+individual lives. 'The child is father of the man.' What we are
+depends largely on what we have been, and what we have been
+powerfully acts in determining what we shall be. Life is a mystic
+chain, not a heap of unconnected links.
+
+And there is another very solemn way in which the past lives on in
+each of us. For not only is our present self the direct descendant
+of our past selves, but that past still subsists in that we are
+responsible for it, and shall one day have to answer for it. The
+writer of Ecclesiastes followed the statement just now quoted as to
+the survival of the past, with another, which is impressive in its
+very vagueness: 'God seeketh again that which is passed away.'
+
+So the undying past lives in its results in ourselves, and in our
+being answerable for it to God.
+
+This metaphor is insufficient in one respect. There is not one epoch
+for sowing and another for reaping, but the two processes are
+simultaneous, and every moment is at once a harvest and a seed-time.
+
+This fact masks the reality of the reaping here, but it points on to
+the great harvest when God shall say, 'Gather the wheat into My
+barns!'
+
+II. Notice some specific forms of this reaping and ingathering.
+
+(1) Memory.
+
+It is quite possible that in the future it may embrace all the life.
+
+'Chambers of imagery.'
+
+(2) Habits and character. Like the deposit of a flood. 'Habitus'
+means clothing, and cloth is woven from single threads.
+
+(3) Outward consequences, position, reputation, etc.
+
+III. Make a personal reference to ourselves.
+
+What sort of harvest are we carrying over from this year? Lay this to
+heart as certain, that we enter on no new year--or new day--empty-handed,
+but always 'bearing our sheaves with us.' 'Be not deceived! God is not
+mocked. Whatsoever a man soweth, that shall he also reap.'
+
+But remember, that while this law remains, there is also the law of
+forgiveness, 'Go in peace!' and there may be a new beginning, 'Sin
+no more!'
+
+
+
+
+'THE LOVE OF THINE ESPOUSALS'
+
+
+ 'And He said unto Moses, Come up unto the Lord, thou,
+ and Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the elders
+ of Israel; and worship ye afar off. 2. And Moses alone
+ shall come near the Lord; but they shall not come nigh,
+ neither shall the people go up with him. 3. And Moses
+ came and told the people all the words of the Lord, and
+ all the judgments: and all the people answered with one
+ voice, and said, All the words which the Lord hath said
+ will we do. 4. And Moses wrote all the words of the Lord,
+ and rose up early in the morning, and builded an altar
+ under the hill, and twelve pillars, according to the
+ twelve tribes of Israel. 5. And he sent young men of the
+ children of Israel, which offered burnt-offerings, and
+ sacrificed peace-offerings of oxen unto the Lord. 6. And
+ Moses took half of the blood, and put it in basons; and
+ half of the blood he sprinkled on the altar. 7. And he
+ took the book of the covenant, and read in the audience
+ of the people: and they said, All that the Lord hath said
+ will we do, and be obedient. 8. And Moses took the blood,
+ and sprinkled it on the people, and said, Behold the
+ blood of the covenant, which the Lord hath made with you
+ concerning all these words. 9. Then went up Moses and
+ Aaron, Nadab and Abihu, and seventy of the elders of
+ Israel; 10. And they saw the God of Israel: and there
+ was under His feet as it were a pared work of a sapphire-
+ stone, and as it were the body of heaven in His clearness.
+ 11. And upon the nobles of the children of Israel He laid
+ not His hand: also they saw God, and did eat and drink.
+ 12. And the Lord said unto Moses, Come up to Me into the
+ mount, and be there: and I will give thee tables of
+ stone, and a law, and commandments which I have written;
+ that thou mayest teach them,'--EXODUS xxiv. 1-12.
+
+An effort is needed to feel what a tremendous and unique fact is
+narrated in these words. Next to the incarnation, it is the most
+wonderful and far-reaching moment in history. It is the birthday of
+a nation, which is God's son. It is the foundation stone of all
+subsequent revelation. Its issues oppress that ancient people to-
+day, and its promises are not yet exhausted. It is history, not
+legend, nor the product of later national vanity. Whatever may come
+of analysing 'sources' and of discovering 'redactors,' Israel held a
+relation to God all its own; and that relation was constituted thus.
+
+I. Note the preliminaries of the covenant. The chapter begins with
+the command to Moses to come up to the mount, with Aaron and other
+representatives of the people. But he was already there when the
+command was given, and a difficulty has been found (or, shall we
+say, made) out of this. The explanation seems reasonable and plain
+enough, that the long section extending from Exodus xx. 22, and
+containing the fundamental laws as spoken by God, is closed by our
+verses 1 and 2, which imply, in the very order to Moses to come up
+with his companions, that he must first go down to bring them. God
+dismisses him as a king might end an audience with his minister, by
+bidding him return with attendants. The singular use of the third
+person in reference to Moses in the third verse is not explained by
+supposing another writer; for, whoever wrote it, it would be equally
+anomalous.
+
+So he comes down from the stern cloud-encircled peak to that great
+plain where the encampment lay, and all eyes watch his descent. The
+people gather round him, eager and curious. He recounts 'all the
+judgments,' the series of laws, which had been lodged in his mind by
+God, and is answered by the many-voiced shout of too swiftly
+promised obedience. Glance over the preceding chapters, and you will
+see how much was covered by 'all that the Lord hath spoken.'
+Remember that every lip which united in that lightly made vow drew
+its last breath in the wilderness, because of disobedience, and the
+burst of homage becomes a sad witness to human weakness and
+changefulness. The glory of God flashed above them on the barren
+granite, the awful voice had scarcely died into desert silence,
+nerves still tingled with excitement, and wills were bowed before
+Jehovah, manifestly so near. For a moment, the people were ennobled,
+and obedience seemed easy. They little knew what they were saying in
+that brief spasm of devotion. It was high-water then, but the tide
+soon turned, and all the ooze and ugliness, covered now, lay bare
+and rotting. 'Better is it that thou shouldest not vow, than that
+thou shouldest vow and not pay.' We may take the lesson to
+ourselves, and see to it that emotion consolidates into strenuous
+persistency, and does not die in the very excitement of the vow.
+
+The pledge of obedience was needed before the Covenant could be
+made, and, as we shall find, was reiterated in the very centre of
+the ceremonial ratification. For the present, it warranted Moses in
+preparing for the morrow's ritual. His first step was to prepare a
+written copy of the laws to which the people had sworn. Here we come
+across an old, silenced battery from which a heavy fire used to be
+directed against the historical accuracy of the Pentateuch.
+Alphabetic writing was of a later date. There could not have been a
+written code. The statement was a mere attempt of a later age to
+claim antiquity for comparatively modern legislation. It was no more
+historical than similar traditions in other countries, Sibylline
+books, etc. All that is out of court now. Perhaps some other guns
+will be spiked in due time, that make a great noise just at present.
+Then comes the erection of a rude altar, surrounded by twelve
+standing stones, just as on the east of Jordan we may yet see
+dolmens and menhirs. The altar represents the divine presence; and
+the encircling stones, Israel gathered around its God. The group is
+a memorial and a witness to the people,--and a witness against them,
+if disobedient. Thus two permanent records were prepared, the book
+and the monument. The one which seemed the more lasting has
+perished; the more fragile has endured, and will last to the world's
+end.
+
+II. Note the rite of ratification of the covenant. The ceremonial is
+complex and significant. We need not stay on the mere picture,
+impressive and, to our eyes, strange as it is, but rather seek to
+bring out the meaning of these smoking offerings, and that blood
+flung on the altar and on the crowd. First came two sorts of
+sacrifices, offered not by priests, but by selected young men,
+probably one for each tribe, whose employment in sacrificial
+functions shows the priestly character of the whole nation,
+according to the great words of Exodus xix. 6. Burnt-offerings and
+peace-offerings differed mainly in the use made of the sacrifice,
+which was wholly consumed by fire in the former, while it was in
+part eaten by the offerer in the latter. The one symbolised entire
+consecration; the other, communion with God on the basis of
+sacrifice. The sin-offering does not appear here, as being of later
+origin, and the product of the law, which deepened the consciousness
+of transgression. But these sacrifices, at the threshold of the
+covenant, receive an expiatory character by the use made of the
+blood, and witness to the separation between God and man, which
+renders amity and covenant friendship impossible, without a
+sacrifice.
+
+They must have yielded much blood. It is divided into two parts,
+corresponding to the two parties to the covenant, like the cloven
+animals in Abraham's covenant. One half is 'sprinkled' on the altar,
+or, as the word means, 'swung,'--which suggests a larger quantity
+and a more vehement action than 'sprinkling' does. That drenching of
+the altar with gore is either a piece of barbarism or a solemn
+symbol of the central fact of Christianity no less than of Judaism,
+and a token that the only footing on which man can be received into
+fellowship with God is through the offering of a pure life, instead
+of the sinner, which, accepted by God, covers or expiates sin. There
+can be no question that the idea of expiation is at the very
+foundation of the Old Testament ritual. It is fashionable to regard
+the expiatory element of Christianity as 'Hebrew old clothes,' but
+the fact is the other way about. It is not that Christianity has not
+been able to rid itself of a rude and false conception, but that
+'Judaism' had its sacrifices appointed by God, in order to prepare
+the way for the true offering, which takes away sin.
+
+The expiation by blood having been thus made, the hindrances to the
+nation's entering into covenant are removed. Therefore follows in
+logical order the next step, their formal (alas! how purely formal
+it proved to be) taking on themselves its obligations. The freshly
+written 'book' is produced, and read there, to the silent people,
+before the bloody altar, beneath the peak of Sinai. Again the chorus
+of assent from a thousand throats echoes among the rocks. They
+accept the conditions. They had done so last night; but this is the
+actual contract on their part, and its place in the whole order of
+the ceremony is significant. It follows expiation, without which man
+cannot enter into friendship with God, without the acceptance of
+which man will not yield himself in obedience. The vows which God
+approves are those of men whose sins are covered.
+
+The final step was the sprinkling of the people with the blood. The
+division of the blood into two portions signifies that it had an
+office in regard to each party to the covenant. If it had been
+possible to pour it all on the altar, and then all on the people,
+that would have been done. The separation into two portions was
+inevitable; but in reality it is the same blood which, sprinkled on
+the altar, expiates, and on the worshipper, consecrates, cleanses,
+unites to God, and brings into covenant with Him. Hence Moses
+accompanies the sprinkling of the people with the explanation, 'This
+is the blood of the covenant, which the Lord hath made with you,
+upon all these conditions' (Rev. Ver. margin). It ratifies the
+compact on both sides. God 'hath made' it, in accepting the
+sprinkled blood; they have made it, in being sprinkled therewith.
+But while the rite sets forth the great gospel truth of expiation,
+the Covenant moves within the region of law. It is made 'on the
+basis of all these words,' and is voidable by disobedience. It is
+the _Magna Charta_ of the nation, and its summing up is 'this
+do, and thou shalt live.' Its promises are mainly of outward
+guardianship and national blessings. And these are suspended by it,
+as they were in fact contingent, on the national observance of the
+national vow. The general idea of a covenant is that of a compact
+between two parties, each of whom comes under obligations contingent
+on the other's discharge of his. Theologians have raised the
+question whether God's covenant is of this kind. Surely it is. His
+promises to Israel had an 'if,' and the fulfilment of the conditions
+necessarily secured the accomplishment of the promises. The ritual
+of the first covenant transcends the strictly retributive compact
+which it ratified, and shadows a gospel beyond law, even the new
+covenant which brings better gifts, and does not turn on 'do,' but
+simply on the sprinkling with the blood of Jesus. The words of Moses
+were widened to carry a blessing beyond his thoughts, which was
+disclosed when, in an upper chamber, a dying man said to the twelve
+representatives of the true Israel, 'This is the new covenant in My
+blood, drink ye all of it.' The blood which Moses sprinkled gave
+ritual cleansing, but it remained outside the man. The blood of
+Jesus gives true purification, and passes into our veins to become
+our life. The covenant by Moses was 'do and live'; that in Christ is
+'believe and live.' Moses brought commandments, and on them his
+covenant was built; Christ brings gifts, and His covenant is all
+promises, which are ours on the simple condition of taking them.
+
+III. Note the vision and feast on the basis of the covenant. The
+little company that climbed the mountain, venturing within the
+fence, represented the whole people. Aaron and his sons were the
+destined priests. The elders were probably seventy, because that
+number is the product of the two perfect numbers, and perhaps with
+allusion to the seventy souls who went down into Egypt with Jacob.
+It is emphatically said that they saw 'the God of Israel,' for that
+day's covenant had made him so in a new closeness of relationship.
+In token of that new access to and possession in Him, which was
+henceforth to be the prerogative of the obedient people, some
+manifestation of His immediate presence was poured on their
+astonished eyes. It is needless to inquire its nature, or to ask how
+such a statement is consistent with the spirituality of the divine
+nature, or with what this same book of Exodus says, 'There shall no
+man see Me, and live.' The plain intention is to assert that there
+was a visible manifestation of the divine presence, but no attempt
+is made to describe it. Our eyes are stayed at the pavement beneath
+His feet, which was blue as sapphire, and bright as the cloudless
+sky gleaming above Sinai. It is enough to learn that 'the secret of
+the Lord is with them' to whom He shows 'His covenant'; that, by the
+power of sacrifice, a true vision of God may be ours, which is 'in a
+mirror, darkly,' indeed, but yet is real and all sufficing. Before
+the covenant was made, Israel had been warned to keep afar lest He
+should break through on them, but now 'He laid not His hand' upon
+them; for only blessing can stream from His presence now, and His
+hand does not crush, but uphold.
+
+Nor is this all which we learn of the intercourse with God which is
+possible on the ground of His covenant. They 'did eat and drink.'
+That may suggest that the common enjoyments of the natural life are
+in no way inconsistent with the vision of God; but more probably it
+is meant to teach a deeper lesson. We have remarked that the ritual
+of the peace-offering included a feast on the sacrifice 'before the
+Lord,' by which was signified communion with Him, as at His table,
+and this meal has the same meaning. They who stand in covenant
+relations with God, feed and feast on a sacrifice, and thereby hold
+fellowship with Him, since He too has accepted the sacrifice which
+nourishes them. So that strange banquet on Sinai taught a fact which
+is ever true, prophesied the deepest joys of Christian experience,
+which are realised in the soul that eats the flesh and drinks the
+blood of Christ, the Mediator of the new covenant, and dimly
+shadowed the yet future festival, when, cleansed and consecrated by
+His blood, they who have made a covenant with Him by His sacrifice,
+shall be gathered unto Him in the heavenly mount, where He makes a
+'feast of fat things and wines on the lees well refined,' and there
+shall sit, for ever beholding His glory, and satisfied with the
+provisions of His house.
+
+
+
+
+THE BREAD OF THE PRESENCE
+
+
+ 'Thou shalt set upon the table shew-bread before Me
+ alway.'--EXODUS xxv. 30.
+
+I suspect that to many readers the term 'shew-bread' conveys little
+more meaning than if the Hebrew words had been lifted over into our
+version. The original expression, literally rendered, is 'bread of
+the face'; or, as the Revised Version has it in the margin,
+'presence bread,' and the meaning of that singular designation is
+paraphrased and explained in my text: 'Thou shalt set upon the
+table, bread of the presence before Me always.' It was bread, then,
+which was laid in the presence of God. The directions with regard to
+it may be very briefly stated. Every Sabbath the priests laid upon
+the table which stood on one side of the Altar of Incense, in the
+Inner Court, two piles of loaves, on each of which piles was placed
+a pan of incense. They lay there for a week, being replaced by fresh
+ones on the coming Sabbath.
+
+The Altar of Incense in the middle symbolised the thought that the
+priestly life, which was the life of the nation, and is the life of
+the Christian both individually and collectively, is to be centrally
+and essentially a life of prayer. On one side of it stood the great
+golden lamp which, in like manner, declared that the activities of
+the priestly life, which was the life of Israel, and is the life of
+the Christian individually and collectively, is to be, in its
+manward aspect, a light for the world. On the other side of the
+Altar of Incense stood this table with its loaves. What does it say
+about the life of the priest, the Church, and the individual
+Christian? That is the question that I wish to try to answer here;
+and in doing so let me first ask you to look at the thing itself,
+and then to consider its connection with the other two articles in
+connection with which it made a threefold oneness.
+
+I. Let me deal with this singular provision of the ancient ritual by
+itself alone.
+
+Bread is a product at once of God's gift and of man's work. In the
+former aspect, He 'leaves not Himself without witness, in that,' in
+the yearly miracle of the harvest, 'He gives us bread from Heaven,
+and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness'; in
+the latter, considered as a product of man's activity, agriculture
+is, if not the first, at all events in settled communities the
+prime, form of human industry. The farmer and the baker begin the
+series of man's industries. So that these loaves were fitly taken as
+representatives of all kinds of human industry and their products,
+and as such were consecrated to God. That is the broad significance
+of this institution, which, as we shall have to see, links itself
+with the other two conceptions of the priestly life in its Godward
+and in its manward aspect. Now the first thing that is suggested,
+therefore, is the plain obligation, which is also a blessed
+privilege, for all men who are priests of God by faith in, and union
+with, the great High Priest, that they lay all their activities as
+an offering before God. The loaves in their very place on that
+table, right in front of the veil that parted the Inner Court from
+the inmost of all, where the Shekinah shone, and the Cherubim bowed
+in worship, tell us that in some sense they, too, were an offering,
+and that the table was an altar. Their sacrificial character is
+emphasised by the fact that upon the top of each of the piles there
+was laid a pan of incense.
+
+So, then, the whole was an offering of Israel's activities and its
+results to God. And we, Christian men and women, have to make an
+offering of all our active life, and all its products. That thought
+opens up many considerations, one or two of which I ask leave to
+touch briefly. First, then, if my active life is to be an offering
+to God, that means that I am to surrender myself. And that surrender
+means three things: first that in all my daily work I am to set Him
+before me as my end; second, that in all my daily work I am to set
+Him before me as my law; third, that in all my daily work I am to
+set Him before me as my power. As for the first, whatever a man does
+for any motive other, and with any end less, than God and His Glory,
+that act, beautiful as it may be in other respects, loses its
+supreme beauty, and falls short of perfect nobleness, just in the
+measure in which other motives, or other ends, than this supreme
+one, are permitted to dominate it. I do not contend for such an
+impossible suppression of myself as that my own blessedness and the
+like shall be in no manner my end, but I do maintain this, that in
+good old language, 'Man's chief end is to glorify God,' and that
+anything which I do, unless it is motived by this regard to Him as
+its 'chief end,' loses its noblest consecration, and is degraded
+from its loftiest beauty. The Altar sanctifies, and not only
+sanctifies but ennobles, the gift. That which has in it the taint of
+self-regard so pronouncedly and dominantly as that God is shut out,
+is like some vegetation down in low levels at the bottom of a vale,
+which never has the sun to shine upon it. But let it rise as some
+tree above the brushwood until its topmost branches are in the
+light, and then it is glorified. To live to self is ignoble and
+mean; to live for others is higher and nobler. But highest and
+noblest of all is to offer the loaves to God, and to make Him the
+end of all our activities.
+
+Again, there is another consideration, bearing on another region in
+which the assertive self is only too apt to spoil all work. And that
+is, that if our activities are offerings to God, this means that His
+supreme Will is to be our law, and that we obey His commands and
+accept His appointments in quiet submission. The tranquillity of
+heart, the accumulation of power, which come to men when they, from
+the depths, say, 'Not my will but Thine be done'; 'Speak, Lord! for
+Thy servant heareth,' cannot be too highly stated. There is no such
+charm to make life quiet and strong as the submission of the will to
+God's providences, and the swift obedience of the will to God's
+commandments. And whilst to make self my end mars what else is
+beautiful, making self my law mars it even more.
+
+Further, we offer our activities to God when we fall back upon Him
+as our one power, and say, 'Perfect Thy strength in my weakness.' He
+that goes out into the world to do his daily work, of whatsoever
+sort it is--you in your little sphere, or I in mine--in dependence
+upon himself, is sure to be defeated. He that says 'we have no
+strength against this great multitude that cometh against us, but
+our eyes are unto Thee,' will, sooner or later, be able to go back
+with joy, and say, 'the Lord hath done great things for us, whereof
+we are glad.' The man that goes into the fight like that foolish
+prime minister of France under the Empire, 'with a light heart.'
+will very soon find his Sedan, and have shamefully to surrender.
+Brethren, these three things, making God the end of my work; making
+God's will the law of my work; making God's strength the power of my
+work; these are the ways by which we, too, can bring our little pile
+of barley bread, and lay it upon that table.
+
+Again, this consecration of life's activities is to be carried out
+by treating their products, as well as themselves, as offerings to
+God. The loaves were the results of human activity. They were also
+the products of divine gifts elaborated by human effort. And both
+things are true about all the bread that you and I have been able to
+make for the satisfaction of our desires, or the sustenance of our
+strength--it comes ultimately from the gift of God. In regard to
+this consecration of the product of our activities, as well as of
+our activities themselves, I have but two words to offer, and the
+one is, let us see to it that we consecrate our enjoyment of God's
+gifts by bringing that enjoyment, as well as the activities which He
+has blessed to produce it, into His presence. That table bore the
+symbols of the grateful recognition of God's mercies by the people.
+And when our hearts are glad, and our 'bosom's lord sits lightly on
+his throne,' we have special need to take care that our joy be not
+godless, nor our enjoyment of His gifts be without reference to
+Himself. 'Ah,' you say, 'that is a threadbare commonplace.' Yes, it
+is, dear friends; it is a commonplace just because it is needful at
+every turn, if we are to make our lives what they ought to be.
+
+May I say another thing? and that is, that the loaves that were laid
+within the Sanctuary were not intended to be separated from the
+others that were eaten in the tents, nor were they meant to be a
+kind of purchasing of an indulgence, or of a right, by surrendering
+a little, to the godless and selfish enjoyment of the rest of the
+batch, or of the rest of the harvest. Let us apply that to our
+money, which is one of the products of our activities; and not
+fancy, as a great many people do, that what we give as a
+subscription to some benevolent or religious institution buys for us
+the right to spend all the rest selfishly. That is another
+commonplace, very threadbare and very feeble, when we speak it, but
+with claws and teeth in it that will lay hold of us, when we try to
+put it in practice. The enjoyments and the products of our daily
+activities are to be offered to God.
+
+Still further, this table with its burden has suggestions that as
+Christians we are bound to bring all our work to Him for His
+judgment upon it. The loaves were laid right in front of the veil,
+behind which blazed the light of His presence. And that meant that
+they were laid before 'those pure eyes and perfect judgment of all-
+judging' God. Whether we bring our activities there or no, of course
+in a very real and solemn sense they are there. But what I desire to
+insist upon now is how important, for the nobleness and purity of
+our daily lives, it is that we should be in the continual habit of
+realising to ourselves the thought that whatever we do, we do before
+His Face. The Roman Catholics talk about 'the practice of the
+presence of God.' One does not like the phrase, but all true
+religion will practise what is meant by it. And for us it should be
+as joyous to think, 'Thou God seest me,' as it is for a child to
+play or work with a quiet heart, because it knows that its mother is
+sitting somewhere not very far off and watching that no harm comes
+to it. That thought of being in His presence would be for us a
+tonic, and a test. How it would pull us up in many a meanness, and
+keep our feet from wandering into many forbidden ways, if there came
+like a blaze of light into our hearts the thought: 'Thou God seest
+me!' There are many of our activities, I am afraid, which we should
+not like to put down on that table. Can _you_ think of any in
+_your_ lives that you would be rather ashamed to lay there, and
+say to Him, 'Judge Thou this'? Then do not do it. That is a brief,
+but a very stringent, easily applied, and satisfactory test of a
+great many doubtful things. If you cannot take them into the Inner
+Court, and lay them down there, and say, 'Look, Lord! this is my
+baking,' be sure that they are made, not of wholesome flour, but of
+poisoned grain, and that there is death in them.
+
+Further, this table, with its homely burden of twelve poor loaves,
+may suggest to us how the simplest, smallest, most secular of our
+activities is a fit offering to Him. The loaves were not out of
+place amidst the sanctities of the spot, nor did they seem to be
+incongruous with the golden altar and the golden lamp-stand, and yet
+they were but twelve loaves. The poorest of our works is fit to be
+carried within the shrine, and laid upon His altar. We may be sure
+that He delights even in the meanest and humblest of them, if only
+we take them to Him and say: 'All things come of Thee, and of Thine
+own have we given Thee.' Ah! there are a great many strange things
+in Christ's treasury. Mothers will hoard up trifles that belonged to
+their children, which everybody else thinks worthless. Jesus Christ
+has in His storehouse a 'cup of cold water,' the widows' mites, and
+many another thing that the world counts of no value, and He
+recognises as precious. There is an old story about some great
+emperor making a progress through his dominions, where he had been
+receiving precious gifts from cities and nobles, and as the gay
+cortège was passing a poor cottage, the peasant-owner came out with
+a coarse earthenware cup filled with spring water in his hand, and
+offered it to his overlord as the only gift that he could give. The
+king accepted it, and ennobled him on the spot. Take your barley
+loaves to Christ, and He will lay them up in His storehouse.
+
+II. Now I need only say a word or two about the other aspect of this
+table of shew-bread, taken with the other two articles in
+conjunction with which it formed a unity.
+
+The lamp and the table go together. They are both offshoots from the
+altar in the middle. That is to say, your lives will not shine
+before men unless your activities are offered to God. The smallest
+taint of making self your end, your law, or your strength, mingling
+with your lives, and manifest in their actions, will dim the light
+which shines from them, and men will be very quick to find out and
+say, 'He calls himself a Christian; but he lives for himself.'
+Neither the light, which is the radiance of a Christian life
+manwards, can be sustained without the offering of the life in its
+depths to God, nor can the activities of the life be acceptably
+offered to Him, unless the man that offers them 'lets his light
+shine before men.' The lamp and the table must go together.
+
+The lamp and the table must together be offshoots from the altar. If
+there be not in the centre of the life aspiration after Him in the
+depths of the heart, communion with Him in the silent places of the
+soul, then there will be little brightness in the life to ray out
+amongst men, and there will be little consecration of the activities
+to be laid before God. The reason why the manifold bustle and busy-
+ness of the Christian Church today sows so much and reaps so little,
+lies mainly here, that they have forgotten to a large extent how the
+altar in the centre must give the oil for the lamp to shine, and the
+grain to be made into the loaves. And, on the other hand, the altar
+in the middle needs both its flanking accompaniments. For the
+Christian life is to be no life of cloistered devotion and
+heavenward aspiration only or mainly, but is to manifest its still
+devotion and its heavenward aspiration by the consecration of its
+activities to God, and the raying of them out into a darkened world.
+The service of man is the service of God, for lamp and table are
+offshoots of the altar. But the service of God is the basis of the
+best service of man, for the altar stands between the lamp and the
+table.
+
+So, brethren, let us blend these three aspects into a unity, the
+Altar, the Lamp, the Table, and so shall we minister aright, and men
+will call us the 'priests of the Most High God,' till we pass within
+the veil where, better than the best of us here can do, we shall be
+able to unite still communion and active service, and shine as the
+sun in the Kingdom of our Father. 'His servants shall serve Him'
+with priestly ministrations, 'and shall see His face, and His name
+shall be in their foreheads.'
+
+
+
+
+THE GOLDEN LAMPSTAND
+
+
+ 'Thou shalt make a candlestick of pure gold....'
+ --EXODUS xxv. 31.
+
+If we could have followed the Jewish priest as he passed in his
+daily ministrations into the Inner Court, we should have seen that
+he first piled the incense on the altar which stood in its centre,
+and then turned to trim the lamps of the golden candlestick which
+flanked it on one side. Of course it was not a candlestick, as our
+versions misleadingly render the word. That was an article of
+furniture unknown in those days. It was a lampstand; from a central
+upright stem branched off on either side three arms decorated with
+what the Book calls 'beaten work,' and what we in modern jewellers'
+technicality call _répoussé_ work, each of which bore on its
+top, like a flower on its stalk, a shallow cup filled with oil, in
+which a wick floated. There were thus seven lamps in all, including
+that on the central stem. The material was costly, the work adorning
+it was artistic, the oil with which it was fed was carefully
+prepared, the number of its lamps expressed perfection, it was daily
+trimmed by the priest, and there, all through the night, it burned,
+the one spot of light in a dark desert.
+
+Now, this Inner Court of the Tabernacle or Temple was intended, with
+its furniture, to be symbolical of the life of Israel, the priestly
+nation. The Altar of Incense, which was the main article of
+ecclesiastical equipment there, and stood in the central place,
+represented the life of Israel in its Godward aspect, as being a
+life of continual devotion. The Candlestick on the one hand, and the
+Table of Shew-bread on the other, were likewise symbolical of other
+aspects of that same life. I have to deal now with the meaning and
+lessons of this golden lampstand, and it teaches us--
+
+I. The office manwards of the Church and of the individual
+Christian.
+
+Let me just for a moment recall the various instances in which this
+symbol reappears in Scripture. We have, in the vision of the prophet
+who sustained and animated the spirits of Israel in their Restoration,
+the repetition of the emblem, in the great golden candlestick which
+Zechariah saw, fed by two 'olive trees,' one on either side of it; and
+in the last book of Scripture we have that most significant and
+lovely variation of it, the reappearance, not of the _one_ golden
+candlestick or lampstand, but of _seven_. The formal unity is at an
+end, but the seven constitute a better, more vital unity, because
+Christ is in the midst. We may learn the lesson that the Christian
+conception of the oneness of the Church towers above the Jewish
+conception of the oneness of Israel by all the difference that there is
+between a mere mechanical, external unity, and a vital oneness--because
+all are partakers of the one Christ. I may recall, also, how our Lord,
+in that great programme of the Kingdom which Matthew has gathered
+together in what we call 'the Sermon on the Mount,' immediately after
+the Beatitudes, goes on to speak of the office of His people under
+the two metaphors of 'the salt of the earth' and 'the light of the
+world,' and immediately connects with the latter of the two a reference
+to a lamp lit and set upon its stand; and clinches the whole by the
+exhortation, 'Let your light so shine before men that they may see
+your good works, and glorify your Father which is in Heaven.'
+
+A remarkable and beautiful variation of that exhortation is found in
+one of the Apostolic writings when Paul, instead of saying, 'Ye are
+the light of the world,' says, 'Shine as lights in the world,' and
+so gives us the individual, as well as the collective and
+ecclesiastical, aspect of these great functions. That is a hint that
+is very much needed. Christian people are quite willing to admit
+that the Church, the abstraction, the generalisation, is 'the light
+of the world.' But they are wofully apt to slip their own necks out
+from under the yoke of the obligation, and to forget that the
+collective light is only the product of the millions of individual
+lights rushing together--just as in some gas-lights you have a whole
+series of minute punctures, each of which gives out its own little
+jet of radiance, and all run together into one brilliant circle. So
+do not let us escape the personal pressure of this office, or lay it
+all on the broad shoulders of that generalised abstraction 'the
+Church.' But, since the collective light is but the product of the
+individual small shinings, let us take the two lessons: first,
+contribute our part to the general lustre; second, be content with
+having our part lost in the general light.
+
+But now let me turn for a little while to the more specific meaning
+of this symbol. The life which, by the central position of the Altar
+of Incense, was symbolised as being centrally, essentially in its
+depths and primarily, a life of habitual devotion and communion with
+God, in its manward aspect is a life that shines 'to give the light
+of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.'
+That is the solemn obligation, the ideal function, of the Christian
+Church and of each individual who professes to belong to it. Now, if
+you recur to our Lord's own application of this metaphor, to which I
+have already referred, you will see that the first and foremost way
+by which Christian communities and individuals discharge this
+function is by conduct. 'Let your light so shine before men'--that
+they may hear your eloquent proclamation of the Gospel? No! 'Let
+your light so shine before men'--that you may convince the
+gainsayers by argument, or move the hard-hearted by appeals and
+exhortations; that you may preach and talk? No! 'That _they may
+see your good works_, and glorify your Father which is in
+Heaven.' We may say of the Christian community, and of the Christian
+individual, with all reverence, what the Scripture in an infinitely
+deeper and more sacred sense says of Jesus Christ Himself, 'the life
+was the light.' It is conduct, whereby most effectually, most
+universally, and with the least risk of rousing antagonism and
+hostile feelings, Christian people may 'shine as lights in the
+world.' For we all know how the inconsistencies of a Christian man
+block the path of the Gospel far more than a hundred sermons or
+talks further it. We all know how there are people, plenty of them,
+who, however illogically yet most naturally, compare our lives in
+their daily action with oar professed beliefs, and, saying to
+themselves, 'I do not see that there is much difference between them
+and me,' draw the conclusion that it matters very little whether a
+man is a Christian or not, seeing that the conduct of the men who
+profess to be so is little more radiant, bright with purity and
+knowledge and joy, than is the conduct of others. Dear brethren, you
+can do far more to help or hinder the spread of Christ's Kingdom by
+the way in which you do common things, side by side with men who are
+not partakers of the 'like precious faith' with yourselves, than I
+or my fellow-preachers can do by all our words. It is all very well
+to lecture about the efficiency of a machine; let us see it at work,
+and that will convince people. We preach; but you preach far more
+eloquently, and far more effectively, by your lives. 'In all
+labour,' says the Book of Proverbs, 'there is profit'--which we may
+divert from its original meaning to signify that in all Christian
+living there is force to attract--'but the talk of the lips tendeth
+only to poverty.' Oh! if the Christian men and women of England
+would live their Christianity, they would do more to convert the
+unconverted, and to draw in the outcasts, than all of us preachers
+can do. 'From you,' said the Apostle once to a church very young,
+and just rescued from the evils of heathenism--'from you sounded
+out,' as if blown from a trumpet, 'the Word of the Lord, so that we
+need not to speak anything.' Live the life, and thereby you diffuse
+the light.
+
+Nor need we forget that this most potent of all weapons is one that
+can be wielded by all Christian people. Our gifts differ. Some of us
+cannot speak for Jesus; some of us who think we can had often better
+hold our tongues. But we can all live like and for Him. And this
+most potent and universally diffused possibility is also the weapon
+that can be wielded with least risk of failure. There is a certain
+assumption, which it is often difficult to swallow, in a Christian
+man's addressing another on the understanding that he, the speaker,
+possesses something which the other lacks. By words we may often
+repel, and often find that the ears that we seek to enter with our
+message close themselves against us and are unwilling to hear. But
+there is no chance of offending anybody, or of repelling anybody, by
+living Christlike. We can all do that, and it is the largest
+contribution that any of us can make to the collective light which
+shines out from the Christian Church.
+
+But, brethren, we have to remember that there are dangers attending
+the life that reveals its hidden principles as being faith in Christ
+and obedience to Him. Did you ever notice how, in the Sermon on the
+Mount, there are two sets of precepts which seem diametrically
+opposite to one another? There is a whole series of illustrations of
+the one commandment, 'Take heed that ye do not your righteousness
+before men, to be seen of them,' and then there Is the precept, 'Let
+your light so shine before men that they may see your good works.'
+So that whilst, on the one hand, there is to be the manifestation in
+daily conduct of the inner principles that animate us, on the other
+hand, if there comes in the least taint or trace of ostentation,
+everything is spoiled, and the light is darkness. The light of the
+sun makes all things visible and hides itself. We do not see the
+sunbeams, but we see what the sunbeams illuminate. It is the coarser
+kinds of light which are themselves separately visible, and they are
+so only because they have not power enough to make everything around
+them as brilliant as they themselves are. So our light is to be
+silent, our light is--if I might use such a phrase--to hide itself
+in 'a glorious privacy,' whilst it enables men to see, even through
+our imperfect ministration, the face of our Father in Heaven.
+
+But let me remind you that the same variation by Paul of our Lord's
+words to which I have already referred as bringing out the
+difference between the collective and the individual function, also
+brings out another difference; for Paul says, 'Ye shine as lights in
+the world, holding forth the word of life.' He slightly varies the
+metaphor. We are no longer regarded as being ourselves illuminants,
+but simply as being the stands on which the light is placed. And
+that means that whilst the witness by life is the mightiest, the
+most universally possible, and the least likely to offend, there
+must also be, as occasion shall serve, without cowardice, without
+shamefaced reticence, the proclamation of the great Gospel which has
+made us 'lights in the world.' And that is a function which every
+Christian man can discharge too, though I have just been saying that
+they cannot all preach and speak; for every Christian soul has some
+other soul to whom its word comes with a force that none other can
+have.
+
+So the one office that is set forth here is the old familiar one,
+the obligation of which is fully recognised by us all, and pitifully
+ill-discharged by any of us, to shine by our daily life, and to
+shine by the actual communication by speech of 'the Name that is
+above every name.' That is the ideal; alas for the reality! 'Ye are
+the light of the world.' What kind of light do we--the Church of
+Christ that gathers here--ray out into the darkness of Manchester?
+Socially, intellectually, morally, in the civic life, in the
+national life, are Christian people in the van? They ought to be.
+There is a church clock in our city which has a glass dial that
+professes to be illuminated at night, so that the passer-by may tell
+the hour; but it is generally burning so dimly that nobody can see
+on its grimy face what o'clock it is. That is like a great many of
+our churches, and I ask you to ask yourselves whether it is like you
+or not--a dark lantern, a most imperfectly illuminated dial, which
+gives no guidance and no information to anybody.
+
+This golden lampstand teaches us--
+
+II. How this office is to be discharged.
+
+Remember simply these two points. It stood, as I have already said,
+on one side of the Altar of Incense which was central to everything.
+It was daily tended by the priests, and fed with fresh oil. Hence we
+may derive some important practical lessons.
+
+To begin with, we note that our light is a derived light, and
+therefore can only be kept bright when we keep close to the source
+from whence it is derived.
+
+'That was the true Light, which coming into the world lighteth every
+man'--there is the source of all illumination, in Jesus Christ
+Himself. He alone is _the_ Light, and as for all others we must
+say of them what was said of His great forerunner, 'Not that light,
+but sent to bear witness of that light'; and again, 'he was a light
+kindled,' and therefore 'shining,' and so his shining was but 'for a
+season.' But Jesus is for ever the light of the world, and all our
+illumination comes from Him. As Paul says, 'Now are ye light in the
+Lord,' therefore only in the measure in which we are 'in the Lord,'
+shall we be light. Keep near to Him and you will shine; break the
+connection with Him, and you are darkness, darkness for yourselves,
+and darkness for the world. Switch off, and the light is darkness.
+
+Change the metaphor, and instead of saying 'derived light' say
+'reflected light.' _There_ is a pane of glass in a cottage,
+miles away across the moor. It was invisible a moment ago, and
+suddenly it gleams like a diamond. Why? The sun has struck it; and
+in a moment after it will be invisible again. As long as Jesus
+Christ is shining on my heart, so long, and not a moment longer,
+shall I give forth the light that will illumine the world.
+Astronomers have a contrivance by which they can keep a photographic
+film on which they are seeking to get the image of a star, moving
+along with the movement of the heavens, so that on the same spot the
+star shall always shine. We have to keep ourselves steady beneath
+the white beam from Jesus, and then we, too, shall be 'light in the
+Lord.'
+
+Our light is fed light. Daily came the priest, daily the oil that
+had been exhausted by shining was replenished. We all know what that
+oil means and is; the Divine Spirit which comes into every heart
+which is open by faith in Christ, and which abides in every heart
+where there are desire, obedience, and the following of Him; which
+can be quenched by my sin, by my negligence, by my ceasing to wish
+it, by my not using its gifts when I have them; which can be grieved
+by my inconsistencies, and by the spots of darkness that so often
+take up more of the sphere of my life than the spots of
+illumination. But we can have as much of that oil of the Divine
+Spirit, the 'unction from the Holy One,' as we desire, and expect,
+and use. And unless we have, dear brethren, there is no shining for
+us. This generation in its abundant activities tends to a
+Christianity which has more spindles than power, which is more
+surface than depth, which is so anxious to do service that it
+forgets the preliminary of all right service, patient, solitary,
+silent communion with God. Suffer the word of exhortation--let
+shining be second, let replenishing with the oil be first. First the
+Altar of Incense, then the Candlestick.
+
+III. This golden lampstand tells us of the fatal effect of
+neglecting the Church's and the individual's duty.
+
+Where is the seven-branched candlestick of the second Temple? No one
+knows. Possibly, according to one statement, it lies at the bottom
+of the Mediterranean. Certainly we know that it is pictured on that
+sad panel in the conqueror's arch at Rome, and that it became a
+trophy of the insolent victor. It disappeared, and the Israel whom
+it vainly endeavoured through the centuries to stir to a
+consciousness of its vocation, has never since had a gleam of light
+to ray out into the world. Where are the seven candlesticks, which
+made a blessed unity because Christ walked in their midst? Where are
+the churches of Ephesus, Smyrna, Philadelphia, Thyatira, and the
+rest? Where they stood the mosque is reared, and from its minaret
+day by day rings out--not the proclamation of the Name, but--'There
+is no God but God, and Mahomet is His Prophet.' The Pharos that
+ought to have shone out over stormy seas has been seized by
+wreckers, and its light is blinded, and false lights lure the
+mariner to the shoals and to shipwreck.
+
+'Take heed lest He also spare not thee.' O brethren! is it not a
+bitter irony to call _us_ 'lights of the world'? Let us penitently
+recognise the inconsistencies of our lives, and the reticence of our
+speech. Let us not lose sight of the high ideal, that we may the more
+penitently recognise the miserable falling short of our reality. And
+let us be thankful that _the_ Priest is tending the lamps. 'He
+will not quench the smoking wick,' but will replenish it with oil, and
+fan the dying flame. Only let us not resist His ministrations, which
+are always gentle, even when He removes the charred blacknesses that
+hinder our being what we should be, and may be, if we will--lights
+of the world. 'Arise! shine, for thy light is come, and the glory of
+the Lord is risen upon thee.'
+
+
+
+
+THE NAMES ON AARON'S BREASTPLATE
+
+
+ Aaron shall bear their names before the Lord, upon his
+ two shoulders, for a memorial.... And Aaron shall bear
+ the names of the Children of Israel in the breastplate
+ of judgment upon his heart, when he goeth in unto the
+ Holy Place.'--EXODUS xxviii. 12,29.
+
+Every part of the elaborately prescribed dress of the high priest
+was significant. But the significance of the whole was concentrated
+in the inscription upon his mitre, 'Holiness to the Lord,' and in
+those others upon his breastplate and his shoulder.
+
+The breastplate was composed of folded cloth, in which were lodged
+twelve precious stones, in four rows of three, each stone containing
+the name of one of the tribes. It was held in position by the ephod,
+which consisted of another piece of cloth, with a back and front
+part, which were united into one on the shoulders. On each shoulder
+it was clasped by an onyx stone bearing the names of six of the
+tribes. Thus twice, on the shoulders, the seat of power, and on the
+heart, the organ of thought and of love, Aaron, entering into the
+presence of the Most High, bore 'the names of the tribes for a
+memorial continually.'
+
+Now, I think we shall not be indulging in the very dangerous
+amusement of unduly spiritualising the externalities of that old law
+if we see here, in these two things, some very important lessons.
+
+I. The first one that I would suggest to you is--here we have the
+expression of the great truth of representation of the people by the
+priest.
+
+The names of the tribes laid upon Aaron's heart and on his shoulders
+indicated the significance of his office--that he represented Israel
+before God, as truly as he represented God to Israel. For the moment
+the personality of the official was altogether melted away and
+absorbed in the sanctity of his function, and he stood before God as
+the individualised nation. Aaron was Israel, and Israel was Aaron,
+for the purposes of worship. And that was indicated by the fact that
+here, on the shoulders from which, according to an obvious symbol,
+all acts of power emanate, and on the heart from which, according to
+most natural metaphor, all the outgoings of the personal life
+proceed, were written the names of the tribes. That meant, 'This man
+standing here is the Israel of God, the concentrated nation.'
+
+The same thought works the other way. The nation is the diffused
+priest, and all its individual components are consecrated to God.
+All this was external ceremonial, with no real spiritual fact at the
+back of it. But it pointed onwards to something that is not
+ceremonial. It pointed to this, that the true priest must, in like
+manner, gather up into himself, and in a very profound sense be, the
+people for whom he is the priest; and that they, in their turn, by
+the action of their own minds and hearts and wills, must consent to
+and recognise that representative relation, which comes to the
+solemn height of identification in Christ's relation to His people.
+'I am the Vine, ye are the branches,' says He, and also, 'That they
+all may be one in us as Thou, Father, art in Me, and I in Thee.' So
+Paul says, 'I live, yet not I, but Christ liveth in me.' 'The life
+which I live in the flesh, I live by the faith of the Son of God,'
+
+So Christ gathers us all, if we will let Him, into Himself; and our
+lives may be hid with Him--in a fashion that is more than mere
+external and formal representation, or as people have a member of
+Parliament to represent them in the councils of the nation--even in
+a true union with Him in whom is the life of all of us, if we live
+in any real sense. Aaron bore the names of the tribes on shoulder
+and heart, and Israel was Aaron, and Aaron was Israel.
+
+II. Further, we see here, in these eloquent symbols, the true
+significance of intercession.
+
+Now, that is a word and a thought which has been wofully limited and
+made shallow and superficial by the unfortunate confining of the
+expression, in our ordinary language, to a mere action by speech.
+Intercession is supposed to be verbal asking for some good to be
+bestowed on, or some evil to be averted from, some one in whom we
+are interested. But the Old Testament notion of the priest's
+intercession, and the New Testament use of the word which we so
+render, go far beyond any verbal utterances, and reach to the very
+heart of things. Intercession, in the true sense of the word, means
+the doing of any act whatsoever before God for His people by Jesus
+Christ. Whensoever, as in the presence of God, He brings to God
+anything which is His, that is intercession. He undertakes for them,
+not by words only, though His mighty word is, 'I will that they whom
+Thou hast given Me be with Me where I am,' but by acts which are
+more than even the words of the Incarnate Word.
+
+If we take these two inscriptions upon which I am now commenting, we
+shall get, I think, what covers the whole ground of the intercession
+on which Christians are to repose their souls. For, with regard to
+the one of them, we read that the high priest's breastplate was
+named 'the breastplate of judgment'; and what that means is
+explained by the last words of the verse following that from which
+my text is taken: 'Aaron shall bear the judgment of the children of
+Israel upon his heart before the Lord.' Judgment means a judicial
+sentence; in this case a judicial sentence of acquittal. And that
+Aaron stood before God in the Holy Place, ministering with this
+breastplate upon his heart, is explained by the writer of these
+regulations to mean that he carried there the visible manifestation
+of Israel's acquittal, based upon his own sacrificial function. Now,
+put that into plain English, and it is just this--Jesus Christ's
+sacrifice ensures, for all those whose names are written on these
+gems on His heart, their acquittal in the judgment of Heaven. Or, in
+other words, the first step in the intercession of our great High
+Priest is the presenting before God for ever and ever that great
+fact that He, the Sinless, has died for the love of sinful men, and
+thereby has secured that the judgment of Heaven on them shall now be
+'no condemnation.' Brethren, there is the root of all our hope in
+Christ, and of all that Christ is to individuals and to society--the
+assurance that the breastplate of judgment is on His heart, as a
+sign that all who trust Him are acquitted by the tribunal of Heaven.
+
+The other side of this great continual act of intercession is set
+forth by the other symbol--the names written on the shoulders, the
+seat of power. There is a beautiful parallel, which yet at first
+sight does not seem to be one, to the thought that lies here, in the
+Book of the Prophet Isaiah, where, addressing the restored and
+perfected Israel, he says, speaking in the person of Jehovah: 'I
+have graven thee upon the palms of My hands.' That has precisely the
+same meaning that I take to be conveyed by this symbol in the text.
+The names of the tribes are written on His shoulders; and not until
+that arm is wearied or palsied, not till that strong hand forgets
+its cunning, will our defence fail. If our names are thus written on
+the seat of power, that means that all the divine authority and
+omnipotence which Jesus Christ, the Eternal Son of the Father,
+wields in His state of royal glory, are exercised on behalf of, or
+at all events on the side of, those whose names He thus bears upon
+His shoulders. That is the guarantee for each of us that our hands
+shall be made strong, according to the ancient prophetic blessing,
+'by the hands of the mighty God of Jacob.' Just as a father or a
+mother will take their child's little tremulous hand in theirs and
+hold it, that it may be strengthened for some small task beyond its
+unbacked, uninvigorated power; so Jesus Christ will give us strength
+within, and also will order the march of His Providence and send the
+gift of His Spirit, for the succour and the strengthening of all
+whose names are written on His ephod. He has gone within the veil.
+He has left us heavy tasks, but our names are on His shoulders, and
+we 'can do all things in Christ who strengthened us.'
+
+III. Still further, this symbol suggests to us the depth and reality
+of Christ's sympathy.
+
+The heart is, in our language, the seat of love. It is not so in the
+Old Testament. Affection is generally allocated to another part of
+the frame; but here the heart stands for the organ of care, of
+thought, of interest. For, according to the Old Testament view of
+the relation between man's body and man's soul, the very seat and
+centre of the individual life is in the heart. I suppose that was
+because it was known that, somehow or other, the blood came thence.
+Be that as it may, the thought is clear throughout all the Old
+Testament that the heart is the man, and the man is the heart. And
+so, if Jesus bears our names upon His heart, that does not express
+merely representation nor merely intercession, but it expresses also
+personal regard, individualising knowledge. For Aaron wore not one
+great jewel with 'Israel' written on it, but twelve little ones,
+with 'Dan,' 'Benjamin,' and 'Ephraim,' and all the rest of them,
+each on his own gem.
+
+So we can say, 'Such a High Priest became us, who could have
+compassion upon the ignorant, and upon them that are out of the
+way'; and we can fall back on that old-fashioned but inexhaustible
+source of consolation and strength: 'In all their affliction He was
+afflicted'; and though the noise of the tempests which toss us can
+scarcely be supposed to penetrate into the veiled place where He
+dwells on high, yet we may be sure--and take all the peace and
+consolation and encouragement out of it that it is meant to give us--that
+'we have not a High Priest that cannot be touched with a
+feeling of our infirmities,' but that Himself, having known
+miseries, 'is able to succour them that are tempted.' Our names are
+on Christ's heart.
+
+IV. Then, lastly, we have here a suggestion of how precious to Aaron
+Israel is.
+
+Jewels were chosen to symbolise the tribes. Bits of tin, potsherds,
+or anything else that one could have scratched letters upon, would
+have done quite as well. But 'the precious things of the everlasting
+mountains' were chosen to bear the dear names. 'The Lord's portion
+is His people'; and precious in the eyes of Christ are the souls for
+whom He has given so much. They are not only precious, but lustrous,
+flashing back the light in various colours indeed, according to
+their various laws of crystallisation, but all receptive of it and
+all reflective of it. I said that the names on the breastplate of
+judgment expressed the acquittal and acceptance of Israel. But does
+Christ's work for us stop with simple acquittal? Oh no! 'Whom He
+justified them He also glorified,' And if our souls are 'bound in
+the bundle of life,' and our names are written on the heart of the
+Christ, be sure that mere forgiveness and acquittal is the least of
+the blessings which He intends to give, and that He will not be
+satisfied until in all our nature we receive and flash back the
+light of His own glory.
+
+It is very significant in this aspect that the names of the twelve
+tribes are described as being written on the precious stones which
+make the walls of the New Jerusalem. Thus borne on Christ's heart
+whilst He is within the veil and we are in the outer courts, we may
+hope to be carried by His sustaining and perfecting hand into the
+glories, and be made participant of the glories. Let us see to it
+that we write His name on our hearts, on their cares, their thought,
+their love, and on our hands, on their toiling and their possessing;
+and then, God helping us, and Christ dwelling in us, we shall come
+to the blessed state of those who serve Him, and bear His name
+flaming conspicuous for ever on their foreheads.
+
+
+
+
+THREE INSCRIPTIONS WITH ONE MEANING
+
+
+ 'Thou shalt make a plate of pure gold, and grave upon
+ it ... HOLINESS TO THE LORD.'--EXODUS xxviii. 36.
+
+ 'In that day there shall be upon the bells of the horses,
+ HOLINESS UNTO THE LORD.'--ZECH. xiv. 20.
+
+ 'His name shall be in their foreheads.'--REV. xxii. 4.
+
+You will have perceived my purpose in putting these three widely
+separated texts together. They all speak of inscriptions, and they
+are all obviously connected with each other. The first of them comes
+from the ancient times of the institution of the ceremonial ritual,
+and describes a part of the high priest's official dress. In his
+mitre was a thin plate of gold on which was written, 'Holiness to
+the Lord.' The second of them comes from almost the last portion
+recorded of the history of Israel in the Old Testament, and is from
+the words of the great Prophet of the Restoration--his ideal
+presentation of the Messianic period, in which he recognises as one
+feature, that the inscription on the mitre of the high priest shall
+be written on 'the bells of the horses.' And the last of them is
+from the closing vision of the celestial kingdom, the heavenly and
+perfected form of the Christian Church. John, probably remembering
+the high priest and his mitre, with its inscription upon the
+forehead, says: 'His servants shall do Him priestly service'--for
+that is the meaning of the word inadequately translated 'serve Him'--'and
+see His face, and His name shall be in their foreheads.'
+
+These three things, then--the high priest's mitre, the horses'
+bells, the foreheads of the perfected saints--present three aspects
+of the Christian thought of holiness. Take them one by one.
+
+I. The high priest's mitre.
+
+The high priest was the official representative of the nation. He
+stood before God as the embodied and personified Israel. For the
+purposes of worship Israel was the high priest, and the high priest
+was Israel. And so, on his forehead, not to distinguish him from the
+rest of the people, but to include all the people in his
+consecration, shone a golden plate with the motto, 'Holiness to the
+Lord.' So, at the very beginning of Jewish ritual there stands a
+protest against all notions that make 'saint' the designation of any
+abnormal or exceptional sanctity, and confine the name to the
+members of any selected aristocracy of devoutness and goodness. All
+Christian men, _ex officio_, by the very fact of their Christianity,
+are saints, in the true sense of the word. And the representative of
+the whole of Israel stood there before God, with this inscription
+blazing on his forehead, as a witness that, whatsoever holiness may
+be, it belongs to every member of the true Israel.
+
+And what is it? It is a very unfortunate thing--indicating
+superficiality of thought--that the modern popular notion of
+'holiness' identifies it with purity, righteousness, moral
+perfection. Now that idea _is_ in it, but is not the whole of
+it. For, not to spend time upon mere remarks on words, the meaning
+of the word thus rendered is in Hebrew, as well as in Greek and in
+our own English, one and the same. The root-meaning is 'separated,'
+'set apart,' and the word expresses primarily, not moral character,
+but relation to God. That makes all the difference; and it
+incalculably deepens the conception, as well as puts us on the right
+track for understanding the only possible means by which there can
+ever be realised that moral perfection and excellence which has
+unfortunately monopolised the meaning of the word in most people's
+minds. The first thought is 'set apart to God.' That is holiness, in
+its root and germ.
+
+And how can we be set apart for God? You may devote a dead thing for
+certain uses easily enough. How can a man be separated and laid
+aside?
+
+Well, there is only one way, brethren, and that is by self-
+surrender. 'Yield yourselves to God' is but the other side, or,
+rather, the practical shape, of the Old and the New Testament
+doctrine of holiness. A man becomes God's when he says, 'Lord, take
+me and mould me, and fill me and cleanse me, and do with me what
+Thou wilt.' In that self-surrender, which is the tap-root of all
+holiness, the first and foremost thing to be offered is that most
+obstinate of all, the will that is in us. And when we yield our
+wills in submission both to commandments and providences, both to
+gifts and to withdrawals, both to gains and to losses, both to joys
+and to sorrows, then we begin to write upon our foreheads 'Holiness
+to the Lord.' And when we go on to yield our hearts to Him, by
+enshrining Him sole and sovereign in their innermost chamber, and
+turning to Him the whole current of our lives and desires, and hopes
+and confidences, which we are so apt to allow to run to waste and be
+sucked up in the desert sands of the world, then we write more of
+that inscription. And when we fill our minds with joyful submission
+to His truth, and occupy our thoughts with His mighty Name and His
+great revelation, and carry Him with us in the hidden corners of our
+consciousness, even whilst we are busy about daily work, then we add
+further letters to it. And when the submissive will, and the devoted
+heart, and the occupied thoughts are fully expressed in daily life
+and its various external duties, then the writing is complete.
+'Holiness to the Lord' is self-surrender of will and heart and mind
+and everything. And that surrender is of the very essence of
+Christianity.
+
+What is a saint? Some man or woman that has practised unheard-of
+austerities? Somebody that has lived an isolated and self-regarding
+life in convent or monastery or desert? No! a man or woman in the
+world who, moved by the mercies of God, yields self to God as 'a
+living sacrifice.'
+
+So the New Testament writers never hesitate to speak even of such
+very imperfect Christians as were found in abundance in churches
+like Corinth and Galatia as being all 'saints,' every man of them.
+That is not because the writers were minimising their defects, or
+idealising their persons, but because, if they are Christians at
+all, they are saints; seeing that no man is a Christian who has not
+been drawn by Christ's great sacrifice for him to yield himself a
+sacrifice for Christ.
+
+Of course that intrusive idea which has, in popular apprehension, so
+swallowed up the notion of holiness--viz. that of perfection of
+moral character or conduct--is included in this other, or rather is
+developed from it. For the true way to conquer self is to surrender
+self; and the more entire our giving up of ourselves, the more
+certainly shall we receive ourselves back again from His hands. 'By
+the mercies of God, I beseech you, yield yourselves living
+sacrifices.'
+
+II. I come to my next text--the horses' bells.
+
+Zechariah has a vision of the ideal Messianic times, and, of course,
+as must necessarily be the case, his picture is painted with colours
+laid upon his palette by his experience, and he depicts that distant
+future in the guise suggested to him by what he saw around him. So
+we have to disentangle from his words the sentiment which he
+expresses, and to recognise the symbolic way in which he puts it.
+His thought is this,--the inscription on the high priest's mitre
+will be written on the bells which ornament the harness of the
+horses, which in Israel were never used as with us, but only either
+for war or for pomp and display, and the use of which was always
+regarded with a certain kind of doubt and suspicion. Even these
+shall be consecrated in that far-off day.
+
+And then he goes on with variations on the same air, 'In that day
+there shall be upon the bells of the horses, "Holiness unto the
+Lord,"' and adds that 'the pots in the Lord's house'--the humble
+vessels that were used for the most ordinary parts of the Temple
+services--'shall be like the bowls before the altar,' into which the
+sacred blood of the offerings was poured. The most external and
+secular thing bearing upon religion shall be as sacred as the
+sacredest. But that is not all. 'Yea! every pot in Jerusalem and in
+Judah shall be holiness unto the Lord of hosts, and all they that
+sacrifice shall come and take of them,' and put their offerings
+therein. That is to say, the coarse pottery vessels that were in
+every poverty-stricken house in the city shall be elevated to the
+rank of the sacred vessels of the Temple. Domestic life with all its
+secularities shall be hallowed. The kitchens of Jerusalem shall be
+as truly places of worship as is the inner shrine of the Most High.
+
+On the whole, the prophet's teaching is that, in the ideal state of
+man upon earth, there will be an entire abolition of the distinction
+between 'sacred' and 'secular'; a distinction that has wrought
+infinite mischief in the world, and in the lives of Christian
+people.
+
+Let me translate these words of our prophet into English
+equivalents. Every cup and tumbler in a poor man's kitchen may be as
+sacred as the communion chalice that passes from lip to lip with the
+'blood of Jesus Christ' in it. Every common piece of service that we
+do, down among the vulgarities and the secularities and the
+meannesses of daily life, may be lifted up to stand upon precisely
+the same level as the sacredest office that we undertake. The bells
+of the horses may jingle to the same tune as the trumpets of the
+priests sounded within the shrine, and on all, great and small, may
+be written, 'Holiness to the Lord.'
+
+But let us remember that that universally diffused sanctity will
+need to have a centre of diffusion, else there will be no diffusion,
+and that all life will become sacred when the man that lives it has
+'Holiness to the Lord' written on his forehead, and not else. If
+that be the inscription on the driver's heart, the horses that he
+drives will have it written on their bells, but they will not have
+it unless it be. Holy men make all things holy. 'To the pure all
+things are pure,' but unto them that are unclean and disobedient
+there is nothing pure. Hallow thyself, and all things are clean unto
+thee.
+
+III. And so I come to my third text--the perfected saints'
+foreheads.
+
+The connection between the first and the last of these texts is as
+plain and close as between the first and the second. For John in his
+closing vision gives emphasis to the priestly idea as designating in
+its deepest relations the redeemed and perfected Christian Church.
+Therefore he says, as I have already explained, 'His servants shall
+do Him _priestly_ service, and His name shall be in their
+foreheads.' The old official dress of the high priest comes into his
+mind, and he paints the future, just as Zechariah did, under the
+forms of the past, and sees before the throne the perfected saints,
+each man of them with that inscription clear and conspicuous.
+
+But there is an advance in his words which I think it is not
+fanciful to note. It is only the _name_ that is written in the
+perfected saint's forehead. Not the 'Holiness unto the Lord,' but
+just the bare name. What does that mean? Well, it means the same as
+your writing your name in one of your books does, or as when a man
+puts his initials on the back of his oxen, or as the old practice of
+branding the master's mark upon the slave did. It means absolute
+ownership.
+
+But it means something more. The name is the manifested personality,
+the revealed God, or, as we say in an abstract way, the character of
+God. That Name is to be in the foreheads of His perfected people.
+How does it come to be there? Read also the clause before the text--'His
+servants shall see His face, and His name shall be in their foreheads.'
+That is to say, the perfected condition is not reached by surrender
+only, but by assimilation; and that assimilation comes by contemplation.
+The faces that are turned to Him, and behold Him, are smitten with the
+light and shine, and those that look upon them see 'as it had been the
+face of an angel,' as the Sanhedrim saw that of Stephen, when he beheld
+ the Son of Man 'standing at the right hand of God.'
+
+My last text is but a picturesque way of saying what the writer of
+it says in plain words when he declares, 'We shall be like Him, for
+we shall see Him as He is.' The name is to be 'in their foreheads,'
+where every eye can see it. Alas! alas! it is so hard for us to live
+out our best selves, and to show to the world what is in us.
+Cowardice, sheepishness, and a hundred other reasons prevent it. In
+this poor imperfect state no emotion ever takes shape and visibility
+without losing more or less of its beauty. But yonder the
+obstructions to self-manifestation will be done away; and 'when He
+shall be manifested, we also shall be manifested with Him in glory.'
+
+'Then shall the righteous blaze forth like the sun in My heavenly
+Father's Kingdom.' But the beginning of it all is 'Holiness to the
+Lord' written on our hearts; and the end of that is the vision which
+is impossible without holiness, and which leads on to the beholder's
+perfect likeness to his Lord.
+
+
+
+
+THE ALTAR OF INCENSE
+
+
+ 'Thou shalt make an altar to burn incense upon.'
+ --EXODUS xxx. 1.
+
+Ceremonies are embodied thoughts. Religious ceremonies are moulded
+by, and seek to express, the worshipper's conception of his God, and
+his own relation to Him; his aspirations and his need. Of late years
+scholars have been busy studying the religions of the more backward
+races, and explaining rude and repulsive rites by pointing to the
+often profound and sometimes beautiful ideas underlying them. When
+that process is applied to Australian and Fijian savages, it is
+honoured as a new and important study; when we apply it to the
+Mosaic Ritual it is pooh-poohed as 'foolish spiritualising.' Now, no
+doubt, there has been a great deal of nonsense talked in regard to
+this matter, and a great deal of ingenuity wasted in giving a
+Christian meaning--or, may I say, a Christian twist?--to every pin
+of the Tabernacle, and every detail of the ritual. Of course, to
+exaggerate a truth is the surest way to discredit a truth, but the
+truth remains true all the same, and underneath that elaborate
+legislation, which makes such wearisome and profitless reading for
+the most of us, in the Pentateuch, there lie, if we can only grasp
+them, great thoughts and lessons that we shall all be the better for
+pondering.
+
+To one item of these, this altar of incense, I call attention now,
+because it is rich in suggestions, and leads us into very sacred
+regions of the Christian life which are by no means so familiar to
+many of us as they ought to be. Let me just for one moment state the
+facts with which I wish to deal. The Jewish Tabernacle, and
+subsequently the Temple, were arranged in three compartments: the
+outermost court, which was accessible to all the people; the second,
+which was trodden by the priests alone; and the third, where the
+Shechinah dwelt in solitude, broken only once a year by the foot of
+the High Priest. That second court we are concerned with now. There
+are three pieces of ecclesiastical furniture in it: an altar in the
+centre, flanked on either side by a great lampstand, and a table on
+which were piled loaves. It is to that central piece of furniture
+that I ask your attention now, and to the thoughts that underlie it,
+and the lessons that it teaches.
+
+I. This altar shows us what prayer is.
+
+Suppose we had been in that court when in the morning or in the
+evening the priest came with the glowing pan of coals from another
+altar in the outer court, and laid it on this altar, and heaped upon
+it the sticks of incense, we should have seen the curling, fragrant
+wreaths ascending till 'the House was filled with smoke,' as a
+prophet once saw it. We should not have wanted any interpreter to
+tell us what that meant. What could that rising cloud of sweet
+odours signify but the ascent of the soul towards God? Put that into
+more abstract words, and it is just the old, hackneyed commonplace
+which I seek to try to freshen a little now, that incense is the
+symbol of prayer. That that is so is plain enough, not only from the
+natural propriety of the case, but because you find the
+identification distinctly stated in several places in Scripture, of
+which I quote but two instances. In one psalm we read, 'Let my
+prayer come before Thee as incense.' In the Book of the Apocalypse
+we read of 'golden bowls full of odours, which are the prayers of
+saints.' And that the symbolism was understood by, and modified the
+practice of, the nation, we are taught when we read that whilst
+Zechariah the priest was within the court offering incense, as it
+was his lot to do, 'the whole multitude of the people were without
+praying,' doing that which the priest within the court symbolised by
+his offering. So then we come to this, dear friends, that we
+fearfully misunderstand and limit the nobleness and the essential
+character of prayer when, as we are always tempted to do by our
+inherent self-regard, we make petition its main feature and form. Of
+course, so long as we are what we shall always be in this world,
+needy and sinful creatures; and so long as we are what we shall ever
+be in all worlds, creatures absolutely dependent for life and
+everything on the will and energy of God, petition must necessarily
+be a very large part of prayer. But the more we grow into His
+likeness, and the more we understand the large privileges and the
+glorious possibilities which lie in prayer, the more will the
+relative proportions of its component parts be changed, and petition
+will become less, and aspiration will become more. The essence of
+prayer, the noblest form of it, is thus typified by the cloud of
+sweet odours that went up before God.
+
+In all true prayer there must be the lowest prostration in reverence
+before the Infinite Majesty. But the noblest prayer is that which
+lifts 'them that are bowed down' rather than that which prostrates
+men before an inaccessible Deity. And so, whilst we lie low at His
+feet, that may be the prayer of a mere theist, but when our hearts
+go out towards Him, and we are drawn to Himself, that is the prayer
+that befits Christian aspiration; the ascent of the soul toward God
+is the true essence of prayer. As one of the non-Christian
+philosophers--seekers after God, if ever there were such, and who, I
+doubt not, found Him whom they sought--has put it, 'the flight of
+the lonely soul to the only God'; that is prayer. Is that my prayer?
+We come to Him many a time burdened with some very real sorrow, or
+weighted with some pressing responsibility, and we should not be
+true to ourselves, or to Him, if our prayer did not take the shape
+of petition. But, as we pray, the blessing of the transformation of
+its character should be realised by us, and that which began with
+the cry for help and deliverance should always be, and it always
+will be, if the cry for help and deliverance has been of the right
+sort, sublimed into 'Thy face, Lord, will I seek.' The Book of
+Ecclesiastes describes death as the 'return of the spirit to God who
+gave it.' That is the true description of prayer, a going back to
+the fountain's source. Flames aspire; to the place 'whence the
+rivers came thither they return again.' The homing pigeon or the
+migrating bird goes straight through many degrees of latitude, and
+across all sorts of weather, to the place whence it came. Ah!
+brethren, let us ask ourselves if our spirits thus aspire and soar.
+Do we know what it is to be, if I might so say, like those captive
+balloons that are ever yearning upwards, and stretching to the
+loftiest point permitted them by the cord that tethers them to
+earth?
+
+Now another thought that this altar of incense may teach us is that
+the prayer that soars must be kindled. There is no fragrance in a
+stick of incense lying there. No wreaths of ascending smoke come
+from it. It has to be kindled before its sweet odour can be set free
+and ascend. That is why so much of our prayer is of no delight to
+God, and of no benefit to us, because it is not on fire with the
+flame of a heart kindled into love and thankfulness by the great
+sacrifice of Jesus Christ. The cold vapours lie like a winding-sheet
+down in the valleys until the sun smites them, warms them, and draws
+them up. And our desires will hover in the low levels, and be dank
+and damp, until they are drawn up to the heights by the warmth of
+the Sun of righteousness. Oh! brethren, the formality and the
+coldness, to say nothing of the inconsecutiveness and the
+interruptedness by rambling thoughts that we all know in our
+petitions, in our aspirations, are only to be cured in one way:--
+
+ 'Come! shed abroad a Saviour's love,
+ And that will kindle ours.'
+
+It is the stretched string that gives out musical notes; the slack
+one is dumb. And if we desire that we may be able to be sure, as our
+Master was, when He said, 'I know that Thou hearest me always,' we
+must pray as He did, of whom it is recorded that 'He prayed the more
+earnestly,' and 'was heard in that He feared.' The word rendered
+'the more earnestly' carries in it a metaphor drawn from that very
+fact that I have referred to. It means 'with the more stretched-out
+extension and intensity.' If our prayers are to be heard as music in
+heaven, they must come from a stretched string.
+
+Once more, this altar of incense teaches us that kindled prayer
+delights God. That emblem of the sweet odour is laid hold of with
+great boldness by more than one Old and New Testament writer, in
+order to express the marvellous thought that there is a mutual joy
+in the prayer of faith and love, and that it rises as 'an odour of a
+sweet smell, a sacrifice acceptable, well pleasing to God.' The
+cuneiform inscriptions give that thought with characteristic
+vividness and grossness when they speak about the gods being
+'gathered like flies round the steam of the sacrifice.' We have the
+same thought, freed from all its grossness, when we think that the
+curling wreaths going up from a heart aspiring and enflamed, come to
+Him as a sweet odour, and delight His soul. People say, 'that is
+anthropomorphism--making God too like a man.' Well, man is like God,
+at any rate, and surely the teaching of that great name 'Father'
+carries with it the assurance that just as fathers of flesh are glad
+when they see that their children like best to be with them, so
+there is something analogous in that joy before the angels of heaven
+which the Father has, not only because of the prodigal who comes
+back, but because of the child who has long been with Him, and is
+ever seeking to nestle closer to His heart. The Psalmist was lost in
+wonder and thankfulness that he was able to say 'He was extolled
+with my tongue.' Surely it should be a gracious, encouraging,
+strengthening thought to us all, that even our poor aspirations may
+minister to the divine gladness.
+
+Now let us turn to another thought.
+
+II. This altar shows us where prayer stands in the Christian life.
+
+There are two or three points in regard to its position which it is
+no fanciful spiritualising, but simply grasping the underlying
+meaning of the institution, if we emphasise. First, let me remind
+you that there was another altar in the outer court, whereon was
+offered the daily sacrifice for the sins of the people. That altar
+came first, and the sacrifice had to be offered on it first, before
+the priest came into the inner court with the coals from that altar,
+and the incense kindled by them. What does that say to us? The altar
+of incense is not approached until we have been to the altar of
+sacrifice. It is no mere arbitrary appointment, nor piece of
+evangelical narrowness, which says that there is no real access to
+God, in all the fullness and reality of His revealed character for
+us sinful men, until our sins have been dealt with, taken away by
+the Lamb of God, sacrificed for us. And it is simply the transcript
+of experience which declares that there will be little inclination
+or desire to come to God with the sacrifice of praise and prayer
+until we have been to Christ, the sacrifice of propitiation and
+pardon. Brethren, we need to be cleansed, and we can only be
+delivered from the unholiness which is the perpetual and necessary
+barrier to our vision of God by making our very own, through simple
+faith, the energy and the blessedness of that great Sacrifice of
+propitiation. Then, and then only, do we properly come to the altar
+of incense. Its place in the Christian life is second, not first.
+'First be reconciled to thy' Father, 'then lay' the incense 'on the
+altar.'
+
+Again, great and deep lessons are given to us in the place of our
+altar in regard to the other articles that stood in that inner
+court. I have said that there were three of them. In the centre this
+altar of incense; on the one hand the great lampstand; on the other
+hand the table with loaves thereon. The one symbolised Israel's
+function in the world to be its light, which in our function too,
+and the other with loaves thereon symbolised the consecration to God
+of Israel's activities, and their results.
+
+But between the two, central to both, stood the altar of incense.
+What does that say as to the place of prayer, defined as I have
+defined it, in the Christian life? It says this, that the light will
+burn dim and go out, and the loaves, the expression and the
+consequences of our activities, will become mouldy and dry, unless
+both are hallowed and sustained by prayer. And that lesson is one
+which we all need, and which I suppose this generation needs quite
+as much as, if not more than, any that has gone before it. For life
+has become so swift and rushing, and from all sides, the Church, the
+world, society, there come such temptations, and exhortations, and
+necessities, for strenuous and continuous work, that the basis of
+all wholesome and vigorous work, communion with God, is but too apt
+to be put aside and relegated to some inferior position. The carbon
+points of the electric arc-light are eaten away with tremendous
+rapidity in the very act of giving forth their illumination, and
+they need to be continually approximated and to be frequently
+renewed. The oil is burned away in the act of shining, and the lamp
+needs to be charged again. If we are to do our work in the world as
+its lights, and if we are to have any activities fit to be
+consecrated to God and laid on the Table before the Veil, it can
+only be by our making the altar of incense the centre, and these
+others subsidiary.
+
+One last thought--the place of prayer in the Christian life is
+shadowed for us by the position of this altar in reference to 'the
+secret place of the Most High,' that mysterious inner court which
+was dark but for the Shechinah's light, and lonely but for the
+presence of the worshipping cherubim and the worshipped God. It
+stood, as we are told a verse or two after my text, 'before the
+veil.' A straight line drawn from the altar of sacrifice would have
+bisected the altar of incense as it passed into the mercy-seat and
+the glory. And that just tells us that the place of prayer in the
+Christian lift is that it is the direct way of coming close to God.
+Dear brother, we shall never lift the veil, and stand in 'the secret
+place of the Most High,' unless we take the altar of incense on our
+road.
+
+There is one more thought here--
+
+III. The altar of incense shows us how prayer is to be cultivated.
+
+Twice a day, morning and evening, came the officiating priest with
+his pan of coals and incense, and laid it there; and during all the
+intervening hours between the morning and the evening the glow lay
+half hidden in the incense, and there was a faint but continual
+emission of fragrance from the smouldering mass that had been
+renewed in the morning, and again in the evening. And does not that
+say something to us? There must be definite times of distinct prayer
+if the aroma of devotion is to be diffused through our else
+scentless days. I ask for no pedantic adherence, with monastic
+mechanicalness, to hours and times, and forms of petitions. These
+are needful crutches to many of us. But what I do maintain is that
+all that talk which we hear so much of in certain quarters nowadays
+as to its not being necessary for us to have special times of
+prayer, and as to its being far better to have devotion diffused
+through our lives, and of how _laborare est orare_--to labour
+is to pray--all that is pernicious nonsense if it is meant to say
+that the incense will be fragrant and smoulder unless it is stirred
+up and renewed night and morning. There must be definite times of
+prayer if there is to be diffused devotion through the day. What
+would you think of people that said, 'Run your cars by electricity.
+Get it out of the wires; it will come! Never mind putting up any
+generating stations'? And not less foolish are they who seek for a
+devotion permeating life which is not often concentrated into
+definite and specific acts.
+
+But the other side is as true. It is bad to clot your religion into
+lumps, and to leave the rest of the life without it. There must be
+the smouldering all day long. 'Rejoice evermore; pray without
+ceasing.' You can pray thus. Not set prayer, of course; but a
+reference to Him, a thought of Him, like some sweet melody, 'so
+sweet we know not we are listening to it,' may breathe its
+fragrance, and diffuse its warmth into the commonest and smallest of
+our daily activities. It was when Gideon was threshing wheat that
+the angel appeared to him. It was when Elisha was ploughing that the
+divine inspiration touched him. It was when the disciples were
+fishing that they saw the Form on the shore. And when we are in the
+way of our common life it is possible that the Lord may meet us, and
+that our souls may be aspiring to Him. Then work will be worship;
+then burdens will be lightened; then our lamps will burn; then the
+fruits of our daily lives will ripen; then our lives will be noble;
+then our spirits will rest as well as soar, and find fruition and
+aspiration perpetually alternating in stable succession of eternal
+progress.
+
+
+
+
+RANSOM FOR SOULS--I.
+
+
+ 'Then shall they give every man a ransom for his soul.'
+ --EXODUS xxx. 12.
+
+This remarkable provision had a religious intention. Connect it with
+the tax-money which Peter found in the fish's mouth.
+
+I. Its meaning. Try to realise an Israelite's thoughts at the
+census. 'I am enrolled among the people and army of God: am I
+worthy? What am I, to serve so holy a God?' The payment was meant--
+
+_(a)_ To excite the sense of sin. This should be present in all
+approach to God, in all service; accompanying the recognition of our
+Christian standing. Our sense of sin is far too slight and weak;
+this defect is at the root of much feebleness in popular religion.
+The sense of sin must embrace not outward acts only, but inner
+spirit also.
+
+_(b)_ To suggest the possibility of expiation. It was 'ransom'
+_i.e._ 'covering,' something paid that guilt might be taken
+away and sin regarded as non-existent. This is, of course,
+obviously, only a symbol. No tax could satisfy God for sin. The very
+smallness of the amount shows that it is symbolical only. 'Not with
+corruptible things as silver' is man redeemed.
+
+II. Its identity for all. Rich or poor, high or low, all men are
+equal in sin. There are surface differences and degrees, but a deep
+identity beneath. So on the same principle all souls are of the same
+value. Here is the true democracy of Christianity. So there is one
+ransom for all, for the need of all is identical.
+
+III. Its use. It was melted down for use in the sanctuary, so as to
+be a 'memorial' permanently present to God when His people met with
+Him. The greater portion was made into bases for the boards of the
+sanctuary. That is, God's dwelling with men and our communion with
+Him all rest on the basis of ransom. We are 'brought nigh by the
+blood of Christ.'
+
+
+
+
+RANSOM FOR SOULS--II.
+
+ 'The rich shall not give more, and the poor shall not
+ give less than half a shekel....'--EXODUS xxx. 15.
+
+This tax was exacted on numbering the people. It was a very small
+amount, about fifteen pence, so it was clearly symbolical in its
+significance. Notice--
+
+I. The broad principle of equality of all souls in the sight of God.
+Contrast the reign of caste and class in heathendom with the
+democracy of Judaism and of Christianity.
+
+II. The universal sinfulness. Payment of the tax was a confession
+that all were alike in this: not that all were equally sinful, but
+all were sinful, whatever variations of degree might exist.
+
+'There is no difference, for all have sinned and come short of the
+glory of God.'
+
+III. The one ransom. It was a prophecy of which _we_ know the
+meaning. Recall the incident of the 'stater' in the fish's mouth.
+
+Christ declares His exemption from the tax. Yet He voluntarily comes
+under it, and He provides the payment of it for Himself and for
+Peter.
+
+He does so by a miracle.
+
+The Apostle has to 'take and give it'; so faith is called into
+exercise.
+
+Thus there is but one Sacrifice for all; and the poorest can
+exercise faith and the richest can do no more. 'None other name.'
+
+
+
+
+THE GOLDEN CALF
+
+
+ 'And when the people saw that Moses delayed to come
+ down out of the mount, the people gathered themselves
+ together unto Aaron, and said unto him, Up, make us
+ gods, which shall go before us; for as for this Moses,
+ the man that brought us up out of the land of Egypt,
+ we wot not what is become of him. 2. And Aaron said
+ unto them, Break off the golden earrings, which are in
+ the ears of your wives, of your sons, and of your
+ daughters, and bring them unto me. 3. And all the people
+ brake off the golden earrings which were in their ears,
+ and brought them unto Aaron. 4. And he received them at
+ their hand, and fashioned it with a graving-tool, after
+ he had made it a molten calf: and they said, These be
+ thy gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the
+ land of Egypt. 5. And when Aaron saw it, he built an
+ altar before it; and Aaron made proclamation, and said,
+ To-morrow is a feast to the Lord. 6. And they rose up
+ early on the morrow, and offered burnt offerings, and
+ brought peace offerings; and the people sat down to eat
+ and to drink, and rose up to play. 7. And the Lord said
+ unto Moses, Go, get thee down; for thy people, which
+ thou broughtest out of the land of Egypt, have corrupted
+ themselves: 8. They have turned aside quickly out of the
+ way which I commanded them: they have made them a molten
+ calf, and have worshipped it, and have sacrificed
+ thereunto, and said, These be thy gods, O Israel, which
+ have brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.... 30. And
+ it came to pass on the morrow, that Moses said unto the
+ people, Ye have sinned a great sin: and now I will go up
+ unto the Lord; peradventure I shall make an atonement
+ for your sin. 31. And Moses returned unto the Lord, and
+ said, Oh! this people have sinned a great sin, and have
+ made them gods of gold. 32. Yet now, if Thou wilt forgive
+ their sin--; and if not, blot me, I pray thee, out of Thy
+ book which Thou hast written. 33. And the Lord said unto
+ Moses, Whosoever hath sinned against Me, him will I blot
+ out of My book. 34. Therefore now go, lead the people
+ unto the place of which I have spoken unto thee. Behold,
+ Mine Angel shall go before thee: nevertheless in the day
+ when I visit I will visit their sin upon them. 35. And
+ the Lord plagued the people, because they made the calf,
+ which Aaron made.'--EXODUS xxxii. 1-8; 30-35.
+
+It was not yet six weeks since the people had sworn, 'All that the
+Lord hath spoken will we do, and be obedient.' The blood of the
+covenant, sprinkled on them, was scarcely dry when they flung off
+allegiance to Jehovah. Such short-lived loyalty to Him can never
+have been genuine. That mob of slaves was galvanised by Moses into
+obedience; and since their acceptance of Jehovah was in reality only
+yielding to the power of one strong will and its earnest faith, of
+course it collapsed as soon as Moses disappeared.
+
+We have to note, first, the people's universal revolt. The language
+of verse 1 may easily hide to a careless reader the gravity and
+unanimity of the apostasy. 'The people gathered themselves
+together.' It was a national rebellion, a flood which swept away
+even some faithful, timid hearts. No voices ventured to protest.
+What were the elders, who shortly before 'saw the God of Israel,'
+doing to be passive at such a crisis? Was there no one to bid the
+fickle multitude look up to the summit overhead, where the red
+flames glowed, or to remind them of the hosts of Egypt lying stark
+and dead on the shore? Was Miriam cowed too, and her song forgotten?
+
+We need not cast stones at these people; for we also have short
+memories for either the terrible or the gracious revelations of God
+in our own lives. But we may learn the lesson that God's lovers have
+to set themselves sometimes dead against the rush of popular
+feeling, and that there are times when silence or compliance is sin.
+
+It would have been easy for the rebels to have ignored Aaron, and
+made gods for themselves. But they desired to involve him in their
+apostasy, and to get 'official sanction' for it. He had been left by
+Moses as his lieutenant, and so to get him implicated was to stamp
+the movement as a regular and entire revolt.
+
+The demand 'to make gods' (or, more probably, 'a god') flew in the
+face of both the first and second commandments. For Jehovah, who had
+forbidden the forming of any image, was denied in the act of making
+it. To disobey Him was to cast Him off. The ground of the rebellion
+was the craving for a visible object of trust and a visible guide,
+as is seen by the reason assigned for the demand for an image. Moses
+was out of sight; they must have something to look at as their
+leader. Moses had disappeared, and, to these people who had only
+been heaved up to the height of believing in Jehovah by Moses,
+Jehovah had disappeared with him. They sank down again to the level
+of other races as soon as that strong lever ceased to lift their
+heavy apprehensions.
+
+How ridiculous the assertion that they did not know what had become
+of Moses! They knew that he was up there with Jehovah. The elders
+could have told them that. The fire on the mount might have burned
+in on all minds the confirmation. Note, too, the black ingratitude
+and plain denial of Jehovah in 'the _man_ that brought us up
+out of the land of Egypt.' They refuse to recognise God's part. It
+was Moses only who had done it; and now that he is gone they must
+have a visible god, like other nations.
+
+Still sadder than their sense-bound wish is Aaron's compliance. He
+knew as well as we do what he should have said, but, like many
+another man in influential position, when beset by popular cries, he
+was frightened, and yielded when he should have 'set his face like a
+flint.' His compliance has in essentials been often repeated,
+especially by priests and ministers of religion who have lent their
+superior abilities or opportunities to carry out the wishes of the
+ignorant populace, and debased religion or watered down its
+prohibitions, to please and retain hold of them. The Church has
+incorporated much from heathenism. Roman Catholic missionaries have
+permitted 'converts' to keep their old usages. Protestant teachers
+have acquiesced in, and been content to find the brains to carry
+out, compromises between sense and soul, God's commands and men's
+inclinations.
+
+We need not discuss the metallurgy of verse 4. But clearly Aaron
+asked for the earrings, not, as some would have it, hoping that
+vanity and covetousness would hinder their being given, but simply
+in order to get gold for the bad work which he was ready to do. The
+reason for making the thing in the shape of a calf is probably the
+Egyptian worship of Apis in that form, which would be familiar to
+the people.
+
+We must note that it was the people who said, 'These be thy gods, O
+Israel!' Aaron seems to keep in the rear, as it were. He makes the
+calf, and hands it over, and leaves them to hail it and worship.
+Like all cowards, he thought that he was lessening his guilt by thus
+keeping in the background. Feeble natures are fond of such
+subterfuges, and deceive themselves by them; but they do not shift
+their sin off their shoulders.
+
+Then he comes in again with an impotent attempt to diminish the
+gravity of the revolt. 'When he _saw_ this,' he tried to turn
+the flood into another channel, and so proclaimed a 'feast to
+Jehovah'!--as if He could be worshipped by flagrant defiance of His
+commandments, or as if He had not been disavowed by the ascription
+to the calf, made that morning out of their own trinkets, of the
+deliverance from Egypt. A poor, inconsequential attempt to save
+appearances and hallow sin by writing God's name on it! The 'god'
+whom the Israelites worshipped under the image of a calf, was no
+less another 'god before Me,' though it was called by the name of
+Jehovah. If the people had their idol, it mattered nothing to them,
+and it mattered as little to Jehovah, what 'name' it bore. The wild
+orgies of the morrow were not the worship which He accepts.
+
+What a contrast between the plain and the mountain! Below, the
+shameful feast, with its parody of sacrifice and its sequel of lust-
+inflamed dancing; above, the awful colloquy between the all-seeing
+righteous Judge and the intercessor! The people had cast off
+Jehovah, and Jehovah no more calls them 'My,' but '_thy_
+people.' They had ascribed their Exodus first to Moses, and next to
+the calf. Jehovah speaks of it as the work of Moses.
+
+A terrible separation of Himself from them lies in '_thy_
+people, which _thou_ broughtest up,' and Moses' bold rejoinder
+emphasises the relation and act which Jehovah seems to suppress
+(verse 11). Observe that the divine voice refuses to give any weight
+to Aaron's trick of compromise. These are no worshippers of Jehovah
+who are howling and dancing below there. They are 'worshipping
+_it_, and sacrificing to it,' not to Him. The cloaks of sin may
+partly cover its ugliness here, but they are transparent to His
+eyes, and many a piece of worship, which is said to be directed to
+Him, is, in His sight, rank idolatry.
+
+We do not deal with the magnificent courage of Moses, his single-
+handed arresting of the wild rebellion, and the severe punishment by
+which he trampled out the fire. But we must keep his severity in
+mind if we would rightly judge his self-sacrificing devotion, and
+his self-sacrificing devotion if we would rightly judge his
+severity.
+
+No words of ours can make more sublime his utter self-abandonment
+for the sake of the people among whom he had just been flaming in
+wrath, and smiting like a destroying angel. That was a great soul
+which had for its poles such justice and such love. The very words
+of his prayer, in their abruptness, witness to his deep emotion. 'If
+Thou wilt forgive their sin' stands as an incomplete sentence, left
+incomplete because the speaker is so profoundly moved. Sometimes
+broken words are the best witnesses of our earnestness. The
+alternative clause reaches the high-water mark of passionate love,
+ready to give up everything for the sake of its objects. The 'book
+of life' is often spoken of in Scripture, and it is an interesting
+study to bring together the places where the idea occurs (see Ps.
+lxix. 28; Dan. xii. 1; Phil. iv. 3; Rev. iii. 5). The allusion is to
+the citizens' roll (Ps. lxxxvii. 6). Those whose names are written
+there have the privileges of citizenship, and, as it is the 'book of
+life' (or '_of the living_'), life in the widest sense is
+secured to them. To blot out of it, therefore, is to cut a man off
+from fellowship in the city of God, and from participation in life.
+
+Moses was so absorbed in his vocation that his life was less to him
+than the well-being of Israel. How far he saw into the darkness
+beyond the grave we cannot say; but, at least, he was content, and
+desirous to die on earth, if thereby Israel might continue to be
+God's people. And probably he had some gleam of light beyond, which
+enhanced the greatness of his offered sacrifice. To die, whatever
+loss of communion with God that involved here or hereafter, would be
+sweet if thereby he could purchase Israel's restoration to God's
+favour. We cannot but think of Paul willing to be separated from
+Christ for his brethren's sake.
+
+We may well think of a greater than Moses or Paul, who did bear the
+loss which they were willing to bear, and died that sin might be
+forgiven. Moses was a true type of Christ in that act of supreme
+self-sacrifice; and all the heroism, the identification of himself
+with his people, the love which willingly accepts death, that makes
+his prayer one of the greatest deeds on the page of history, are
+repeated in infinitely sweeter, more heart-subduing fashion in the
+story of the Cross. Let us not omit duly to honour the servant; let
+us not neglect to honour and love infinitely more the Lord. 'This
+man was counted worthy of more glory than Moses.' Let us see that we
+render Him
+
+ 'Thanks never ceasing,
+ And infinite love.'
+
+
+
+
+THE SWIFT DECAY OF LOVE
+
+
+ 'And Moses turned, and went down from the mount, and
+ the two tables of the testimony were in his hand: the
+ tables were written on both their sides; on the one
+ side and on the other were they written. 16. And the
+ tables were the work of God, and the writing was the
+ writing of God, graven upon the tables. 17. And when
+ Joshua heard the noise of the people as they shouted,
+ he said unto Moses, There is a noise of war in the camp.
+ 18. And he said, It is not the voice of them that shout
+ for mastery, neither is it the voice of them that cry
+ for being overcome: but the noise of them that sing do
+ I hear. 19. And it came to pass, as soon as he came nigh
+ unto the camp, that he saw the calf, and the dancing:
+ and Moses' anger waxed hot, and he cast the tables out
+ of his hands, and brake them beneath the mount. 20. And
+ he took the calf which they had made, and burnt it in
+ the fire, and ground it to powder, and strawed it upon
+ the water, and made the children of Israel drink of it.
+ 21. And Moses said unto Aaron, What did this people unto
+ thee, that thou hast brought so great a sin upon them?
+ 22. And Aaron said, Let not the anger of my lord wax hot:
+ thou knowest the people, that they are set on mischief.
+ 23. For they said unto me, Make us gods, which shall go
+ before us: for as for this Moses, the man that brought
+ us up out of the land of Egypt, we wot not what is become
+ of him. 24. And I said unto them, Whosoever hath any
+ gold, let them break it off. So they gave it me: then
+ I cast it into the fire, and there came out this calf.
+ 25. And when Moses saw that the people were naked; (for
+ Aaron had made them naked unto their shame among their
+ enemies:) 26. Then Moses stood in the gate of the camp,
+ and said, Who is on the Lord's side? let him come unto
+ me. And all the sons of Levi gathered themselves together
+ unto him.'--EXODUS xxxii. 15-26.
+
+Moses and Joshua are on their way down from the mountain, the former
+carrying the tables in his hands and a heavier burden in his heart,--the
+thought of the people's swift apostasy. Joshua's soldierly ear
+interprets the shouts which are borne up to them as war-cries; 'He
+snuffeth the battle afar off, and saith Aha!' But Moses knew that
+they meant worse than war, and his knowledge helped his ear to
+distinguish a cadence and unison in the noise, unlike the confused
+mingling of the victors' yell of triumph and the shriek of the
+conquered. If we were dealing with fiction, we should admire the
+masterly dramatic instinct which lets the ear anticipate the eye,
+and so prepares us for the hideous sight that burst on these two at
+some turn in the rocky descent.
+
+I. Note, then, what they saw. The vivid story puts it all in two
+words,--'the calf and the dancing.' There in the midst, perhaps on
+some pedestal, was the shameful copy of the Egyptian Apis; and
+whirling round it in mad circles, working themselves into frenzy by
+rapid motion and frantic shouts, were the people,--men and women,
+mingled in the licentious dance, who, six short weeks before, had
+sworn to the Covenant. Their bestial deity in the centre, and they
+compassing it with wild hymns, were a frightful contradiction of
+that grey altar and the twelve encircling stones which they had so
+lately reared, and which stood unregarded, a bowshot off, as a
+silent witness against them. Note the strange, irresistible
+fascination of idolatry. Clearly the personal influence of Moses was
+the only barrier against it. The people thought that he had
+disappeared, and, if so, Jehovah had disappeared with him. We wonder
+at their relapses into idolatry, but we forget that it was then
+universal, that Israel was at the beginning of its long training,
+that not even a divine revelation could produce harvest in seedtime,
+and that to look for a final and complete deliverance from the 'veil
+that was spread over all nations,' at this stage, is like expecting
+a newly reclaimed bit of the backwoods to grow grass as thick and
+velvety as has carpeted some lawn that has been mown and cared for
+for a century. Grave condemnation is the due of these short-memoried
+rebels, who set up their 'abomination' in sight of the fire on
+Sinai; but that should not prevent our recognising the evidence
+which their sin affords of the tremendous power of idolatry in that
+stage of the world's history. Israel's proneness to fall back to
+heathenism makes it certain that a supernatural revelation is needed
+to account for their possession of the loftier faith which was so
+far above them.
+
+That howling, leaping crowd tells what sort of religion they would
+have 'evolved' if left to themselves. Where did 'Thou shalt have
+none other gods beside Me' come from? Note the confusion of thought,
+so difficult for us to understand, which characterises idolatry.
+What a hopelessly inconsequential cry that was, 'Make us gods, which
+shall go before us!' and what a muddle of contradictions it was that
+men should say 'These be thy gods,' though they knew that the thing
+was made yesterday out of their own earrings! It took more than a
+thousand years to teach the nation the force of the very self-
+evident argument, as it seems to us, 'the workman made it, therefore
+it is not God.' The theory that the idol is only a symbol is not the
+actual belief of idolaters. It is a product of the study, but the
+worshipper unites in his thought the irreconcilable beliefs that it
+was made and is divine. A goldsmith will make and sell a Madonna,
+and when it is put in the cathedral, will kneel before it.
+
+Note what was the sin here. It is generally taken for granted that
+it was a breach of the second, not of the first, commandment, and
+Aaron's proclamation of 'a feast to the Lord' is taken as proving
+this. Aaron was probably trying to make an impossible compromise,
+and to find some salve for his conscience; but it does not follow
+that the people accepted the half-and-half suggestion. Leaders who
+try to control a movement which they disapprove, by seeming to
+accept it, play a dangerous game, and usually fail. But whether the
+people call the calf 'Jehovah' or 'Apis' matters very little. There
+would be as complete apostasy to another god, though the other god
+was called by the same name, if all that really makes his 'name' was
+left out, and foreign elements were brought in. Such worship as
+these wild dances, offered to an image, broke both the commandments,
+no matter by what name the image was invoked.
+
+The roots of idolatry are in all men. The gross form of it is
+impossible to us; but the need for aid from sense, the dependence on
+art for wings to our devotion, which is a growing danger to-day, is
+only the modern form of the same dislike of a purely spiritual
+religion which sent these people dancing round their calf.
+
+II. Mark Moses' blaze of wrath and courageous, prompt action. He
+dashes the tables on the rock, as if to break the record of the
+useless laws which the people have already broken, and, with his
+hands free, flings himself without pause into the midst of the
+excited mob. Verses 19 and 20 bear the impression of his rapid,
+decisive action in their succession of clauses, each tacked on to
+the preceding by a simple 'and.' Stroke followed stroke. His fiery
+earnestness swept over all obstacles, the base riot ceased, the
+ashamed dancers slunk away. Some true hearts would gather about him,
+and carry out his commands; but he did the real work, and, single-
+handed, cowed and controlled the mob. No doubt, it took more time
+than the brief narrative, at first sight, would suggest. The image
+is flung into the fire from which it had come out. The fire made it,
+and the fire shall unmake it. We need not find difficulty in
+'burning' a golden idol. That does not mean 'calcined,' and the
+writer is not guilty of a blunder, nor needed to be taught that you
+cannot burn gold. The next clause says that after it was 'burned,'
+it was still solid; so that, plainly, all that is meant is, that the
+metal was reduced to a shapeless lump. That would take some time.
+Then it was broken small; there were plenty of rocks to grind it up
+on. That would take some more time, but not a finger was lifted to
+prevent it. Then the more or less finely broken up fragments are
+flung into the brook, and, with grim irony, the people are bid to
+drink. 'You shall have enough of your idol, since you love him so.
+Here, down with him! You will have to take the consequences of your
+sin. You must drink as you have brewed.' It is at once a
+contemptuous demonstration of the idol's impotence, and a picture of
+the sure retribution.
+
+But we may learn two things from this figure of the indignant
+lawgiver. One is, that the temper in which to regard idolatry is not
+one of equable indifference nor of scientific investigation, but
+that some heat of moral indignation is wholesome. We are all
+studying comparative mythology now, and getting much good from it;
+but we are in some danger of forgetting that these strange ideas and
+practices, which we examine at our ease, have spread spiritual
+darkness and moral infection over continents and through
+generations. Let us understand them, by all means; let us be
+thankful to find fragments of truth in, or innocent origins of,
+repulsive legends; but do not let the student swallow up the
+Christian in us, nor our minds lose their capacity of wholesome
+indignation at the systems, blended with Christ-like pity and effort
+for the victims.
+
+We may learn, further, how strong a man is when he is all aflame
+with true zeal for God. The suddenness of Moses' reappearance, the
+very audacity of his act, the people's habit of obedience, all
+helped to carry him through the crisis; but the true secret of his
+swift victory was his own self-forgetting faith. There is contagion
+in pure religious enthusiasm. It is the strongest of all forces. One
+man, with God at his back, is always in the majority. He whose whole
+soul glows with the pure fire, will move among men like flame in
+stubble. 'All things are possible to him that believeth.'
+Consecrated daring, animated by love and fed with truth, is all-
+conquering.
+
+III. Note the weaker nature of Aaron, taking refuge in a transparent
+lie. Probably his dialogue with his brother came in before the
+process described in the former verses was accomplished. But the
+narrative keeps all that referred to the destruction of the idol
+together, and goes by subject rather than by time. We do not learn
+how Moses had come to know Aaron's share in the sin, but his
+question is one of astonishment. Had they bewitched him anyhow? or
+what inducement had led him so far astray? The stronger and devouter
+soul cannot conceive how the weaker had yielded. Aaron's answer puts
+the people's wish forward. 'They said, Make us gods'; that was all
+which they had 'done.' A poor excuse, as Aaron feels even while he
+is stammering it out. What would Moses have answered if the people
+had 'said' so to him? Did he, standing there, with the heat of his
+struggle on him yet, look like a man that would acknowledge any
+demand of a mob as a reason for a ruler's compliance? It is the
+coward's plea. How many ecclesiastics and statesmen since then have
+had no better to offer for their acts! Such fear of the Lord as
+shrivelled before the breath of popular clamour could have had no
+deep roots. One of the first things to learn, whether we are in
+prominent or in private positions, is to hold by our religious
+convictions in supreme indifference to all surrounding voices, and
+to let no threats nor entreaties lead us to take one step beyond or
+against conscience.
+
+Aaron feels the insufficiency of the plea, when he has to put it
+into plain words to such a listener, and so he flies to the resource
+of timid and weak natures, a lie. For what did he ask the gold, and
+put it into the furnace, unless he meant to make a god? Perhaps he
+had told the people the same story, as priests in all lands have
+been apt to claim a miraculous origin for idols. And he repeats it
+now, as if, were it true, he would plead the miracle as a
+vindication of the worship as well as his absolution. But the lie is
+too transparent to deserve even an answer, and Moses turns silently
+from him.
+
+Aaron's was evidently the inferior nature, and was less deeply
+stamped with the print of heaven than his brother's. His feeble
+compliance is recorded as a beacon for all persons in places of
+influence or authority, warning them against self-interested or
+cowardly yielding to a popular demand, at the sacrifice of the
+purity of truth and the approval of their own consciences. He was
+not the last priest who has allowed the supposed wishes of the
+populace to shape his representations of God, and has knowingly
+dropped the standard of duty or sullied the clear brightness of
+truth in deference to the many-voiced monster.
+
+IV. Note the rallying of true hearts round Moses. The Revised
+Version reads 'broken loose' instead of 'naked,' and the correction
+is valuable. It explains the necessity for the separation of those
+who yet remained bound by the restraints of God's law, and for the
+terrible retribution that followed. The rebellion had not been
+stamped out by the destruction of the calf; and though Moses' dash
+into their midst had cowed the rebels for a time, things had gone
+too far to settle down again at once. The camp was in insurrection.
+It was more than a riot, it was a revolution. With the rapid eye of
+genius, Moses sees the gravity of the crisis, and, with equally
+swift decisiveness, acts so as to meet it. He 'stood in the gate of
+the camp,' and made the nucleus for the still faithful. His summons
+puts the full seriousness of the moment clearly before the people.
+They have come to a fork in the road. They must be either for
+Jehovah or against Him. There can be no mixing up of the worship of
+Jehovah and the images of Egypt, no tampering with God's service in
+obedience to popular clamour. It must be one thing or other. This is
+no time for the family of 'Mr. Facing-both-ways'; the question for
+each man is, 'Under which King?' Moses' unhesitating confidence that
+he is God's soldier, and that to be at his side is to be on God's
+side, was warranted in him, but has often been repeated with less
+reason by eager contenders, as they believed themselves to be, for
+God. No doubt, it becomes us to be modest and cautious in calling
+all true friends of God to rank themselves with us. But where the
+issue is between foul wrong and plain right, between palpable
+idolatry, error, or unbridled lust, and truth, purity, and
+righteousness, the Christian combatant for these is entitled to send
+round the fiery cross, and proclaim a crusade in God's name. There
+will always be plenty of people with cold water to pour on
+enthusiasm. We should be all the better for a few more, who would
+venture to feel that they are fighting for God, and to summon all
+who love Him to come to their and His help.
+
+Moses' own tribe responded to the summons. And, no doubt, Aaron was
+there too, galvanised into a nobler self by the courage and fervour
+of his brother, and, let us hope, urged by penitence, to efface the
+memory of his faithlessness by his heroism now.
+
+We do not go on to the dreadful retribution, which must be regarded,
+not as massacre, but as legal execution. It is folly to apply to it,
+or to other analogous instances, the ideas of this Christian
+century. We need not be afraid to admit that there has been a
+development of morality. The retributions of a stern age were
+necessarily stern. But if we want to understand the heart of Moses,
+or of Moses' God, we must not look only at the ruler of a wild
+people trampling out a revolt at the sacrifice of many lives, but
+listen to him, as the next section of the narrative shows him,
+pleading with tears for the rebels, and offering even to let his own
+name be blotted out of God's book if their sin might be forgiven.
+So, coupling the two parts of his conduct together, we may learn a
+little more clearly a lesson, of which this age has much need,--the
+harmony of retributive justice and pitying love; and may come to
+understand that Moses learned both the one and the other by
+fellowship with the God in whom they both dwell in perfection and
+concord.
+
+
+
+
+THE MEDIATOR'S THREEFOLD PRAYER
+
+
+ 'And Moses said unto the Lord, See, Thou sayest unto me,
+ Bring up this people: and Thou hast not let me know whom
+ Thou wilt send with me. Yet Thou hast said, I know thee
+ by name, and thou hast also found grace in My sight.
+ 13. Now therefore, I pray Thee, if I have found grace
+ in Thy sight, show me now Thy way, that I may know Thee,
+ that I may find grace in Thy sight: and consider that
+ this nation is Thy people. 14. And He said, My presence
+ shall go with thee, and I will give thee rest. 15. And
+ he said unto Him, If Thy presence go not with me, carry
+ us not up hence. 16. For wherein shall it be known here
+ that I and Thy people have found grace in Thy sight? Is it
+ not in that Thou goest with us! So shall we be separated, I
+ and Thy people, from all the people that are upon the
+ face of the earth, 17. And the Lord said unto Moses, I
+ will do this thing also that thou hast spoken: for thou
+ hast found grace in My sight, and I know thee by name.
+ 18. And he said, I beseech Thee, show me Thy glory.
+ 19. And He said, I will make all My goodness pass before
+ thee, and I will proclaim the name of the Lord before
+ thee; and will be gracious to whom I will be gracious,
+ and will shew mercy on whom I will shew mercy. 20. And
+ he said, Thou canst not see My face: for there shall no
+ man see Me, and live. 21. And the Lord said, Behold,
+ there is a place by Me, and thou shalt stand upon a rock:
+ 22. And it shall come to pass, while My glory passeth
+ by, that I will put thee in a clift of the rock, and
+ will cover thee with My hand while I pass by: 23. And
+ I will take away Mine hand, and thou shall see My back
+ parts; but My face shall not be seen.'--EXODUS xxxiii. 12-23.
+
+The calf worship broke the bond between God and Israel. Instead of
+His presence, 'an angel' is to lead them, for His presence could
+only be destruction. Mourning spreads through the camp, in token of
+which all ornaments are laid aside. The fate of the nation is in
+suspense, and the people wait, in sad attire, till God knows 'what
+to do unto' them. The Tabernacle is carried beyond the precincts of
+the camp, in witness of the breach, and all the future is doubtful.
+The preceding context describes (vs. 7-11) not one event, but the
+standing order of these dark days, when the camp had to be left if
+God was to be found, and when Moses alone received tokens of God's
+friendship, and the people stood wistfully and tremblingly gazing
+from afar, while the cloudy pillar wavered down to the Tabernacle
+door. Duty brought Moses back from such communion; but Joshua did
+not need to come near the tents of the evil-doers, and, in the
+constancy of devout desire, made his home in the Tabernacle. In one
+of these interviews, so close and familiar, the wonderful dialogue
+here recorded occurred. It turns round three petitions, to each of
+which the Lord answers.
+
+I. We have the leader's prayer for himself, with the over-abundant
+answer of God. In the former chapter, we had the very sublimity of
+intercession, in which the stern avenger of idolatry poured out his
+self-sacrificing love for the stiff-necked nation whom he had had to
+smite, and offered himself a victim for them. Here his first prayer
+is mainly for himself, but it is not therefore a selfish prayer.
+Rather he prays for gifts to himself, to fit him for his service to
+them. We may note separately the prayer, and the pleas on which it
+is urged. 'Show me now Thy way (or ways), that I may know Thee.' The
+desire immediately refers to the then condition of things. As we
+have pointed out, it was a time of suspense. In the strong metaphor
+of the context, God was making up His mind on His course, and Israel
+was waiting with hushed breath for the _dénouement_. It was not
+the entrance of the nation into the promised land which was in
+doubt, but the manner of their guidance, and the penalties of their
+idolatry. These things Moses asked to know, and especially, as verse
+12 shows, to receive some more definite communication as to their
+leader than the vague 'an angel.' But the specific knowledge of
+God's 'way' was yearned for by him, mainly, as leading on to a
+deeper and fuller and more blessed knowledge of God Himself, and
+that again as leading to a fuller possession of God's favour, which,
+as already in some measure possessed, lay at the foundation of the
+whole prayer. The connection of thought here goes far beyond the
+mere immediate blessing, which Moses needed at the moment. That cry
+for insight into the purposes and methods of Him whom the soul
+trusts, amid darkness and suspense, is the true voice of sonship.
+The more deeply it sees into these, the more does the devout soul
+feel the contrast between the spot of light in which it lives and
+the encircling obscurity, and the more does it yearn for the further
+setting back of the boundaries. Prayer does more than effort, for
+satisfying that desire. Nor is it mere curiosity or the desire for
+intellectual clearness that moves the longing. For the end of
+knowing God's ways is, for the devout man, a deeper, more blessed
+knowledge of God Himself, who is best known in His deeds; and the
+highest, most blessed issue of the God-given knowledge of God, is
+the conscious sunshine of His favour shining ever on His servant.
+That is not a selfish religion which, beginning with the assurance
+that we have found grace in His sight, seeks to climb, by happy
+paths of growing knowledge of Him as manifested in His ways, to a
+consciousness of that favour which is made stable and profound by
+clear insight into the depths of His purposes and acts.
+
+The pleas on which this prayer is urged are two: the suppliant's
+heavy tasks, and God's great assurances to him. He boldly reminds
+God of what He has set him to do, and claims that he should be
+furnished with what is needful for discharging his commission. How
+can he lead if he is kept in the dark? When we are as sure as Moses
+was of God's charge to us, we may be as bold as he in asking the
+needful equipment for it. God does not send His servants out to sow
+without seed, or to fight without a sword. His command is His
+pledge. He smiles approval when His servants' confidence assumes
+even bold forms, which sound like remonstrance and a suspicion that
+He was forgetting, for He discerns the underlying eagerness to do
+His will, and the trust in Him. The second plea is built on God's
+assurances of intimate and distinguishing knowledge and favour. He
+had said that He knew Moses 'by name,' by all these calls and
+familiar interviews which gave him the certainty of his individual
+relation to, and his special appointment from, the Lord. Such
+prerogative was inconsistent with reserve. The test of friendship is
+confidence. So pleads Moses, and God recognises the plea. 'I call
+you not servants; for the servant knoweth not what his lord doeth;
+but I have called you friends; for all things that I have heard of
+my Father I have made known unto you.'
+
+The plea based upon the relation of the people to God is subordinate
+in this first prayer. It is thrown in at the end almost as an
+afterthought; it boldly casts responsibility off Moses on to God,
+and does so to enforce the prayer that he should be equipped with
+all requisites for his work, as if he had said, 'It is more Thy
+concern than mine, that I should be able to lead them.' The divine
+answer is a promise to go not with the people, but with Moses. It is
+therefore not yet a full resolving of the doubtful matter, nor
+directly a reply to Moses' prayer. In one aspect it is less, and in
+another more, than had been asked. It seals to the man and to the
+leader the assurance that for himself he shall have the continual
+presence of God, in his soul and in his work, and that, in all the
+weary march, he will have rest, and will come to a fuller rest at
+its end. Thus God ever answers the true hearts that seek to know
+Him, and to be fitted for their tasks. Whether the precise form of
+desire be fulfilled or no, the issue of such bold and trustful
+pleading is always the inward certainty of God's face shining on us,
+and the experience of repose, deep and untroubled in the midst of
+toil, so that we may be at once pilgrims towards, and dwellers in,
+'the house of the Lord,'
+
+II. We have the intercessor's prayer for the people, with the answer
+(vs. 15-17). If the promise of verse 14 is taken as referring to the
+people, there is nothing additional asked in this second stage, and
+the words of verse l7, 'this thing also,' are inexplicable. Observe
+that 'with me' in verse 15 is a supplement, and that the 'us' of the
+next clause, as well as the whole cast of verse 16, suggests that we
+should rather supply 'with us,' The substance, then, of the second
+petition, is the extension of the promise, already given to Moses
+for himself, to the entire nation. Observe how he identifies himself
+with them, making them 'partakers' in his grace, and reiterating 'I
+and Thy people,' as if he would have no blessing which was not
+shared by them. He seeks that the withdrawal of God's presence,
+which had been the consequence of Israel's withdrawal from God,
+should be reversed, and that not he alone, but all the rebels, might
+still possess His presence.
+
+The plea for this prayer is God's honour, which was concerned in
+making it plain even in the remote wilderness, to the wandering
+tribes there, that His hand was upon Israel. Moses expands the
+argument which he had just touched before. The thought of His own
+glory as the motive of God's acts, may easily be so put at to be
+repulsive; but at bottom it is the same as to say that His motive is
+love--for the glory which He seeks is the communication of true
+thoughts concerning His character, that men may be made glad and
+like Himself thereby. Moses has learned that God's heart must long
+to reveal its depth of mercy, and therefore he pleads that even
+sinful Israel should not be left by God, in order that some light
+from His face may strike into a dark world. There is wide
+benevolence, as well as deep insight into the desires of God, in the
+plea.
+
+The divine answer yields unconditionally to the request, and rests
+the reason for so doing wholly on the relation between God and
+Moses. The plea which he had urged in lowly boldness as the
+foundation of both his prayers is endorsed, and, for his sake, the
+divine presence is again granted to the people.
+
+Can we look at this scene without seeing in it the operation on a
+lower field of the same great principle of intercession, which
+reaches its unique example in Jesus Christ? It is not arbitrary
+forcing of the gospel into the history, but simply the recognition
+of the essence of the history, when we see in it a foreshadowing of
+our great High-priest. He, too, knits Himself so closely with us,
+both by the assumption of our manhood and by the identity of loving
+sympathy, that He accepts nothing from the Father's hand for Himself
+alone. He, too, presents Himself before God, and says 'I and Thy
+people.' The great seal of proof for the world that He is the
+beloved of God, lies in the divine guardianship and guidance of His
+servants. His prayer for them prevails, and the reason for its
+prevalence is God's delight in Him. The very sublime of self-
+sacrificing love was in the lawgiver, but the height of his love,
+measured against the immeasurable altitude of Christ's, is as a
+mole-hill to the Andes.
+
+III. We have the last soaring desire which rises above the limits of
+the present. These three petitions teach the insatiableness, if we
+may use the word, of devout desires. Each request granted brings on
+a greater. 'The gift doth stretch itself as 'tis received.'
+Enjoyment increases capacity, and increase of capacity is increase
+of desire. God being infinite, and man capable of indefinite growth,
+neither the widening capacity nor the infinite supply can have
+limits. This is not the least of the blessings of a devout life,
+that the appetite grows with what it feeds on, and that, while there
+is always satisfaction, there is never satiety.
+
+Moses' prayer sounds presumptuous, but it was heard unblamed, and
+granted in so far as possible. It was a venial error--if error it
+may be called--that a soul, touched with the flame of divine love,
+should aspire beyond the possibilities of mortality. At all events,
+it was a fault in which he has had few imitators. _Our_ desires
+keep but too well within the limits of the possible. The precise
+meaning of the petition must be left undetermined. Only this is
+clear, that it was something far beyond even that face-to-face
+intercourse which he had had, as well as beyond that vision granted
+to the elders. If we are to take 'glory' in its usual sense, it
+would mean the material symbol of God's presence, which shone at the
+heart of the pillar, and dwelt afterwards between the cherubim, but
+probably we must attach a loftier meaning to it here, and rather
+think of what we should call the uncreated and infinite divine
+essence. Only do not let us make Moses talk like a metaphysician or
+a theological professor. Rather we should hear in his cry the voice
+of a soul thrilled through and through with the astounding
+consciousness of God's favour, blessed with love-gifts in answered
+prayers, and yearning for more of that light which it feels to be
+life.
+
+And if the petition be dark, the answer is yet more obscure 'with
+excess of light.' Mark how it begins with granting, not with
+refusing. It tells how much the loving desire has power to bring,
+before it speaks of what in it must be denied. There is infinite
+tenderness in that order of response. It speaks of a heart that does
+not love to say 'no,' and grants our wishes up to the very edge of
+the possible, and wraps the bitterness of any refusal in the sweet
+envelope of granted requests. A broad distinction is drawn between
+that in God which can be revealed, and that which cannot. The one is
+'glory,' the other 'goodness,' corresponding, we might almost say,
+to the distinction between the 'moral' and the 'natural' attributes
+of God. But, whatever mysterious revelation under the guise of
+vision may be concealed in these words, and in the fulfilment of
+them in the next chapter, they belong to the 'things which it is
+impossible for a man to utter,' even if he has received them. We are
+on more intelligible ground in the next clause of the promise, the
+proclamation of 'the Name.' That expression is, in Scripture, always
+used as meaning the manifested character of God. It is a revelation
+addressed to the spirit, not to the sense. It is the translation, so
+far as it is capable of translation, of the vision which it
+accompanied; it is the treasure which Moses bore away from Sinai,
+and has shared among us all. The reason for his prayer was probably
+his desire to have his mediatorial office confirmed and perfected;
+and it was so, by that proclamation of the Name. The reason for this
+marvellous gift is next set forth as being God's own unconditional
+grace and mercy. He is His own motive, His own reason. Just as the
+independent and absolute fullness of His being is expressed by the
+name 'I am that I am,' so the independent and absolute freeness of
+His mercy, whether in granting Moses' prayer or in pardoning the
+people, is expressed by 'I will shew mercy on whom I will shew
+mercy.' Not till all this exuberance of gracious answer has smoothed
+the way does the denial of the impossible request come; and even
+then it is so worded as to lay all the emphasis on what is granted,
+and to show that the refusal is but another phase of love. The
+impossibility of beholding the Face is reiterated, and then the
+careful provisions which God will make for the fulfilment of the
+possible part of the bold wish are minutely detailed. The
+distinction between the revealable and unrevealable, which has been
+already expressed by the contrast of 'glory' and 'grace,' now
+appears in the distinction between the 'face' which cannot be looked
+on, and the 'back' which may be.
+
+Human language and thought are out of their depth here. We must be
+content to see a dim splendour shining through the cloudy words, to
+know that there was granted to one man a realisation of God's
+presence, and a revelation of His character, so far transcending
+ordinary experiences as that it was fitly called sight, but yet as
+far beneath the glory of His being as the comparatively imperfect
+knowledge of a man's form, when seen only from behind, is beneath
+that derived from looking him in the face.
+
+But whatever was the singular prerogative of the lawgiver, as he
+gazed from the cleft of the rock at the receding glory, we see more
+than he ever did; and the Christian child, who looks upon the 'glory
+of God in the face of Jesus Christ,' has a vision which outshines
+the flashing radiance that shone round Moses. It deepened his
+convictions, confirmed his faith, added to his assurance of his
+divine commission, but only added to his knowledge of God by the
+proclamation of the Name, and that Name is more fully proclaimed in
+our ears. Sinai, with all its thunders, is silent before Calvary.
+And he who has Jesus Christ to declare God's Name to him need not
+envy the lawgiver on the mountain, nor even the saints in heaven.
+
+
+
+
+GOD PROCLAIMING HIS OWN NAME
+
+
+ 'The Lord passed by before him, and proclaimed, The
+ Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering,
+ and abundant in goodness and truth.'--EXODUS xxxiv. 6.
+
+This great event derives additional significance and grandeur from
+the place in which it stands. It follows the hideous act of idolatry
+in which the levity and sinfulness of Israel reached their climax.
+The trumpet of Sinai had hardly ceased to peal, and there in the
+rocky solitudes, in full view of the mount 'that burned with fire,'
+while the echoes of the thunder and the Voice still lingered, one
+might say, among the cliffs, that mob of abject cowards were bold
+enough to shake off their allegiance to God, and, forgetful of all
+the past, plunged into idolatry, and wallowed in sensuous delights.
+What a contrast between Moses on the mount and Aaron and the people
+in the plain! Then comes the wonderful story of the plague and of
+Moses' intercession, followed by the high request of Moses, so
+strange and yet so natural at such a time, for the vision of God's
+'glory.' Into all the depths of that I do not need to plunge. Enough
+that he is told that his desire is beyond the possibilities of
+creatural life. The mediator and lawgiver cannot rise beyond the
+bounds of human limitations. But what _can_ be _shall_ be.
+God's 'goodness' will pass before him. Then comes this wonderful
+advance in the progress of divine revelation. If we remember the
+breach of the Covenant, and then turn to these words, considered as
+evoked by the people's sin, they become very remarkable. If we
+consider them as the answer to Moses' desire, they are no less so.
+Taking these two thoughts with us, let us consider them in--
+
+I. The answer to the request for a sensuous manifestation.
+
+The request is 'show me,' as if some visible manifestation were
+desired and expected, or, if not a visible, at least a direct
+perception of Jehovah's glory.' Moses desires that he, as mediator
+and lawgiver, may have some closer knowledge. The answer to his
+request is a word, the articulate proclamation of the 'Name' of the
+Lord. It is higher than all manifestation to sense, which was what
+Moses had asked. Here there is no symbol as of the Lord in the
+'cloud.' The divine manifestation is impossible to sense, and that,
+too, not by reason of man's limitations, but by reason of God's
+nature. The manifestation to spirit in full immediate perception is
+impossible also. It has to be maintained that we know God only 'in
+part'; but it does not follow that our knowledge is only
+representative, or is not of Him 'as He is.' Though not whole it is
+real, so far as it goes.
+
+But this is not the highest form. Words and propositions can never
+reveal so fully, nor with such certitude, as a personal revelation.
+But we have Christ's life, 'God manifest': not words about God, but
+the manifestation of the very divine nature itself in action.
+'Merciful':--and we see Jesus going about 'doing good.' 'Gracious,'
+and we see Him welcoming to Himself all the weary, and ever
+bestowing of the treasures of His love. 'Longsuffering':--'Father!
+forgive them!' God is 'plenteous in mercy and in truth,' forgiving
+transgression and sin:--'Thy sins be forgiven thee.'
+
+How different it all is when we have deeds, a human life, on which
+to base our belief! How much more certain, as well as coming closer
+to our hearts! Merely verbal statements need proof, they need
+warming. In Christ's showing us the Father they are changed as from
+a painting to a living being; they are brought out of the region of
+abstractions into the concrete.
+
+ 'And so the word had breath, and wrought
+ With human hands the creed of creeds.'
+
+'Show us the Father and it sufficeth us.' 'He that hath seen Me,
+hath seen the Father.'
+
+Is there any other form of manifestation possible? Yes; in heaven
+there will be a closer vision of Christ--not of God. Our knowledge
+of Christ will there be expanded, deepened, made more direct. We
+know not how. There will be bodily changes: 'Like unto the body of
+His glory.' etc. 'We shall be like Him.' 'Changed from glory to
+glory.'
+
+II. The answer to the desire to see God's glory.
+
+The 'Glory' was the technical name for the lustrous cloud that hung
+over the Mercy-seat, but here it probably means more generally some
+visible manifestation of the divine presence. What Moses craved to
+see with his eyes was the essential divine light. That vision he did
+not receive, but what he did receive was partly a visible
+manifestation, though not of the dazzling radiance which no human
+eye can see and live, and still more instructive and encouraging,
+the communication in words of that shining galaxy of attributes,
+'the glories that compose Thy name.' In the name specially so-
+called, the name Jehovah, was revealed absolute eternal Being, and
+in the accompanying declaration of so-called 'attributes' were
+thrown into high relief the two qualities of merciful forgiveness
+and retributive justice. The 'attributes' which separate God from
+us, and in which vulgar thought finds the marks of divinity, are
+conspicuous by their absence. Nothing is said of omniscience,
+omnipresence, and the like, but forgiveness and justice, of both of
+which men carry analogues in themselves, are proclaimed by the very
+voice of God as those by which He desires that He should be chiefly
+conceived of by us.
+
+The true 'glory of God' is His pardoning Love. That is the glowing
+heart of the divine brightness. If so, then the very heart of that
+heart of brightness, the very glory of the 'Glory of God,' is the
+Christ, in whom we behold that which was at once 'the glory as of
+the only begotten of the Father' and the 'Glory of the Father.'
+
+In Jesus these two elements, pardoning love and retributive justice,
+wondrously meet, and the mystery of the possibility of their
+harmonious co-operation in the divine government is solved, and
+becomes the occasion for the rapturous gratitude of man and the
+wondering adoration of principalities and powers in heavenly places.
+Jesus has manifested the divine mercifulness; Jesus has borne the
+burden of sin and the weight of the divine Justice. The lips that
+said 'Be of good cheer, thy sins be forgiven thee,' also cried, 'Why
+hast Thou forsaken Me?' The tenderest manifestation of the God
+'plenteous in mercy ... forgiving iniquity,' and the most awe-
+kindling manifestation of the God 'that will by no means clear the
+guilty,' are fused into one, when we 'behold that Lamb of God that
+taketh away the sin of the world.'
+
+III. The answer to a great sin.
+
+This Revelation is the immediate issue of Israel's great apostasy.
+
+Sin evokes His pardoning mercy. This insignificant speck in Creation
+has been the scene of the wonder of the Incarnation, not because its
+magnitude was great, but because its need was desperate. Men,
+because they are sinners, have been subjects of an experience more
+precious than the 'angels which excel in strength' and hearken 'to
+the voice of His word' have known or can know. The wilder the storm
+of human evil roars and rages, the deeper and louder is the voice
+that peals across the storm. So for us all Christ is the full and
+final revelation of God's grace. The last, because the perfect
+embodiment of it; the sole, because the sufficient manifestation of
+it. 'See that ye refuse not Him that speaketh.'
+
+
+
+
+SIN AND FORGIVENESS
+
+
+ '... Forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and
+ that will by no means clear the guilty....'--EXODUS xxiv. 7.
+
+The former chapter tells us of the majesty of the divine revelation
+as it was made to Moses on 'the mount of God.' Let us notice that,
+whatever was the visible pomp of the external Theophany to the
+senses, the true revelation lay in the proclamation of the 'Name';
+the revelation to the conscience and the heart; and such a
+revelation had never before fallen on mortal ears. It is remarkable
+that the very system which was emphatically one of law and
+retribution should have been thus heralded by a word which is
+perfectly 'evangelical' in its whole tone. That fact should have
+prevented many errors as to the relation of Judaism and
+Christianity. The very centre of the former was 'God is love,'
+'merciful and gracious,' and if there follows the difficult addition
+'visiting the iniquities,' etc., the New Testament adds its 'Amen'
+to that. True, the harmony of the two and the great revelation of
+the _means_ of forgiveness lay far beyond the horizon of Moses
+and his people, but none the less was it the message of Judaism that
+'there is forgiveness with Thee that Thou mayest be feared.' The law
+spoke of retribution, justice, duty, and sin, but side by side with
+the law was another institution, the sacrificial worship, which
+proclaimed that God was full of love, and that the sinner was
+welcomed to His side. And it is the root of many errors to transfer
+New Testament language about the law to the whole Old Testament
+system. But, passing away from this, I wish to look at two points in
+these words.
+
+I. The characteristics of human sins.
+
+II. The divine treatment of them.
+
+I. The characteristics of human sins.
+
+Observe the threefold form of expression--iniquity and transgression
+and sin.
+
+It seems natural that in the divine proclamation of His own holy
+character, the sinful nature of men should be characterised with all
+the fervid energy of such words; for the accumulation even of
+synonyms would serve a _moral_ purpose, expressive at once of
+the divine displeasure against sin, and of the free full pardon for
+it in all its possible forms. But the words are very far from all
+meaning the same thing. They all designate the same actions, but
+from different points of view, and with reference to different
+phases and qualities of sin.
+
+Now these three expressions are inadequately represented by the
+English translation.
+
+'Iniquity' literally means 'twisting,' or 'something twisted,' and
+is thus the opposite of 'righteousness,' or rather of what is
+'straight.' It is thus like our own 'right' and 'wrong,' or like the
+Latin 'in-iquity' (by which it is happily enough rendered in our
+version). So looking at this word and the thoughts which connect
+themselves with it, we come to this:--
+
+(1) All sin of every sort is deviation from a standard to which we
+ought to be conformed.
+
+Note the graphic force of the word as giving the straight line to
+which our conduct ought to run parallel, and the contrast between it
+and the wavering curves into which our lives meander, like the lines
+in a child's copy-book, or a rude attempt at drawing a circle at one
+sweep of the pencil. Herbert speaks of
+
+ 'The crooked wandering ways in which we live.'
+
+There is a path which is 'right' and one which is 'wrong,' whether
+we believe so or not.
+
+There are hedges and limitations for us all. This law extends to the
+ordering of all things, whether great or small. If a line be
+absolutely straight, and we are running another parallel to it, the
+smallest possible wavering is fatal to our copy. And the smallest
+deflection, if produced, will run out into an ever-widening distance
+from the straight line.
+
+There is nothing which it is more difficult to get into men's belief
+than the sinfulness of little sins; nothing more difficult to cure
+ourselves of than the habit of considering quantity rather than
+quality in moral questions. What a solemn thought it is, that of a
+great absolute law of right rising serene above us, embracing
+everything! And this is the first idea that is here in our text--a
+grave and deep one.
+
+But the second of these expressions for sin literally means
+'apostasy,' 'rebellion,' not 'transgression,' and this word brings
+in a more solemn thought yet, viz.:--
+
+(2) Every sin is apostasy from or rebellion against God.
+
+The former word dealt only with abstract thought of a 'law,' this
+with a 'Lawgiver.'
+
+Our obligations are not merely to a law, but to Him who enacted it.
+So it becomes plain that the very centre of all sin is the shaking
+off of obedience to God. Living to 'self' is the inmost essence of
+every act of evil, and may be as virulently active in the smallest
+trifle as in the most awful crime.
+
+How infinitely deeper and darker this makes sin to be!
+
+When one thinks of our obligations and of our dependence, of God's
+love and care, what an 'evil and a bitter thing' every sin becomes!
+
+Urge this terrible contrast of a loving Father and a disobedient
+child.
+
+This idea brings out the ingratitude of all sin.
+
+But the third word here used literally means 'missing an aim,' and
+so we come to
+
+(3) Every sin misses the goal at which we should aim. There may be a
+double idea here--that of failing in the great purpose of our being,
+which is already partially included in the first of these three
+expressions, or that of missing the aim which we proposed to
+ourselves in the act. All sin is a failure.
+
+By it we fall short of the loftiest purpose. Whatever we gain we
+lose more.
+
+Every life which has sin in it is a 'failure.' You may be
+prosperous, brilliant, successful, but you are 'a failure.'
+
+For consider what human life might be: full of God and full of joy.
+Consider what the 'fruits' of sin are. 'Apples of Sodom.' How sin
+leads to sorrow. This is an inevitable law. Sin fails to secure what
+it sought for. All 'wrong' is a mistake, a blunder. 'Thou fool!'
+
+So this word suggests the futility of sin considered in its
+consequences. 'These be thy gods, O Israel!' 'The end of these
+things is death.'
+
+II. The divine treatment of sins.
+
+'Forgiving,' and yet not suffering them to go unpunished.
+
+(1) God _forgives_, and yet He does not leave sin unpunished,
+for He will 'by no means _clear_ the guilty.'
+
+The one word refers to His love, His heart; the other to the
+retributions which are inseparable from the very course of nature.
+
+Forgiveness is the flow of God's love to all, and the welcoming back
+to His favour of all who come. Forgiveness likewise includes the
+escape from the extreme and uttermost consequences of sin in this
+life and in the next, the sense of God's displeasure here, and the
+final separation from Him, which is eternal death. Forgiveness is
+not inconsistent with retribution. There must needs be retribution,
+from--
+
+_(a)_ The very constitution of our nature.
+
+Conscience, our spiritual nature, our habits all demand it.
+
+_(b)_ The constitution of the world.
+
+In it all things work under God, but only for 'good' to them who
+love God. To all others, sooner or later, the Nemesis comes. 'Ye
+shall eat of the fruit of your doings.'
+
+(2) _God_ forgives, and therefore He does not leave sin
+unpunished. It is divine mercy that strikes. The end of His
+chastisement is to separate us from our sins.
+
+(3) Divine forgiveness and retributive justice both centre in the
+revelation of the Cross.
+
+To us this message comes. It was the hidden heart of the Mosaic
+system. It was the revelation of Sinai. To Israel it was
+'proclaimed' in thunder and darkness, and the way of forgiveness and
+the harmony of righteousness and mercy were veiled. To us it is
+proclaimed from Calvary. There in full light the Lord passes before
+us and proclaims, 'I am the Lord, the Lord God merciful and
+gracious.' 'Ye are come ... unto Jesus.' 'See that ye refuse not Him
+that speaketh.' 'This is my Beloved Son, hear Him !'
+
+
+
+
+BLESSED AND TRAGIC UNCONSCIOUSNESS
+
+
+ '... Moses wist not that the skin of his face shone
+ while he talked with Him.'--EXODUS xxxiv. 29.
+
+ '... And Samson wist not that the Lord had departed
+ from him.'--JUDGES xvi. 20.
+
+The recurrence of the same phrase in two such opposite connections
+is very striking. Moses, fresh from the mountain of vision, where he
+had gazed on as much of the glory of God as was accessible to man,
+caught some gleam of the light which he adoringly beheld; and a
+strange radiance sat on his face, unseen by himself, but visible to
+all others. So, supreme beauty of character comes from beholding God
+and talking with Him; and the bearer of it is unconscious of it.
+
+Samson, fresh from his coarse debauch, and shorn of the locks which
+he had vowed to keep, strides out into the air, and tries his former
+feats; but his strength has left him because the Lord has left him;
+and the Lord has left him because, in his fleshly animalism, he has
+left the Lord. Like, but most unlike, Moses, he knows not his
+weakness. So strength, like beauty, is dependent upon contact with
+God, and may ebb away when that is broken, and the man may be all
+unaware of his weakness till he tries his power, and ignominiously
+fails.
+
+These two contrasted pictures, the one so mysteriously grand and the
+other so tragic, may well help to illustrate for us truths that
+should be burned into our minds and our memories.
+
+I. Note, then, the first thought which they both teach us, that
+beauty and strength come from communion with God.
+
+In both the cases with which we are dealing these were of a merely
+material sort. The light on Moses' face and the strength in Samson's
+arm were, at the highest, but types of something far higher and
+nobler than themselves. But still, the presence of the one and the
+departure of the other alike teach us the conditions on which we may
+possess both in nobler form, and the certainty of losing them if we
+lose hold of God.
+
+Moses' experience teaches us that the loftiest beauty of character
+comes from communion with God. That is the use that the Apostle
+makes of this remarkable incident in 2 Cor. iii, where he takes the
+light that shone from Moses' face as being the symbol of the better
+lustre that gleams from all those who 'behold (or reflect) the glory
+of the Lord' with unveiled faces, and, by beholding, are 'changed
+into the likeness' of that on which they gaze with adoration and
+longing. The great law to which, almost exclusively, Christianity
+commits the perfecting of individual character is this: Look at Him
+till you become like Him, and in beholding, be changed. 'Tell me the
+company a man keeps, and I will tell you his character,' says the
+old proverb. And what is true on the lower levels of daily life,
+that most men become assimilated to the complexion of those around
+them, especially if they admire or love them, is the great principle
+whereby worship, which is desire and longing and admiration in the
+superlative degree, stamps the image of the worshipped upon the
+character of the worshipper. 'They followed after vanity, and have
+become vain,' says one of the prophets, gathering up into a sentence
+the whole philosophy of the degradation of humanity by reason of
+idolatry and the worship of false gods. 'They that make them are
+like unto them; so is every one that trusteth in them.' The law
+works upwards as well as downwards, for whom we worship we declare
+to be infinitely good; whom we worship we long to be like; whom we
+worship we shall certainly imitate.
+
+Thus, brethren, the practical, plain lesson that comes from this
+thought is simply this: If you want to be pure and good, noble and
+gentle, sweet and tender; if you desire to be delivered from your
+own weaknesses and selfish, sinful idiosyncrasies, the way to secure
+your desire is, 'Look unto Me and be ye saved, all the ends of the
+earth.' Contemplation, which is love and longing, is the parent of
+all effort that succeeds. Contemplation of God in Christ is the
+master-key that opens this door, and makes it possible for the
+lowliest and the foulest amongst us to cherish unpresumptuous hopes
+of being like Him' if we see Him as He is revealed here, and
+perfectly like Him when yonder we see Him 'as He _is_.'
+
+There have been in the past, and there are today, thousands of
+simple souls, shut out by lowliness of position and other
+circumstances from all the refining and ennobling influences of
+which the world makes so much, who yet in character and bearing, ay,
+and sometimes in the very look of their meek faces, are living
+witnesses how mighty to transform a nature is the power of loving
+gazing upon Jesus Christ. All of us who have had much to do with
+Christians of the humbler classes know that. There is no influence
+to refine and beautify men like that of living near Jesus Christ,
+and walking in the light of that Beauty which is 'the effulgence of
+the divine glory and the express image of His Person.'
+
+And in like manner as beauty so strength comes from communion with
+God and laying hold on Him. We can only think of Samson as a 'saint'
+in a very modified fashion, and present him as an example in a very
+limited degree. His dependence upon divine power was rude, and
+divorced from elevation of character and morality, but howsoever
+imperfect, fragmentary, and I might almost say to our more trained
+eyes, grotesque, it looks, yet there was a reality in it; and when
+the man was faithless to his vow, and allowed the crafty harlot's
+scissors to shear from his head the token of his consecration, it
+was because the reality of the consecration, rude and external as
+that consecration was, both in itself and in its consequences, had
+passed away from him.
+
+And so we may learn the lesson, taught at once by the flashing face
+of the lawgiver and the enfeebled force of the hero, that the two
+poles of perfectness in humanity, so often divorced from one
+another--beauty and strength--have one common source, and depend for
+their loftiest position upon the same thing. God possesses both in
+supremest degree, being the Almighty and the All-fair; and we
+possess them in limited, but yet possibly progressive, measure,
+through dependence upon Him. The true force of character, and the
+true power for work, and every real strength which is not disguised
+weakness, 'a lath painted to look like iron,' come on condition of
+our keeping close by God. The Fountain is open for you all; see to
+it that you resort thither.
+
+II. And now the second thought of my text is that the bearer of the
+radiance is unconscious of it.
+
+'Moses wist not that the skin of his face shone.' In all regions of
+life, the consummate apex and crowning charm of excellence is
+unconsciousness of excellence. Whenever a man begins to imagine that
+he is good, he begins to be bad; and every virtue and beauty of
+character is robbed of some portion of its attractive fairness when
+the man who bears it knows, or fancies, that he possesses it. The
+charm of childhood is its perfect unconsciousness, and the man has
+to win back the child's heritage, and become 'as a little child,' if
+he would enter into and dwell in the 'Kingdom of Heaven.' And so in
+the loftiest region of all, that of the religious life, you may be
+sure that the more a man is like Christ, the less he knows it; and
+the better he is, the less he suspects it. The reasons why that is
+so, point, at the same time, to the ways by which we may attain to
+this blessed self-oblivion. So let me put just in a word or two some
+simple, practical thoughts.
+
+Let us, then, try to lose ourselves in Jesus Christ. That way of
+self-oblivion is emancipation and blessedness and power. It is safe
+for us to leave all thoughts of our miserable selves behind us, if
+instead of them we have the thought of that great, sweet, dear Lord,
+filling mind and heart. A man walking on a tight-rope will be far
+more likely to fall, if he is looking at his toes, than if he is
+looking at the point to which he is going. If we fix our eyes on
+Jesus, then we can safely look, neither to our feet nor to the
+gulfs; but straight at Him gazing, we shall straight to Him advance.
+'Looking off' from ourselves 'unto Jesus' is safe; looking off
+anywhere else is peril. Seek that self-oblivion which comes from
+self being swallowed up in the thought of the Lord.
+
+And again, I would say, think constantly and longingly of the
+unattained. 'Brethren! I count not myself to have apprehended.'
+Endless aspiration and a stinging consciousness of present
+imperfection are the loftiest states of man here below. The
+beholders down in the valley, when they look up, may see our figures
+against the skyline, and fancy us at the summit, but our loftier
+elevation reveals untrodden heights beyond; and we have only risen
+so high in order to discern more clearly how much higher we have to
+rise. Dissatisfaction with the present is the condition of
+excellence in all pursuits of life, and in the Christian life even
+more eminently than in all others, because the goal to be attained
+is in its very nature infinite; and therefore ensures the blessed
+certainty of continual progress, accompanied here, indeed, with the
+sting and bite of a sense of imperfection, but one day to be only
+sweetness, as we think of how much there is yet to be won in addition
+to the perfection of the present.
+
+So, dear friends, the best way to keep ourselves unconscious of
+present attainments is to set our faces forward, and to make 'all
+experience' as 'an arch wherethro' gleams that untraveiled world to
+which we move.' 'Moses wist not that the skin of his face shone.'
+
+The third practical suggestion that I would make is, cultivate a
+clear sense of your own imperfections. We do not need to try to
+learn our goodness. That will suggest itself to us only too clearly;
+but what we do need is to have a very clear sense of our
+shortcomings and failures, our faults of temper, our faults of
+desire, our faults in our relations to our fellows, and all the
+other evils that still buzz and sting and poison our blood. Has not
+the best of us enough of these to knock all the conceit out of us? A
+true man will never be so much ashamed of himself as when he is
+praised, for it will always send him to look into the deep places of
+his heart, and there will be a swarm of ugly, creeping things under
+the stones there, if he will only turn them up and look beneath. So
+let us lose ourselves in Christ, let us set our faces to the
+unattained future, let us clearly understand our own faults and
+sins.
+
+III. Thirdly, the strong man made weak is unconscious of his
+weakness.
+
+I do not mean here to touch at all upon the general thought that, by
+its very nature, all evil tends to make us insensitive to its
+presence. Conscience becomes dull by practice of sin and by neglect
+of conscience, until that which at first was as sensitive as the
+palm of a little child's hand becomes as if it were 'seared with a
+hot iron.' The foulness of the atmosphere of a crowded hall is not
+perceived by the people in it. It needs a man to come in from the
+outer air to detect it. We can accustom ourselves to any mephitic
+and poisonous atmosphere, and many of us live in one all our days,
+and do not know that there is any need of ventilation or that the
+air is not perfectly sweet. The 'deceitfulness' of sin is its great
+weapon.
+
+But what I desire to point out is an even sadder thing than that--namely,
+that Christian people may lose their strength because they
+let go their hold upon God, and know nothing about it. Spiritual
+declension, all unconscious of its own existence, is the very
+history of hundreds of nominal Christians amongst us, and, I dare
+say, of some of us. The very fact that you do not suppose the
+statement to have the least application to yourself is perhaps the
+very sign that it does apply. When the lifeblood is pouring out of a
+man, he faints before he dies. The swoon of unconsciousness is the
+condition of some professing Christians. Frost-bitten limbs are
+quite comfortable, and only tingle when circulation is coming back.
+I remember a great elm-tree, the pride of an avenue in the south,
+that had spread its branches for more years than the oldest man
+could count, and stood, leafy and green. Not until a winter storm
+came one night and laid it low with a crash did anybody suspect what
+everybody saw in the morning--that the heart was eaten out of it,
+and nothing left but a shell of bark. Some Christian people are like
+that; they manage to grow leaves, and even some fruit, but when the
+storm comes they will go down, because the heart has been out of
+their religion for years. 'Samson wist not that the Lord was
+departed from him.'
+
+And so, brother, because there are so many things that mask the
+ebbing away of a Christian life, and because our own self-love and
+habits come in to hide declension, let me earnestly exhort you and
+myself to watch ourselves very narrowly. Unconsciousness does not
+mean ignorant presumption or presumptuous ignorance. It is difficult
+to make an estimate of ourselves by poking into our own sentiments
+and supposed feelings and convictions, and the estimate is likely to
+be wrong. There is a better way than that. Two things tell what a
+man is--one, what he wants, and the other, what he does. As the will
+is, the man is. Where do the currents of your desires set? If you
+watch their flow, you may be pretty sure whether your religious life
+is an ebbing or a rising tide. The other way to ascertain what we
+are is rigidly to examine and judge what we do. 'Let us search and
+try our ways, and turn again to the Lord.' Actions are the true test
+of a man. Conduct is the best revelation of character, especially in
+regard to ourselves. So let us 'watch and be sober'--sober in our
+estimate of ourselves, and determined to find every lurking evil,
+and to drag it forth into the light.
+
+Again, let me say, let us ask God to help us. 'Search me, O God! and
+try me.' We shall never rightly understand what we are, unless we
+spread ourselves out before Him and crave that Divine Spirit, who is
+'the candle of the Lord,' to be carried ever in our hands into the
+secret recesses of our sinful hearts. 'Anoint thine eyes with eye
+salve that thou mayest see,' and get the eye salve by communion with
+God, who will supply thee a standard by which to try thy poor,
+stained, ragged righteousness. The _collyrium_, the eye salve,
+may be, will be, painful when it is rubbed into the lids, but it
+will clear the sight; and the first work of Him, whose dearest name
+is _Comforter_, is to convince of sin.
+
+And, last of all, let us keep near to Jesus Christ, near enough to
+Him to feel His touch, to hear His voice, to see His face, and to
+carry down with us into the valley some radiance on our countenances
+which may tell even the world, that we have been up where the Light
+lives and reigns.
+
+'Because thou sayest, I am rich and increased with goods, and have
+need of nothing, and knowest not that thou art wretched, and
+miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked, I counsel thee to buy of
+Me gold tried in the fire, that thou mayest be rich; and white
+raiment, that thou mayest be clothed, and that the shame of thy
+nakedness do not appear; and anoint thine eyes with eye salve, that
+thou mayest see,'
+
+
+
+
+AN OLD SUBSCRIPTION LIST
+
+
+ 'And they came, every one whose heart stirred him up,
+ and every one whom his spirit made willing, and they
+ brought the Lord's offering to the work....'
+ --EXODUS xxxv. 21.
+
+This is the beginning of the catalogue of contributions towards the
+erection of the Tabernacle in the wilderness. It emphasises the
+purely spontaneous and voluntary character of the gifts. There was
+plenty of compulsory work, of statutory contribution, in the Old
+Testament system of worship. Sacrifices and tithes and other things
+were imperative, but the Tabernacle was constructed by means of
+undemanded offerings, and there were parts of the standing ritual
+which were left to the promptings of the worshipper's own spirit.
+There was always a door through which the impulses of devout hearts
+could come in, to animate what else would have become dead,
+mechanical compliance with prescribed obligations. That spontaneous
+surrender of precious things, not because a man must give them, but
+because he delights in letting his love come to the surface and find
+utterance in giving which is still more blessed than receiving, had
+but a narrow and subordinate sphere of action assigned to it in the
+legal system of the Old Covenant, but it fills the whole sphere of
+Christianity, and becomes the only kind of offering which
+corresponds to its genius and is acceptable to Christ. We may look,
+then, not merely at the words of our text, but at the whole section
+of which they form the introduction, and find large lessons for
+ourselves, not only in regard to the one form of Christian service
+which is pecuniary liberality, but in reference to all which we have
+to do for Jesus Christ, in the picture which it gives us of that
+eager crowd of willing givers, flocking to the presence of the
+lawgiver, with hands laden with gifts so various in kind and value,
+but all precious because freely and delightedly brought, and all
+needed for the structure of God's house.
+
+I. We have set forth here the true motive of acceptable service.
+
+'They came, every one whose heart stirred him up, and every one whom
+his spirit made willing.' There is a striking metaphor in that last
+word. Wherever the spirit is touched with the sweet influences of
+God's love, and loves and gives back again, that spirit is buoyant,
+lifted, raised above the low, flat levels where selfishness feeds
+fat and then rots. The spirit is raised by any great and unselfish
+emotion. There is buoyancy and glad consciousness of elevation in
+all the self-sacrifice of love, which dilates and lifts the spirit
+as the light gas smoothes out the limp folds of silk in a balloon,
+and sends it heavenwards, a full sphere. Only service or surrender,
+which is thus cheerful because it is the natural expression of love,
+is true service in God's sight. Whosoever, then, had his spirit
+raised and made buoyant by a great glad resolve to give up some
+precious thing for God's sanctuary, came with his gift in his hand,
+and he and it were accepted. That trusting of men's giving to
+spontaneous liberality was exceptional under the law. It is normal
+under the Gospel, and has filled the whole field, and driven out the
+other principle of statutory and constrained service and sacrifice
+altogether. We have its feeble beginnings in this incident. It is
+sovereign in Christ's Church. There are no pressed men on board
+Christ's ship. None but volunteers make up His army. 'Thy people
+shall be willing in the day of Thy might.' He cares nothing for any
+service but such as it would be pain to keep back; nothing for any
+service which is not given with a smile of glad thankfulness that we
+are able to give it.
+
+And for the true acceptableness of Christian service, that motive of
+thankful love must be actually present in each deed. It is not
+enough that we should determine on and begin a course of sacrifice
+or work under the influence of that great motive, unless we renew it
+at each step. We cannot hallow a row of actions in that wholesale
+fashion by baptizing the first of them with the cleansing waters of
+true consecration, while the rest are done from lower motives. Each
+deed must be sanctified by the presence of the true motive, if it is
+to be worthy of Christ's acceptance. But there is a constant
+tendency in all Christian work to slide off its only right
+foundation, and having been begun 'in the spirit,' to be carried on
+'in the flesh.' Constant watchfulness is needed to resist this
+tendency, which, if yielded to, destroys the worth and power, and
+changes the inmost nature, of apparently devoted and earnest
+service.
+
+Not the least subtle and dangerous of these spurious motives which
+steal in surreptitiously to mar our work for Christ is habit.
+Service done from custom, and representing no present impulse of
+thankful devotion, may pass muster with us, but does it do so with
+God? No doubt a habit of godly service is, in some aspects, a good,
+and it is well to enlist that tremendous power of custom which sways
+so much of our lives, on the side of godliness. But it is not good,
+but, on the contrary, pure loss, when habit becomes mechanical, and,
+instead of making it easier to call up the true motive, excludes
+that motive, and makes it easy to do the deed without it. I am
+afraid that if such thoughts were applied as a sieve to sift the
+abundant so-called Christian work of the present day, there would be
+an alarming and, to the workers, astonishing quantity of refuse that
+would not pass the meshes.
+
+Let us, then, try to bring every act of service nominally done for
+Christ into conscious relation with the motive which ought to be its
+parent; for only the work that is done because our spirits lift us
+up, and our hearts are willing, is work that is accepted by Him, and
+is blessed to us.
+
+And how is that to be secured? How is that glad temper of
+spontaneous and cheerful consecration to be attained and maintained?
+I know of but one way. 'Brethren,' said the Apostle, when he was
+talking about a very little matter--some small collection for a
+handful of poor people--'ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,
+how that, though He was rich, yet for our sakes He became poor, that
+we, through His poverty, might become rich.' Let us keep our eyes
+fixed upon that great pattern of and motive for surrender; and our
+hearts will become willing, touched with the fire that flamed in
+His. There is only one method of securing the gladness and
+spontaneousness of devotion and of service, and that is, living very
+near to Jesus Christ, and drinking in for ourselves, as the very
+wine that turns to blood and life in our veins, the spirit of that
+dear Master. Every one whose heart is lifted up will have it lifted
+up because it holds on by Him who hath ascended up, and who, being
+'lifted up, draws all men to Him.' The secret of consecration is
+communion with Jesus Christ.
+
+The appeal to lower motives is often tempting, but always a mistake.
+Continual contact with Jesus Christ, and realisation of what He has
+done for us, are sure to open the deep fountains of the heart, and
+to secure abundant streams. If we can tap these perennial reservoirs
+they will yield like artesian wells, and need no creaking machinery
+to pump a scanty and intermittent supply. We cannot trust this
+deepest motive too much, nor appeal to it too exclusively.
+
+Let me remind you, too, that Christ's appeal to this motive leaves
+no loophole for selfishness or laziness. Responsibility is all the
+greater because we are left to assess ourselves. The blank form is
+sent to us, and He leaves it to our honour to fill it up. Do not
+tamper with the paper, for remember there is a Returning Officer
+that will examine your schedule, who knows all about your
+possessions. So, when He says, 'Give as you like; and I do not want
+anything that you do not like,' remember that 'Give as you like'
+ought to mean, 'Give as you, who have received everything from Me,
+are bound to give.'
+
+II. We get here the measure of acceptable work.
+
+We have a long catalogue, very interesting in many respects, of the
+various gifts that the people brought. Such sentences as these occur
+over and over again--'And every man with whom was found' so-and-so
+'brought it'; 'And all the women did spin with their hands, and
+brought that which they had spun'; 'And the rulers brought' so-and-
+so. Such statements embody the very plain truism that what we have
+settles what we are bound to give. Or, to put it into grander words,
+capacity is the measure of duty. Our work is cut out for us by the
+faculties and opportunities that God has given us.
+
+That is a very easy thing to say, but it is an uncommonly hard thing
+honestly to apply. For there are plenty of people that are smitten
+with very unusual humility whenever you begin to talk to them about
+work. 'It is not in my way,' 'I am not capable of that kind of
+service,' and so on, and so on. One would believe in the genuineness
+of the excuse more readily if there were anything about which such
+people said, 'Well, I _can_ do that, at all events'; but such
+an all-round modesty, which is mostly observable when service is
+called for, is suspicious. It might be well for some of these
+retiring and idle Christians to remember the homely wisdom of 'You
+never know what you can do till you try.' On the other hand, there
+are many Christians who, for want of honest looking into their own
+power, for want of what I call sanctified originality, are content
+to run in the ruts that other people's vehicles have made, without
+asking themselves whether that is the gauge that their wheels are
+fit for. Both these sets of people flagrantly neglect the plain law
+that what we have settles what we should give.
+
+The form as well as the measure of our service is determined
+thereby. 'She hath done what she could,' said Jesus Christ about
+Mary. We often read that, as if it were a kind of apology for a
+sentimental and useless gift, because it was the best that she could
+bestow. I do not hear that tone in the words at all. I hear, rather,
+this, that duty is settled by faculty, and that nobody else has any
+business to interfere with that which a Christian soul, all aflame
+with the love of God, finds to be the spontaneous and natural
+expression of its devotion to the Master. The words are the
+vindication of the form of loving service; but let us not forget
+that they are also a very stringent requirement as to its measure,
+if it is to please Christ. 'What she could'; the engine must be
+worked up to the last ounce of pressure that it will stand. All must
+be got out of it that can be got out of it. Is that the case about
+us? We talk about hard work for Christ. Have any of us ever, worked
+up to the edge of our capacity? I am afraid that if the principles
+that lie in this catalogue were applied to us, whether about our
+gold and silver, or about our more precious spiritual and mental
+possessions, _we_ could not say, 'Every man with whom was
+found' this, that, and the other, 'brought it for the work.'
+
+III. Notice, again, how in this list of offerings there comes out
+the great thought of the infinite variety of forms of service and
+offering, which are all equally needful and equally acceptable.
+
+The list begins with 'bracelets, and earrings, and rings, and
+tablets, all jewels of gold.' And then it goes on to 'blue, and
+purple, and scarlet, and fine linen, and red skins of rams, and
+badgers' skins, and shittim wood.' And then we read that the 'women
+did spin with their hands, and brought that which they had spun'--namely,
+the same things as have been already catalogued, 'the blue,
+and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen.' That looks as if the
+richer gave the raw material, and the women gave the labour. Poor
+women! they could not give, but they could spin. They had no stores,
+but they had ten fingers and a distaff, and if some neighbour found
+the stuff, the ten fingers joyfully set the distaff twirling, and
+spun the yarn for the weavers. Then there were others who willingly
+undertook the rougher work of spinning, not dainty thread for the
+rich soft stuffs whose colours were to glow in the sanctuary, but
+the coarse black goat's hair which was to be made into the heavy
+covering of the roof of the tabernacle. No doubt it was less
+pleasant labour than the other, but it got done by willing hands.
+And then, at the end of the whole enumeration, there comes, 'And the
+rulers brought precious stones, and spices, and oil,' and all the
+expensive things that were needed. The large subscriptions are at
+the bottom of the list, and the smaller ones are in the place of
+honour. All this just teaches us this--what a host of things of all
+degrees of preciousness in men's eyes go to make God's great
+building!
+
+So various were the requirements of the work on hand. Each man's
+gift was needed, and each in its place was equally necessary. The
+jewels on the high-priest's breastplate were no more nor less
+essential than the wood that made some peg for a curtain, or than
+the cheap goat's-hair yarn that was woven into the coarse cloth
+flung over the roof of the Tabernacle to keep the wet out. All had
+equal consecration, because all made one whole. All was equally
+precious, if all was given with the same spirit. So there is room
+for all sorts of work in Christ's great house, where there are not
+only 'vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth,'
+and all 'unto honour ... meet for the Master's use.' The smallest
+deed that co-operates to a great end is great. 'The more feeble are
+necessary.' Every one may find a corner where his special possession
+will work into the general design. If I have no jewels to give, I
+can perhaps find some shittim wood, or, if I cannot manage even
+that, I can at least spin some other person's yarn, even though I
+have only a distaff, and not a loom to weave it in. Many of us can
+do work only when associated with others, and can render best
+service by helping some more highly endowed. But all are needed, and
+welcomed, and honoured, and rewarded. The owner of all the slaves
+sets one to be a water-carrier, and another to be his steward. It is
+of little consequence whether the servant be Paul or Timothy, the
+Apostle or the Apostle's helper. 'He worketh the work of the Lord,
+as I also do,' said the former about the latter. All who are
+associated in the same service are on one level.
+
+I remember once being in the treasury of a royal palace. There was a
+long gallery in which the Crown valuables were stored. In one
+compartment there was a great display of emeralds, and diamonds, and
+rubies, and I know not what, that had been looted from some Indian
+rajah or other. And in the next case there lay a common quill pen,
+and beside it a little bit of discoloured coarse serge. The pen had
+signed some important treaty, and the serge was a fragment of a flag
+that had been borne triumphant from a field where a nation's
+destinies had been sealed. The two together were worth a farthing at
+the outside, but they held their own among the jewels, because they
+spoke of brain-work and bloodshed in the service of the king. Many
+strangely conjoined things lie side by side in God's jewel-cases.
+Things which people vulgarly call large and valuable, and what
+people still more vulgarly call small and worthless, have a way of
+getting together there. For in that place the arrangement is not
+according to what the thing would fetch if it were sold, but what
+was the thought in the mind and the emotion in the heart which gave
+it. Jewels and camel's hair yarn and gold and silver are all massed
+together. Wood is wanted for the Temple quite as much as gold and
+silver and precious stones.
+
+So, whatever we have, let us bring that; and whatever we are, let us
+bring that. If we be poor and our work small, and our natures
+limited, and our faculties confined, it does not matter. A man is
+accepted 'according to that he hath, and not according to that he
+hath not.' God does not ask how much we have given or done, if we
+have given or done what we could. But He does ask how much we have
+kept back, and takes strict account of the unsurrendered
+possessions, the unimproved opportunities, the unused powers. He
+gives much who gives all, though his all be little; he gives little
+who gives a part, though the part be much. The motive sanctifies the
+act, and the completeness of the consecration magnifies it. 'Great'
+and 'small' are not words for God's Kingdom, in which the standard
+is not quantity but quality, and quality is settled by the purity of
+the love which prompts the deed, and the consequent thoroughness of
+self-surrender which it expresses. Whoever serves God with a whole
+heart will render to Him a whole strength, and will thus bring Him
+the gifts which He most desires.
+
+
+
+
+THE COPIES OF THINGS IN THE HEAVENS
+
+
+ 'And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 2. On the first
+ day of the first month shalt thou set up the tabernacle
+ of the tent of the congregation. 3. And thou shalt put
+ therein the ark of the testimony, and cover the ark with
+ the vail. 4. And thou shalt bring in the table, and set
+ in order the things that are to be set in order upon it;
+ and thou shalt bring in the candlestick, and light the
+ lamps thereof. 5. And thou shalt set the altar of gold
+ for the incense before the ark of the testimony, and put
+ the hanging of the door to the tabernacle. 6. And thou
+ shalt set the altar of the burnt offering before the
+ door of the tabernacle of the tent of the congregation.
+ 7. And thou shalt set the laver between the tent of the
+ congregation and the altar, and shalt put water therein.
+ 8. And thou shalt set up the court round about, and hang
+ up the hanging at the court gate. 9. And thou shalt take
+ the anointing oil, and anoint the tabernacle, and all
+ that is therein, and shalt hallow it, and all the vessels
+ thereof: and it shall be holy. 10. And thou shalt anoint
+ the altar of the burnt offering, and all his vessels,
+ and sanctify the altar: and it shall be an altar most
+ holy. 11. And thou shalt anoint the laver and his foot,
+ and sanctify it. 12. And thou shalt bring Aaron and his
+ sons unto the door of the tabernacle of the congregation,
+ and wash them with water. 13. And thou shalt put upon
+ Aaron the holy garments, and anoint him, and sanctify
+ him; that he may minister unto me in the priest's office.
+ 14. And thou shalt bring his sons, and clothe them with
+ coats: 15. And thou shalt anoint them, as thou didst
+ anoint their father, that they may minister unto me in
+ the priest's office; for their anointing shall surely
+ be an everlasting priesthood throughout their generations.
+ 16. Thus did Moses: according to all that the Lord
+ commanded him, so did he.'--EXODUS xl. 1-16.
+
+The Exodus began on the night after the fourteenth day of the first
+month. The Tabernacle was set up on the first day of the first
+month; that is, one year, less a fortnight, after the Exodus. Exodus
+xix. 1 shows that the march to Sinai took nearly three months; and
+if to this we add the eighty days of Moses' seclusion on the
+mountain, we get about six months as occupied in preparing the
+materials for the Tabernacle. 'Setting it up' was a short process,
+done in a day. The time specified was ample to get ready a wooden
+framework of small dimensions, with some curtains and coverings of
+woven stuffs. What a glad stir there would be in the camp on that
+New Year's day, when the visible token of God's dwelling in its
+midst first stood there! Our present purpose is simply to try to
+bring out the meaning of the Tabernacle and its furniture. It was
+both a symbol and a type; that is, it expressed in material form
+certain great religious needs and truths; and, just because it did
+so, it pointed onwards to the full expression and satisfaction of
+these in Christ Jesus and His gifts. In other words, it was a
+parable of the requisites for, and the blessings of, communion with
+God.
+
+Note, then, first, the general lesson of the Tabernacle as a whole.
+Its name declares its meaning, 'the tent of meeting' (Rev. Ver.). It
+was the meeting-place of God with man, as the name is explained in
+Exodus xxix. 42, 'where I will meet with you, to speak there unto
+thee.' It is also named simply 'the dwelling'; that is, of God. It
+was pitched in the midst of the camp, like the tent of the king with
+his subjects clustered round him. Other nations had temples, like
+the solemn structures of Egypt; but this slight, movable sanctuary
+was a new thing, and spoke of the continual presence of Israel's
+God, and of His loving condescension in sharing their wandering
+lives, and, like them, dwelling 'within curtains.' It was a visible
+representation of a spiritual fact for the then present; it was a
+parable of the inmost reality of communion between man and God; and
+it was, therefore, a prophecy both of the full realisation of His
+presence among men, in the temple of Christ's body, and of the yet
+future communion of Heaven, which is set before us by the 'great
+voice ... saying, Behold, the tabernacle of God is with men.'
+
+The threefold division into court of the worshippers, holy place for
+the priests, and holiest of all, was not peculiar to the Tabernacle.
+It signifies the separation which, after all nearness, must still
+exist. God is unrevealed after all revelation; afar off, however
+near; shrouded in the utter darkness of the inmost shrine, and only
+approached by the priestly intercessor with the blood of the
+sacrifice. Like all the other arrangements of the Sanctuary, the
+division of its parts declares a permanent truth, which has
+impressed itself on the worship of all nations; and it reveals God's
+way of meeting the need by outward rites for the then present, and
+by the mediation of the great High-Priest in the time to come, whose
+death rent the veil, and whose life will, one day, make the holiest
+place in the heavens patent to our feet.
+
+The enumeration of the furniture of the Tabernacle starts from the
+innermost shrine, and goes outward. It was fit that it should begin
+with God's special abode. The 'holy of holies' was a tiny chamber,
+closed in from light, the form, dimensions, materials, and furniture
+of which were all significant. It measured ten cubits, or fifteen
+feet, every way, thereby expressing, in its cubical form and in the
+predominance of the number ten, stability and completeness. It will
+be remembered that the same cubical form is given to the heavenly
+city, in the Apocalypse, for the same reason. There, in the thick
+darkness, unseen by mortals except for the one approach of the high-
+priest on the day of atonement, dwelt the 'glory' which made light
+in the darkness, and flashed on the gold which covered all things in
+the small shrine.
+
+Our lesson does not speak of cherubim or mercy-seat, but specifies
+only the ark of the testimony. This was a small chest of acacia
+wood, overlaid with gold, and containing the two tables of the law,
+which were called the testimony, as bearing witness to Israel of
+God's will concerning their duty, and as therein bearing witness,
+too, of what He is. Nor must the other part of the witness-bearing
+of the law be left out of view,--that it testifies against the
+transgressors of itself. The ark was the centre-point of the divine
+revelation, the very throne of God; and it is profoundly significant
+that its sole contents should be the tables of stone. Egyptian arks
+contained symbols of their gods, degrading, bestial, and often
+impure; but the true revelation was a revelation, to the moral
+sense, of a Being who loves righteousness. Other faiths had their
+mysteries, whispered in the inmost shrine, which shunned the light
+of the outer courts; but here the revelation within the veil was the
+same as that spoken on the house-tops. Our lesson does not refer to
+the 'mercy seat,' which covered the ark above, and spoke the need
+for, and the provision of, a means whereby the witness of the law
+against the worshipper's sins should be, as it were, hid from the
+face of the enthroned God. The veil which is referred to in verse 3
+was that which hung between the holy of holies and the holy place.
+It did not 'cover the ark,' as the Authorised Version unfortunately
+renders, but 'screened' it, as the Revised Version correctly gives
+it. It blazed with colour and embroidered figures of cherubim. No
+doubt, the colours were symbolical; but it is fancy, rather than
+interpretation, which seeks meanings beyond splendour in the blue
+and purple and crimson and white which were blended in its gorgeous
+folds. What is it which hangs, in ever-shifting hues, between man
+and God? The veil of creation, embroidered by His own hand with
+beauty and life, which are symbolised in the cherubim, the types of
+the animate creation. The two divisions of the Tabernacle, thus
+separated by the veil, correspond to earth and heaven; and that
+application of the symbol is certainly intended, though not
+exclusively.
+
+We step, then, from the mystery of the inner shrine out to the
+comparatively inferior sacredness of the 'holy place,' daily trodden
+by the priests. Three articles stand in it: the table for the so-
+called shew-bread, the great lampstand, and the golden altar of
+incense. Of these, the altar was in the midst, right in the path to
+the holiest place; and on the right, looking to the veil, the table
+of shew-bread; while on the left was the lampstand. These three
+pieces of furniture were intimately connected with each other, and
+represented various aspects of the spiritual character of true
+worshippers. The holy place was eminently the people's, just as the
+most holy place was eminently God's. True, only the priests entered
+it; but they did so on behalf of the nation. We may expect,
+therefore, to find special reference to the human side of worship in
+its equipments; and we do find it. Of the three articles, the altar
+of incense was in idea, as in locality, the centre; and we consider
+it first, though it stands last in our list, suggesting that, in
+coming from the most holy place, the other two would be first
+encountered. The full details of its construction and use are found
+in Exodus xxx. Twice a day sweet incense was burned on it, and no
+other kind of sacrifice was permitted; but once a year it was
+sprinkled, by the high priest, with expiatory blood. The meaning is
+obvious. The symbolism of incense as representing prayer in frequent
+in Scripture, and most natural. What could more beautifully express
+the upward aspirations of the soul, or the delight of God in these,
+than the incense sending up its wreaths of fragrant smoke? Incense
+gives no fragrance nor smoke till it is kindled; and the censer has
+to be constantly swung to keep up the glow, without which there will
+be no 'odour of a sweet smell.' So cold prayers are no prayers, but
+are scentless, and unapt to rise. The heart must be as a coal of
+fire, if the prayer is to come up before God with acceptance. Twice
+a day the incense was kindled; and all day long, no doubt, it
+smouldered, 'a perpetual incense before the Lord.' So, in the life
+of true communion, there should be daily seasons of special
+devotion, and a continual glow. The position of the altar of incense
+was right in the line between the altar of burnt offering, in the
+outer court, and the entrance to the holiest place; by which we are
+taught that acceptable prayer follows on reconciliation by
+sacrifice, and leads into 'the secret place of the Most High.' The
+yearly atonement for the altar taught that evil imperfection cleaves
+to all our devotion, which needs and receives the sprinkling of the
+blood of the great sacrifice.
+
+The great seven-branched candlestick, or lampstand, stood on the
+right of the altar, as the priest looked to the most holy place. Its
+meaning is plain. It is an emblem of the Church as recipient and
+communicative of light, in all the applications of that metaphor, to
+a dark world. As the sacred lamps streamed out their hospitable rays
+into the desert all the night, so God's servants are lights in the
+world. The lamps burned with derived light, which had to be fed as
+well as kindled. So we are lighted by the touch of the great Aaron,
+and His gentle hand tends the smoking wick, and nourishes it to a
+flame. We need the oil of the Spirit to sustain the light. The lamp
+was a clustered light, representing in its metal oneness the formal
+and external unity of Israel. The New Testament unity is of a better
+kind. The seven candlesticks are made one because He walks in the
+midst, not because they are welded on to one stem.
+
+Consistency of symbolism requires that the table of shew-bread
+should, like the altar and the candlestick, express some phase of
+true worship. Its interpretation is less obvious than that of the
+other two. The name means literally 'bread of the face'; that is,
+bread presented to, and ever lying before, God. There are two
+explanations of the meaning. One sees in the offering only a devout
+recognition of God as the author of material blessing, and a
+rendering to Him of His gifts of outward nourishment. In this case,
+the shew-bread would be anomalous, a literality thrust into the
+midst of symbolism. The other explanation keeps up the congruity, by
+taking the material bread, which is the result of God's blessing on
+man's toil, as a symbol of the spiritual results of God's blessing
+on man's spiritual toil, or, in other words, of practical
+righteousness or good works, and conceives that these are offered to
+God, by a strong metaphor, as acceptable food. It is a bold
+representation, but we may quote 'I will sup with him' as proof that
+it is not inadmissible; and it is not more bold than the declaration
+that our obedience is 'an odour of a sweet smell.' So the three
+pieces of furniture in the holy place spoke of the true Israel, when
+cleansed by sacrifice and in communion with God, as instant in
+prayer, continually raying out the light derived from Him, and
+zealous of good works, well-pleasing to God.
+
+We pass outwards, through another veil, and stand in the court,
+which was always open to the people. There, before the door of the
+Tabernacle, was the altar of burnt offering. The order of our
+chapter brings us to it last, but the order of worship brought the
+worshipper to it first. Its distinctive character was that on it the
+blood of the slain sacrifices was offered. It was the place where
+sinful men could begin to meet with God, the foundation of all the
+communion of the inner sanctuary. We need not discuss mere details
+of form and the like. The great lesson taught by the altar and its
+place, is that reconciliation is needed, and is only possible by
+sacrifice. As a symbol it taught every Israelite what his own
+conscience, once awakened, endorsed, that sin must be expiated
+before the sinner and God can walk in concord. As prophecy, it
+assured those whose hearts were touched with longing, that God would
+Himself 'provide the lamb for the burnt offering,' in some way as
+yet unknown. For us it is an intended prefiguration of the great
+work of Jesus Christ. 'We have an altar.' We need that altar at the
+beginning of our fellowship with God, as much as Israel did. A
+Christianity which does not start from the altar of burnt offering
+will never get far into the holy place, nor ever reach that
+innermost shrine where the soul lives and adores, silent before the
+manifest God between the cherubim.
+
+The laver, or basin, was intended for the priests' use, in washing
+hands and feet before ministering at the altar or entering the
+tabernacle. It teaches the necessity for purity, in order to
+priestly service.
+
+Thus these three divisions of the Tabernacle and its court set forth
+the stages in the approach of the soul to God, beginning with the
+reconciling sacrifice and cleansing water, advancing to closer
+communion by prayer, impartation of light received, and offering of
+good works to God, and so entering within the veil into secret
+sweetnesses of union with God, which attains its completeness only
+when we pass from the holy place on earth to the most holy in the
+heavens.
+
+The remainder of the text can only be glanced at in a sentence or
+two. It consists of two parts: the consecration of the Tabernacle
+and its vessels by the anointing oil which, when applied to
+inanimate objects, simply devoted them to sacred uses, and the
+consecration of Aaron and his sons. A fuller account is given in
+Leviticus viii., from which we learn that it was postponed to a
+later period, and accompanied with a more elaborate ritual than that
+prescribed here. That consists of three parts: washing, as
+emblematic of communicated purity; robing, and anointing,--the last
+act signifying, when applied to men, their endowment with so much of
+the divine Spirit as fitted them for their theocratic functions.
+These three things made the 'sanctifying,' or setting apart for
+God's service, of Aaron and his sons. He is consecrated alone, in
+order that his primacy may be clearly indicated. He is consecrated
+by Moses as the higher; then the sons are consecrated with the same
+ceremonial, to indicate the hereditary priesthood, and the equality
+of Aaron's successors with himself. 'They truly were many priests,
+because they were not suffered to continue by reason of death,' and
+provision for their brief tenure of office was embodied in the
+consecration of the sons by the side of the father. Their priesthood
+was only 'everlasting' by continual succession of short-lived
+holders of the office. But the prediction which closes the text has
+had a fulfilment beyond these fleeting, shadowy priests, in Him
+whose priesthood is 'everlasting' and 'throughout all generations.'
+because 'He ever liveth to make intercession' (Heb. vii. 25).
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF LEVITICUS
+
+
+THE BURNT OFFERING A PICTURE AND A PROPHECY
+
+ 'And the Lord called unto Moses, and spake unto him out
+ of the tabernacle of the congregation, saying, 2. Speak
+ unto the children of Israel, and say unto them, If any
+ man of you bring an offering unto the Lord, ye shall
+ bring your offering of the cattle, even of the herd, and
+ of the flock. 3. If his offering be a burnt-sacrifice of
+ the herd, let him offer a male without blemish: he shall
+ offer it of his own voluntary will, at the door of the
+ tabernacle of the congregation before the Lord. 4. And he
+ shall put his hand upon the head of the burnt-offering;
+ and it shall be accepted for him, to make atonement for
+ him. 5. And he shall kill the bullock before the Lord:
+ and the priests, Aaron's sons, shall bring the blood,
+ and sprinkle the blood round about upon the altar that
+ is by the door of the tabernacle of the congregation.
+ 6. And he shall flay the burnt offering, and cut it into
+ his pieces. 7. And the sons of Aaron the priest shall put
+ fire upon the altar, and lay the wood in order upon the
+ fire: 8. And the priests, Aaron's sons, shall lay the
+ parts, the head, and the fat, in order upon the wood that
+ is on the fire which is upon the altar: 9. But his inwards
+ and his legs shall he wash in water: and the priest shall
+ burn all on the altar, to be a burnt sacrifice, an
+ offering made by fire, of a sweet savour unto the Lord.'
+ --LEV. i. 1-9.
+
+In considering the Jewish sacrificial system, it is important to
+distinguish the symbolical from the typical value of the sacrifices.
+The former could scarcely be quite unnoticed by the offerers; but
+the latter was only gradually made plain, was probably never very
+generally seen, and is a great deal clearer to us, in the light of
+Christ, the Antitype, than it could ever have been before His
+coming. As symbols, the sacrifices expressed great eternal truths as
+to spiritual worship and communion, its hindrances, requisites,
+manner, and blessings. They were God's picture-book for these
+children in religious development. As types, they shadowed the work
+of Jesus Christ and its results.
+
+The value of the sacrifices in either aspect is independent of
+modern questions as to their Mosaic origin; for at whatever period
+the Priest's Code was promulgated, it equally bears witness to the
+ruling ideas of the offerings, and, in any case, it was long before
+Christ came, and therefore its prophecy of Him is as supernatural,
+whether Moses or Ezra were its author. I make this remark, not as
+implying that the new theory is not revolutionary, but simply as
+absolving a student of the religious significance of the sacrificial
+system from entering here on questions of date.
+
+The 'burnt offering' stands first in Leviticus for several reasons.
+It was derived from patriarchal times; it was offered twice daily,
+besides frequently on other occasions; and in its significance it
+expressed the complete consecration which should be the habitual
+state of the true worshipper. Its name literally means 'that which
+ascends,' and refers, no doubt, to the ascent of the transformed
+substance of the sacrifice in fire and smoke, as to God. The central
+idea of this sacrifice, then, as gathered from its name and
+confirmed by its manner, is that of the yielding of the whole being
+in self-surrender, and borne up by the flame of intense consecration
+to God. Very beautiful is the variety of material which was
+permitted. The poor man's pair of pigeons went up with as sweet an
+odour as the rich man's young bull. God delights in the consecration
+to Him of ourselves and our powers, no matter whether they be great
+or small, if only the consecration be thorough, and the whole being
+be wrapped in the transforming blaze.
+
+It is worth while to try to realise the strange and to our eyes
+repulsive spectacle of the burnt offering, which is veiled from us
+by its sacred associations. The worshipper leads up his animal by
+some rude halter, and possibly resisting, to the front of the
+Tabernacle, the courts of which he dared not tread, but which was to
+him the dwelling-place of God. There by the altar he stands, and,
+first pressing his hand with force on the victim's head, he then,
+with one swift cut, kills it, and as the warm blood spouts from the
+mangled throat, the attendant priest catches it in a basin, and,
+standing at the two diagonally opposite corners of the altar in
+turn, dashes, with one dexterous twist, half of the contents against
+each, so as to wet two sides of the altar with one throw, and the
+other two with the other. The offerer then flays the reeking
+carcase, tossing the gory hide to the priest as his perquisite, and
+cuts up the sacrifice according to a fixed method. His part of the
+work is done, and he stands by with bloody hands while the priests
+arrange the pieces on the pile on the altar; and soon the odour of
+burning flesh and the thick smoke hanging over the altar tell that
+the rite is complete. What a scene it must have been when, as on
+some great occasions, hundreds of burnt offerings were offered in
+succession! The place and the attendants would look to us liker
+shambles and butchers than God's house and worshippers.
+
+Now, if we inquire into the significance of the offering, it turns on
+two points--expiation and burning. The former it has in common with
+other bloody sacrifices, though it presents features of its own, even
+in regard to expiation. But the latter is peculiar to it, and must
+therefore be taken to be its special teaching. The stages in the whole
+process are five: the presentation, laying on of hands, slaughter,
+sprinkling of blood, and burning of the whole carcase. The first three
+are alike in this and other sacrifices, the fourth is modified here,
+and the last is found here only. Each has its lesson. The offerer has
+himself to bring the animal to the door of the Tabernacle, that he may
+show his willing surrender of a valuable thing. As he stands there with
+his offering, his thoughts would pass into the inner shrine, where God
+dwelt; and he would, if he were a true worshipper, feel that while God,
+on His part, already dwelt in the midst of the people, he, on the other
+hand, can only enter into the enjoyment of His presence by sacrifice.
+The offering was to be 'a male without blemish'; for bodily defect
+symbolising moral flaw could not be tolerated in the offerings to a
+holy God, who requires purity, and will not be put off with less than
+a man's best, be it ox or pigeon. 'The torn and the lame and the sick,'
+which Malachi charged his generation with bringing, are neither worthy
+of God to receive nor of us to offer. When he pressed his hand on the
+head of the sacrifice, what was the worshipper meant to think? In all
+other instances where hands are laid on, some transference or
+communication of gifts or qualities is implied; and it is natural to
+suppose that the same meaning attaches to the act here, with such
+modifications as the case requires. We find that it was done in
+other bloody sacrifices, accompanied with confession. Nothing is
+said of confession here; but we cannot dismiss the idea that the
+offerer laid his sins on the victim by that striking act, especially
+as the very next clause says 'it shall be accepted for him to make
+atonement for him.' The atonement was made, as we shall see, by the
+application of the blood to the altar; but the possibility of the
+victim's blood atoning for the offerer depended on his having laid
+his hands on its head. We may perhaps go farther than 'transference
+of sins.' Might we not widen the expression, and say 'identification,'
+or, to use a word which has become so worn by religious controversy
+that it slips through our fingers unnoticed, 'substitution'? Did not the
+offerer say in effect, by that act, 'This is I? This animal life shall
+die, as I ought to die. It shall go up as a sweet savour to Jehovah,
+as my being should.'
+
+The animal invested with this representative character is next to be
+slain by the offerer, not by the priest, who only performed that
+part of the ritual in the case of national or public sacrifices.
+That was distinctly a vicarious death; and, as inflicted by the hand
+of the person represented by the animal, he thereby acknowledged
+that its death was the wages of his sin, and allowed the justice of
+his condemnation, while he presented this innocent life--innocent
+because not that of a moral being--as his substitute. So far the
+worshipper's part goes. But now, when the act of expiation is to be
+symbolically represented, and, so far as outward sacrifice could, is
+to be accomplished, another actor appears. The priest comes forward
+as mediator between God and man, and applies the blood to the altar.
+The difference between the sprinkling of the blood, in the burnt
+offerings and in the other sacrifices, which had expiation for their
+principal object, in some of which it was smeared on the horns of
+the altar, and, in the most solemn of all, was carried into the
+holiest place, and sprinkled on the mercy-seat, suggests that the
+essential character of the burnt offering was not expiatory, though
+expiation was the foundation on which alone the essential character
+could be reared. The application of the blood was the formal act by
+which atonement was made. The word rendered 'to make atonement'
+means 'to cover'; and the idea conveyed is that the blood, which is
+the life of the sacrifice, covers the sins of the offerer, so as to
+make them powerless to dam back the love or to precipitate the wrath
+of God.
+
+With this act the expiatory portion of the ritual ends, and we may
+here pause to look back for a moment on it as a whole. We have
+pointed out the double bearings of the Mosaic ritual as symbolical
+and as typical or prophetic. In the former aspect, the emphatic
+teaching of this rite is that 'the wages of sin is death,' that
+'without shedding of blood there is no remission,' that God has
+appointed sacrifice as the means of entering into fellowship with
+Him, and that substitution and vicarious penalty are facts in His
+government. We may like or dislike these thoughts; we may call them
+gross, barbarous, immoral, and the like, but, at all events, we
+ought not to deny that they are ingrained in the Mosaic sacrificial
+system, which becomes unmeaning elaboration of empty and often
+repulsive ceremonies, if they are not recognised as its very centre.
+Of course, the meaning of the sacrifices was hidden from many a
+worshipper. They became opaque instead of transparent, and hid the
+great truth which they were meant to reveal. All forms labour under
+that disadvantage; but that they were significant in design, and
+largely so to devout hearts in effect, admits of no reasonable
+doubt. That which they signified was chiefly the putting away of sin
+by the sacrifice of innocent life, which stood in the place of the
+guilty. Of course, too, their benefit was symbolical, and the blood
+of bulls and goats could never put away sin; but, under the shelter
+of the outward forms, a more spiritual insight gradually grew up,
+such as breathes in many a psalm, and such as, we cannot doubt,
+filled the heart of many a worshipper, as he stood by the bleeding
+sacrifice on which his own hands had laid the burden that had
+weighed so heavy on himself. How far the prophetic aspect of the
+sacrifices was discerned, is a more difficult question. But this at
+least we know--that the highest level of evangelical prophecy, in
+Isaiah's wonderful fifty-third chapter, is reached from this
+vantage-ground. It is the flower of which these ordinances are the
+root. We need not enlarge upon the prophetic aspect of the
+sacrifice. The mere negative sinlessness of the victim points to the
+'Lamb without blemish and without spot,' on whom, as Isaiah says, in
+language dyed through and through with sacrificial references, 'the
+Lord hath made to meet the iniquity of us all,' and who Himself
+makes 'His soul an offering for sin.' The modern tendency to bring
+down the sacrificial system to a late date surely sins against the
+sacred and all-explaining law of evolution, in the name of which it
+is attempted, inasmuch as it is an unheard-of thing for the earlier
+stages of a religion to be less clogged with ceremonial than the
+later. Psalmist and prophet first, and priest afterwards, is not the
+order of development.
+
+The remaining part of the ritual was, as we have pointed out,
+peculiar to the burnt offering. In it alone the whole of the
+sacrifice was consumed on the altar, with the exceptions of the
+skin, which was given to the priest, and of the contents of the
+intestines. Hence it was sometimes called 'a whole burnt offering.'
+The meaning of this provision may be apprehended if we note that the
+word rendered 'burn,' in verse 9, is not that which simply implies
+destruction by fire, but is a peculiar word, reserved for
+sacrificial burnings, and meaning 'to cause to ascend in smoke or
+vapour.' The gross flesh was, as it were, refined into vapour and
+odour, and went up to God as 'a sweet savour.' It expressed,
+therefore, the transformation of the sinful human nature of the
+worshipper, by the refining power of the fire of God, into something
+more ethereal and kindred with the heaven to which it rose. Or, to
+put the thought in plainer words, on the basis of expiation, the
+glad surrender of the whole being is possible and will ensue; and
+when a man yields himself in joyful self-surrender to the God who
+has forgiven his sins, then the fire of the divine Spirit is shed
+abroad in his heart, and kindles a flame which lays hold on all the
+gross, earthly elements of his being, and changes them into fire,
+kindred with itself, which aspires, in ruddy tongues of upward-
+leaping light, to the God to whom the heart has been surrendered,
+and to whom the whole being tends.
+
+This is the purpose of expiation; this is the summit of all
+religion. One man has realised to the full, in his life, what the
+burnt offering taught as the goal for all worshippers. Jesus has
+lived in the constant exercise of perfect self-surrender, and in the
+constant unmeasured possession of 'the Spirit of burning,' with
+which He has come to baptize us all. If we look to Him as our
+expiation, we should also find in Him the power to yield ourselves
+'living sacrifices,' and draw from Him the sacred and refining fire,
+which shall transform our grossness into His likeness, and make even
+us 'acceptable to God, through Jesus Christ.'
+
+
+
+
+STRANGE FIRE
+
+
+ 'And Nadab and Abihu, the sons of Aaron, took either of
+ them his censer, and put fire therein, and put incense
+ thereon, and offered strange fire before the Lord, which
+ He commanded them not. 2. And there went out fire from
+ the Lord, and devoured them, and they died before the
+ Lord. 3. Then Moses said unto Aaron, This is it that
+ the Lord spake, saying, I will be sanctified in them
+ that come nigh Me, and before all the people I will be
+ glorified. And Aaron held his peace. 4. And Moses called
+ Mishael and Elzaphan, the sons of Uzziel the uncle of
+ Aaron, and said unto them, Come near, carry your brethren
+ from before the sanctuary out of the camp. 5. So they went
+ near, and carried them in their coats out of the camp; as
+ Moses had said. 6. And Moses said unto Aaron, and unto
+ Eleazar and unto Ithamar, his sons. Uncover not your
+ heads, neither rend your clothes; lest ye die, and lest
+ wrath come upon all the people: but let your brethren,
+ the whole house of Israel, bewail the burning which the
+ Lord hath kindled. 7. And ye shall not go out from the
+ door of the tabernacle of the congregation, lest ye die:
+ for the anointing oil of the Lord is upon you. And they
+ did according to the word of Moses. 8. And the Lord
+ spake unto Aaron, saying, 9. Do not drink wine nor strong
+ drink, thou, nor thy sons with thee, when ye go into the
+ tabernacle of the congregation, lest ye die: it shall be
+ a statute for ever throughout your generations; 10. And
+ that ye may put difference between holy and unholy, and
+ between unclean and clean; 11. And that ye may teach the
+ children of Israel all the statutes which the Lord hath
+ spoken unto them by the hand of Moses.'--LEV. x. 1-11.
+
+This solemn story of sin and punishment is connected with the
+preceding chapter by a simple 'and.' Probably, therefore, Nadab and
+Abihu 'offered strange fire,' immediately after the fire from
+Jehovah had consumed the appointed sacrifice. Their sin was
+aggravated by the time of its being committed. But a week had passed
+since the consecration of their father and themselves as priests.
+The first sacrifices had just been offered, and here, in the very
+blossoming time, came a vile canker. If such licence in setting
+aside the prescriptions of the newly established sacrificial order
+asserted itself then, to what lengths might it not run when the
+first impression of sanctity and of God's commandment had been worn
+by time and custom? The sin was further aggravated by the sinners
+being priests, who were doubly obliged to punctilious adherence to
+the instituted ritual. If they set the example of contempt, would
+not the people better (or, rather, worsen) their instruction?
+
+Unquestionably, their punishment was awfully severe. But we shall
+entirely misconceive their sin if we judge it by our standards. We
+are not dependent on forms as Israel was, but the spiritual religion
+of Christianity was only made possible by the externalism of the
+older system. The sweet kernel would not have softened and become
+juicy without the shelter of the hard shell. Scaffolding is needed
+to erect a building; and he is not a wise man who either despises or
+would keep permanently standing the scaffold poles.
+
+We draw a broad distinction between positive commandments and moral
+or religious obligations. But in the Mosaic legislation that
+distinction does not exist. There, all precepts are God's uttered
+will, and all disobedience is rebellion against Him. Nor could it be
+otherwise at the stage of development which Israel had reached.
+
+What, then, was the crime of these two rash sons of Aaron? That
+involves two questions: What did they do? and What was the sin of
+doing it? The former question may be answered in various ways.
+Certainly the designation of 'strange fire' seems best explained by
+the usual supposition that it means fire not taken from the altar.
+The other explanations, which make the sin to have been offering at
+an unauthorised time, or offering incense not compounded according
+to the prescription, give an unnatural meaning to the phrase. It was
+the 'fire' which was wrong,--that is, it was 'fire which they had
+kindled,' caught up from some common culinary hearth, or created by
+themselves in some way.
+
+What was their sin in thus offering it? Plainly, the narrative
+points to the essence of the crime in calling it 'fire which He had
+not commanded.' So this was their crime, that they were tampering
+with the appointed order which but a week before they had been
+consecrated to conserve and administer; that they were thus
+thrusting in self-will and personal caprice, as of equal authority
+with the divine commandment; that they were arrogating the right to
+cut and carve God's appointments, as the whim or excitement of the
+moment dictated; and that they were doing their best to obliterate
+the distinction on the preservation of which religion, morality, and
+the national existence depended; namely, the distinction between
+holy and common, clean and unclean. To plough that distinction deep
+into the national consciousness was no small part of the purpose of
+the law; and here were two of its appointed witnesses disregarding
+it, and flying in its face. The flash of holy fire consuming the
+sacrifices had scarcely faded off their eyeballs when they thus
+sinned.
+
+They have had many successors, not only in Israel, while a ritual
+demanding punctilious conformity lasted, but in Christendom since.
+Alas! our censers are often flaming with 'strange fire.' How much
+so-called Christian worship glows with self-will or with partisan
+zeal! When we seek to worship God for what we can get, when we rush
+into His presence with hot, eager desires which we have not
+subordinated to His will, we are burning 'strange fire which He has
+not commanded.' The only fire which should kindle the incense in our
+censers, and send it up to heaven in fragrant wreaths, is fire
+caught from the altar of sacrifice. God must kindle the flame in our
+hearts if we are to render these else cold hearts to Him.
+
+ 'The prayers I bring will then be sweet indeed
+ If Thou the Spirit give, by which I pray.'
+
+The swift, terrible punishment does indeed bear marks of the
+severity of that earlier stage of revelation. But it was not
+disproportioned to the offence, and it was not the cruelty of a
+martinet who avenged ceremonial lapses with penalties which should
+have been kept for moral offences. The surface of the sin was
+ceremonial impropriety: the heart of it was flouting Jehovah and His
+law. It was better that two men should die, and the whole nation
+perish not, as it would have done if their example had been
+followed. It is mercy to trample out the first sparks beside a
+powder-barrel.
+
+There is a very striking parallel between verse 2 and the last verse
+of the preceding chapter. In both the same expression is used,
+'There came forth fire from before the Lord, and consumed' (the word
+rendered _devoured_ in verse 2 is the same in Hebrew as _consumed_). So,
+then, the same divine fire, which had graciously signified God's
+acceptance of the appointed sacrifice, now flashed out with lightning-like
+power of destruction, and killed the two rebel priests. There is dormant
+potency of destruction in the God who reveals Himself as gracious. The
+'wrath of the Lamb' is as real as His gentleness. The Gospel is 'the
+savour of life unto life' and 'of death unto death.'
+
+Moses' word to the stunned father is of a piece with the severity of
+the whole incident. No voice of condolence or sympathy comes from
+him. The brother is swallowed up in the lawgiver. He puts into words
+the meaning of the terrible stroke, and expects Aaron to acquiesce,
+though his heart bleeds. What was his interpretation? He saw in it
+God's purpose to be 'sanctified in them that come nigh Him.' The
+priests were these. Nadab and Abihu had been consecrated for the
+purpose of enforcing the truth of God's holiness. They had done the
+very opposite, by breaking down the distinction between sacred and
+common.
+
+But their nearness to God brought with it not only corresponding
+obligations, but corresponding criminality and penalty, if these
+obligations were not discharged. If God is not 'sanctified'
+_by_ His servants, He will sanctify Himself _on_ them. If His people
+do not set forth His infinite separation from all evil and elevation
+above all creatures, He will proclaim these truths in lightning that
+kills and thunder that roars. It is a universal law which Moses sternly
+spoke to Aaron instead of comfort, bidding him recognise the necessity
+of the fearful blow to his paternal heart. 'You only have I known of all
+the families of the earth, therefore I will punish you for all your
+iniquities.'
+
+The prohibition to Aaron and his sons to show signs of mourning is
+as stern as the rest of the story, and serves to insist upon the
+true point of view from which to regard it. For the official
+representatives of the divine order of worship to mourn the deaths
+of its assailants would have seemed to indicate their murmuring at
+God's judgments, and might have led them to participate in the sin
+while they lamented its punishment. It is hard to mourn and not to
+repine. Affection blinds to the ill-desert of its objects. Nadab's
+and Abihu's stark corpses lying in the forecourt of the sanctuary,
+and Aaron's dry eyes and undisturbed attire, proclaim the same
+truths,--the gravity of the dead men's sin, and the righteous
+judgment of God. But the people might sorrow, for _their_
+mourning would help to imprint on them more deeply the lessons of
+the dread event.
+
+While the victims' cousins carried their bodies to their graves in
+the sand, their father and brothers had to remain in the Tabernacle,
+because 'the anointing oil of Jehovah is upon you.' That oil, as the
+symbol of the Spirit, separates those on whom it is poured from all
+contact with death, from participation in sin, from the weight of
+sorrow. What have immortality, righteousness, joy in the Holy Ghost,
+to do with these dark shadows? Those whom God has called to His
+immediate service must hold themselves apart from earthly passions,
+and must control natural affection, if indulging it imperils their
+clear witness to God's righteous will.
+
+The prohibition (verses 8-11) of wine and strong drink during the
+discharge of the priestly functions seems to suggest that Nadab and
+Abihu had committed their sin while in some degree intoxicated. Be
+that as it may, the prohibition is rested upon the necessity of
+preserving, in all its depth and breadth, the distinction between
+common and holy which Nadab and Abihu had broken down. That
+distinction was to be very present to the priest in his work, and
+how could he have the clearness of mind, the collectedness and
+composure, the sense of the sanctity of his office, and
+ministrations which it requires and gives, if he was under the
+influence of strong drink?
+
+Nothing has more power to blur the sharpness of moral and religious
+insight than even a small amount of alcohol. God must be worshipped
+with clear brain and naturally beating heart. Not the fumes of wine,
+in which there lurks almost necessarily the tendency to 'excess,'
+but the being 'filled with the Spirit' supplies the only legitimate
+stimulus to devotion. Besides the personal reason for abstinence,
+there was another,--namely, that only so could the priests teach the
+people 'the statutes' of Jehovah. Lips stained from the wine-cup
+would not be fit to speak holy words. Words spoken by such would
+carry no power.
+
+God's servants can never impress on the sluggish conscience of
+society their solemn messages from God, unless they are
+conspicuously free from self-indulgence, and show by their example
+the gulf, wide as between heaven and hell, which parts cleanness
+from uncleanness. Our lives must witness to the eternal distinction
+between good and evil, if we are to draw men to 'abhor that which is
+evil, and cleave to that which is good.'
+
+
+
+
+THE FIRST STAGE IN THE LEPER'S CLEANSING
+
+
+ 'And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 2. This shall be
+ the law of the leper in the day of his cleansing: He
+ shall be brought unto the priest: 3. And the priest
+ shall go forth out of the camp; and the priest shall
+ look, and, behold, if the plague of leprosy be healed
+ in the leper; 4. Then shall the priest command to take
+ for him that is to be cleansed two birds alive and clean,
+ and cedar-wood, and scarlet, and hyssop: 5. And the
+ priest shall command that one of the birds be killed
+ in an earthen vessel over running water: 6. As for the
+ living bird, he shall take it, and the cedar-wood, and
+ the scarlet, and the hyssop, and shall dip them and the
+ living bird in the blood of the bird that was killed over
+ the running water: 7. And he shall sprinkle upon him that
+ is to be cleansed from the leprosy seven times, and shall
+ pronounce him clean, and shall let the living bird loose
+ into the open field.'--LEV. xiv. 1-7.
+
+The whole treatment of leprosy is parabolic. Leprosy itself is a
+'parable of death.' The horrible loathsomeness, the contagiousness,
+the non-curableness, etc. So the man was shut out from camp and from
+sanctuary. There was a double process in the cleansing rite,
+restoring to each.
+
+I. Sketch the ceremonial. Two birds, one slain over a vessel of
+water so that its blood drained in. Then the living bird was to be
+dipped into this water and blood, along with cedar, scarlet, and
+hyssop, and the man sprinkled seven times and the living bird set
+loose.
+
+II. The significance. This elaborate symbolism was partly
+intelligible even then. Two birds, like the two goats on the
+Atonement Day. Did both in some sense symbolise the man? The first
+one was not exactly a sacrifice. Its death points to the physical
+death which was the end of the disease, but also in some sense its
+death symbolised the death by which cleansing was secured.
+
+_(a)_ The purifying water is made by blood added to it, i.e.
+cleansing by sacrifice.
+
+'By water and by blood.'
+
+_(b)_ The sevenfold sprinkling. The cedar, symbol of
+incorruptibility; the scarlet, of full vital energy; the hyssop, of
+purifying. So the thought was suggested of the communication of
+cleansing, full health and incorruption, undecaying strength; all
+physical contrasts to leprosy sevenfold.
+
+_(c)_ The free, glad activity. The freed bird. The restored
+leper.
+
+
+
+
+THE DAY OF ATONEMENT
+
+
+ 'And the Lord spake unto Moses after the death of the
+ two sons of Aaron when they offered before the Lord,
+ and died; 2. And the Lord said unto Moses, Speak unto
+ Aaron thy brother, that he come not at all times into
+ the holy place within the vail before the mercy-seat,
+ which is upon the ark; that he die not: for I will appear
+ in the cloud upon the mercy-seat. 3. Thus shall Aaron
+ come into the holy place; with a young bullock for a sin
+ offering, and a ram for a burnt offering. 4. He shall
+ put on the holy linen coat, and he shall have the linen
+ breeches upon his flesh, and shall be girded with a linen
+ girdle, and with the linen mitre shall he be attired:
+ these are holy garments; therefore shall he wash his
+ flesh in water, and so put them on. 5. And he shall take
+ of the congregation of the children of Israel two kids
+ of the goats for a sin offering, and one ram for a burnt
+ offering. 6. And Aaron shall offer his bullock of the
+ sin offering, which is for himself, and make an atonement
+ for himself, and for his house. 7. And he shall take the
+ two goats, and present them before the Lord at the door
+ of the tabernacle of the congregation. 8. And Aaron
+ shall cast lots upon the two goats; one lot for the
+ Lord, and the other lot for the scapegoat. 9. And Aaron
+ shall bring the goat upon which the Lord's lot fell, and
+ offer him for a sin offering: 10. But the goat, on which
+ the lot fell to be the scapegoat, shall be presented
+ alive before the Lord, to make an atonement with Him,
+ and to let him go for a scapegoat into the wilderness.
+ 11. And Aaron shall bring the bullock of the sin offering
+ which is for himself, and shall make an atonement for
+ himself, and for his house, and shall kill the bullock
+ of the sin offering which is for himself. 12. And he
+ shall take a censer full of burning coals of fire from
+ off the altar before the Lord, and his hands full of
+ sweet incense beaten small, and bring it within the vail:
+ 13. And he shall put the incense upon the fire before the
+ Lord, that the cloud of the incense may cover the
+ mercy-seat that is upon the testimony, that he die not:
+ 14. And he shall take of the blood of the bullock, and
+ sprinkle it with his finger upon the mercy-seat eastward;
+ and before the mercy-seat shall he sprinkle of the blood
+ with his finger seven times. 15. Then shall he kill the
+ goat of the sin offering, that is for the people, and
+ bring his blood within the vail, and do with that blood
+ as he did with the blood of the bullock, and sprinkle it
+ upon the mercy-seat, and before the mercy-seat. 16. And
+ he shall make an atonement for the holy place, because
+ of the uncleanness of the children of Israel, and because
+ of their transgressions in all their sins: and so shall
+ he do for the tabernacle of the congregation, that
+ remaineth among them in the midst of their uncleanness.
+ 17. And there shall be no man in the tabernacle of the
+ congregation when he goeth in to make an atonement in
+ the holy place, until he come out, and have made an
+ atonement for himself, and for his household, and for
+ all the congregation of Israel. 18. And he shall go out
+ unto the altar that is before the Lord, and make an
+ atonement for it; and shall take of the blood of the
+ bullock, and of the blood of the goat, and put it upon
+ the horns of the altar round about. 19. And he shall
+ sprinkle of the blood upon it with his finger seven
+ times, and cleanse it, and hallow it from the uncleanness
+ of the children of Israel.'--LEV. xvi. 1-19.
+
+The Talmudical treatise on the ritual of the day of atonement is
+entitled 'Yoma,' _the_ day, which sufficiently expresses its
+importance in the series of sacrificial observances. It was the
+confession of the incompleteness of them all, a ceremonial
+proclamation that ceremonies do not avail to take away sin; and it
+was also a declaration that the true end of worship is not reached
+till the worshipper has free access to the holy place of the Most
+High. Thus the prophetic element is the very life-breath of this
+supreme institution of the old covenant, which therein acknowledges
+its own defects, and feeds the hopes of a future better thing. We do
+not here consider the singular part of the ritual of the Day of
+Atonement which is concerned with the treatment of the so-called
+'scapegoat' but confine ourselves to the consideration of that part
+of it which was observed in the Tabernacle and was intended to
+expiate the sins of the priesthood and of the people. The chapter
+connects the rites of the Day of Atonement with the tragic death of
+the sons of Aaron, which witnessed to the sanctity of the inner
+shrine, as not to be trodden but with the appointed offerings by the
+appointed priest; and so makes the whole a divinely given
+instruction as to the means by which, and the objects for which,
+Aaron may enter within the veil.
+
+I. In verses 3-10 we have the preliminaries of the sacrifices and a
+summary of the rites. First, Aaron was to bathe, and then to robe
+himself in pure white. The dress is in singular contrast to the
+splendour of his usual official costume, in which he stood before
+men as representing God, and evidently signifies the purity which
+alone fits for entrance into the awful presence. Thus vested, he
+brings the whole of the animals to be sacrificed to the altar,--namely,
+for himself and his order, a bullock and a ram; for the people, two
+goats and a ram. The goats are then taken by him to the door of the
+tent,--and it is to be observed that they are spoken of as both
+constituting one sin offering (v. 5). They therefore both belong to
+the Lord, and are, in some important sense, one, as was recognised by
+the later Rabbinical prescription that they should be alike in colour,
+size, and value. The appeal to the lot was an appeal to God to decide
+the parts they were respectively to sustain in a transaction which,
+in both parts, was really one. The consideration of the meaning of
+the ritual for the one which was led away may be postponed for the
+present. The preliminaries end with the casting of the lots, and in
+later times, with tying the ominous red fillet on the head of the dumb
+creature for which so weird a fate was in store.
+
+II. The first part of the ritual proper (vs. 11-14) is the expiation
+for the sins of Aaron and the priesthood, and his entrance into the
+most holy place. The bullock was slain in the usual manner of the
+sin offering, but its blood was destined for a more solemn use. The
+white-robed priest took a censer of burning embers from the altar
+before the tent-door, and two hands full of incense, and, thus
+laden, passed into the Tabernacle. How the silent crowd in the outer
+court would watch the last flutter of the white robe as it was lost
+in the gloom within! He passed through the holy place, which, on
+every day but this, was the limit of his approach; but, on this one
+day, he lifted the curtain, and entered the dark chamber, where the
+glory flashed from the golden walls and rested above the ark. Would
+not his heart beat faster as he laid his hand on the heavy veil, and
+caught the first gleam of the calm light from the Shechinah? As soon
+as he entered, he was to cast the incense into the censer, that the
+fragrant cloud might cover the mercy-seat. Incense is the symbol of
+prayer, and that curling cloud is a picture of the truth that the
+purest of men, even the anointed priest, robed in white, who has
+offered sacrifices daily all the year round, and today has anxiously
+obeyed all the commands of ceremonial cleanliness, can yet only draw
+near to God as a suppliant, not entering there as having a right of
+access, but beseeching entrance as undeserved mercy. The incense did
+not cover 'the glory' that Aaron might not gaze upon it, but it
+covered him that Jehovah might not look on his sin. It would appear
+that, between verse 13 and verse 14, Aaron's leaving the most holy
+place to bring the blood of the sacrifice must be understood. If so,
+we can fancy the long-drawn sigh of relief with which the waiting
+worshippers saw him return, and carry back into the shrine the
+expiating blood. The 'most holy place' would still be filled and its
+atmosphere thick with the incense fumes when he returned to perform
+the solemn expiation for himself and the whole priestly order. Once
+the blood was sprinkled on the mercy-seat, and seven times,
+apparently, on the ground in front of it. The former act was
+intended, as seems probable, to make atonement for the sins of the
+priesthood; the latter, to cleanse the sanctuary from the ideal
+defilements arising from their defective and sinful ministrations.
+
+This completed the part of the ceremonial which belonged immediately
+to Aaron and the priests. It carries important lessons. Could there
+be a more striking exhibition of their imperfect realisation of the
+idea of the priestly office? Observe the anomaly inherent in the
+very necessity of the case. Aaron was dressed in the white robes
+emblematic of purity; he had partaken in the benefit of, and had
+himself offered, sacrifices all the year round. So far as ritual
+could go, he was pure, and yet so stained with sin that he dared not
+enter into the divine presence without that double safeguard of the
+incense and the blood. The priest who cleanses others is himself
+unclean, and he and his fellows have tainted the sanctuary by the
+very services which were meant to atone and to purify. That solemn
+ritual is intended to teach priest and people alike, that every
+priest 'taken from among men' fails in his office, and pollutes the
+temple instead of purifying the worshipper. But the office was God's
+appointment, and therefore would not always be filled by men too
+small and sinful for its requirements. There must somewhere and
+somewhen be a priest who will be one indeed, fulfilling the divine
+ideal of the functions, and answering the deep human longings which
+have expressed themselves in all lands, for one, pure with no
+ceremonial but a real purity, to bring us to God and God to us, to
+offer sacrifice which shall need no after atonement to expiate its
+defects, and to stand without incense or blood of sprinkling for
+himself in the presence of God for us. The imperfections of the
+human holders of the Old Testament offices, whether priest, prophet,
+or king, were no less prophecies than their positive qualifications
+were. Therefore, when we see Aaron passing into the holy place, we
+see the dim shadow of Christ, who 'needeth not to make atonement'
+for His own sins, and is our priest 'for ever.'
+
+III. The ritual for the atonement of the sins of the people follows.
+The two goats had been, during all this time, standing at the door
+of the Tabernacle. We have already pointed out that they are to be
+considered as one sacrifice. There are two of them, for the same
+reason, as has been often remarked, as there were two birds in the
+ritual of cleansing the leper; namely, because one animal could not
+represent the two parts of the one whole truth which they are meant
+to set forth. The one was sacrificed as a sin offering, and the
+other led away into a solitary land. Here we consider the meaning of
+the former only, which presents no difficulty. It is a sin offering
+for the people, exactly corresponding to that just offered for the
+priests. The same use is made of the blood, which is once sprinkled
+by Aaron on the mercy-seat and seven times on the ground before it,
+as in the former case. It is not, however, all employed there, but
+part of it is carried out into the other divisions of the
+Tabernacle; and first, the holy place, which the priests daily
+entered and which is called in verse 16 'the tent of meeting,' and
+next, the altar of burnt offering in the outer court, are in like
+manner sprinkled seven times with the blood, to 'hallow' them 'from
+the uncleanness of the children of Israel' (verse 19). The teaching
+of this rite, in its bearing upon the people, is similar to that of
+the previous priestly expiation. The insufficiency of sacrificial
+cleansing is set forth by this annual atonement for sins which had
+all been already atoned for. The defects of a ritual worship are
+proclaimed by the ritual which cleanses the holy places from the
+uncleanness contracted by them from the worshippers. If the altar,
+the seat of expiation, itself needed expiation, how imperfect its
+worth must be! If the cleansing fountain is foul, how shall it be
+cleansed, or how shall it cleanse the offerers? The bearing of the
+blood of expiation into the most holy place, where no Israelite ever
+entered, save the high priest, taught that the true expiation could
+only be effected by one who should pass into the presence of God,
+and leave the door wide open for all to enter. For surely the
+distance between the worshippers and the mercy-seat was a confession
+of imperfection; and the entrance there of the representative of the
+sinful people was the holding out of a dim hope that in some
+fashion, yet unknown, the veil would be rent, and true communion be
+possible for the humble soul. The Epistle to the Hebrews tells us
+where we are to look for the realities of which these ceremonies
+were the foreshadowings. The veil was rent at the crucifixion.
+Christ has gone into 'the secret place of the Most High,' and if we
+love Him, our hearts have gone with Him, and our lives are 'hid with
+Him, in God.'
+
+
+
+
+'THE SCAPEGOAT'
+
+
+ 'And the goat shall bear upon him all their iniquities
+ unto a land not inhabited....'-LEV. xvi. 22.
+
+The import of the remarkable treatment of this goat does not depend
+on the interpretation of the obscure phrase rendered in the
+Authorised Version 'for the scapegoat.' Leaving that out of sight
+for the moment, we observe that the two animals were one sacrifice,
+and that the transaction with the living one was the completion of
+that with the slain. The sins of the congregation, which had been
+already expiated by the sacrifice, were laid by the high priest on
+the head of the goat, which was then sent away into the wilderness
+that he might 'bear upon him all their iniquities unto a land not
+inhabited' (v. 22). Nothing depends on the fate of the goat, though,
+in after times, it was forced over a precipice and so killed. The
+carrying away of expiated sin, and not the destruction of unexpiated
+sinners, is the meaning of the impressive rite, and, had it been
+possible, the same goat that was sacrificed would have been sent
+into the desert. As that could not be done, an ideal unity was
+established between the two: the one sacrificed represented the fact
+of expiation, the one driven away represented the consequences of
+expiation in the complete removal of sin. The expiation was made
+'within the veil'; but a visible token of its completeness was given
+to help feeble faith, in the blessed mystery of the unseen
+propitiation. What was divided in the symbol between the twin goats
+is all done by the one Sacrifice, who has entered into the holiest
+of all, at once Priest and Sacrifice, and with His own blood made
+expiation for sin, and has likewise carried away the sin of the
+world into a land of forgetfulness, whence it never can return.
+
+The clear meaning of the rite is thus obtained, whatever be the
+force of the difficult phrase already referred to. 'Scapegoat' is
+certainly wrong. But it may be questioned whether the Revised
+Version is right in retaining the Hebrew word untranslated, and, by
+putting a capital letter to it, marking it as a proper name ('for
+Azazel'). The word occurs only here, so that we have no help from
+other passages. It seems to come from a root meaning 'to drive
+away,' and those who take it to be a proper name, generally suppose
+it to refer to some malignant spirit, or to Satan, and interpret it
+as meaning 'a fiend whom one drives away,' or, sometimes, 'who
+drives away.' The vindication of such an interpretation is supposed
+to lie in the necessity of finding a complete antithesis in the
+phrase to the 'for Jehovah' of the previous clause in verse 8. But
+it is surely sacrificing a good deal to rhetorical propriety to drag
+in an idea so foreign to the Pentateuch, and so opposed to the plain
+fact, that both goats were one sin offering (v. 5), in order to get
+a pedantically correct antithesis. In the absence of any guidance
+from usage, certainty as to the meaning of the word is unattainable.
+But there seems no reason, other than that of the said antithesis,
+against taking it to mean removal or dismissal, rather than 'a
+remover.' The Septuagint translates it in both ways: as a person in
+verse 8, and as 'sending away' in verse 10. If the latter meaning be
+adopted, then the word just defines the same purpose as is given
+more at length in verse 22, namely, the carrying away of the sins of
+the congregation. The logical imperfection of the opposition in
+verse 8 would then be simply enough solved by the fact that while
+both goats were 'for the Lord,' one was destined to be actually
+offered in sacrifice, and the other to be 'for dismissal.' The
+incomplete contrast testifies to the substantial unity of the two,
+and needs no introduction, into the most sacred rite of the old
+covenant, of a ceremony which looks liker demon-worship than a
+parable of the great expiation for a world's sins.
+
+The question for us is, What spiritual ideas are contained in this
+Levitical symbolism? There is signified, surely, the condition of
+approach to God. Remember how the Israelites had impressed on their
+minds the awful sanctity of 'within the veil.' The inmost shrine was
+trodden once a year only by the high priest, and only after anxious
+lustrations and when clothed in pure garments, he entered 'with
+sacrifice and incense lest he die.' This ritual was for a gross and
+untutored age, but the men of that age were essentially like
+ourselves, and we have the same sins and spiritual necessities as
+they had.
+
+The two goats are regarded as _one_ sacrifice. They are a 'sin
+offering.' Hence, to show how unimportant and non-essential is the
+distinction between them, the 'lot' is employed; also, while the one
+is being slain, the other stands before the 'door of the
+Tabernacle.' This shows that both are parts of one whole, and it is
+only from the impossibility of presenting both halves of the truth
+to be symbolised in one that two are taken. The one which is slain
+represents the sacrifice for sin. The other represents the effects
+of that sacrifice. It is never heard of more. 'The Lamb of God
+taketh away the sins of the world.' 'As far as the east is from the
+west, so far hath He removed our transgressions from us.'
+
+I. The perfect removal of all sin is thus symbolised.
+
+Notice (1) the vivid consciousness of sin which marked Judaism.
+
+Was it exaggerated or right?
+
+The same consciousness is part of all of us, but how overlaid! how
+stifled!
+
+That consciousness once awakened has in it these elements--a bitter
+sense of sin as mine, involving guilt; despair as to whether I can
+ever overcome it; and fearful thoughts of my relation to God which
+conscience itself brings.
+
+(2) The futility of all attempts to remove these fears.
+
+False religions have next to nothing to say about forgiveness.
+Sacrifices and lustrations they have, but no assurance of
+absolution. Systems of philosophy and morals have nothing to say but
+that the universe goes crashing on, and if you have broken its laws
+you must suffer. That is all, or only the poor cheer of 'Well! you
+have fallen, get up and go on again!' So men often drug themselves
+into forgetfulness. They turn away from the unwelcome subject, and
+forget it at the price of all moral earnestness and often of all
+happiness; a lethargic sleep or a gaiety, as little real as that of
+the Girondins singing in their prison the night before being led out
+to the guillotine.
+
+It is only God's authoritative revelation that can ensure the cure,
+only He can assure us of pardon, and of the removal of all barriers
+between ourselves and His love. Only His word can ensure, and His
+power can effect, the removal of the consequences of our sins. Only
+His word can ensure, and His power effect, the removal of the power
+of evil on our characters.
+
+(3) Still the question, Can guilt ever be cancelled? often assumes a
+fearful significance. Doubtless much seems to say that it cannot be.
+
+_(a)_ The irrevocableness of the past.
+
+_(b)_ The rigid law of consequences in this world.
+
+_(c)_ The indissoluble unity of an individual life and moral
+nature, confirmed by the experience of failure in all attempts at
+reformation of self.
+
+_(d)_ The consciousness of disturbed relations with God, and
+the prophecy of judgment. All this that ancient symbol suggested.
+The picture of the goat going away, and away, and away, a lessening
+speck on the horizon, and never heard of more is the divine symbol
+of the great fact that there is full, free, everlasting forgiveness,
+and on God's part, utter forgetfulness. 'Though your sins be as
+scarlet, they shall be white as snow.' 'I will remember them no more
+at all for ever.'
+
+II. The bearing away of sin is indissolubly connected with
+sacrifice. Two goats were provided, of which one was offered for a
+sin offering, indicating that sacrifice came first; then the removal
+of sin was symbolised by the sending away of the second goat. There
+is an evident reference to this sequence in the words 'without
+shedding of blood there is no remission.' The two goats represent
+Christ's work; the one in its essence, the other in its effect.
+
+The one teaches that sacrifice is a necessary condition of pardon.
+Forgiveness was not given because the offerer confessed his guilt or
+because 'God was merciful,' but because the goat had been slain as a
+sin offering. There is deep spiritual truth for us in this
+symbolism. We do not need to enter on the philosophy of atonement,
+but simply to rest on the fact--that the only authority on which we
+can be sure of forgiveness at all indissolubly associates the two
+things, sacrifice and pardon. We have no reason to believe in
+forgiveness except from the Bible record and assurance.
+
+Was the Mosaic ritual a divinely appointed thing? If so, its
+testimony is conclusive. But even if it were only the embodiment of
+human aspirations and wants, it would be a strong evidence of the
+necessity of some such thing as forgiveness.
+
+The shallow dream that God's forgiveness can be extended without a
+sacrifice having been offered does not exalt but detracts from the
+divine character. It invariably leads to an emasculated abhorrence
+of evil, and detracts from the holiness of God, as well as
+introduces low thoughts of the greatness of forgiveness and of the
+infinite love of God.
+
+III. The bearing away of sin is associated with man's laying of his
+sins on the sacrifice appointed by God.
+
+We have seen that the two goats must be regarded as together making
+one whole. The one which was slain made 'atonement ... because of
+the uncleannesses of the children of Israel, and because of their
+transgressions, even all their sins,' but that expiation was not
+actually effective till Aaron had 'laid his hands on the head of the
+live goat, and confessed over him all the iniquities of the children
+of Israel, ... and put them on the head of the live goat, and sent
+him away into the wilderness.' The sacrifice of the slain goat did
+not accomplish the pardon or removal of the people's sins, but made
+it possible that their sins should be pardoned and removed.
+
+Then the method by which that possibility is realised is the laying
+hands on the scapegoat and confessing the sins upon it. The sins
+which are actually forgiven, by virtue of the atonement made for all
+sins, are those which it bears away to the wilderness.
+
+This answers, point for point, to repentance and faith. By these the
+possibility is turned into an actuality for as many as believe on
+Christ.
+
+Christ has died for sin. Christ has made atonement by which all sin
+may be forgiven; whether any shall actually be forgiven depends on
+something else. It is conceivable that though Christ died, no sin
+might be pardoned, if no man believed. His blood would not, even
+then, have been shed in vain, for the purpose of it would have been
+fully effected in providing a way by which any and all sin could be
+forgiven. So that the whole question whether any man's sin is
+pardoned turns on this, Has he laid his hand on Christ? Faith is
+only a condition of forgiveness, not a cause, or in itself a power.
+There was no healing in the mere laying of the hand on the head of
+the goat.
+
+It was not faith which was the reason for forgiveness, but God's
+love which had provided the sacrifice.
+
+God's will is not a bare will to pardon, nor a bare will to pardon
+for Christ's sake, but for Christ's sake to pardon them who believe.
+'Behold the Lamb of God which taketh away the sins of the world.'
+'Dost thou believe on the Son of God?' 'Through this Man is preached
+the remission of sins.'
+
+
+
+
+THE CONSECRATION OF JOY
+
+
+ 'And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 34. Speak unto
+ the children of Israel, saying, The fifteenth day of
+ this seventh month shall be the feast of tabernacles for
+ seven days unto the Lord. 35. On the first day shall be
+ an holy convocation: ye shall do no servile work therein.
+ 36. Seven days ye shall offer an offering made by fire
+ unto the Lord; on the eighth day shall be an holy
+ convocation unto you; and ye shall offer an offering made
+ by fire unto the Lord: it is a solemn assembly; and ye
+ shall do no servile work therein. 37. These are the
+ feasts of the Lord, which ye shall proclaim to be holy
+ convocations, to offer an offering made by fire unto the
+ Lord, a burnt offering, and a meat offering, a sacrifice,
+ and drink offerings, every thing upon his day: 38. Beside
+ the sabbaths of the Lord, and beside your gifts, and
+ beside all your vows, and beside all your freewill
+ offerings, which ye give unto the Lord. 39. Also in the
+ fifteenth day of the seventh month, when ye have gathered
+ in the fruit of the land, ye shall keep a feast unto
+ the Lord seven days: on the first day shall be a sabbath,
+ and on the eighth day shall be a sabbath. 40. And ye
+ shall take you on the first day the boughs of goodly
+ trees, branches of palm-trees, and the boughs of thick
+ trees, and willows of the brook; and ye shall rejoice
+ before the Lord your God seven days. 41. And ye shall
+ keep it a feast unto the Lord seven days in the year.
+ It shall be a statute for ever in your generations: ye
+ shall celebrate it in the seventh month. 42. Ye shall
+ dwell in booths seven days; all that are Israelites born
+ shall dwell in booths: 43. That your generations may
+ know that I made the children of Israel to dwell in
+ booths, when I brought them out of the land of Egypt:
+ I am the Lord your God. 44. And Moses declared unto
+ the children of Israel the feasts of the Lord.'
+ --LEV. xxiii. 33-44.
+
+These directions for the observance of the great festival at the
+close of harvest are singularly arranged. Verses 33-36 give part of
+the instructions for the Feast, verses 37 and 38 interrupt these
+with a summary of the contents of the chapter, and verses 39 to the
+end pick up the broken thread, and finish the regulations for the
+feast. Naturally, this apparent afterthought has been pointed out as
+clear evidence of diversity of authorship. But a reasonable
+explanation may be given on the hypothesis of the unity of the
+section, by observing that verses 33-36 deal only with the
+sacrificial side of the feast, as worship proper, and thus come into
+line with the previous part of the chapter, which is occupied with
+an enumeration of the annual 'feasts of the Lord' (v. 4). It was
+natural, therefore, that, when the list had been completed by the
+sacrificial prescriptions for the last of the series, the close of
+the catalogue should be marked, in verses 37, 38, and that then the
+other parts of the observances connected with this feast, which are
+not sacrificial, nor, properly speaking, worship, should be added.
+There is no need to invoke the supposition of two authors, and a
+subsequent stitching together, in order to explain the arrangement.
+The unity is all the more probable because, otherwise, the first
+half would give the name of the feast as that of 'tabernacles,' and
+would not contain a word to account for the name.
+
+We need not, then, include the separating wedge, in verses 37, 38,
+in our present consideration. The ritual of the feast is broadly
+divided by it, and we may consider the two portions separately. The
+first half prescribes the duration of the feast as seven days (the
+perfect number), with an eighth, which is named, like the first, 'an
+holy convocation,' on which no work was to be done, but is also
+called 'a solemn assembly,' or rather, as the Revised Version reads,
+in margin, 'a closing festival,' inasmuch as it closed, not only
+that particular feast, but the whole series for the year. The
+observances enjoined, then, are the public assembly on the first and
+eighth days, with cessation from labour, and a daily offering. We
+learn more about the offering from Numbers xxix. 12 _et seq._,
+which appoints a very peculiar arrangement. On each day there was to
+be, as on other feast days, one goat for a sin offering; but the
+number of rams and lambs for the burnt offering was doubled, and,
+during the seven days of the feast, seventy bullocks were offered,
+arranged in a singular diminishing scale,--thirteen on the first
+day, and falling off by one a day till the seventh day, when seven
+were sacrificed. The eighth day was marked as no part of the feast
+proper, by the number of sacrifices offered on it, dropping to one
+bullock, one ram, and seven lambs. No satisfactory account of this
+regulation has been suggested. It may possibly have meant no more
+than to mark the first day as the chief, and to let the worshippers
+down gradually from the extraordinary to the ordinary.
+
+The other half of the regulations deals with the more domestic
+aspect of the festival. Observe, as significant of the different
+point of view taken in it, that the first and eighth days are there
+described, not as 'holy convocations,' but as 'sabbaths,' or, as the
+Revised Version gives it better, 'a solemn rest.' Observe, also,
+that these verses connect the feast with the ingathering of the
+harvest, as does Exodus xxiii. 16. It is quite possible that Moses
+grafted the more commemorative aspect of the feast on an older
+'harvest home'; but that is purely conjectural, however confidently
+affirmed as certain. To tumble down cartloads of quotations about
+all sorts of nations that ran up booths and feasted in them at
+vintage-time does not help us much. The 'joy of harvest' was
+unquestionably blended with the joy of remembered national
+deliverance, but that the latter idea was superadded to the former
+at a later time is, to say the least, not proven. Would it matter
+very much if it were? Three kinds of trees are specified from which
+'the fruit,' that is branches with fruit on them, if the tree bore
+fruit, were to be taken: palms, 'thick trees,' that is thick
+foliaged, which could give leafy shade, and willows of the brook,
+which the Rabbis say were used for binding the others together.
+Verse 40 does not tell what is to be done with these branches, but
+the later usage was to carry some of them in the hand as well as to
+use them for booths. The keynote of the whole feast is struck in
+verse 40: 'Ye shall rejoice before the Lord your God.' The leafy
+spoils come into view here as tokens of jubilation, which certainly
+suggests their being borne in the hand; but they were also meant to
+be used in building the booths in which the whole nation was to live
+during the seven days, in commemoration of God's having made them
+'dwell in booths, when I brought them out of the land of Egypt.'
+This is all that is enjoined by Moses. Later additions to the
+ceremonial do not concern us here, however interesting some of these
+are. The true intention of the feast is best learned from the
+original simple form. What, then, was its intention? It was the
+commemoration of the wilderness life as the ground of rejoicing
+'before the Lord.' But we must not forget that, according to
+Leviticus, it was appointed while the wilderness life was still
+present, and so was not to be observed then. Was it, then, a dead
+letter, or had the appointment a message of joy even to the weary
+wanderers who lived in the veritable booths, which after generations
+were to make a feast of mimicking? How firm the confidence of
+entering the land must have been, which promulgated such a law! It
+would tend to hearten the fainting courage of the pilgrims. A
+divinely guaranteed future is as certain as the past, and the
+wanderers whom He guides may be sure of coming to the settled home.
+All words which He speaks beforehand concerning that rest and the
+joyful worship there are pledges that it shall one day be theirs.
+The present use of the prospective law was to feed faith and hearten
+hope; and, when Canaan was reached, its use was to feed memory and
+brighten godly gladness.
+
+The feast of tabernacles was the consecration of joy. Other
+religions have had their festivals, in which wild tumult and foul
+orgies have debased the worshippers to the level of their gods. How
+different the pure gladness of this feast 'before the Lord'! No
+coarse and sensuous delights of passion could live before the 'pure
+eyes and perfect witness' of God. In His 'presence' must be purity
+as well as 'fullness of joy.' If this festival teaches us, on the
+one hand, that they wofully misapprehend the spirit of godliness who
+do not find it full of gladsomeness, it teaches us no less, on the
+other, that they wofully misapprehend the spirit of joy, who look
+for it anywhere but 'before the Lord.' The ritual of the feast
+commanded gladness. Joy is a duty to God's children. There were
+mourners in Israel each year, as the feast came round, who would
+rather have shrunk into a corner, and let the bright stream of
+merriment flow past them; but they, too, had to open their heavy
+hearts, and to feel that, in spite of their private sorrows, they
+had a share in the national blessings. No grief should unfit us for
+feeling thankful joy for the great common gift of 'a common
+salvation.' The sources of religious joy, open to all Christians,
+are deeper than the fountains of individual sorrow, deep as life
+though these sometimes seem.
+
+The wilderness life came into view in the feast as a wandering life
+of privation and change. The booths reminded of frail and shifting
+dwellings, and so made the contrast with present settled homes the
+sweeter. They were built, not of such miserable scrub as grew in the
+desert, and could scarcely throw shade enough to screen a lizard,
+but of the well-foliaged branches of trees grown by the rivers of
+water, and so indicated present abundance. The remembrance of
+privations and trials past, of which the meaning is understood, and
+the happy results in some degree possessed, is joy. Prosperous men
+like to talk of their early struggles and poverty. This feast
+teaches that such remembrance ought always to trace the better
+present to God, and that memory of conquered sorrows and trials is
+wholesome only when it is devout, and that the joy of present ease
+is bracing, not when it is self-sufficient, but when it is thankful.
+The past, rightly looked at, will yield for us all materials for a
+feast of tabernacles; and it is rightly looked at only when it is
+all seen as God's work, and as tending to settled peace and
+abundance. Therefore the regulations end with that emphatic seal of
+all His commands, to impress which on our hearts is the purpose of
+all His dealings with us as with Israel, 'I am the Lord your God.'
+
+III. We may note our Lord's allusions to the feast. There are
+probably two, both referring to later additions to the ceremonies.
+One is in John vii. 37. We learn from the Talmud that on each of the
+seven days (and according to one Rabbi on the eighth also) a priest
+went down to Siloam and drew water in a golden pitcher, which he
+brought back amid the blare of trumpets to the altar, and poured
+into a silver basin while the joyous worshippers chanted the 'Great
+Hallel' (Psa. cxiii.-cxviii.), and thrice waved their palm branches
+as they sang. We may venture to suppose that this had been done for
+the last time; that the shout of song had scarcely died away when a
+stir in the crowd was seen, and a Galilean peasant stood forth, and
+there, before the priests with their empty vessels, and the hushed
+multitude, lifted up His voice, so as to be heard by all, and cried,
+saying: 'If any man thirst, let him come unto Me, and drink.' What
+increased force is given to the extraordinary self-assertion of such
+words, if we picture this as the occasion of their utterance!
+Leviticus gives no preeminence to any one day, but John's
+expression, 'that great day of the feast,' may well have been
+warranted by later developments.
+
+The other allusion is less certain, though it is probable. It is
+found in the saying at John viii. 12: 'I am the Light of the world,'
+etc. The Talmud gives a detailed account of the illuminations
+accompanying the feast. Four great golden lamps were set up in the
+court, each tended by four young priests. 'There was not a court in
+Jerusalem that was not lit up by the lights of the water-drawing.'
+Bands of grave men with flashing torches danced before the people,
+while Levites 'accompanied them with harps, psalteries, cymbals, and
+numberless musical instruments,' and another band of Levites
+standing on the fifteen steps which led to the women's court,
+chanted the fifteen so-called 'songs of degrees,' and yet others
+marched through the courts blowing their trumpets as they went. It
+must have been a wild scene, dangerously approximating to the
+excitement of heathen nocturnal festivals, and our Lord may well
+have sought to divert the spectators to higher thoughts. But the
+existence of the allusion is doubtful.
+
+We have one more allusion to the feast, considered as a prophecy of
+the true rest and joy in the true Canaan. The same John, who has
+preserved Christ's references, gives one of his own in Revelation
+vii. 9, when he shows us the great multitude out of every nation
+'with palms in their hands.' These are not the Gentile emblems of
+victory, as they are often taken to be. There are no heathen emblems
+in the Apocalypse, but all moved within the circle of Jewish types
+and figures. So we are to think of that crowd of 'happy palmers' as
+joyously celebrating the true feast of tabernacles in the settled
+home above, and remembering, with eyes made clear by heaven, the
+struggles and fleeting sorrows of the wilderness. The emblem sets
+forth heaven as a festal assembly, as the ingathering of the results
+of the toils of earth, as settled life after weary pilgrimage, as
+glad retrospect of the meaning and triumphant possession of the
+issues of God's patient guidance and wise discipline. Here we dwell
+in 'the earthly house of this tabernacle'; there, in a 'building of
+God ... eternal.' Here we are agitated by change, and wearied by the
+long road; there, changeless but increasing joy will be ours, and
+the backward look of thankful wonder will enhance the sweetness of
+the blessed present, and confirm the calm and sure hope of an ever-
+growing glory stretching shoreless and bright before us.
+
+
+
+
+SOJOURNERS WITH GOD
+
+
+ 'The land shall not be sold for ever: for the land is
+ Mine; for ye are strangers and sojourners with Me.'
+ --LEV. xxv. 23.
+
+The singular institution of the Jubilee year had more than one
+purpose. As a social and economical arrangement it tended to prevent
+the extremes of wealth and poverty. Every fiftieth year the land was
+to revert to its original owners, the lineal descendants of those
+who had 'come in with the conqueror,' Joshua. Debts were to be
+remitted, slaves emancipated, and so the mountains of wealth and the
+valleys of poverty were to be somewhat levelled, and the nation
+carried back to its original framework of a simple agricultural
+community of small owners, each 'sitting under his own vine and fig-
+tree' and, like Naboth, sturdily holding the paternal acres.
+
+As a ceremonial institution it was the completion of the law of the
+Sabbath. The seventh day proclaimed the need for weekly rest from
+labour, and as was the sabbath in the week, so was the seventh year
+among the years--a time of quiet, when the land lay fallow and much
+of the ordinary labour was suspended. Nor were these all; when seven
+weeks of years had passed, came the great Jubilee year, charged with
+the same blessed message of Rest, and doubtless showing dimly to
+many wearied and tearful eyes some gleams of a better repose beyond.
+
+Besides these purposes, it was appointed to enforce, and to make the
+whole fabric of the national wealth consciously rest upon, this
+thought contained in our text. The reason why the land was not to
+pass out of the hauls of the representatives of those to whom God
+had originally given it, was that He had not really given it to them
+at all. It was not theirs to sell--they had only a beneficiary
+occupation. While they held it, it was still His, and neither they,
+nor any one to whom they might sell the use of it for a time, were
+anything more than tenants at will. The land was His, and they were
+only like a band of wanderers, squatting for a while by permission
+of the owner, on his estate. Their camp-fires were here today, but
+to-morrow they would be gone. They were 'strangers and sojourners.'
+That may sound sad, but all the sadness goes when we read on--'with
+Me.' They are God's guests, so though they do not own a foot of
+soil, they need not fear want.
+
+All this is as true for us. We can have no better New Year's
+thoughts than those which were taught by the blast of the silver
+trumpets that proclaimed liberty to the slaves, and restored to the
+landless pauper his alienated heritage.
+
+I. Here is the lesson of God's proprietorship and our stewardship.
+
+'The land is Mine' was of course true in a special sense of the
+territory which God gave by promise and miracle, which was kept by
+obedience, and lost by rebellion. But it is as really true about our
+possessions, and that not only because of our transient stay here.
+It would be as true if we were to live in this world for ever. It
+will be as true in heaven. Length of time makes no difference in
+this tenure. Undisturbed possession for ever so long does not
+constitute ownership here. God is possessor of all, by virtue of His
+very nature, by His creation and preservation of us and of all
+things. So that when we talk about 'mine' and 'thine,' we are only
+speaking a half truth. There is a great sovereign 'His' behind both.
+So then let us take that thought with us for use, as we pass into
+another year. What lessons does it give?
+
+It should nurture constant thankfulness. To-day looking back over
+whatever dark, dreary, sunless days, we all have bright ones too.
+Does any thought of God as the Fountain of all our joys and goods
+rise in our souls? Have we learned to associate a divine hand and a
+Father's will with them? Do we congratulate ourselves on our own
+cleverness, tact, and skill, saying, 'mine hand hath done it,' or do
+we hug ourselves on our own good fortune, and burn incense to chance
+and 'circumstances'?--or, sadder still, are we generously grateful
+to every human friend that helps us, and unthankful only to God--or
+does the glad thought come, to gild the finest gold of our
+possessions with new brilliance and worth, and to paint and perfume
+the whitest lily of our joys with new delightsomeness, 'All things
+come of Thee'; 'Thou makest us drink of the river of Thy pleasures'?
+Blessed are they who, by the magic glass of a thankful heart, see
+all things in God, and God in all things. To them life is tenfold
+brighter, as a light plunged in oxygen flames more intensely than in
+common air. The darkest night is filled with light, and the
+loneliest place blazes with angel faces, and the stoniest pillar is
+soft, to him who sees everywhere the ladder that knits earth with
+heaven, and to whom all His blessings are as the messengers that
+descend by it on errands of mercy, whose long shining ranks lead up
+the eye and the heart to the loving God from whom they come.
+
+Here too is the ground for constant thankful submission. 'The Lord
+gave, and the Lord hath taken away.' We have no right to murmur,
+however we may regret, if the Landowner takes back a bit of the land
+which He has let us occupy. It was the condition of our occupation
+that He should be at liberty to do so whenever He saw that it would
+be best for us. He does not give us our little patches for His
+advantage, but for ours, nor does He take them away at His own whim,
+but 'for our profit.' We get more than full value for all the work
+and capital we have expended, and His only reason for ever
+disturbing us is that we may be driven to claim a better inheritance
+in Himself than we can find even in the best of His gifts. So He
+sometimes gives, that we may be led by our possessions to think
+lovingly of Him; and He sometimes takes, that we may be led, in the
+hour of emptiness and loss, to recognise whose hand it was that
+pulled up the props round which our poor tendrils clung. But the
+opposite actions have the same purpose, and like the up-and-down
+stroke of a piston, or the contrary motion of two cogged wheels that
+play into each other, are meant to impel us in one direction, even
+to the heart of God who is our home. A landowner stops up a private
+road one day in a year, in order to assert his right, and to remind
+the neighbourhood that he could stop it altogether if he liked. So
+God reminds us by our losses and sorrows, of what we are so apt to
+forget, and what it is such a joy to us to remember--His possession
+of them all. Blessed be God! He teaches us in that fashion far
+seldomer than in the other. Let joy teach us the lesson, and we
+shall the less need 'the sternest' teacher 'and the best,' even
+sorrow. Better to learn it by gladness than by tears; better to see
+it written in 'laughing flowers' than in desolate gardens and
+killing frost.
+
+So, too, there should be a constant sense of responsibility in the
+use of all which we have. All is His, and He has given all to us,
+for a purpose. So, plainly, we are but stewards, or trustees, and
+are bound to employ everything, not according to our own inclination
+or notion of what is right, but according to what, in the exercise
+of our best and most impartial judgment, we believe to be the
+owner's will. Trusteeship means that we take directions as to the
+employment of the property from its owner. It means too that we
+employ it not for our own satisfaction and well-being alone, though
+that is included, and is a part of His purpose who 'delights in the
+prosperity of His servants.' Thoughts of others, thoughts of the
+owner's claims, and of bringing back to Him all that He has given to
+us, increased by our diligence, must be uppermost in our minds, if
+we are to live nobly or happily here. 'It is required in stewards
+that a man be found faithful.' And this applies to all we have in
+mind, body, and estate. A thoughtful expenditure and use of all His
+gifts, on principles drawn from our knowledge of His will, and for
+objects not terminating with self, is the duty that corresponds to
+the great fact of God's ownership of all. If we use His gifts to
+minister to our own vanity or frivolity, or love of ease, or
+display; if an 'intolerable deal' of all we have is used for
+ourselves, and a poor ha'porth' for others; if our gifts are
+grudging; if we possess without sense of responsibility, and enjoy
+without thankfulness, and lose with murmuring; if our hearts are
+more set on material prosperity than on love and peace, knowledge
+and purity, noble lives and a Father God; if higher desires and
+hopes are dying out as we 'get on' in the world, and religious
+occupations which used to be pleasant are stale; then for all our
+outward Christianity the stern old woe applies, 'Your riches are
+corrupted, and the rust of them shall be a witness against you,' and
+we need the shrill note of the trumpet of Jubilee to be blown in our
+ears, 'The land is Mine.'
+
+II. We have the teaching of the transiency of our stay here.
+
+'Ye are strangers and sojourners'--pilgrims who make a brief halt in
+a foreign country. The image has in it an allusion to the nomad life
+of Abraham and his son and grandson, as well as to the desert-
+wanderings of the people, and suggests the thought, 'You are
+homeless wanderers, not having where to lay your heads, as truly
+when you have been settled for generations on your ancestral lands,
+as when you plodded wearily in the wilderness.' It is a universal
+truth, ever acknowledged and forgotten, wholesome though sometimes
+sad to feel, and preached to even frivolous natures by the change in
+our calendar which a New Year brings.
+
+How vividly this word of our text brings out the contrast between
+the permanence of the external world and our brief stay in it!
+
+In Israel there would be few vineyards or olive-grounds held by the
+same man at two, and none at three, successive jubilees. The hoary
+twisted olives yielded their black berries, say, to Simeon, the son
+of Joseph, to-day, as they did fifty years ago to Joseph, the son of
+Reuben, and as they will do fifty years hence to Judas, the son of
+Simeon. So is it with us all. There is nothing more pathetic than
+the thought of how generations come and go, and empires rise and
+fall, while the scene on which they play their brief parts remains
+the same.
+
+ 'The mountains look on Marathon,
+ And Marathon looks on the sea.'
+
+to-day as they did more than two millenniums ago, only the grass was
+for a while a little ranker on the plain. Olivet lifts the same
+outline against the pale morning twilight as when David went up its
+slope a weeping exile. The pebble that we kick out of our path had
+thousands of years of existence ere we were born, and may lie there
+unaltered to all appearance for centuries after we are dead. 'One
+generation cometh and another goeth, but the earth abideth for
+ever.'
+
+And how much more lasting our possessions are than their possessors!
+Where are the strong hands that clutched the rude weapons that lie
+now quietly ticketed in our museums? How dim and dark the bright
+brave eyes that once flashed through the bars of these helmets,
+hanging just a little rusted, over the tombs in Westminster Abbey!
+Other men will live in our houses, read our books, own our mills,
+use our furniture, preach in our pulpits, sit in our pews: we are
+but lodgers in this abiding nature, 'like a wayfaring man that
+turneth aside to tarry for a night,' and to-morrow morning vacates
+his rooms for a new arrival, and goes away unregretted and is
+forgotten in an hour.
+
+The constant change and progression of life are enforced, too, in
+this metaphor.
+
+The old threadbare emblem of a journey which is implied in the text
+suggests how, moment by moment, we hurry on and how everything is
+slipping past us, as fields and towns do to a traveller in a train.
+Only our journey is smooth and noiseless, like the old-fashioned
+canal boat travelling, where, if you shut your eyes, you could not
+tell that you were moving. We glide on and never know it, and so
+gradually and silently is the scene 'changed by still degrees,' that
+it is only now and then that men have any vivid consciousness that
+the 'fashion of this world is' ever 'in the act of passing,' like
+the canvas of a panorama ever winding and unwinding on its twin
+rollers with slow, equable motion. It needs an effort of attention
+and will to discern the movement, and it is worth while to make the
+effort, for that clear and poignant sense of the constant flux and
+mutation of all things around us, and of the ebbing away of our own
+lives, is fundamental to all elevation of thought, to all nobleness
+of deed, to all worthy conception of duty and of joy. Everything
+that is, stands poised, like Fortune, on a rolling ball. The solid
+earth is a movable sphere, for ever spinning on its axis and rushing
+on its path among the stars. Ever some star is sinking in mist, or
+dipping below the horizon; ever new constellations are climbing to
+the zenith. A long, patient discipline is needed to keep fresh in
+our hearts the sense of this transiency. Let us set ourselves
+consciously to deepen our convictions of it, and amidst all the
+illusions of these solid-seeming shows of things, keep firm hold of
+the assurance that they are but fleeting shadows that sweep across
+the solemn mountain's side, and that only God and the doing of His
+will lasts. So shall our life pierce down with its seeking roots to
+the abiding ground of all Being, and, looking to the 'things that
+are eternal,' we shall be able to make what is but for a moment
+contribute to the everlasting ennobling of our character and
+enrichment of our life yonder.
+
+Surely these words, too, tell of the true home.
+
+'Ye are strangers'--because your native land is elsewhere. It is not
+merely the physical facts of death and change that make us strangers
+here, but the direction of our desires, and the true affinities of
+our nature. If by these we belong to heaven and God, then here we
+shall feel that we have not where to lay our heads, and shall 'dwell
+in tabernacles' because 'we look for the city.'
+
+What a contrast between the perishable tents of the wilderness and
+the rock-built mansions of that city. And how short this phase of
+being must look when seen from above! You remember how long a year,
+a week, seemed to you when a child--what do the first ten years of
+your life look to you now? What must the earthly life of Abel, the
+first who died, look to him even now, when he contrasts its short
+twenty or thirty years with the thousands since? and, after
+thousands and thousands more, how it will dwindle! So to us, if we
+reach that safe shore, and look back upon the sea that brought us
+thither, as it stretches to the horizon, miles of billows once so
+terrible will seem shrunken to a line of white foam.
+
+Cherish, then, constant consciousness of that solemn eternity, and
+let your eyes be ever directed to it, like a man who sees some great
+flush of light on the horizon, and is ever turning from his work to
+look. Use the transient as preparation for the eternal, the fleeting
+days as those which determine the undying 'Day' and its character.
+Keep your cares and interests in the present rigidly limited to
+necessary things. Why should travellers burden themselves? The less
+luggage, the easier marching. The accommodation and equipment in the
+desert do not matter much. The wise man will say, 'Oh, it will do. I
+shall soon be home.' 'Ye are strangers and sojourners.'
+
+III. We have here also the teaching of trust.
+
+Some of us think that such thoughts as the preceding are sad. Why
+should they be so? They need not be. Our text adds a little word
+which takes all the sadness out of them. 'With Me'; that gives the
+true notion of our earthly life. We are strangers indeed, passing
+through a country which is not ours, but whilst we are sojourners,
+we are 'sojourners' with the king of the land. In the antique
+hospitable times, the chief of the tribe would take the travellers
+to his own tent, and charge himself with their safety and comfort.
+So we are God's guests on our travels. He will take care of us. The
+visitor has no need to trouble himself about the housekeeping, he
+may safely leave that with the master of the house. If the king has
+taken us in charge, we may be quite sure that no harm will come to
+us in his country. So for ourselves and for those we love, and for
+all the wide interests of church and world, there are peace and
+strength in the thought that we are the guests of God here,
+'strangers and sojourners with _Him_.' Will He invite us to His
+table and let us hunger? Will He call us to be His guests, and then,
+like some traitorous Arab sheikh, break the laws of hospitality and
+harm His too-confiding guests? Impossible for evermore. So we are
+safe, and our bread shall be given us, for we are sojourners with
+God.
+
+True, we are strangers, and in our constant movement we lose many of
+the companions of our march, and the track of the caravan may be
+traced by the graves on either side. But, since we are 'with Him,'
+we have companionship even when most solitary, and even in a strange
+land shall not be lonely. Seek then to cultivate as a joy and
+strength that consciousness that the Lord of all the land is ever
+with you, Whoever goes, He abides. Whatever rushes past us like a
+phantasmagoria, He passes not. Whatever and whoever change, He
+changes never. Where thou goest, He will go. He will be 'thy shield
+at thy right hand,' and thy 'keeper from all evil.' So, looking
+forward to the unknown days of another New Year, we may be of good
+cheer.
+
+So will it be while we live; and if this year we should die--well,
+the King of this land, where we are strangers, is the King of the
+other land beyond the sea, where we are at home. So we shall only be
+the nearer to Him for the change. Death the separator shall but
+unite us to the King, whose presence indeed fills this subject-
+province of His empire with all its good, but who dwells in more
+resplendent 'beauty,' and is felt in greater nearness in the other
+'land that is very far off.' Whether here or there, we may have God
+with us, if we will. With Him for our Host and companion, let us
+peacefully go on our road, while the life of strangers and
+sojourners shall last. It will bring us to the fatherland where we
+shall be at home with the King, and find in Him our 'sure dwelling,
+and quiet resting-place, and peaceful habitation for ever.'
+
+
+
+
+GOD'S SLAVES
+
+
+ 'For they are My servants, which I brought forth out
+ of the land of Egypt; they shall not be sold as bondmen.'
+ --LEV. xxv. 42.
+
+This is the basis of the Mosaic legislation as to slavery. It did
+not suppress but regulated that accursed system. Certainly Hebrew
+slavery was a very different thing from that of other nations. In
+the first place, no Jew was to be a slave. To that broad principle
+there were exceptions, such as the case of the man who voluntarily
+gave himself up to his creditor. But even he was not to be treated
+as a slave, but as a 'hired servant,' and at the jubilee was to be
+set free. There were also other regulations of various kinds in
+other circumstances on which we do not need to dwell. The slaves of
+alien blood were owned and used, but under great mitigations and
+restrictions.
+
+Of course we have here an instance of the incompleteness of the
+Mosaic law,--or rather we may more truly say of its completeness,
+regard being had to the state of the world at the time. All social
+change hangs together. Institutions cannot be altered at a blow,
+without altering the stage of civilisation, of which they are the
+expression. 'Raw haste' is 'half-sister to delay.' What is good and
+necessary for one era is out of place in another. So God works
+slowly, and lets bad things die out, by changing the atmosphere in
+which they flourish.
+
+All servitude to men was an infraction of God's rights over Israel.
+God was the Israelites' 'Master'; they were His 'slaves.' He was so,
+because He had 'broken the bands of their yoke, and set them free.'
+There is, then, here--
+
+I. The ground of God's rights. 'I brought you forth.'
+
+II. Our servitude because of our redemption. 'Ye are My servants.'
+
+III. Our consequent freedom from all other masters. 'Ye shall not be
+sold as bondmen.'
+
+
+
+
+THE KINSMAN REDEEMER
+
+
+ 'After that he is sold he may be redeemed again; one of
+ his brethren may redeem him.'--LEV. xxv. 48.
+
+There are several of the institutions and precepts of the Mosaic
+legislation which, though not prophetic, nor typical, have yet
+remarkable correspondences with lofty Christian truth. They may be
+used as symbols, if only we remember that we are diverting them from
+their original purpose.
+
+How singularly these words lend themselves to the statement of the
+very central truths of Christianity--a slavery which is not
+necessarily perpetual and a redemption effected by a kinsman!
+
+That institution of the 'Goel' is of a very remarkable kind, and
+throws great light on Christian verities. I wish, in dealing with
+it, to guard against any idea that it was meant to be prophetic or
+typical.
+
+I. The kinsman redeemer under the old law.
+
+The strength of the family tie in the Israelitish polity was great.
+The family was the unit--hence there were certain duties devolving
+on the nearest male relative. These, so far as we are at present
+concerned, were three.
+
+_(a)_ The redemption of a slave. The Mosaic legislation about
+slavery was very remarkable. It did not nominally prohibit it, but
+it fenced it round and modified it, so as to make it another thing.
+
+Israelites were allowed to hold Gentile slaves, but under careful
+restrictions. Israelites were allowed to sell themselves as slaves.
+If the sale was to Israelites, the slavery was ended in six years or
+at the jubilee, whichever period came first--unless the slave had
+his ear bored to the doorpost to intimate his contentment in service
+(Exod. xxi. 5,6). This is not slavery in our sense of the word, but
+only a six years' engagement. If sold to a heathen in Israel, then
+the Goel had to redeem him; and the reason for this was that all
+Israelites belonged to God.
+
+_(b)_ The redemption of an inheritance.
+
+This was the task of the kinsman-goel. The land belonged to the
+tribe. Pauperism was thus kept off. There could be no 'submerged
+tenth.' The theocratic reason was, 'the land shall not be sold at
+all for ever for it is Mine!'
+
+_(c)_ The avenging of murder. Blood feuds were thus checked,
+though not abolished. The remarkable institution of 'cities of
+refuge' gave opportunity for deliberate investigation into each
+case. If wilful murder was proved, the murderer was given up to the
+Goel for retribution; if death had been by misadventure, the slayer
+was kept in the city of refuge till the high-priest's decease.
+
+This is the germ of the figure of the Redeemer-Kinsman in later
+Scripture. Notice how higher ideas began to gather round the office.
+The prophets felt that in some way God was their 'Goel.' In Isaiah
+the application of the name to Him is frequent and, we might almost
+say, habitual. So in Psalm xlix. 7, 'None can be Goel to his
+brother'; verse 15, 'God will be Goel to my soul from the power of
+the grave.'
+
+Job xix. 25, 'I know that my Goel liveth....'
+
+II. Our Kinsman-Redeemer.
+
+The New Testament metaphor of 'Redemption' or buying back with a
+ransom is distinctly drawn from the Hebrew Goel's office.
+
+Christ is the Kinsman. The brotherhood of Christ with us was
+voluntarily assumed, and was for the purpose of redeeming His
+brethren.
+
+He is the Kinsman-Redeemer from slavery,--a slavery which is
+voluntary. The soul is self-delivered to evil and sin; but blessed
+be God! this slavery is terminable. The kinship of Christ was
+needful for our redemption. 'It behoved Him to be made like unto His
+brethren.' He thus gave His life a 'ransom' for many. Note the
+objective value of His atonement, and its subjective power as
+setting us free.
+
+He is the Kinsman-Redeemer of our inheritance. God is the
+inheritance here. The manhood of Jesus brings God back to us for
+our--(1) Knowledge; (2) Love; (3) Possession. Heaven is our
+inheritance hereafter. His manhood secures it for us. 'I go to
+prepare a place for you.' 'An inheritance incorruptible.' 'The
+redemption of the purchased possession.'
+
+The Kinsman-Avenger of blood. It is only in a modified sense that we
+can transfer this part of the Goel's office to Jesus. The old
+Kinsman-Avenger of blood avenged it by shedding the shedder's blood
+in retribution. But that was not the kind of vindication (for Goel
+means also Vindicator) for which Job looked when he used the
+expression. Resurrection to the vision of God was to come to him 'at
+the last,' by the standing of his Goel on the earth, and that was to
+be the true avenging of his death, and his vindication. The great
+murderer Death is to die, and his victims are to be wrested from
+him, and their death be proved to be the means of their fuller life.
+'Precious shall their blood be in His sight,' and when their slayer
+is slain they will live for ever, partakers of their Kinsman-
+Redeemer's glory, because they had been partakers of His death, and
+His blood had been precious in their sight. Let us cling to our
+Kinsman-Redeemer in all our life that He may give us freedom and an
+inheritance among His brethren, and, closing our eyes in death, we
+may commend our spirits to the 'Angel that redeemed us from all
+evil,' and be sure that He will 'redeem' our 'souls from the power
+of the grave.'
+
+
+
+
+THE OLD STORE AN THE NEW
+
+
+ 'Ye shall eat old store, and bring forth the old because
+ of the new.'
+ LEV. xxvi. 10.
+
+This is one of the blessings promised to obedience. No doubt it,
+like the other elements of that 'prosperity' which 'is the blessing
+of the Old Testament,' presupposes a supernatural order of things,
+in which material well-being was connected with moral good far more
+closely and certainly than we see to be the case. But the spirit and
+heart of the promise remain, however the form of it may have passed
+away. It is a picturesque way of saying that the harvest shall be
+more than enough for the people's wants. All through the winter, and
+the spring, and the ripening summer, their granaries shall yield
+supplies. There will be no season of scarcity such as often occurs
+in countries whose communications are imperfect, just before
+harvest, when the last year's crop is exhausted, and it is hard to
+get anything to live on till this year's is ready. But when the new
+wheat comes in they will have still much of the old, and will have
+to 'bring it forth' to empty their barns, to make room for the fresh
+supplies which the blessing of God has sent before they were needed.
+The same idea of superabundant yield from the fields is given under
+another form in a previous verse of this chapter (ver. 5): 'Your
+threshing shall reach unto the vintage, and the vintage shall reach
+unto the sowing time, and ye shall eat your bread to the full':
+which reminds one of the striking prophecy of Amos: 'Behold, the
+days come, saith the Lord, that the plowman shall overtake the
+reaper, and the treader of grapes him that soweth seed.' So rapid
+the growth, and so large the fruitfulness, that the gatherer shall
+follow close on the heels of the sower, and will not have
+accomplished his task before it is again time to sow. The prophet
+clearly has in his mind the old promise of the law, and applies it
+to higher matters, even to the fields white to harvest, where 'he
+that soweth and he that reapeth shall rejoice together.' In the same
+way we may take these words, and gather from them better promises
+and larger thoughts than they originally carried.
+
+There is in them a promise as to the fullness of the divine gifts,
+which has a far wider reach and nobler application than to the
+harvests and granaries of old Palestine.
+
+We may take the words in that aspect, first, as containing God's
+pledge that these outward gifts shall come in unbroken continuity.
+And have they not so come to us all, for all these long years? Has
+there ever been a gap left yawning? has there ever been a break in
+the chain of mercies and supplies? has it not rather been that 'one
+post ran to meet another,' that before one of the messengers had
+unladed all his budget, another's arrival has antiquated and put
+aside his store? True, we are often brought very low; there may not
+be much in the barn but sweepings, and a few stray grains scattered
+over the floor. We may have but a handful of meal in the barrel, and
+be ready to dress it 'that we may eat it, and die.' But it never
+really comes to that. The new ever comes before the old is all eaten
+up; or if it be delayed even beyond that time, it comes before the
+hunger reaches inanition. It may be good that we should have to
+trust Him, even when the storehouse is empty; it may be good for us
+to know something of want, but that discipline comes seldom, and is
+never carried very far. For the most part He anticipates wants by
+gifts, and His good gifts overlap each other in our outward lives as
+slates on a roof, or scales on a fish.
+
+We wonder at the smooth working of the machinery for feeding a great
+city; and how, day by day, the provisions come at the right time,
+and are parted out among hundreds of thousands of homes. But we
+seldom think of the punctual love, the perfect knowledge, the
+profound wisdom which cares for us all, and is always in time with
+its gifts. It was that quality of punctuality extended over a whole
+universe which seemed so wonderful to the Psalmist: 'The eyes of all
+wait upon Thee, and Thou givest them their meat in due season.'
+God's machinery for distribution is perfect, and its very
+perfection, with the constancy of the resulting blessings, robs Him
+of His praise, and hinders our gratitude. By assiduity He loses
+admiration.
+
+'Things grown common lose their dear delight.' 'If in His gifts and
+benefits He were more sparing and close-handed,' said Luther, 'we
+should learn to be thankful.' But let us learn it by the continuity
+of our joys, that we may not need to be taught it by their
+interruption; and let us still all tremulous anticipation of
+possible failure or certain loss by the happy confidence which we
+have a right to cherish, that His mercies will meet our needs,
+continuous as they are, and be strung so close together on the poor
+thread of our lives that no gap will be discernible in the jewelled
+circle.
+
+May we not apply that same thought of the unbroken continuity of
+God's gifts to the higher region of our spiritual experience? His
+supplies of wisdom, love, joy, peace, power, to our souls are always
+enough and more than enough for our wants. If ever men complain of
+languishing vitality in their religious emotions, or of a stinted
+supply of food for their truest self, it is their own fault, not
+His. He means that there should be no parentheses of famine in our
+Christian life. It is not His doing if times of torpor alternate
+with seasons of quick energy and joyful fullness of life. So far as
+He is concerned the flow is uninterrupted, and if it come to us in
+jets and spurts as from an intermittent well, it is because our own
+fault has put some obstacle to choke the channel and dam out His
+Spirit from our spirits. We cannot too firmly hold, or too
+profoundly feel, that an unbroken continuity of supplies of His
+grace--unbroken and bright as a sunbeam reaching in one golden shaft
+all the way from the sun to the earth--is His purpose concerning us.
+Here, in this highest region, the thought of our text is most
+absolutely true; for He who gives is ever pouring forth His own self
+for us to take, and there is no limit to our reception but our
+capacity and our desire; nor any reason for a moment's break in our
+possession of love, righteousness, peace, but our withdrawal of our
+souls from beneath the Niagara of His grace. As long as we keep our
+poor vessels below that constant downpour they will be full. It is
+all our own blame if they are empty. Why should Christian people
+have these dismal times of deadness, these parentheses of paralysis?
+as if their growth must be like that of a tree with its alternations
+of winter sleep and summer waking? In regard to outward blessings we
+are, as it were, put upon rations, and 'that He gives' us we
+'gather.' There He sometimes does, in love and wisdom, put us on
+very short allowance, and even now and then causes 'the fields to
+yield no meat.' But never is it so in the higher region. There He
+puts the key of the storehouse into our own hands, and we may take
+as much as we will, and have as much as we take. There the bread of
+God is given for evermore, and He wills that in uninterrupted
+abundance 'the meek shall eat and be satisfied.'
+
+The source is full to overflowing, and there are no limits to the
+supply. The only limit is our capacity, which again is largely
+determined by our desire. So after all His gifts there is more yet
+unreceived to possess. After all His Self-revelation there is more
+yet unspoken to declare. Great as is the goodness which He has
+'wrought before the sons of men for them that trust in Him,' there
+are far greater treasures of goodness 'laid up' in the deep mines of
+God 'for them that fear Him.' Bars of uncoined treasure and ingots
+of massy gold lie in His storehouses, to be put into circulation as
+soon as we need, and can use, them. Hence we have the right to look
+for an endless increase in our possession of God; and from the
+consideration of an Infinite Spirit that imparts Himself, and of
+finite but indefinitely expansible spirits that receive, the
+certainty arises of an endless life for us of growing glory; a
+heaven of ceaseless advance, where in constant alternation desire
+shall widen capacity, and capacity increase fruition, and fruition
+lead in, not satiety, but quickened appetite and deeper longing.
+
+But we may also see in this text the prescription of a duty as well
+as the announcement of a promise. There is direction here as to our
+manner of receiving God's gifts, as well as large assurance as to
+His manner of bestowing them. It is His to substitute the new for
+the old. It is ours gladly to accept the exchange, a task not always
+easy or pleasant.
+
+No doubt there is a natural love of change deep in us all, but that
+is held in check by its opposite, and all poetry and human life
+itself are full of the sadness born of mutation. Our Lord laid bare
+a deep tendency, when He said, 'No man having tasted old wine,
+straightway desireth new; because he saith the old is better.' We
+cling to what is familiar, in the very furniture of our houses; and
+yet we are ever being forced to accept what is strange and new, and,
+like some fresh article in a room, is out of harmony with the well-
+worn things that we have seen standing in their corners for years.
+It takes some time for the raw look to wear off, and for us to 'get
+used to it,' as we say. So is it, though often for deeper reasons,
+in far more important things. A man, for instance, has been engaged
+in some kind of business for years, and at last God shows him, by
+clear indications, that he must turn to something else. How slow he
+is to see it, how reluctant to do it! How he cleaves to the 'old
+store'! How he shrinks from clearing out the barn, to bring in the
+new! Or a household has been going on for many days unbroken, and at
+last a time comes when some of its members have to pass out into new
+circumstances; a son to push his way in the world, a daughter to
+brighten another fireside. It is hard for the parents to enter fully
+into the high hopes of their children, and to accept the new
+condition, without many vain longings for the old days that can
+never come back any more. So, all through our lives, wisdom and
+faith say, 'Bring forth the old because of the new.' Accept
+cheerfully the law of constant change under which God's love has set
+us. Do not let the pleasant bonds of habit tie down your hearts so
+tightly to the familiar possessions that you shrink from the
+introduction of fresh elements. Be sure that the new comes from the
+same loving hand which sent the old in its season, and that change
+is meant to be progress. Do not confine yourselves within any mill-
+horse round of associations and occupations. Front the vicissitudes
+of life, not merely with brave patience, but with happy confidence,
+for they all come from Him whose love is older than your oldest
+blessings, and whose mercies, new every morning, express themselves
+afresh through every change. Welcome the new, treasure the old, and
+in both see the purpose of that loving Father who, Himself
+unchanged, changeth all things, and
+
+ '... fulfils Himself in many ways,
+ Lest one good custom should corrupt the world.'
+
+In higher matters than these our text may give us counsel as to our
+duty. 'God hath more light yet to break forth from His holy word.'
+We are bound to welcome new truth, so soon as to our apprehensions
+it has made good its title, and not to refuse it lodgment in our
+minds because it needs the displacement of their old contents. In
+the regions of our knowledge and of our Christian life, most
+chiefly, are we under solemn obligations to 'bring forth the old
+store because of the new'; if we would not be unfaithful to God's
+great educational process that goes on through all our lives. It is
+often difficult to adjust the relations of our last lesson with our
+previous possessions. There is always a temptation to make too much
+of a new truth, and to fancy that it will produce more change in our
+whole mental furniture than it really will do. No man is less likely
+to come to the knowledge of the truth than he who is always deep in
+love with some new thought, 'the Cynthia of the minute,' and ever
+ready to barter 'old lamps for new ones.' But all these things
+admitted, still it remains true that we are here to learn, that our
+education is to go on all our days, and that here on earth it can
+only be carried out by our parting with the old store, which may
+have become musty by long lying in the granaries, to make room for
+the new, just gathered in the ripened field. The great central
+truths of God in Christ are to be kept for ever; but we shall come
+to grasp them in their fullness only by joyfully welcoming every
+fresh access of clearer light which falls upon them; and gladly
+laying aside our inadequate thoughts of God's permanent revelation
+of Himself in Jesus Christ, to house and garner in heart and spirit
+the fuller knowledge which it may please Him to impart.
+
+So the law for life is thankful enjoyment of the old store, and
+openness of mind and freedom of heart which permit its unreluctant
+surrender when newer harvests ripen. And the highest form of the
+promise of our text will be when we pass into another world, and its
+rich abundance is poured out into our laps. Blessed are they who can
+willingly put away the familiar blessings of earth, and stretch out,
+willingly emptied, expectant hands to meet the 'new store' of
+Heaven!
+
+
+
+
+EMANCIPATED SLAVES
+
+
+ 'I am the Lord your God, which brought you forth out of
+ the land of Egypt, that ye should not be their bondmen;
+ and I have broken the bands of your yoke, and made you
+ go upright.'--LEV. xxvi. 13.
+
+The history of Israel is a parable and a prophecy as well as a
+history.
+
+The great central word of the New Testament has been drawn from it,
+viz. 'redemption,' _i.e._ a buying out of bondage.
+
+The Hebrew slaves in Egypt were 'delivered.' The deliverance made
+them a nation. God acquired them for Himself, and they became His
+servants.
+
+The great truths of the gospel are all there.
+
+Henceforth the fact of their deliverance became the basis of all His
+appeals to them; the ground of His law; the reason for their
+obedience. In the previous context it has shaped the institution of
+slavery. Here it is the foundation of a general exhortation to
+obedience. The emphatic picture of the men stooping beneath the
+yoke, and then straightening themselves up, erect, illustrates the
+joyful freedom which Christ gives. That freedom is our subject.
+
+I. Jesus gives freedom from the slavery of sin.
+
+Freedom consists in power to follow unhindered the law of our being.
+So sin is slavery because it is contrary to that law.
+
+When Jesus promised freedom through the truth, the Jews indignantly
+spurned the offer with the proud boast, which the presence of a
+Roman garrison in Jerusalem should have made to stick in their
+throats: 'We were never in bondage to any man.' A like hardy
+shutting of eyes to plain facts characterises the attitude of
+multitudes to the Christian view of man's condition. Jesus answered
+the Jews by the deep saying: 'He that committeth sin is the servant
+of sin.' A man fancies himself showing off his freedom by throwing
+off the restraints of morality or law, and by 'doing as he likes,'
+but he is really showing his servitude. Self-will looks like
+liberty, but it is serfdom. The libertine is a slave. That slavery
+under sin takes two forms. The man who sins is a slave to the power
+of sin. Will and conscience are meant to guide and impel us, and we
+never sin without first coercing or silencing them and subjecting
+them to the upstart tyranny of desires and senses which should obey
+and not command. The 'beggars' are on horseback, and the 'princes'
+walking. There is a servile revolt, and we know what horrors
+accompany that.
+
+But that slavery under sin is shown also by the terrible force with
+which any sin, if once committed, appeals to the doer to repeat it.
+It is not only in regard to sensual sins that the awful insistence
+of habit grips the doer, and makes it the rarest thing that evil
+once done is done only once.
+
+But he who sins is also a slave to the guilt of sin. True, that
+sense of guilt is for the most part and in most men dormant, but the
+snake is but hibernating, and often wakes and stings at most
+unexpected moments. 'The deceitfulness of sin' lies to the sinner,
+so that for the most part he 'wipes his mouth, saying I have done no
+harm,' but some chance incident may at any time, and certainly
+something will at some time, dissipate the illusion, as a stray
+sunbeam might scatter a wisp of mist and show startled eyes the grim
+fact that had always been there. And even while not consciously
+felt, guilt hampers the soul's insight into divine realities, clips
+its wings so that it cannot soar, paralyses its efforts after noble
+aims, and inclines it to ignoble grovelling as far away from
+thoughts of God and goodness as may be.
+
+Christ makes the man bound and tied by the cords of his sins lift
+himself up and stand erect. By His death He brings forgiveness which
+removes guilt and the consciousness of it. By His inbreathed life He
+gives a new nature akin to His own, and brings into force a new
+motive, even transforming love, which is stronger than the death
+with which sin has cursed its doers. 'The law of the Spirit of Life
+in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin and death.'
+
+II. Jesus gives freedom from a slavish relation to God.
+
+Apart from Him, God, if recognised at all, is for the most part
+thought of as 'austere, reaping where He did not sow,' and His
+commandments as grievous. Men may sullenly recognise that they
+cannot resist, but they do not submit. They may obey in act, but
+there is no obedience in their wills, nor any cheerfulness in their
+hearts. The elder brother in the parable could say, 'Neither
+transgressed I at any time thy commandment,' but his service had
+been joyless, and he never remembered having received gifts that
+made him 'merry with his friends.'
+
+But from all such slavish, and therefore worthless, obedience, and
+all such reluctant, and therefore unreal, submission, Jesus
+liberates those who believe on Him and abide in His word. He
+declares God as our loving Father, and through Him we have authority
+to become sons of God. He 'sends forth the Spirit of His Son into
+our hearts,' and that makes us to be no more slaves but sons. Sullen
+obedience becomes glad choice, and it is the inmost desire, and the
+deepest delight, of the loving child to do always the things that
+please the loving Father. 'I ought' and 'I will' coalesce, and so
+there is no slavery, but perfect freedom, in recognising and bowing
+to the great 'I must' which sweetly rules the life.
+
+III. Christ gives deliverance from servility to men.
+
+We need not touch on the historical connection, plain as that is,
+between modern conceptions of individual freedom and the influence
+of Christ's teaching. Modern democracy is rooted in Christ, though
+it is often unaware of its genesis, and blindly attacks the force to
+which it owes its existence.
+
+Because all men are redeemed by Christ, because by that redemption
+all stand in the same relation to Him, because all have equal access
+to Him, and are taught and guided by His Spirit, because 'we must
+all appear before the judgment-seat of Christ,' therefore class
+prerogatives and subject classes fade away, and there is 'neither
+bond nor free,' but 'all are one in Christ Jesus.'
+
+But there are other ways in which men tyrannise over men and in
+which Christ's redemption sets us free.
+
+There is the undue authority of favourite teachers and examples.
+
+There is the tyranny of public opinion.
+
+There is undue regard to human approbation.
+
+There is the sway of priestcraft.
+
+How does Christianity deliver from these? It makes Christ's law our
+unconditional duty. It makes His approbation our highest joy. It
+gives legitimate scope to the instinct of loyalty, submission, and
+imitation, and of subjection to authority. It reduces to
+insignificance men's judgment, and all their loud voices to a babble
+of nothings. 'With me it is a very small matter to be judged of
+man's judgment.' It brings the soul into direct communion with God,
+and sweeps away all intermediaries.
+
+'Not for that we have dominion over your faith but are helpers of
+your joy; for by faith ye stand.'
+
+So personal independence and individuality of character are the
+result of Christianity. 'I have made you go upright.
+
+IV. Christ gives us freedom from the power of circumstances.
+
+Most men are made by these. We need not here enter on questions of
+the influence of their environment on all men's development.
+
+But Christ gives us--
+
+_(a)_ A great aim for our lives high above these.
+
+_(b)_ A foothold in Him outside of them. We are not the slaves
+of our circumstances, but their masters.
+
+_(c)_ The power to utilise them.
+
+So Christians are 'free' in all senses of the word.
+
+The great Act of Emancipation has been passed for us all. Only
+Christ has rule over us, and we have our perfect freedom in His
+service. We have been sitting in the prison-house, and He has come
+and declared 'The Spirit of the Lord is upon Me to proclaim liberty
+to the captives.'
+
+
+
+
+THE BOOK OF NUMBERS
+
+
+
+
+THE WARFARE OF CHRISTIAN SERVICE
+
+
+ 'All that enter in to perform the service, to do the
+ work in the tabernacle.'
+ NUM. iv. 23.
+
+These words occur in the series of regulations as to the functions
+of the Levites in the Tabernacle worship. The words 'to perform the
+service' are, as the margin tells us, literally, to 'war the
+warfare.' Although it may be difficult to say why such very prosaic
+and homely work as carrying the materials of the Tabernacle and the
+sacrificial vessels was designated by such a term, the underlying
+suggestion is what I desire to fix upon now--viz., that work for
+God, of whatever kind it be, which Christian people are bound to do,
+and which is mainly service for men for God's sake, will never be
+rightly done until we understand that it is a _warfare_, as
+well as a work.
+
+The phrase on which I am commenting occurs again and again in the
+regulations as to the Levitical service, and is applied, not only as
+in my text to those who were told off to bear the burdens on the
+march, but also to the whole body of Levites, who did the inferior
+services in connection with the ritual worship. They were not, as it
+would appear, sacrificing priests, but they belonged to the same
+tribe as these, and they had sacred functions to discharge. So we
+come to this principle, that Christian service is to be looked at as
+warfare.
+
+Now, that is a principle which ought to be applied to all
+Christians. For there is no such thing as designating a portion of
+Christ's Church to service which others have not to perform. The
+distinction of 'priest' and 'layman' existed in the Old Testament;
+it does not exist under the New Covenant, and there is no obligation
+upon any one Christian man to devote himself for Christ's sake to
+Christ's service and man's help (which is Christ's service), that
+does not lie equally upon all Christian people. The function is the
+same for all; the methods of discharging it may be widely different.
+Within the limits of the priestly tribe there may still be those
+whose office it is to carry the vessels, and those whose office it
+is to act more especially as ministering priests; but they are all
+'of the tribe of Levi.' We, if we are Christian people at all, are
+all bound to do this work of 'the tabernacle,' and war this warfare.
+
+It is important that we Christian people should elevate our thoughts
+of our duties in the world to the height of this great metaphor. The
+metaphor of the Christian life as being a 'warfare' is familiar
+enough, but that is not exactly the point which I wish to dwell upon
+now. When we speak about 'fighting the good fight of faith,' we
+generally mean our wrestle and struggle with our own evils and with
+the things that hinder us from developing a Christlike character,
+and 'growing in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Saviour
+Jesus Christ.' But it is another sort of warfare about which I am
+now speaking, the warfare which every Christian man has to wage who
+flings himself into the work of diminishing the world's miseries and
+sins, and tries to make people better, and happier because they are
+better. That is a fight, and will always be so, if it is rightly
+done.
+
+I. Think of the foes.
+
+Speaking generally, society is constituted upon a non-Christian
+basis. We talk about 'Christian' nations. There is not one on the
+face of the earth. There is not a nation whose institutions and
+maxims and politics and the practices of its individual members are
+ruled and moulded predominantly by the Gospel of Jesus Christ. So
+every man that has come into personal touch with that Lord, and has
+felt that His commandments are the supreme authority in his own
+individual life, when he goes out into society, comes full tilt
+against a whole host of things that are in pronounced antagonism, or
+in real though unacknowledged contradiction, to the principles by
+which a Christian has to live for himself, and to commend to his
+brethren. So we have to fight. There are two things to be done--the
+imparting of good which will increase the sum of the world's
+happiness, and the destruction of evil, which will subtract some of
+the world's sorrows. The latter is always a conflict, for there are
+arrayed in defence of the evil vested interests, and the influence
+of habit, and the lowered vitality and sensitiveness of conscience
+which has come from breathing the polluted atmosphere which evil has
+vitiated. So that if we set ourselves, in humble, quiet, out-and-out
+dependence on Jesus Christ and submission to His will, to lead other
+people to submit to His will, there is nothing in the world more
+certain than that we shall find against us, starting up, as it were,
+out of the mist and taking form suddenly, a whole host of enemies.
+So we Christian men, as individuals, as members of a community and
+able to bring some influence to bear upon the conscience of society,
+have to fight against popular social evils, and to war for
+righteousness' sake.
+
+There is another foe. There is nothing that men dislike more than
+being lifted up into a clearer atmosphere and made to see truths
+which they do not see or care for. When we first become Christians
+we are all hot to go and teach and preach; and we fancy that we have
+only to stand up, with a Bible in our hand, and read two or three
+texts, and our fellows will grasp them as gladly as we have done.
+But soon we find out that it is not so easy to draw men to Christ as
+we thought it would be. We have to fight against gravitation and
+unwillingness, when we would lift a poor brother into the liberty
+and the light that we are in. We have to struggle with the men that
+we are trying to help. We have to war, in order to bring 'the peace
+of God which passes understanding' into their hearts.
+
+But the worst of all our foes, in doing Christian service, is our
+own miserable selves, with our laziness, and our vanity, and our
+wondering what A, B, and C will think about us, and the mingling of
+impure motives with nobler ones, and our being angry with people
+because they are so insensible, not so much to Christ's love as to
+our words and pleadings. Unless we can purge all that devil's leaven
+out of ourselves, we have little chance of working 'the work of the
+tabernacle,' or warring the warfare of God. Ah! brethren, to do
+anything for this world of unbelief and sin, of which we ourselves
+are part, is a struggle. And I know of no work that needs more
+continual putting a firm heel upon self, in all its subtle
+manifestations, than the various forms of Christian service. Not
+only we preachers, but Sunday-school teachers, mothers in their
+nurseries, teaching their children, and all of us, if we are trying
+to do anything for men, for Christ's sake, must feel, if we are
+honest with ourselves and about our work, that the first condition
+of success in it is to fight down self, and that only then, being
+emptied of ourselves, are we ready to be filled with the Spirit, by
+which we are made mighty to pull down the strongholds of sin.
+
+II. The weapons of this warfare.
+
+There are two great passages in the New Testament, both of which
+deal with the Christian life under this metaphor of warfare. One of
+these is the detailed description of the Christian armour in the
+Epistle to the Ephesians. There we have described the equipment for
+that phase of the fight of the Christian life which has to do mainly
+with the perfecting of the individual character. But somewhat
+different is the armour which is to be worn, when the Christian man
+goes out into the world to labour and to wage war there for Jesus
+Christ. We may turn, then, rather to the other of the two passages
+in question for the descriptions of the equipment, armour, and
+weapons of the Christian in his warfare for the spread of truth and
+goodness in the world. The passage to which I refer is in 2 Cor. vi.
+What are the weapons that Paul specifies in that place? I venture to
+alter their order, because he seems to have put them down just as
+they came into his mind, and we can put some kind of logical
+sequence into them. 'By the Word of God'--that is the first one. 'By
+the Holy Ghost,' which is otherwise given as 'by the power of God,'
+is the next. Get your minds and hearts filled with the truth of the
+Gospel, and dwell in fellowship with God, baptized with His Holy
+Spirit; and then you will be clothed 'as with a vesture down to your
+heels' with the power of God. These are the divine side, the weapons
+given us from above--'the Word of God' which is 'the sword of the
+Spirit,' and the indwelling Holy Ghost manifesting Himself in power.
+Then follow a series of human qualities which, though they are 'the
+fruit of the Spirit,' are yet not produced in us without our own co-
+operation. We have to forge and sharpen these weapons, though the
+fire in which they are forged is from above, and the metal of which
+they are made is given from heaven, like meteoric iron. These are
+'kindness, long-suffering, love unfeigned.' We have to dismiss from
+our minds the ordinary characteristics of warfare in thinking of
+that which Christians are to wage. Like the old Knights Templars, we
+must carry a sword which has a cross for its hilt, and must be clad
+in gentleness, and long-suffering, and unfeigned love. 'The wrath of
+men worketh not the righteousness of God.' You cannot bully people
+into Christianity, you cannot scold them into goodness. There must
+be sweetness in order to attract, and he imperfectly echoes the
+music of the voice that came from 'the lips into which grace was
+poured,' whose words are harsh and rough, and who preaches the
+Gospel as if he were thundering damnation into people's ears.
+
+Brethren, whatever be our warfare against sin, we must never lose
+our tempers. Harsh words break no bones indeed, but neither do they
+break hearts. A character like Jesus Christ--that is the victorious
+weapon. Let a man go and live in the world with these weapons that I
+have been naming, the truth of God in his heart, the Holy Spirit in
+his spirit, the power that comes therefrom animating his deadness
+and strengthening his weakness, and himself an emblem and an
+embodiment of the redeeming love of Christ--and though he spoke no
+word he would be sure to preach Christ; and though he struck no blow
+he would be a formidable antagonist to the hosts of evil, and the
+icebergs of sin and godlessness would run down into water before his
+silent and omnipotent shining. These are the weapons.
+
+III. Note the temper, or disposition, of the Christian warrior-
+servant.
+
+Courage goes without saying. If a man expects to be beaten, and to
+do nothing by his Christian witness but clear his conscience, he
+deserves nothing else than what he will get--viz. that his
+expectation will be fulfilled and he _will_ do nothing else
+_but_ clear his conscience, and that imperfectly. That is why
+so many preachers and Sunday-school teachers never see any
+conversions in their congregation or classes--because they do not
+expect any; because they go to their work without the enthusiastic
+boldness which would give power to their utterances.
+
+I suppose concentration, too, goes without saying. When a man is on
+the battlefield with the swords whirling about his head, and the
+bayonets an inch from his breast, he does not go dreaming of scenes
+a hundred miles off, or think anything else than the one thing, how
+to keep a whole skin and wound an enemy. If Christian men will do
+their work in the dawdling, half-interested, and half-indifferent
+way in which so many of us promenade through our Christian service
+as if it was a review and not a fight, they are not likely to bring
+back many trophies of victory. You must put your whole selves into
+the battle. I said we must subdue ourselves ere we begin to fight.
+That is no contradiction to what I am saying now, for, as we all
+know, there is a distinction between the two selves in us--the self-
+centred self, which is to be crucified, and the God-centred self,
+which is to be nourished. You must put your whole selves into the
+battle.
+
+There must, too, be discipline. One difference between a mob and an
+army is that the mob has as many wills as there are heads in it, and
+the army has only one will, that of the commander. He says to one
+man 'Go!' and he goes, and gets shot; and to another one 'Come!' and
+he comes; and to a third one 'Do this!' and, no matter what it is,
+straightway he goes and does it. So if we are soldiers we have to
+take orders from headquarters, and to be sure that we pay no
+attention to any other commands. Suppose a man is set at a certain
+post by his captain, and a corporal comes and says, 'You go and do
+this other thing; never mind your post, I will look after that,' to
+obey that is mutiny. If Jesus Christ tells you to do anything, and
+any others say 'Do not do it just yet!' neglect them, and obey Him.
+If your own heart says, 'Stop a little while and try something other
+and easier before you tackle that task,' be sure of the Captain's
+voice, and then, whatever happens, obey, and obey at once. Warfare
+is a diabolical thing, but there is a divine beauty in one aspect of
+it--
+
+ Their's not to make reply,
+ Their's not to reason why,
+ Their's but to do--
+
+even if it mean 'to die.' Thus let us wage warfare.
+
+IV. The Relieving Guard.
+
+This metaphor of warfare is used in the Book of Job, in a passage
+where our English Version does not show it. So I venture to
+substitute the right translation for the one in the Authorised
+Version, 'All the days of my warfare will I wait till my change
+comes.' The guard will be relieved some day, and the private that
+has been tramping up and down in the dark or the snow, perhaps
+within rifle's length of the enemy, will shoulder his gun and go
+into the comfortable guardhouse, and hang up his knapsack, and fling
+off his dirty boots, and sit down by the fire, and make himself
+comfortable. There is a 'heavenly manner of relieving guard.' Soon
+it will be the end of the sentry's time, and then, as one of those
+that had done a good day's work, and a long one, said with a sigh of
+relief, 'I have fought a good fight.' Henceforth the helmet is put
+off, which is 'the hope of salvation,' and the crown is put on,
+which is salvation in its fullness. 'All the days of my warfare will
+I wait'--till my Captain relieves the guard.
+
+
+
+
+THE GUIDING PILLAR
+
+
+ 'So it was alway: the cloud covered [the tabernacle] by
+ day, and the appearance of fire by night.'--Num. ix. 16.
+
+The children of Israel in the wilderness, surrounded by miracle, had
+nothing which we do not possess. They had some things in an inferior
+form; their sustenance came by manna, ours comes by God's blessing
+on our daily work, which is better. Their guidance came by this
+supernatural pillar; ours comes by the reality of which that pillar
+was nothing but a picture. And so, instead of fancying that men thus
+led were in advance of us, we should learn that these, the
+supernatural manifestations, visible and palpable, of God's presence
+and guidance were the beggarly elements: 'God having provided some
+better thing for us that they without us should not be made
+perfect.'
+
+With this explanation of the relation between the miracle and symbol
+of the Old, and the reality and standing miracle of the New,
+Covenants, let us look at the eternal truths, which are set before
+us in a transitory form, in this cloud by day and fiery pillar by
+night.
+
+I. Note, first, the double form of the guiding pillar.
+
+The fire was the centre, the cloud was wrapped around it. The former
+was the symbol, making visible to a generation who had to be taught
+through their senses, the inaccessible holiness and flashing
+brightness and purity of the divine nature; the latter tempered and
+veiled the too great brightness for feeble eyes.
+
+The same double element is found in all God's manifestations of
+Himself to men. In every form of revelation are present both the
+heart and core of light, which no eye can look upon, and the
+merciful veil which, because it veils, unveils; because it hides,
+reveals; makes visible because it conceals; and shows God because it
+is 'the hiding of His power.' So, through all the history of His
+dealings with men, there has ever been what is called in Scripture
+language the 'face,' or the 'name of God'; the aspect of the divine
+nature on which the eye can look; and manifested through it, there
+has always been the depth and inaccessible abyss of that Infinite
+Being. We have to be thankful that in the cloud is the fire, and
+that round the fire is the cloud. For only so can our eyes behold
+and our hands grasp the else invisible and remote central Sun of the
+universe. God hides to make better known the glories of His
+character. His revelation is the flashing of the uncreated and
+intolerable light of His infinite Being through the encircling
+clouds of human conceptions and words, or of deeds which each show
+forth, in forms fitted to our apprehension, some fragment of His
+lustre. After all revelation, He remains unrevealed. After ages of
+showing forth His glory, He is still 'the King invisible, whom no
+man hath seen at any time nor can see.' The revelation which He
+makes of Himself is 'truth and is no lie.' The recognition of the
+presence in it of both the fire and the cloud does not cast any
+doubt on the reality of our imperfect knowledge, or of the authentic
+participation in the nature of the central light, of the sparkles of
+it which reach us. We know with a real knowledge what we know of
+Him. What He shows us is Himself, though not His whole self.
+
+This double aspect of all possible revelation of God, which was
+symbolised in comparatively gross external form in the pillar that
+led Israel on its march, and lay stretched out and quiescent, a
+guarding covering above the Tabernacle when the weary march was
+still, recurs all through the history of Old Testament revelation by
+type and prophecy and ceremony, in which the encompassing cloud was
+comparatively dense, and the light which pierced it relatively
+faint. It reappears in both elements in Christ, but combined in new
+proportions, so as that 'the veil, that is to say, His flesh,' is
+thinned to transparency and all aglow with the indwelling lustre of
+manifest Deity. So a light, set in some fair alabaster vase, shines
+through its translucent walls, bringing out every delicate tint and
+meandering vein of colour, while itself diffused and softened by the
+enwrapping medium which it beautifies by passing through its purity.
+Both are made visible and attractive to dull eyes by the
+conjunction. 'He that hath seen Christ hath seen the Father,' and he
+that hath seen the Father in Christ hath seen the man Christ, as
+none see Him who are blind to the incarnate deity which illuminates
+the manhood in which it dwells.
+
+But we have to note also the varying appearance of the pillar
+according to need. There was a double change in the pillar according
+to the hour, and according as the congregation was on the march or
+encamped. By day it was a cloud, by night it glowed in the darkness.
+On the march it moved before them, an upright pillar, as gathered
+together for energetic movement; when the camp rested it 'returned
+to the many thousands of Israel' and lay quietly stretched above the
+Tabernacle like one of the long-drawn, motionless clouds above the
+setting summer sun, glowing through all its substance with
+unflashing radiance reflected from unseen light, and 'on all the
+glory' (shrined in the Holy Place beneath) was 'a defence.'
+
+Both these changes of aspect symbolise for us the reality of the
+Protean capacity of change according to our ever-varying needs,
+which for our blessing we may find in that ever-changing,
+unchanging, divine Presence which will be our companion, if we will.
+
+It was not only by a natural process that, as daylight declined,
+what had seemed but a column of smoke in the fervid desert sunlight,
+brightened into a column of fire, blazing amid the clear stars. But
+we may well believe in an actual admeasurement of the degree of
+light, correspondent to the darkness and to the need for certitude
+and cheering sense of God's protection, which the defenceless camp
+would feel as they lay down to rest.
+
+When the deceitful brightness of earth glistens and dazzles around
+us, our vision of Him may be 'a cloudy screen to temper the
+deceitful ray'; and when 'there stoops on our path, in storm and
+shade, the frequent night,' as earth grows darker, and life becomes
+greyer and more sombre, and verges to its eventide, the pillar
+blazes brighter before the weeping eye, and draws nearer to the
+lonely heart. We have a God who manifests Himself in the pillar of
+cloud by day, and in flaming fire by night.
+
+II. Note the guidance of the pillar.
+
+When it lifts the camp marches; when it glides down and lies
+motionless the march is stopped, and the tents are pitched. The main
+point which is dwelt upon in this description of the God-guided
+pilgrimage of the wandering people is the absolute uncertainty in
+which they were kept as to the duration of their encampment, and as
+to the time and circumstances of their march. Sometimes the cloud
+tarried upon the Tabernacle many days; sometimes for a night only;
+sometimes it lifted in the night. 'Whether it was by day or by night
+that the cloud was taken up, they journeyed. Or whether it were two
+days, or a month, or a year that the cloud tarried upon the
+Tabernacle, remaining thereon, the children of Israel abode in their
+tents, and journeyed not: but when it was taken up they journeyed.'
+So never, from moment to moment, did they know when the moving cloud
+might settle, or the resting cloud might soar. Therefore, absolute
+uncertainty as to the next stage was visibly represented before them
+by that hovering guide which determined everything, and concerning
+whose next movement they knew absolutely nothing.
+
+Is not that all true about us? We have no guiding cloud like this.
+So much the better. Have we not a more real guide? God guides us by
+circumstances, God guides us by His word, God guides us by His
+Spirit, speaking through our common-sense and in our understandings,
+and, most of all, God guides us by that dear Son of His, in whom is
+the fire and round whom is the cloud. And perhaps we may even
+suppose that our Lord implies some allusion to this very symbol in
+His own great words, 'I am the Light of the world. He that followeth
+Me shall not walk in darkness, but shall have the light of life.'
+For the conception of 'following' the light seems to make it plain
+that our Lord's image is not that of the sun in the heavens, or any
+such supernal light, but that of some light which comes near enough
+to a man to move before him, and behind which he can march. So, I
+think, that Christ Himself laid His hand upon this ancient symbol,
+and in these great words said in effect, 'I am that which it only
+shadowed and foretold.' At all events, whether in them He was
+pointing to our text or no, we must feel that He is the reality
+which was expressed by this outward symbol. And no man who can say,
+'Jesus Christ is the Captain of my salvation, and after His pattern
+I march; at the pointing of His guiding finger I move; and in His
+footsteps, He being my helper, I try to tread,' need feel or fancy
+that any possible pillar, floating before the dullest eye, was a
+better, surer, or diviner guide than he possesses. They whom Christ
+guides want none other for leader, pattern, counsellor, companion,
+reward. This Christ is our Christ 'for ever and ever, He will be our
+guide even unto death' and beyond it. The pillar that we follow,
+which will glow with the ruddy flame of love in the darkest hours of
+life--blessed be His name!--will glide in front of us through the
+'valley of the shadow of death,' brightest then when the murky
+midnight is blackest. Nor will the pillar which guides us cease to
+blaze, as did the guide of the desert march, when Jordan has been
+crossed. It will still move before us on paths of continuous and
+ever-increasing approach to infinite perfection. They who here
+follow Christ afar off and with faltering steps shall there 'follow
+the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.'
+
+In like manner, the same absolute uncertainty which was intended to
+keep the Israelites (though it failed often to do so) in the
+attitude of constant dependence, is the condition in which we all
+have to live, though we mask it from ourselves. That we do not know
+what lies before us is a commonplace. The same long tracts of
+monotonous continuance in the same place and doing the same duties
+befall us that befell these men. Years pass, and the pillar spreads
+itself out, a defence above the unmoving sanctuary. And then, all in
+a flash, when we are least thinking of change, it gathers itself
+together, is a pillar again, shoots upwards, and moves forwards; and
+it is for us to go after it. And so our lives are shuttlecocked
+between uniform sameness which may become mechanical monotony, and
+agitation by change which may make us lose our hold of fixed
+principles and calm faith, unless we recognise that the continuance
+and the change are alike the will of the guiding God, whose will is
+signified by the stationary or moving pillar.
+
+III. That leads me to the last thing that I would note--viz. the
+docile following of the Guide.
+
+In the context, the writer does not seem to be able to get away from
+the thought that whatever the pillar indicated, immediate prompt
+obedience followed. He says so over and over and over again. 'As
+long as the cloud abode they rested, and when the cloud tarried long
+they journeyed not'; and 'when the cloud was a few days on the
+Tabernacle they abode'; and 'according to the commandment they
+journeyed'; and 'when the cloud abode until the morning they
+journeyed'; and 'whether it were two days, or a month, or a year
+that the cloud tarried they journeyed not, but abode in their
+tents.' So, after he has reiterated the thing half a dozen times or
+more, he finishes by putting it all again in one verse, as the last
+impression which he would leave from the whole narrative--'at the
+commandment of the Lord they rested in their tents, and at the
+commandment of the Lord they journeyed.' Obedience was prompt;
+whensoever and for whatsoever the signal was given, the men were
+ready. In the night, after they had had their tents pitched for a
+long period, when only the watchers' eyes were open, the pillar
+lifts, and in an instant the alarm is given, and all the camp is in
+a bustle. That is what we have to set before us as the type of our
+lives. We are to be as ready for every indication of God's will as
+they were. The peace and blessedness of our lives largely depend on
+our being eager to obey, and therefore quick to perceive, the
+slightest sign of motion in the resting, or of rest in the moving,
+pillar which regulates our march and our encamping.
+
+What do we need in order to cultivate and keep such a disposition?
+We need perpetual watchfulness lest the pillar should lift
+unnoticed. When Nelson was second in command at Copenhagen, the
+admiral in command of the fleet hoisted the signal for recall, and
+Nelson put his telescope to his blind eye and said, 'I do not see
+it.' That is very like what we are tempted to do. When the signal
+for unpleasant duties that we would gladly get out of is hoisted, we
+are very apt to put the telescope to the blind eye, and pretend to
+ourselves that we do not see the fluttering flags. We need still
+more to keep our wills in absolute suspense, if His will has not
+declared itself. Do not let us be in a hurry to run before God. When
+the Israelites were crossing the Jordan, they were told to leave a
+great space between themselves and the guiding ark, that they might
+know how to go, because they had 'not passed that way heretofore.'
+Impatient hurrying at God's heels is apt to lead us astray. Let Him
+get well in front, that you may be quite sure which way He desires
+you to go, before you go. And if you are not sure which way He
+desires you to go, be sure that He does not at that moment desire
+you to go anywhere.
+
+We need to hold the present with a slack hand, so as to be ready to
+fold our tents and take to the road, if God will. We must not reckon
+on continuance, nor strike our roots so deep that it needs a
+hurricane to remove us. To those who set their gaze on Christ, no
+present, from which He wishes them to remove, can be so good for
+them as the new conditions into which He would have them pass. It is
+hard to leave the spot, though it be in the desert, where we have so
+long encamped that it has come to feel like home. We may look with
+regret on the circle of black ashes on the sand where our little
+fire glinted cheerily, and our feet may ache, and our hearts ache
+more, as we begin our tramp once again, but we must set ourselves to
+meet the God-appointed change cheerfully, in the confidence that
+nothing will be left behind which it is not good to lose, nor
+anything met which does not bring a blessing, however its first
+aspect may be harsh or sad.
+
+We need, too, to cultivate the habit of prompt obedience. It is
+usually reluctance which puts the drag on. Slow obedience is often
+the germ of incipient disobedience. In matters of prudence and of
+intellect, second thoughts are better than first, and third
+thoughts, which often come back to first ones, better than second;
+but in matters of duty, first thoughts are generally best. They are
+the instinctive response of conscience to the voice of God, while
+second thoughts are too often the objections of disinclination, or
+sloth, or cowardice. It is easiest to do our duty when we are at
+first sure of it. It then comes with an impelling power which
+carries us over obstacles as on the crest of a wave, while
+hesitation and delay leave us stranded in shoal water. If we would
+follow the pillar, we must follow it at once.
+
+A heart that waits and watches for God's direction, that uses
+common-sense as well as faith to unravel small and great
+perplexities, and is willing to sit loose to the present, however
+pleasant, in order that it may not miss the indications which say,
+'Arise, this is not your rest,' fulfils the conditions on which, if
+we keep them, we may be sure that He will guide us by the right way,
+and bring us at last to 'the city of habitation.'
+
+
+
+
+HOBAB
+
+
+ 'And Moses said unto Hobab ... Come thou with us, and
+ we will do thee good: for the Lord hath spoken good
+ concerning Israel.'--NUM. x. 29.
+
+There is some doubt with regard to the identity of this Hobab.
+Probably he was a man of about the same age as Moses, his brother-
+in-law, and a son of Jethro, a wily Kenite, a Bedouin Arab. Moses
+begs him to join himself to his motley company, and to be to him in
+the wilderness 'instead of eyes.' What did Moses want a man for,
+when he had the cloud? What do we want common-sense for, when we
+have God's Spirit? What do we want experience and counsel for, when
+we have divine guidance promised to us? The two things work in
+together. The cloud led the march, but it was very well to have a
+man that knew all about the oases and the wells, the situation of
+which was known only to the desert-born tribes, and who could teach
+the helpless slaves from Goshen the secrets of camp life. So Moses
+pressed Hobab to change his position, to break with his past, and to
+launch himself into an altogether new and untried sort of life.
+
+And what does he plead with him as the reason? 'We will do thee
+good, for the Lord hath spoken good concerning Israel.' Probably
+Hobab looked rather shy at the security, for I suppose he was no
+worshipper of Jehovah, and he said, 'No; I had rather go home to my
+own people and my own kindred and my father's house where I fit in,
+and keep to my own ways, and have something a little more definite
+to lay hold of than your promise, or the promise of your Jehovah
+that lies behind it. These are not solid, and I am going back to my
+tribe.' But Moses pressed and he at last consented, and the
+following verses suggest that the arrangement was made
+satisfactorily, and that the journeyings began prosperously. In the
+Book of Judges we find traces of the presence of Hobab's descendants
+as incorporated among the people of Israel. One of them came to be
+somebody, the Jael who struck the tent-peg through the temples of
+the sleeping Sisera, for she is called 'the wife of Heber the
+_Kenite_.' Probably, then, in some sense Hobab must have become
+a worshipper of Jehovah, and have cast in his lot with his brother-
+in-law and his people. I do not set Hobab up as a shining example.
+We do not know much about his religion. But it seems to me that this
+little glimpse into a long-forgotten and unimportant life may teach
+us two or three things about the venture of faith, the life of
+faith, and the reward of faith.
+
+I. The venture of faith.
+
+I have already said that Hobab had nothing in the world to trust to
+except Moses' word, and Moses' report of God's Word. 'We will do you
+good; God has said that He will do good to us, and you shall have
+your share in it.' It was a grave thing, and, in many circumstances,
+would have been a supremely foolish thing, credulous to the verge of
+insanity, to risk all upon the mere promise of one in Moses'
+position, who had so little in his own power with which to fulfil
+the promise; and who referred him to an unseen divinity, somewhere
+or other; and so drew bills upon heaven and futurity, and did not
+feel himself at all bound to pay them when they fell due, unless God
+should give him the cash to do it with. But Hobab took the plunge,
+he ventured all upon these two promises--Moses' word, and God's word
+that underlay it.
+
+Now that is just what we have to do. For, after all talking about
+reasons for belief, and evidences of religion, and all the rest of
+it, it all comes to this at last--will you risk everything on Jesus
+Christ's bare word? There are plenty of reasons for doing so, but
+what I wish to bring out is this, that the living heart and root of
+true Christianity is neither more nor less than the absolute and
+utter reliance upon nothing else but Christ, and therefore on His
+word. He did not even condescend to give reasons for that reliance,
+for His most solemn assurance was just this, 'Verily, verily, I say
+unto you.' That is as much as to say, 'If you do not see in Me,
+without any more argument, reason enough for believing Me, you do
+not see Me at all.'
+
+Christ did not argue--He asserted, and in default of all other
+proof, if I might venture to say so, He put His own personality into
+the scales and said, 'There, that will outweigh everything.' So no
+wonder that 'they were astonished at His doctrine,'--not so much at
+the substance of it as at the tone of it, 'for He taught them
+_with authority_.'
+
+But what right had He to teach them with authority? What right has
+He to present Himself there in front of us and proclaim, 'I say unto
+you, and there is an end of it'? The heart and essence of Christian
+faith is doing, in a far sublimer fashion, precisely what this wild
+Arab did, when he uprooted himself from the conditions in which his
+life had grown up, and flung himself into an unknown future, on bare
+trust in a bare word. Jesus Christ asks us to do the same by Him.
+Whether His word comes to us revealing, or commanding, or promising,
+it is absolute, and, for His true followers, ends all controversy,
+all hesitation, all reluctance. When He commands it is ours to obey
+and live. And when He promises it is for us to twine all the
+tendrils of our expectations round that faithful word, and by faith
+to make 'the anchor of the soul, sure and steadfast.' The venture of
+faith takes a _word_ for the most solid thing in the universe,
+and the Incarnate Word of God for the basis of all our hope, the
+authority for all our conduct, 'the Master-light of all our seeing.'
+
+II. Hobab suggests to us, secondly--
+
+The sort of life that follows the venture of faith. The hindrances
+to his joining Moses were plainly put by himself. He said in effect,
+'I will not come; I will depart to mine own land and to my kindred.
+Why should I attach myself to a horde of strangers, and go wandering
+about the desert for the rest of my life, looking out for
+encampments for them, when I can return to where I have been all my
+days; and be surrounded by the familiar atmosphere of friends and
+relatives?' But he bethought himself that there was a nobler life to
+live than that, and because he was stirred by the impulse of
+reliance on Moses and his promise, and perhaps by some germ of
+reliance on Moses' God, he finally said, 'The die is cast. I choose
+my side. I will break with the past. I turn my back on kindred and
+home. Here I draw a broad line across the page, and begin over again
+in an altogether new kind of life. I identify myself with these
+wanderers; sharing their fortunes, hoping to share their prosperity,
+and taking their God for my God.' He had perhaps not been a nomad
+before, for there still are permanent settlements as well as nomad
+encampments in Arabia, as there were in those days, and he and his
+relatives, from the few facts that we know of them, seem to have had
+a fixed home, with a very narrow zone of wandering round it. So
+Hobab, an old man probably, if he was anything like the age of his
+connection by marriage, Moses, who was eighty at this time, makes up
+his mind to begin a new career.
+
+Now that is what we have to do. If we have faith in Christ and His
+promise, we shall not say, 'I am going back to my kindred and to my
+home.' We shall be prepared to accept the conditions of a wanderer's
+life. We shall recognise and feel, far more than we ever have done,
+that we are indeed 'pilgrims and sojourners' here. Dear Christian
+friends, we have no business to call ourselves Christ's men, unless
+the very characteristic of our lives is that we are drawn ever
+forward by the prospect of future good, and unless that future is a
+great deal more solid and more operative upon us, and tells more on
+our lives, than this intrusive, solid-seeming present that thrusts
+itself between us and our true home. That is a sure saying. The
+Christian obligation to live a life of detachment, even while
+diligent in duty, is not to be brushed aside as pulpit rhetoric and
+exaggeration, but it is the plainest teaching of the New Testament.
+I wish it was a little more exemplified in the daily life of the
+people who call themselves Christians.
+
+If I am not living for the unseen and the future, what right have I
+to say that I am Christ's at all? If the shadows are more than the
+substance to me; if this condensed vapour and fog that we call
+reality has not been to our apprehension thinned away into the
+unsubstantial mist that it is, what have the principles of
+Christianity done for us, and what worth is Christ's word to us? If
+I believe Him, the world is--I do not say, as the sentimental poet
+put it, 'but a fleeting show, for man's illusion given';--but as
+Paul puts it, a glass which may either reveal or obscure the
+realities beyond; and according as we look at, or look through, 'the
+things seen and temporal,' do we see, or miss, 'the things unseen
+and eternal.' So, then, the life of faith has for its essential
+characteristic--because it is a life of reliance on Christ's bare
+word--that future good is consciously its supreme aim. That will
+detach us, as it did Hobab, from home and kindred, and make us feel
+that we are 'pilgrims and sojourners.'
+
+III. Lastly, our story suggests to us--
+
+The rewards of faith.
+
+'Come with us,' says Moses; 'we are journeying unto the place of
+which the Lord said, I will give it you. Come thou with us, and we
+will do thee what goodness the Lord shall do unto us.' He went, and
+neither he nor Moses ever saw the land, or at least never set their
+feet on it. Moses saw it from Pisgah, but probably Hobab did not
+even get so much as that.
+
+So he had all his tramping through the wilderness, and all his work,
+for nothing, had he? Had he not better have gone back to Midian, and
+made use of the present reality, than followed a will-of-the-wisp
+that led him into a bog, if he got none of the good that he set out
+expecting to get? Then, did he make a mistake? Would he have been a
+wiser man if he had stuck to his first refusal? Surely not. It seems
+to me that the very fact of this great promise being given to this
+old--dare I call Hobab a 'saint'?--to this old saint, and never
+being fulfilled at all in this world, compels us to believe that
+there was some gleam of hope, and of certainty, of a future life,
+even in these earliest days of dim and partial revelation.
+
+To me it is very illuminative, and very beautiful, that the dying
+Jacob bursts in his song into a sudden exclamation, 'I have waited
+for Thy salvation, O Lord!' It is as if he had felt that all his
+life long he had been looking for what had never come, and that it
+could not be that God was going to let him go down to the grave and
+never grasp the good that he had been waiting for all his days. We
+may apply substantially the same thoughts to Hobab, and to all his
+like, and may turn them to our own use, and argue that the
+imperfections of the consequences of our faith here on earth are
+themselves evidences of a future, where all that Christ has said
+shall be more than fulfilled, and no man will be able to say, 'Thou
+didst send me out, deluding me with promises which have all gone to
+water and have failed.'
+
+Hobab dying there in the desert had made the right choice, and if we
+will trust ourselves to Christ and His faithful word, and, trusting
+to Him, will feel that we are detached from the present and that it
+is but as the shadow of a cloud, whatever there may be wanting in
+the results of our faith here on earth, there will be nothing
+wanting in its results at the last. Hobab did not regret his
+venture, and no man ever ventures his faith on Christ and is
+disappointed. 'He that believeth shall not be confounded.'
+
+
+
+
+THE HALLOWING OF WORK AND OF REST
+
+
+ 'And it came to pass, when the ark set forward, that
+ Moses said, Rise up, Lord, and let Thine enemies be
+ scattered; and let them that hate Thee flee before Thee.
+ 36. And when it rested, he said, Return, O Lord, unto
+ the many thousands of Israel.'--Num. x. 35, 36.
+
+The picture suggested by this text is a very striking and vivid one.
+We see the bustle of the morning's breaking up of the encampment of
+Israel. The pillar of cloud, which had lain diffused and motionless
+over the Tabernacle, gathers itself together into an upright shaft,
+and moves, a dark blot against the glittering blue sky, the sunshine
+masking its central fire, to the front of the encampment. Then the
+priests take up the ark, the symbol of the divine Presence, and fall
+into place behind the guiding pillar. Then come the stir of the
+ordering of the ranks, and a moment's pause, during which the leader
+lifts his voice--'Rise, Lord, and let Thine enemies be scattered,
+and let them that hate Thee flee before Thee.' Then, with braced
+resolve and confident hearts, the tribes set forward on the day's
+march.
+
+Long after those desert days a psalmist laid hold of the old prayer
+and offered it, as not antiquated yet by the thousand years that had
+intervened. 'Let God arise, and let His enemies be scattered,'
+prayed one of the later psalmists; 'let them that hate Him flee
+before Him.' We, too, in circumstances so different, may take up the
+immortal though ancient words, on which no dimming rust of antiquity
+has encrusted itself, and may, at the beginnings and the endings of
+all our efforts and of each of our days, and at the beginning and
+ending of life itself, offer this old prayer--the prayer which asked
+for a divine presence in the incipiency of our efforts, and the
+prayer which asked for a divine presence in the completion of our
+work and in the rest that remaineth.
+
+I. So, then, if we put these two petitions together, I think we
+shall see in them first, a pattern of that realisation of, and
+aspiration after, the divine Presence, which ought to fill all our
+lives.
+
+'Rise, Lord, let Thine enemies be scattered.'
+
+But was not that moving pillar the token that God had risen? And was
+not the psalmist who reiterated Moses' prayer asking for what had
+been done before he asked it? Was not the ark the symbol of the
+divine Presence, and was not its movement after the pillar a pledge
+to the whole host of Israel that the petition which they were
+offering, through their leader's lips, was granted ere it was
+offered? Yes. And yet the present God would not manifest His
+Presence except in response to the desire of His servants; and just
+because the ark was the symbol, and that moving column was the
+guarantee of God's being with the host as their defence, therefore
+there rose up with confidence this prayer, 'Rise, Lord, and let
+Thine enemies be scattered.'
+
+That twofold attitude, the realisation of, and therefore the
+aspiration after, the divine gifts, which are given before they are
+desired, but are not appropriated and brought into operation in our
+lives unless they are desired, is precisely the paradox of the
+Christian life. Having, we long for, and longing, we have, and
+because we possess God we pray, 'Oh! that we might possess Thee.'
+The more we long, the more we receive. But unless He gave Himself in
+anticipation of our longing, there would be neither longing nor
+reception. Only on condition of our desiring to have Him does He
+flow into our lives, victorious and strength-giving, and the more we
+experience that omnipotent might and calming, guiding nearness, the
+more assuredly we shall long for it.
+
+Let us then, dear brethren, blend these two things together, for
+indeed they are inseparable one from the other, and there can be no
+real experience in any depth of the one of them without the other.
+Blessed be God! there need be no long interval of waiting between
+sowing the seed of supplication and reaping the harvest of fruition.
+That process of growth and reaping goes on with instantaneous
+rapidity. 'Before they call I will answer,' for pillar and ark were
+there ere Moses opened his lips; and 'while they are yet speaking I
+will hear,' for, in response to the cry, the host moved
+triumphantly, guarded through the wilderness. So it may be, and
+ought to be, with each of us.
+
+In like manner, coupling these two petitions together, and taking
+them as unitedly covering the whole field of life in their great
+antitheses of work and rest, effort and accomplishment, beginning
+and ending, morning and evening, we may say that here is an example,
+to be appropriated in our own lives, of that continuous longing and
+realisation which will encircle all life as with a golden ring, and
+make every part of it uniform and blessed. To begin, continue, and
+end with God is the secret of joyful beginning, of patient
+continuance, and of triumphant ending. There is no reason in heaven,
+though there are hosts of excuses on earth, why there should not be,
+in the case of each of us, an absolutely continuous and
+uninterrupted sense of being with God. O brethren! that is a stage
+of Christian experience high above the one on which most of us
+stand. But that is our fault, and not the necessity of our
+condition. Let us lay this to heart, that it is possible to have the
+pillar always guiding our march, and possible to have it stretching,
+calm and motionless, over all our hours of rest.
+
+II. Now, if, turning from the lessons to be drawn from these two
+petitions, taken in conjunction, we look at them separately, we may
+say that we have here an example of the spirit in which we should
+set ourselves, day by day, and at each new epoch and beginning, be
+it greater or smaller, to every task.
+
+There are truths that underlie that first prayer, 'Rise up, Lord,
+and let Thine enemies be scattered,' which are of perennial
+validity, and apply to us as truly as to these warriors of God in
+the wilderness long centuries ago. The first of them is that the
+divine Presence is the source of all energy, and of successful
+endeavour after, and accomplishment of, any duty. The second of them
+is that that presence is, as I have been saying, granted, in its
+operative power, only on condition of its being sought. And the
+third of them is that I have a right to identify my enemies with
+God's only on condition that I have made His cause mine. When Moses
+prayed, 'Let Thine enemies be scattered,' he meant by these the
+hostile nomad tribes that might ring Israel round, and come down
+like a sandstorm upon them at any moment. What right had he to
+suppose that the people whose lances and swords threatened the
+motley host that he was leading through the wilderness were God's
+enemies? Only this right, that his host had consented to be God's
+soldiers, and that they having thus made His enemies theirs, He, on
+His part, was sure to make their enemies His. We are often tempted
+to identify our foes with God's, without having taken the
+preliminary step of having so yielded ourselves to be His servants
+and instruments for carrying forward His will, as that our own wills
+have become a vanishing quantity, or rather have been ennobled and
+greatened in proportion as they have been moulded in submission to
+His. We must take God's cause for ours, in all the various aspects
+of that phrase. And that means, first of all, that we make our own
+perfecting into the likeness of Jesus Christ the main aim of our own
+lives and efforts. It means, further, the putting ourselves bravely
+and manfully on the side of right and truth and justice, in all
+their forms. Above all, it means that we give ourselves to be God's
+instruments in carrying on His great purposes for the salvation of
+the world through Jesus Christ. If we do these things, whatever
+obstacles may arise in our paths, we may be sure that these are
+God's antagonists, because they are antagonists to God's work in and
+by us.
+
+Only in so far as they are such, can you pray, 'Let them flee before
+Thee!' Many of the things that we call our enemies come to us
+disguised, and are mistaken by our superficial sight, and we do not
+know that they are friends. 'All things work together for good to
+them that love God.' And, when we desire His Presence, the
+hindrances to doing His will--which are the only real enemies that
+we have to fight--will melt away before His power, 'as wax melteth'
+before the ardours of the fire; and, for the rest, the distresses,
+the difficulties, the sorrows, and all the other things that we so
+often think are our foes, we shall find out to have been our
+friends. Make God's cause yours, and He will make your cause His.
+
+That applies to the great things of life, and to the little things.
+I begin my day's work some morning, perhaps wearied, perhaps annoyed
+with a multiplicity of trifles which seem too small to bring great
+principles to bear upon them. But do you not think there would be a
+strange change wrought in the petty annoyances of every day, and in
+the small trifles of which all our lives, of whatever texture they
+are, must largely be composed, if we began each day and each task
+with that old prayer, 'Rise, Lord, and let Thine enemies be
+scattered'? Do you not think there would come a quiet into our
+hearts, and a victorious peace to which we are too much strangers?
+If we carried the assurance that there is One that fights for us,
+into the trifles as well as into the sore struggles of our lives, we
+should have peace and victory. Most of us will not have many large
+occasions of trial and conflict in our career; and, if God's
+fighting for us is not available in regard to the small annoyances
+of home and daily life, I know not for what it is available. 'Many
+littles make a mickle,' and there are more deaths in skirmishes than
+in the field of a pitched battle. More Christian people lose their
+hold of God, their sense of His presence, and are beaten
+accordingly, by reason of the little enemies that come down on them,
+like a cloud of gnats in a summer evening, than are defeated by the
+shock of a great assault or a great temptation, which calls out
+their strength, and sends them to their knees to ask for help from
+God.
+
+So we may learn from this prayer the spirit of expectance of victory
+which is not presumption, and of consecration, which alone will
+enable us to pass through life victorious. 'Be of good cheer,' said
+the Master, as if in answer to this prayer in its Christian form--'I
+have overcome the world.' We turn to the helmed and sworded Figure
+that stands mysteriously beside us whilst we are all unaware of His
+coming, and the swift question that Joshua put rises to our lips,
+'Art Thou for us or for our adversaries?' The reply comes, 'Nay! but
+as Captain of the Lord's host am I come up.' That is Christ's answer
+to the prayer, 'Rise, Lord, let Thine enemies be scattered.'
+
+III. Lastly, we have here a pattern of the temper for hours of
+repose.
+
+'When the ark rested, he said, "Return, O Lord, unto the many
+thousands of Israel."' As I said at the beginning of these remarks,
+the pillar of cloud seems to have taken two forms, braced together
+upright when it moved, diffused and stretched as a shelter and a
+covering over the host of Israel when it and they were at rest. In
+like manner, that divine Presence is Protean in its forms, and takes
+all shapes, according to the moment's necessities of the Christian
+trusting heart. When we are to brace ourselves for the march it
+condenses itself into an upright and moving guide. When we lay
+ourselves down with relaxed muscles for repose, it softly expands
+itself and 'covers our head' in the hours of rest, 'as in the day of
+battle.'
+
+Ah! brother, we have more need of God in times of repose than in
+times of effort. It is harder to realise His Presence in the brief
+hours of relaxation than even in the many hours of strenuous toil.
+Every one who goes for a holiday knows that. You have only to look
+at the sort of amusements that most people fly to when they have not
+anything to do, to see that there is quite as much, if not more,
+peril to communion of soul with God in times when the whole nature
+is somewhat relaxed, and the strings are loosened, like those of a
+violin screwed down a turn or two of the peg, than there is in times
+of work.
+
+So let us take special care of our hours of repose, and be quite
+sure that they are so spent as that we can ask when the day's work
+is done, and we have come to slippered ease, in preparation for
+nightly rest, 'Return, O Lord, unto Thy waiting servant.' Work
+without God unfits for rest with Him. Rest without God unfits for
+work for Him.
+
+We may take these two petitions as tests of the allowableness of any
+occupation, or of any relaxation. Dare I ask Him to come with me
+into that field of work? If I dare not, it is no place for me. Dare
+I ask Him to come with me into this other chamber of rest? If I dare
+not, I had better never cross its threshold. Take these two prayers,
+and where you cannot pray them, do not risk yourself.
+
+But the highest form of the contrast between the two waits still to
+be realised. For life as a whole is a fight, and beyond it there is
+the 'rest that remaineth,' where there will be not merely God's
+'return unto the thousands of Israel,' but the realisation of His
+fuller presence, and of deeper rest, which shall be wondrously
+associated with more intense work, though in that work there will be
+no conflict. The two petitions will flow together then, for whilst
+we labour we shall rest; and whilst we rest we shall labour,
+according to the great sayings, 'they rest from their labours,' and
+yet 'they rest not day nor night.'
+
+
+
+
+MOSES DESPONDENT
+
+
+ 'I am not able to bear all this people alone, because
+ it is too heavy for me.'
+ NUM. xi. 14.
+
+Detail the circumstances.
+
+The leader speaks the truth in his despondency. He is pressed with
+the feeling of his incapacity for his work. We may take his words
+here as teaching us what men need in him who is to be their guide,
+and how impossible it is to find what they need in mere men.
+
+I. What men need in their guide.
+
+These Israelites were wandering in the wilderness; they were without
+natural supplies for their daily necessities; they had a long hard
+journey before them, an unknown road, at the terminus of which was a
+land where they should rest. We have precisely the same necessities
+as those which Moses despairingly said that they had.
+
+Like them, we wander hungry, and need a Leader who can satisfy our
+desires and evermore give us bread for our souls even more than for
+our bodies. We need One to whom we can 'weep,' as the Israelites did
+to Moses, and not weep in vain. We need One who can do for us what
+Moses felt that the Israelites needed, and that he could not give
+them, when he almost indignantly put to God the despairing question,
+'Can I carry them in my bosom as a nursing father beareth the
+sucking child?' Our weakness, our ignorance, our heart-hunger, cry
+out for One who can 'bear all this people alone.' who in his single
+Self has resources of strength, wisdom, and sufficiency to meet not
+only the wants of one soul but those of the world. For He who can
+satisfy the poorest single soul must be able to satisfy all men.
+
+II. The impossibility of finding this in men.
+
+Moses' experience here is that of all leaders and great men. He is
+overwhelmed with the work; feels his own utter impotence; has
+himself to be strengthened; loathes his work; longs for release from
+it. See how he confesses
+
+ His human dependence.
+ His incapacity to do and be what is needed.
+ His impatience with the people.
+ His longing to be rid of it all.
+
+That is a true picture of the experience of the best of men--a true
+picture of the limitations of the noblest leaders.
+
+But it is not only the leaders who confess their inadequacy, but the
+followers feel it, for even the most enthusiastic of them come
+sooner or later to find that their Oracle had not learned all
+wisdom, nor was fit to be taken as sole guide, much less as sole
+defence or satisfaction. He who looks to find all that he needs in
+men must take many men to find it, and no multiplicity of men will
+bring him what he seeks. The Milky Way is no substitute for the sun.
+Our hearts cry out for One great light, for One spacious home.
+Endless strings of pearls do not reach the preciousness of One pearl
+of price.
+
+III. The failures of human leaders prophesy the true Leader.
+
+Moses was prophetic of Christ by his failures as by his successes.
+He could not do what the people clamoured to have done, and what he
+in the mood of despair in which the text shows him, sadly owned that
+he could not. In that very confession he becomes an unconscious
+prophet. For that he should have so vividly set forth the
+qualifications of a leader of men, as defined by the people's cries,
+and should have so bitterly felt his incapacity to supply them, is a
+witness, if there is a God at all, that somewhere the needed Ideal
+will be realised in 'a Leader and Commander of the people,' God-sent
+and 'worthy of more glory than Moses.'
+
+The best service that all human leaders, helpers or lovers, can do
+us, is to confess their own insufficiency, and to point us to Jesus.
+
+All that men need is found in Him and in Him alone. All that men
+have failed, and must always fail, to be, He is. Those eyes are
+blessed that 'see no man any more save Jesus only.' We need One who
+can satisfy our desires and fill our hungry souls, and Jesus speaks
+a promise, confirmed by the experience of all who have tested it
+when He declares: 'He that cometh unto Me shall never hunger.' We
+need One who will dry our tears, and Jesus, when He says 'Weep not,'
+wipes them away and stanches their sources, giving 'the oil of joy
+for mourning.' We need One who can hold us up in our journey, and
+minister strength to fainting hearts and vigour to weary feet, and
+Jesus 'strengthens us with might in the inner man.' We need One who
+will bring us to the promised land of rest, and Jesus brings many
+sons to glory, and wills that they be 'with Him where He is.' So let
+us turn away from the multiplicity of human insufficiencies to Him
+who is our one only help and hope, because He is all-sufficient and
+eternal.
+
+
+
+
+AFRAID OF GIANTS
+
+
+ 'And Moses sent them to spy out the land of Canaan, and
+ said unto them, Get you up this way southward, and go
+ up into the mountain; 18. And see the land, what it is;
+ and the people that dwelleth therein, whether they be
+ strong or weak, few or many; 19. And what the land is
+ that they dwell in, whether it be good or bad; and what
+ cities they be that they dwell in, whether in tents, or
+ in strong holds; 20. And what the land is, whether it
+ be fat or lean, whether there be wood therein, or not.
+ And be ye of good courage, and bring of the fruit of the
+ land. Now the time was the time of the firstripe grapes.
+ 21. So they went up, and searched the land from the
+ wilderness of Zin unto Rehob, as men come to Hamath.
+ 22. And they ascended by the south, and came unto Hebron;
+ where Ahiman, Sheshai, and Talmai, the children of Anak,
+ were. (Now Hebron was built seven years before Zoan in
+ Egypt.) 23. And they came unto the brook of Eshcol, and
+ cut down from thence a branch with one cluster of grapes,
+ and they bare it between two upon staff; and they brought
+ of the pomegranates, and of the figs. 24. The place was
+ called the brook Eshcol, because of the cluster of grapes
+ which the children of Israel cut down from thence. 25. And
+ they returned from searching of the land after forty days.
+ 26. And they went and came to Moses, and to Aaron, and to
+ all the congregation of the children of Israel, unto the
+ wilderness of Paran, to Kadesh; and brought back word
+ unto them, and unto all the congregation, and shewed them
+ the fruit of the land. 27. And they told him, and said,
+ We came unto the land whither thou sentest us, and surely
+ it floweth with milk and honey; and this is the fruit
+ of it. 28. Nevertheless the people be strong that dwell
+ in the land, and the cities are walled, and very great:
+ and, moreover, we saw the children of Anak there. 29.
+ The Amalekites dwell in the land of the south; and the
+ Hittites, and the Jebusites, and the Amorites, dwell
+ in the mountains; and the Canaanites dwell by the sea,
+ and by the coast of Jordan. 30. And Caleb stilled the
+ people before Moses, and said, Let us go up at once,
+ and possess it; for we are well able to overcome it.
+ 31. But the men that went up with him said, We be not
+ able to go up against the people; for they are stronger
+ than we. 32. And they brought up an evil report of the
+ land which they had searched unto the children of Israel,
+ saying, The land, through which we have gone to search
+ it, is a land that eateth up the inhabitants thereof;
+ and all the people that we saw in it are men of a great
+ stature. 33. And there we saw the giants, the sons of
+ Anak, which come of the giants: and we were in our own
+ sight as grasshoppers, and so we were in their sight.'
+ --NUM. xiii. 17-33.
+
+We stand here on the edge of the Promised Land. The discussion of
+the true site of Kadesh need not concern us now. Wherever it was,
+the wanderers had the end of their desert journey within sight; one
+bold push forward, and their feet would tread on their inheritance.
+But, as is so often the case, courage oozed out at the decisive
+moment, and cowardice, disguised as prudence, called for 'further
+information,'--that cuckoo-cry of the faint-hearted. There are
+three steps in this narrative: the despatch of the explorers, their
+expedition, and the two reports brought back.
+
+I. We have the despatch and instructions of the explorers. A
+comparison with Deuteronomy i. shows that the project of sending the
+spies originated in the people's terror at the near prospect of the
+fighting which they had known to be impending ever since they left
+Egypt. Faith finds that nearness diminishes dangers, but sense sees
+them grow as they approach. The people answered Moses' brave words
+summoning them to the struggle with this feeble petition for an
+investigation. They did not honestly say that they were alarmed, but
+defined the scope of the exploring party's mission as simply to
+'bring us word again of the way by which we must go up, and the
+cities into which we shall come.' Had they not the pillar blazing
+there above them to tell them that? The request was not fathomed in
+its true faithlessness by Moses, who thought it reasonable and
+yielded. So far Deuteronomy goes; but this narrative puts another
+colour on the mission, representing it as the consequence of God's
+command. The most eager discoverer of discrepancies in the component
+parts of the Pentateuch need not press this one into his service,
+for both sides may be true: the one representing the human
+feebleness which originated the wish; the other, the divine
+compliance with the desire, in order to disclose the unbelief which
+unfitted the people for the impending struggle, and to educate them
+by letting them have their foolish way, and taste its bitter
+results. Putting the two accounts together, we get, not a
+contradiction, but a complete view, which teaches a large truth as
+to God's dealings; namely, that He often lovingly lets us have our
+own way to show us by the issues that His is better, and that
+daring, which is obedience, is the true prudence.
+
+The instructions given to the explorers turn on two points: the
+eligibility of the country for settlement, and the military strength
+of its inhabitants. They alternate in a very graphic way from the
+one of these to the other, beginning, in verse 18, with the land,
+and immediately going on to the numbers and power of the
+inhabitants; then harking back again, in verse 19, to the fertility
+of the land, and passing again to the capacity of the cities to
+resist attack; and finishing up, in verse 20, with the land once
+more, both arable and forest. The same double thought colours the
+parting exhortation to 'be bold,' and to 'bring of the produce of
+the land.' Now the people knew already both points which the spies
+were despatched to find out. Over and over again, in Egypt, in the
+march, and at Sinai, they had been told that the land was 'flowing
+with milk and honey,' and had been assured of its conquest. What
+more did they want? Nothing, if they had believed God. Nothing, if
+they had been all saints,--which they were not. Their fears were
+very natural. A great deal might be said in favour of their wish to
+have accurate information. But it is a bad sign when faith, or
+rather unbelief, sends out sense to be its scout, and when we think
+to verify God's words by men's confirmation. Not to believe Him
+unless a jury of twelve of ourselves says the same thing, is surely
+much the same as not believing Him at all; for it is not He, but
+they, whom we believe after all.
+
+There is no need to be too hard on the people. They were a mob of
+slaves, whose manhood had been eaten out by four centuries of
+sluggish comfort, and latterly crushed by oppression. So far as we
+know, Abraham's midnight surprise of the Eastern kings was the
+solitary bit of fighting in the national history thus far; and it is
+not wonderful that, with such a past, they should have shrunk from
+the prospect of bloodshed, and caught at any excuse for delay at
+least, even if not for escape. 'We have all of us one human heart,'
+and these cowards were no monsters, but average men, who did very
+much what average men, professing to be Christians, do every day,
+and for doing get praised for prudence by other average professing
+Christians. How many of us, when brought right up to some task
+involving difficulty or danger, but unmistakably laid on us by God,
+shelter our distrustful fears under the fair pretext of 'knowing a
+little more about it first,' and shake wise heads over rashness
+which takes God at His word, and thinks that it knows enough when it
+knows what He wills?
+
+II. We have the exploration (verses 21-25). The account of it is
+arranged on a plan common in the Old Testament narratives, the
+observation of which would, in many places, remove difficulties
+which have led to extraordinary hypotheses. Verse 21 gives a general
+summary of what is then taken up, and told in more detail. It
+indicates the completeness of the exploration by giving its extreme
+southern and northern points, the desert of Zin being probably the
+present depression called the Arabah, and 'Rehob as men come to
+Hamath' being probably near the northern Dan, on the way to Hamath,
+which lay in the valley between the Lebanon and the Anti-Lebanon.
+The account then begins over again, and tells how the spies went up
+into 'the South.' The Revised Version has done wisely in printing
+this word with a capital, and thereby showing that it is not merely
+the name of a cardinal point, but of a district. It literally means
+'the dry,' and is applied to the arid stretch of land between the
+more cultivated southern parts of Canaan and the northern portion of
+the desert which runs down to Sinai. It is a great chalky plateau,
+and might almost be called a steppe or prairie. Passing through
+this, the explorers next would come to Hebron, the first town of
+importance, beside which Abraham had lived, and where the graves of
+their ancestors were. But they were in no mood for remembering such
+old stories. Living Anaks were much more real to them than dead
+patriarchs. So the only thing mentioned, besides the antiquity of
+the city, is the presence in it of these giants. They were probably
+the relics of the aboriginal inhabitants, and some strain of their
+blood survived till late days. They seem to have expelled the
+Hittites, who held Mamre, or Hebron, in Abraham's time. Their name
+is said to mean 'long-necked,' and the three names in our lesson are
+probably tribal, and not personal, names. The whole march northward
+and back again comes in between verses 22 and 23; for Eshcol was
+close to Hebron, and the spies would not encumber themselves with
+the bunch of grapes on their northward march. The details of the
+exploration are given more fully in the spies' report, which shows
+that they had gone up north from Hebron, through the hills, and
+possibly came back by the valley of the Jordan. At any rate, they
+made good speed, and must have done some bold and hard marching, to
+cover the ground out and back in six weeks. So they returned with
+their pomegranates and figs, and a great bunch of the grapes for
+which the valley identified with Eshcol is still famous, swinging on
+a pole,--the easiest way of carrying it without injury.
+
+III. We have next the two reports. The explorers are received in a
+full assembly of the people, and begin their story with an object-
+lesson, producing the great grape cluster and the other spoils. But
+while honesty compelled the acknowledgment of the fertility of the
+land, cowardice slurred that over as lightly as might be, and went
+on to dilate on the terrors of the giants and the strength of the
+cities, and the crowded population that held every corner of the
+country. Truly, the eye sees what it brings with it. They really had
+gone to look for dangers, and of course they found them. Whatever
+Moses might lay down in his instructions, they had been sent by the
+people to bring back reasons for not attempting the conquest, and so
+they curtly and coldly admit the fertility of the soil, and fling
+down the fruit for inspection as undeniably grown there, but they
+tell their real mind with a great 'nevertheless.' Their report is,
+no doubt, quite accurate. The cities were, no doubt, some of them
+walled, and to eyes accustomed to the desert, very great; and there
+were, no doubt, Anaks at Hebron, at any rate, and the 'spies' had
+got the names of the various races and their territories correctly.
+As to these, we need only notice that the Hittites were an outlying
+branch of the great nation, which recent research has discovered, as
+we might say, the importance and extent of which we scarcely yet
+know; that the Jebusites held Jerusalem till David's time; that the
+'Amorites,' or 'Highlanders,' occupied the central block of
+mountainous country in conjunction with the two preceding tribes;
+and that the 'Canaanites,' or 'Lowlanders,' held the lowlands east
+and west of that hilly nucleus, namely, the deep gorge of the
+Jordan, and the strip of maritime plain. A very accurate report may
+be very one-sided. The spies were not the last people who, being
+sent out to bring home facts, managed to convey very decided
+opinions without expressing any. A grudging and short admission to
+begin with, the force of which is immediately broken by sombre and
+minute painting of difficulty and danger, is more powerful as a
+deterrent than any dissuasive. It sounds such an unbiassed appeal to
+common-sense, as if the reporter said, 'There are the facts; we
+leave you to draw the conclusions.' An 'unvarnished account of the
+real state of the case,' in which there is not a single misstatement
+nor exaggeration, may be utterly false by reason of wrong
+perspective and omission, and, however true, is sure to act as a
+shower-bath to courage, if it is unaccompanied with a word of cheer.
+To begin a perilous enterprise without fairly facing its risks and
+difficulties is folly. To look at _them_ only is no less folly,
+and is the sure precursor of defeat. But when on the one side is
+God's command, and on the other such doleful discouragements, they
+are more than folly, they are sin.
+
+It is bracing to turn from the creeping prudence which leaves God
+out of the account, to the cheery ring of Caleb's sturdy confidence.
+His was 'a minority report,' signed by only two of the 'Commission.'
+These two had seen all that the others had, but everything depends
+on the eyes which look. The others had measured themselves against
+the trained soldiers and giants, and were in despair. These two
+measured Amalekites and Anaks against God, and were jubilant. They
+do not dispute the facts, but they reverse the implied conclusion,
+because they add the governing fact of God's help. How differently
+the same facts strike a man who lives by faith, and one who lives by
+calculation! Israel might be a row of ciphers, but with God at the
+head they meant something. Caleb's confidence that 'we are well able
+to overcome' was religious trust, as is plain from God's eulogium on
+him in the next chapter (Num. xiv. 24). The lessons from it are that
+faith is the parent of wise courage; that where duty, which is God's
+voice, points, difficulties must not deter; that when we have God's
+assurance of support, they are nothing. Caleb was wise to counsel
+going up to the assault 'at once,' for there is no better cure for
+fear than action. Old soldiers tell us that the trying time is when
+waiting to begin the fight. 'The native hue of resolution' gets
+'sicklied o'er' with the paleness that comes from hesitation. Am I
+sure that anything is God's will? Then the sooner I go to work at
+doing it, the better for myself and for the vigour of my work.
+
+This headstrong rashness, as they thought it, brings up the other
+'spies' once more. Notice how the gloomy views are the only ones in
+their second statement. There is nothing about the fertility of the
+land, but, instead, we have that enigmatical expression about its
+'eating up its inhabitants.' No very satisfactory explanation of
+this is forthcoming. It evidently means that in some way the land
+was destructive of its inhabitants, which seems to contradict their
+former reluctant admission of its fertility. Perhaps in their
+eagerness to paint it black enough, they did contradict themselves,
+and try to make out that it was a barren soil, not worth conquering.
+Fear is not very careful of consistency. Note, too, the
+exaggerations of terror. 'All the people' are sons of Anak now. The
+size as well as the number of the giants has grown; 'we were in our
+own sight as grasshoppers.' No doubt they were gigantic, but fear
+performed the miracle of adding a cubit to their stature. When the
+coward hears that 'there is a lion without,'--that is, in the open
+country,--he immediately concludes, 'I shall be slain in the
+streets,' where it is not usual for lions to disport themselves.
+
+Thus exaggerated and one-sided is distrust of God's promises. Such a
+temper is fatal to all noble life or work, and brings about the
+disasters which it foresees. If these cravens had gone up to fight
+with men before whom they felt like grasshoppers, of course they
+would have been beaten; and it was much better that their fears
+should come out at Kadesh than when committed to the struggle.
+Therefore God lovingly permitted the mission of the spies, and so
+brought lurking unbelief to the surface, where it could be dealt
+with. Let us beware of the one-eyed 'prudence' which sees only the
+perils in the path of duty and enterprise for God, and is blind to
+the all-sufficient presence which makes us more than conquerors,
+when we lean all our weight on it. It is well to see the Anakim in
+their full formidableness, and to feel that we are 'as grasshoppers
+in our own sight' and in theirs, if the sight drives us to lift our
+eyes to Him who 'sitteth upon the circle of the earth, and the
+inhabitants thereof,' however huge and strong, 'are as
+grasshoppers.'
+
+
+
+
+WEIGHED, AND FOUND WANTING
+
+
+ 'And all the congregation lifted up their voice, and
+ cried; and the people wept that night. 2. And all the
+ children of Israel murmured against Moses and against
+ Aaron; and the whole congregation said unto them, Would
+ God that we had died in the land of Egypt! or would God
+ we had died in this wilderness! 3. And wherefore hath
+ the Lord brought us unto this land, to fall by the sword,
+ that our wives and our children should be a prey? were
+ it not better for us to return into Egypt? 4. And they
+ said one to another, Let us make a captain, and let us
+ return into Egypt 5. Then Moses and Aaron fell on their
+ faces before all the assembly of the congregation of the
+ children of Israel. 6. And Joshua the son of Nun, and
+ Caleb the son of Jephunneh, which were of them that
+ searched the land, rent their clothes. 7. And they spake
+ unto all the company of the children of Israel, saying,
+ The land, which we passed through to search it, is an
+ exceeding good land. 8. If the Lord delight in us, then
+ He will bring us into this land, and give it us; a land
+ which floweth with milk and honey. 9. Only rebel not ye
+ against the Lord, neither fear ye the people of the land;
+ for they are bread for us: their defence is departed
+ from them, and the Lord is with us: fear them not.
+ 10. But all the congregation bade stone them with stones.
+ And the glory of the Lord appeared in the tabernacle of
+ the congregation before all the children of Israel.'
+ --NUM. xiv. 1-10.
+
+Terror is more contagious than courage, for a mob is always more
+prone to base than to noble instincts. The gloomy report of the
+spies jumped with the humour of the people, and was at once
+accepted. Its effect was to throw the whole assembly into a paroxysm
+of panic, which was expressed in the passionate Eastern manner by
+wild, ungoverned shrieking and tears. What a picture of a frenzied
+crowd the first verse of this chapter gives! That is not the stuff
+of which heroes can be made. Weeping endured for a night, but to
+such weeping there came no morning of joy. When day dawned, the
+tempest of emotion settled down into sullen determination to give up
+the prize which hung within reach of a bold hand, ripe and ready to
+drop. It was one of the moments which come once at least in the
+lives of nations as of individuals, when a supreme resolve is called
+for, and when to fall beneath the stern requirement, and refuse a
+great attempt because of danger, is to pronounce sentence of
+unworthiness and exclusion on themselves. Not courage only, but
+belief in God, was tested in this crucial moment, which made a
+turning-point in the nation's history. Our text brings before us
+with dramatic vividness and sharpness of contrast, three parties in
+this decisive hour--the faithless cowards, the faithful four, and
+the All-seeing presence.
+
+I. Note the faithless cowards. The gravity of the revolt here is
+partly in its universality, which is emphasised in the narrative at
+every turn: '_all_ the congregation' (v. 1), '_all_ the children of
+Israel,' the _whole_ congregation' (v. 2), '_all_ the assembly of the
+congregation' (which implies a solemn formal convocation), '_all_ the
+company' (v, 7), '_all_ the congregation,' '_all_ the children of Israel'
+(v. 10). It was no sectional discontent, but full-blown and universal
+rebellion. The narrative draws a distinction between the language
+addressed to Moses, and the whisperings to one another. Publicly, the
+unanimous voice suggested the return to Egypt as an alternative for
+discussion, and put it before Moses; to one another they muttered the
+proposal, which no man had yet courage to speak out, of choosing a
+new leader, and going back, whatever became of Moses. That could only
+mean murder as well as mutiny. The whispers would soon be loud enough.
+
+In the murmurs to Moses, observe the distinct and conscious apostacy
+from Jehovah. They recognise that God 'has brought' them there, and
+they slander Him by the assertion that His malignant, deliberate
+purpose was to kill them all, and make slaves of their wives and
+children. That was how they read the past, and thought of Him! He
+had enticed them into His trap, as a hunter might some foolish
+animal, by dainties strewed along the path, and now they were in the
+toils, and their only chance of life was to break through. Often,
+already, had they raised that mad cry--'back to Egypt!' but there
+had never been such a ring of resolve in it, nor had it come from so
+many throats, nor had any serious purpose to depose Moses been
+entertained. If we add the fact that they were now on the very
+frontier of Canaan, and that the decision now taken was necessarily
+final, we get the full significance of the incident from the mere
+secular historian's point of view. But its bearing on the people's
+relation to Jehovah gives a darker colouring to it. It is not merely
+faint-hearted shrinking from a great opportunity, but it is wilful
+and deliberate rejection of His rule, based upon utter distrust of
+His word. So Scripture treats this event as the typical example of
+unbelief (Psa. xcv.; Heb. iii. and iv.). So regarded, it presents,
+as in a mirror, some of the salient characteristics of that master
+sin. Bad as it is, it is not out of the range of possibility that it
+should be repeated, and we need the warning to 'take heed lest any
+of us should fall after the same example of unbelief.'
+
+We may learn from it the essentials of faith and its opposite. The
+trust which these cowards failed to exercise was reliance on
+Jehovah, a personal relation to a Person. In externals and contents,
+their trust was very unlike the New Testament faith, but in object
+and essence it was identical. They had to trust in Jehovah; we, in
+'God manifest in the flesh.' Their creed was much less clear and
+blessed than ours, but their faith, if they had had it, would have
+been the same. Faith is not the belief of a creed, whether man-made
+or God-revealed, but the cleaving to the Person whom the creed makes
+known. He may be made known more or less perfectly; but the act of
+the soul, by which we grasp Him, does not vary with the completeness
+of the revelation. That act was one for 'the world's grey fathers'
+and for us. In like manner, unbelief is the same black and fatal
+sin, whatever be the degree of light against which it turns. To
+depart from the living God is its essence, and that is always
+rebellion and death.
+
+Note the short memory and churlish unthankfulness of unbelief. It
+has been often objected to the story of the Exodus, that such
+extremity of folly as is ascribed to the Israelites is inconceivable
+in such circumstances. How could men, with all these miracles in
+mind, and manna falling daily, and the pillar blazing every night,
+and the roll of Sinai's thunders scarcely out of their ears, behave
+thus? But any one who has honestly studied his own heart, and known
+its capacity for neglecting the plainest indications of God's
+presence, and forgetting the gifts of His love, will believe the
+story, and see brethren in these Israelites. Miracles were less
+wonderful to them, because they knew less about nature and its laws.
+Any miracles constantly renewed become commonplace. Habit takes the
+wonder out of everything. The heart that does not 'like to retain
+God in its knowledge' will find easy ways of forgetting Him, and
+revolting from Him, though the path be strewed with blessings, and
+tokens of His presence flame on every side. True, it is strange that
+all the wonders and mercies of the past two years had made no deeper
+impression on these people's hearts; but if they had not done so, it
+is not unnatural that they had made so slight an impression on their
+wills. Their ingratitude and forgetfulness are inexplicable, as all
+sin is, for its very essence is that it has no sufficient reason.
+But neither is inconceivable, and both are repeated by us every day.
+
+Note the credulity of unbelief. The word of Jehovah had told them
+that the land 'flowed with milk and honey,' and that they were sure
+to conquer it. They would not believe Him unless they had
+verification of His promises. And when they got their own fears
+reflected in the multiplying mirror of the spies' report, they took
+men's words for gospel, and gave to them a credence without
+examination or qualification, which they had never given to God. I
+think that I have heard of people who inveigh against Christians for
+their slavish acceptance of the absolute authority of Jesus Christ,
+and who pin their faith to some man's teaching with a credulity
+quite as great as and much less warrantable than ours.
+
+Note the bad bargain which unbelief is ready to make. They
+contemplated a risky alternative to the brave dash against Canaan.
+There would be quite as much peril in going back as forward. The
+march from Egypt had not been so easy; but what would it be when
+there were no Moses, no Jethro, no manna, no pillar? And what sort
+of reception would wait them in Egypt, and what fate befall them
+there? In front, there were perils; but God would be with them. They
+would have to fight their way, but with the joyous feeling that
+victory was sure, and that every blow struck, and every step
+marched, brought them nearer triumphant peace. If they turned, every
+step would carry them farther from their hopes, and nearer the
+dreary putting on of the old yoke, which 'neither they nor their
+fathers were able to bear.' They would buy slavery at as dear a
+price as they would have to pay for freedom and wealth. Yet they
+elected the baser course, and thought themselves prudent and careful
+of themselves in doing so. Is the breed of such miscalculators
+extinct? Far greater hardships and pains are met on the road of
+departure from God, than any which befall His servants. To follow
+Him involves a conflict, but to shirk the battle does not bring
+immunity from strife. The alternatives are not warfare or peace,
+God's service or liberty. The most prudent self-love would coincide
+with the most self-sacrificing heroic consecration, and no man can
+worse consult his own well-being than in seeking escape from the
+dangers and toil of enlisting in God's army, by running back through
+the desert to put his neck in chains in Egypt. As Moses said:
+'Because then servedst not the Lord thy God with joyfulness, and
+with gladness of heart for the abundance of all things, therefore
+thou shalt serve thine enemies, in hunger, and in thirst, and in
+want of all things.'
+
+II. The faithful four. Moses and Aaron, Caleb and Joshua, are the
+only Abdiels in that crowd of unbelieving dastards. Their own peril
+does not move them; their only thought is to dissuade from the fatal
+refusal to advance. The leader had no armed force with which to put
+down revolt, and stood wholly undefended and powerless. It was a
+cruel position for him to see the work of his life crumbling to
+pieces, and every hope for his people dashed by their craven fears.
+Is there anywhere a nobler piece of self-abnegation than his
+prostrating himself before them in the eagerness of his pleading
+with them for their own good? If anything could have kindled a spark
+of generous enthusiasm, that passionate gesture of entreaty would
+have done it. It is like: 'We beseech you, in His stead, be ye
+reconciled to God.' Men need to be importuned not to destroy
+themselves, and he will have most success in such God-like work who,
+as Moses, is so sure of the fatal issues, and so oblivious of all
+but saving men from self-inflicted ruin, that he sues as for a boon
+with tears in his voice, and dignity thrown to the winds.
+
+Caleb and Joshua had a different task,--to make one more attempt to
+hearten the people by repeating their testimony and their
+confidence. Tearing their dresses, in sign of mourning, they bravely
+ring out once more the cheery note of assured faith. They first
+emphatically reiterate that the land is fertile,--or, as the words
+literally run, 'good exceedingly, exceedingly.' It is right to
+stimulate for God's warfare by setting forth the blessedness of the
+inheritance. 'The recompense of the reward' is not the motive for
+doing His will, but it is legitimately used as encouragement, in
+spite of the overstrained objection that virtue for the sake of
+heaven is spurious virtue. If 'for the sake of heaven,' it is
+spurious; but it is not spurious because it is heartened by the hope
+of heaven. In Caleb's former report there was no reason given for
+his confidence that 'we are well able to overcome.' Thus far all the
+discussion had been about comparative strength, as any heathen
+soldier would have reckoned it. But the two heroes speak out the
+great Name at last, which ought to scatter all fears like morning
+mist. The rebels had said that Jehovah had 'brought us into this
+land to fall by the sword.' The two give them back their words with
+a new turn: 'He will bring us into this land, and give it us.' That
+is the only antidote to fear. Calculations of comparative force are
+worse than useless, and their results depend on the temper of the
+calculator; but, if once God is brought into the account, the sum is
+ended. When His sword is flung into the scale, whatever is in the
+other goes up. So Caleb and Joshua brush aside the terrors of the
+Anaks and all the other bugbears. 'They are bread for us,' we can
+swallow them at a mouthful; and this was no swaggering boast, but
+calm, reasonable confidence, because it rested on this, 'the Lord is
+with us.' True, there was an 'if,' but not an 'if' of doubt, but a
+condition which they could comply with, and so make it a certainty,
+'only rebel not against the Lord, and fear not the people of the
+land.' Loyalty to Him would give courage, and courage with His
+presence would be sure of victory. Obedience turns God's 'ifs' into
+'verilys.' There, then, we have an outline picture of the work of
+faith pleading with the rebellious, heartening them and itself by
+thoughts of the fair inheritance, grasping the assurance of God's
+omnipotent help, and in the strength thereof wisely despising the
+strongest foes, and settling itself immovable in the posture of
+obedience.
+
+III. The sudden appearance of the all-seeing Lord. The bold
+remonstrance worked the people into a fury, and fidelity was about
+to reap the reward which the crowd ever gives to those who try to
+save it from its own base passions. Nothing is more hateful to
+resolute sinners than good counsel which is undeniably true. But
+just as the stones were beginning to fly, the 'glory of the Lord,'
+that wondrous light which dwelt above the ark in the inmost shrine,
+came forth before all the awestruck crowd. The stones would be
+dropped fast enough, and a hush of dread would follow the howling
+rage of the angry crowd. Our text does not go on to the awful
+judgment which was proclaimed; but we may venture beyond its bounds
+to point out that the sentence of exclusion from the land was but
+the necessary consequence of the temper and character which the
+refusal to advance had betrayed. Such people were not fit for the
+fight. A new generation, braced by the keen air and scant fare of
+the desert, with firmer muscles and hearts than these enervated
+slaves had, was needed for the conquest. The sentence was mercy as
+well as judgment; it was better that they should live in the
+wilderness, and die there by natural process, after having had more
+education in God's loving care, than that they should be driven
+unwillingly to a conflict which, in their state of mind, would have
+been but their butchery. None the less, it is an awful condemnation
+for a man to be brought by God's providence face to face with a
+great possibility of service and of blessing, and then to show
+himself such that God has to put him aside, and look for other
+instruments. The Israelites were excluded from Canaan by no
+arbitrary decree, but by their own faithless fears, which made their
+victory impossible. 'They could not enter in because of unbelief.'
+In like manner our unbelief shuts us out from salvation, because we
+can only enter in by faith; and the 'rest that remains' is of such a
+nature that it is impossible for even His love to give it to the
+unbelieving. 'Let us labour, therefore, to enter into that rest,
+lest any man fall after the same example of unbelief.'
+
+
+
+
+MOSES THE INTERCESSOR
+
+
+ 'Pardon, I beseech Thee, the iniquity of this people
+ according unto the greatness of Thy mercy, and as Thou
+ hast forgiven this people, from Egypt even until now.'
+ --NUM. xiv. 19.
+
+See how in this story a divine threat is averted and a divine
+promise is broken, thus revealing a standing law that these in
+Scripture are conditional.
+
+This striking incident of Moses' intercession suggests to us some
+thoughts as to
+
+I. The ground of the divine forgiveness.
+
+The appeal is not based on anything in the people. God is not asked
+to forgive because of their repentance or their faith. True, these
+are the conditions on which His pardon is received by us, but they
+are not the reasons why it is given by Him. Nor does Moses appeal to
+any sacrifices that had been offered and were conceived to placate
+God. But he goes deeper than all such pleas, and lays hold, with
+sublime confidence, on God's own nature as his all-powerful plea.
+'The greatness of Thy mercy' is the ground of the divine
+forgiveness, and the mightiest plea that human lips can urge. It
+suggests that His very nature is pardoning love; that 'mercy' is
+proper to Him, that it is the motive and impulse of His acts. He
+forgives because He is mercy. That is the foundation truth. It is
+the deep spring from which by inherent impulse all the streams of
+forgiveness well up.
+
+What was true when Moses prayed for the rebels is true to-day.
+Christ's work is the consequence, not the cause, of God's pardoning
+love. It is the channel through which the waters reach us, but the
+waters made the channel for themselves.
+
+II. The persistency of the divine pardon.
+
+'As thou hast forgiven ... even until now.'
+
+His past is the guarantee of His future. This is true of every one
+of His attributes. There is no limitation to the divine forgiveness;
+you cannot exhaust it.
+
+Sometimes there may be long tracts of almost utter godlessness, or
+times of apathy. Sometimes there may be bursts of great and
+unsanctified evil after many professions of fidelity, as in David's
+case. Sometimes there may be but a daily experience in which there
+is little apparent progress, little consciousness of growing mastery
+over sin, little of deepening holiness and spiritual power. Be it so!
+To all such, and to every other form of Christian unfaithfulness,
+this blessed thought applies.
+
+We are apt to think as if our many pardons in the past made future
+pardons less likely, whereas the truth is that we have received
+forgiveness so often in the past that we may be quite sure that it
+will never fail us in the future. God has established a precedent in
+His dealings with us. He binds Himself by His past.
+
+As in His creative energy, the forces that flung the whole universe
+forth were not exhausted by the act, but subsist continually to
+sustain it, as 'He fainteth not, neither is weary,' so in the works
+of His providence, and more especially of His grace, there is
+nothing in the exercise of any of His attributes to exhaust
+_that_ attribute, nothing in the constant appeal which we make
+to His forgiving grace to weary out that grace. And thus we may
+learn, even from the unfading glories of the heavens and the
+undimmed splendours of His creative works, the lesson that, in the
+holier region of His love, and His pardoning mercy, there is no
+exhaustion, and that all the past instances of His pardoning grace
+only make the broader, firmer ground of certainty as to His
+continuous present and future forgiveness for all our iniquity. He
+who has proposed to us the 'seventy times seven' as the number of
+our forgivenesses will not let His own fall short of that tale. Our
+iniquities may be 'more than the hairs of our heads,' but as the
+psalmist who found his to be so comforted himself with thinking,
+God's 'thoughts which are to usward' were 'more than can be
+numbered.' There would be a pardoning thought for every sin, and
+after all sins had been forgiven, there would be 'multitudes of
+redemptions' still available for penitent souls.
+
+There is but one thing that limits the divine pardon, and that is
+continuous rejection of it.
+
+Whoever seeks to be pardoned _is_ pardoned.
+
+III. The manner of the divine forgiveness.
+
+He pardoned, but He also inflicted punishment, and in both He loves
+equally. The worst, that is the spiritual, consequences (which are
+the punishments) of sin, namely separation and alienation from God,
+He removes in the very act of forgiveness, but His pardon does not
+affect the natural consequences. 'Thou wast a God that forgavest
+them and tookest vengeance of their inventions,' says a psalmist in
+reference to this very incident. Thank God that He loves us too
+wisely and well not to let us by experience 'know that it is a
+bitter thing to forsake the Lord.'
+
+It is a blessing that He does so, and a sign that we are pardoned,
+if we rightly use it.
+
+IV. The vehicle of the divine forgiveness.
+
+The Mediator. Moses here may be taken as a dim shadow of Christ.
+
+'Moses was faithful in all his house' but Jesus is the true
+Mediator, whose intercession consists in presenting the constant
+efficacy of His sacrifice, and to whom God ever says, 'I have
+pardoned according to Thy word.'
+
+Trust utterly to Him. You cannot weary out the forgiving love of
+God. 'Christ ever liveth to make intercession'; with God is
+'plenteous redemption.' 'He shall redeem Israel out of _all_
+his iniquities.'
+
+
+
+
+SERVICE A GIFT
+
+
+ '... I have given your priest's office unto you as a
+ service of gift.'--NUM. xviii. 7.
+
+All Christians are priests--to offer sacrifices, alms, especially
+prayers; to make God known to men.
+
+I. Our priesthood is a gift of God's love.
+
+We are apt to think of our duties as burdensome. They are an honour
+and a mark of God's grace.
+
+1. They are His gift--
+
+_(a)_ The power to do. All capacities and possessions from Him.
+
+_(b)_ The wish to do. 'Worketh in you to will.'
+
+_(c)_ The right to do, through Christ.
+
+2. They are a blessing.
+
+_(a)_ Note the good effects on ourselves--the increase of
+fellowship with Him, the strengthening of all holy desires.
+
+_(b)_ The future benefits. Apply this to prayer and to effort
+on behalf of our fellow-men.
+
+II. Our priesthood is to be done as a service--under a sense of
+obligation to a master, with diligence (an [Greek: ergon], not a
+[Greek: parergon]).
+
+III. Our priesthood is to be done as a gift to God--to be done
+joyfully, giving ourselves back to Him: 'Yield yourselves unto
+ God'--'your reasonable service.'
+
+Then only do we really possess ourselves, and 'all things are ours,
+for we are Christ's, and Christ is God's.'
+
+
+
+
+THE WATERS OF MERIBAH
+
+
+ 'Then came the children of Israel, even the whole
+ congregation, into the desert of Zin in the first
+ month: and the people abode in Kadesh; and Miriam died
+ there, and was buried there. 2. And there was no water
+ for the congregation: and they gathered themselves
+ together against Moses and against Aaron. 3. And the
+ people chode with Moses, and spake, saying, Would God
+ that we had died when our brethren died before the Lord!
+ 4. And why have ye brought up the congregation of the
+ Lord into this wilderness, that we and our cattle should
+ die there? 5. And wherefore have ye made us to come up out
+ of Egypt, to bring us in unto this evil place? It is no
+ place of seed, or of figs, or of vines, or of pomegranates;
+ neither is there any water to drink. 6. And Moses and
+ Aaron went from the presence of the assembly unto the
+ door of the tabernacle of the congregation, and they fell
+ upon their faces: and the glory of the Lord appeared unto
+ them. 7. And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, 8. Take
+ the rod, and gather thou the assembly together, thou,
+ and Aaron thy brother, and speak ye unto the rock before
+ their eyes; and it shall give forth his water, and thou
+ shalt bring forth to them water out of the rock: so thou
+ shalt give the congregation and their beasts drink.
+ 9. And Moses took the rod from before the Lord, as He
+ commanded him. 10. And Moses and Aaron gathered the
+ congregation together before the rock, and he said unto
+ them, Hear now, ye rebels; must we fetch you water out
+ of this rock? 11. And Moses lifted up his hand, and with
+ his rod he smote the rock twice: and the water came out
+ abundantly, and the congregation drank, and their beasts
+ also. 12. And the Lord spake unto Moses and Aaron,
+ Because ye believed Me not, to sanctify Me in the eyes
+ of the children of Israel, therefore ye shall not bring
+ this congregation into the land which I have given them.
+ 13. This is the water of Meribah; because the children
+ of Israel strove with the Lord, and He was sanctified
+ in them.'--NUM. xx. 1-13.
+
+Kadesh had witnessed the final trial and failure of the generation
+that came out of Egypt; now we see the first trial and failure of
+the new generation, thirty-seven years after, on the same spot. Deep
+silence shrouds the history of these dreary years; but, probably,
+the congregation was broken up, and small parties roamed over the
+country, without purpose or hope, while Moses and a few of the
+leaders kept by the tabernacle. There is a certain emphasis in the
+phrase of the first verse of this chapter, 'the children of Israel,
+even the _whole_ congregation,' which suggests that this was
+the first reassembling of the scattered units since the last act of
+the 'whole congregation.' 'The first month' was, then, the first of
+the fortieth year, and the gathering was either in obedience to the
+summons of Moses, who knew that the fixed time had now come, or was
+the result of common knowledge of the fact. In any case, we have
+here the first act of a new epoch, and the question to be tried is
+whether the new men are any better than the old. It is this which
+gives importance to the event, and explains the bitterness of Moses
+at finding the old spirit living in the children. It was his trial
+as well as theirs. He resumed the functions which had substantially
+been in abeyance for a generation, and by his conduct showed that he
+had become unfit for the new form which the leadership must take
+with the invasion of Canaan.
+
+I. We note the old murmurings on the lips of the new generation. The
+lament of a later prophet fits these hereditary grumblers,--'In vain
+have I smitten your children; they received no correction.' The
+place where they reassembled might have taught them the sin of
+unbelief; their parents' graves should have enforced the lesson. But
+the long years of wandering, and two millions of deaths, had been
+useless. The weather-beaten but sturdy strength of the four old men,
+the only survivors, might have preached the wisdom of trust in the
+God in whose 'favour is life.' But the people 'had learned nothing and
+forgotten nothing.' The old cuckoo-cry, which had become so
+monotonous from their fathers, is repeated, with differences, not in
+their favour. They do not, indeed, murmur directly against God,
+because they regard Moses and Aaron as responsible. 'Why,' say they,
+'have _ye_ brought up the congregation of the Lord?' They seem to use
+that name with a touch of pride in their relation to God, while
+destitute of any real obedience, and so they show the first traces of
+the later spirit of the nation. They have acquired cattle while living
+in the oases of the wilderness, and they are anxious about them.
+They acknowledge the continuity of national life in their question,
+'Wherefore have ye made us to come up out of Egypt?' though most of
+them had been born in the wilderness. The fear that moved their fathers
+to unbelief was more reasonable and less contemptible than this
+murmuring, which ignores God all but utterly, and is ready to throw
+up everything at the first taste of privation.
+
+It is a signal instance of the solemn law by which the fathers' sins
+are inherited by the children who prove themselves heirs to their
+ancestors by repeating their deeds. It is fashionable now to deny
+original sin, and equally fashionable to affirm 'heredity,' which is
+the same thing, put into scientific language. There is such a thing
+as national character persistent through generations, each unit of
+which adds something to the force of the tendencies which he
+receives and transmits, but which never are so omnipotent as to
+destroy individual guilt, however they may lighten it.
+
+Note, too, the awful power of resistance to God's educating
+possessed by our wills. The whole purpose of these men's lives, thus
+far, had been to fit them for being God's instruments, and for the
+reception of His blessing. The desert was His school for body and
+mind, where muscles and wills were to be braced, and solitude and
+expectation might be nurses of lofty thoughts, and in the silence
+God's voice might sound. What better preparation of a hardy race of
+God-trusting heroes could there have been, and what came of it all?
+Failure all but complete! The instrument tempered with so much care
+has its edge turned at the first stroke. The old sore breaks out at
+the old spot. Man's will has an awful power to thwart God's
+training; and of all the sad mysteries of this sad mysterious world,
+this is the saddest and most mysterious, and is the root of all
+other sadness and mystery,--that a man can set his pin-point of a
+will against that great Will which gives him all his power, and when
+God beckons can say, 'I will not,' and can render His most sedulous
+discipline ineffectual.
+
+Note, too, that trivial things are large enough to hide plain duties
+and bright possibilities. These men knew that they had come to
+Kadesh for the final assault, which was to recompense all their
+hardships. Their desert training should have made them less
+resourceless and desperate when water failed; but the hopes of
+conquest and the duty of trust cannot hold their own against present
+material inconvenience. They even seem to make bitter mockery of the
+promises, when they complain that Kadesh is 'no place of seed, or of
+figs, or of vines, or of pomegranates,' which were the fruits
+brought by the spies,--as if they had said, 'So this stretch of
+waterless sand is the fertile land you talked of, is it? This is all
+that we have got by reassembling here.' Do we not often feel that
+the drought of Kadesh is more real than the grapes of Eshcol? Are we
+not sometimes tempted to bitter comparisons of the fair promises
+with the gloomy realities? Does our courage never flag, nor our
+faith falter, nor swirling clouds of doubt hide the inheritance from
+our weary and tear-filled eyes? He that is without sin may cast the
+first stone at these men; but whoever knows his own weak heart will
+confess that, if he had been among that thirsty crowd, he would,
+most likely, have made one of the murmurers.
+
+II. Note God's repetition of His old gift to the new generation.
+Moses makes no attempt to argue with the people, but casts himself
+in entreaty before the door of the Tabernacle, as if crushed and
+helpless in face of this heart-breaking proof of the persistent
+obstinacy of the old faults. God's answer recalls the former miracle
+at Rephidim (Exodus xvii. 1-7) in the early days of the march, when
+the same cries had come from lips now silent, and the rock, smitten
+at God's command by the rod which had parted the sea, yielded water.
+The only differences are that here Moses is bid to speak, not to
+smite; and that the miracle is to be done before all the
+congregation, instead of before the elders only. Both variations
+seem to have the common purpose of enhancing the wonder, and
+confirming the authority of Moses, to a generation to whom the old
+deliverances were only hearsay, and many of whom were in contact
+with the leader for the first time. The fact that we have here the
+beginning of a new epoch, and a new set of people, goes far to
+explain the resemblance of the two incidents, without the need of
+supposing, with many critics, that they are but different versions
+of one 'legend.' The repetition of scarcity of water is not
+wonderful; the recurrence of the murmurings is the sad proof of the
+unchanged temper of the people, and the repetition of the miracle is
+the merciful witness of the patience of God. His charity 'is not
+easily provoked, is not soon angry,' but stoops to renew gifts which
+had been so little appreciated that the remembrance of them failed
+to cure distrust. Unbelief is obstinate, but His loving purpose is
+more persistent still. Rephidim should have made the murmuring at
+Kadesh impossible; but, if it does not, then He will renew the
+mercy, though it had been once wasted, and will so shape the second
+gift that it shall recall the first, if haply both may effect what
+one had failed to do. When need is repeated, the supply is
+forthcoming, even when it is demanded by sullen and forgetful
+distrust. We can wear out men's patience, but God's is
+inexhaustible. The same long-suffering Hand that poured water from
+the rock for two generations of distrustful murmurers still lavishes
+its misused gifts on us, to win us to late repentance, 'and
+upbraideth not' for our slowness to learn the lessons of His
+mercies.
+
+III. Note the breaking down at last of the long-tried leader's
+patience. It is in striking contrast with the patience of God. Psalm
+cvi. 32, 33, describes the sin of Moses as twofold; namely, anger
+and speaking 'unadvisedly.' His harsh words, so unlike his pleadings
+on the former occasion of rebellion at Kadesh, have a worse thing
+than an outburst of temper in them. 'Must _we_ fetch you water
+out of the rock?' arrogates to himself the power of working
+miracles. He forgets that he was as much an instrument, and as
+little a force, as his own rod. His angry scolding betrays wounded
+personal importance, and annoyance at rebellion against his own
+authority, rather than grief at the people's distrust of God, and
+also a distinct clouding over of his own consciousness of dependence
+for all his power on God, and an impure mingling of thoughts of
+self. The same turbid blending of anger and self-regard impelled his
+arm to the passionately repeated strokes, which, in his heat, he
+substituted for the quiet words that he was bidden to speak. The
+Palestinian Tar gum says very significantly, that at the first
+stroke the rock dropped blood, thereby indicating the tragic
+sinfulness of the angry blow. How unworthy a representative of the
+long-suffering God was this angry man! 'The servant of the Lord must
+not strive,' nor give the water with which he is entrusted, with
+contempt or anger in his heart. That gift requires meek compassion
+in its stewards.
+
+But the failure of Moses' patience was only too natural. The whole
+incident has to be studied as the first of a new era, in which both
+leader and led were on their trial. During the thirty-seven years of
+waiting, Moses had had but little exercise of that part of his
+functions, and little experience of the people's temper. He must
+have looked forward anxiously to the result of the desert hardening;
+he must have felt more remote from and above the children than he
+did to their parents, his contemporaries who had come with him from
+Egypt, and so his disappointment must have been proportionately
+keen, when the first difficulty that rose revealed the old spirit in
+undiminished force. For forty years he had been patient, and ready
+to swallow mortifications and ignore rebellion against himself, and
+to offer himself for his people; but now, when men whom he had seen
+in their swaddling-clothes showed the same stiff-necked distrust as
+had killed their fathers, the breaking-point of his patience was
+reached. That burst of anger is a grave symptom of lessened love for
+the sinful murmurers; and lessened love always means lessened power
+to guide and help. The people are not changed, but Moses is. He has
+no longer the invincible patience, the utter self-oblivion, the
+readiness for self-sacrifice, which had borne him up of old, and so
+he fails. We may learn from his failure that the prime requisite for
+doing God's work is love, which cannot be moved to anger nor stirred
+to self-assertion, but meets and conquers murmuring and rebellion by
+patient holding forth of God's gift, and is, in some faint degree,
+an echo of His endless long-suffering. He who would serve men must,
+sleeping or waking, carry them in his heart, and pity their sin.
+They who would represent God to men, and win men for God, must be
+'imitators of God ... and walk in love.' If the bearer of the water
+of life offers it with 'Hear, ye rebels,' it will flow untasted.
+
+IV. Note the sentence on the leader, and the sad memorial name.
+Moses is blamed for not believing nor sanctifying God. His self-
+assertion in his unadvised speech came from unbelief, or
+forgetfulness of his dependence. He who claims power to himself,
+denies it to God. Moses put himself between God and the people, not
+to show but to hide God; and, instead of exalting God's holiness
+before them by declaring Him to be the giver, he intercepted the
+thanks and diverted them to himself. But was his momentary failure
+not far too severely punished? To answer that question, we must
+recur to the thought of the importance of this event as beginning a
+new chapter, and as a test for both Moses and Israel. His failure
+was a comparatively small matter in itself; and if the sentence is
+regarded merely as the punishment of a sin, it appears sternly
+disproportionate to the offence. Were eighty years of faithful
+service not sufficient to procure the condonation of one moment's
+impatience? Is not that harsh treatment? But a tiny blade above-
+ground may indicate the presence of a poisonous root, needing
+drastic measures for its extirpation; and the sentence was not only
+punishment for sin, but kind, though punitive, relief from an office
+for which Moses had no longer, in full measure, his old
+qualifications. The subsequent history does not show any withdrawal
+of God's favour from him, and certainly it would be no very sore
+sorrow to be freed from the heavy load, carried so long. There is
+disapprobation, no doubt, in the sentence; but it treats the conduct
+of Moses rather as a symptom of lessened fitness for his heavy
+responsibility than as sin; and there is as much kindness as
+condemnation in saying to the wearied veteran, who has stood at his
+post so long and has taken up arms once more, 'You have done enough.
+You are not what you were. Other hands must hold the leader's staff.
+Enter into rest.'
+
+Note that Moses was condemned for doing what Jesus always did,
+asserting his power to work miracles. What was unbelief and a sinful
+obtrusion of himself in God's place when the great lawgiver did it,
+was right and endorsed by God when the Carpenter of Nazareth did it.
+Why the difference? A greater than Moses is here, when He says to
+us, 'What will ye that I should do unto you?'
+
+The name of Meribah-Kadesh is given to suggest the parallel and
+difference with the other miraculous flow of water. The two
+incidents are thus brought into connection, and yet individualised.
+'Meribah,' which means 'strife,' brands the murmuring as sinful
+antagonism to God: 'Kadesh,' which means 'holy,' brings both the
+miracle and the sentence under the common category of acts by which
+God manifested His holiness to the new generation; and so the double
+name is a reminder of sin that they may be humble, and of mingled
+mercy and judgment that they may 'trust and obey.'
+
+
+
+
+THE POISON AND THE ANTIDOTE
+
+
+ 'And they journeyed from mount Hor by the way of the
+ Red Sea, to compare the land of Edom: and the soul of
+ the people was much discouraged because of the way.
+ 5. And the people spake against God, and against Moses,
+ Wherefore have ye brought us up out of Egypt to die in
+ the wilderness? for there is no bread, neither is there
+ any water; and our soul loatheth this light bread. 6. And
+ the Lord sent fiery serpents among the people, and they
+ bit the people; and much people of Israel died. 7. Therefore
+ the people came to Moses, and said, We have sinned, for
+ we have spoken against the Lord, and against thee; pray
+ unto the Lord, that He take away the serpents from us.
+ And Moses prayed for the people. 8. And the Lord said
+ unto Moses, Make thee a fiery serpent, and set it upon
+ a pole: and it shall come to pass, that every one that
+ is bitten, when he looketh upon it, shall live. 9. And
+ Moses made a serpent of brass, and put it upon a pole,
+ and it came to pass, that if a serpent had bitten any
+ man, when he beheld the serpent of brass, he lived.'
+ --NUM. xxi. 4-9.
+
+The mutinous discontent of the Israelites had some excuse when they
+had to wheel round once more and go southwards in consequence of the
+refusal of passage through Edom. The valley which stretches from the
+Dead Sea to the head of the eastern arm of the Red Sea, down which
+they had to plod in order to turn the southern end of the mountains
+on its east side, and then resume their northern march outside the
+territory of Edom, is described as a 'horrible desert.' Certainly it
+yielded neither bread nor water. So the faithless pilgrims broke
+into their only too familiar murmurings, utterly ignoring their
+thirty-eight years of preservation. 'There is no bread.' No; but the
+manna had fallen day by day. 'Our soul loatheth this light bread.'
+Yes; but it was bread all the same. Thus coarse tastes prefer garlic
+and onions to Heaven's food, and complain of being starved while it
+is provided. 'There is no water.' No; but the 'rock that followed
+them' gushed out abundance, and there was no thirst.
+
+Murmuring brought punishment, which was meant for amendment. 'The
+Lord sent fiery serpents.' That statement does not necessarily imply
+a miracle. Scripture traces natural phenomena directly to God's
+will, and often overleaps intervening material links between the
+cause which is God and the effect which is a physical fact. The
+neighbourhood of Elath at the head of the gulf is still infested
+with venomous serpents, 'marked with fiery red spots,' from which,
+or possibly from the inflammation caused by their poison, they are
+here called 'fiery.' God made the serpents, though they were hatched
+by eggs laid by mothers; He brought Israel to the place; He willed
+the poisonous stings. If we would bring ordinary events into
+immediate connection with the Divine hand, and would see in all
+calamities fatherly chastisement 'for our profit,' we should
+understand life better than we often do.
+
+The swift stroke had fallen without warning or voice to interpret
+it, but the people knew in their hearts whence and why it had come.
+Their quick recognition of its source and purpose, and their swift
+repentance, are to be put to their credit. It is well for us when we
+interpret for ourselves God's judgments, and need no Moses to urge
+us to humble ourselves before Him. Conscious guilt is conscious of
+unworthiness to approach God, though it dares to speak to offended
+men. The request for Moses' intercession witnesses to the instinct
+of conscience, requiring a mediator,--an instinct which has led to
+much superstition and been terribly misguided, but which is deeply
+true, and is met once for all in Jesus Christ, our Advocate before
+the throne. The request shows that the petitioners were sure of
+Moses' forgiveness for their distrust of him, and thus it witnesses
+to his 'meekness.' His pardon was a kind of pledge of God's. Was the
+servant likely to be more gracious than the Master? A good man's
+readiness to forgive helps bad men to believe in a pardoning God. It
+reflects some beam of Heaven's mercy.
+
+Moses had often prayed for the people when they had sinned, and
+before they had repented. It was not likely that he would be slow to
+do so when they asked him, for the asking was accompanied with ample
+confession. The serpents had done their work, and the prayer that
+the chastisement should cease would be based on the fact that the
+sin had been forsaken. But the narrative seems to anticipate that,
+after the prayer had been offered and answered, Israelites would
+still be bitten. If they were, that confirms the presumption that
+the sending of the serpents was not miraculous. It also brings the
+whole facts into line with the standing methods of Providence, for
+the outward consequences of sin remain to be reaped after the sin
+has been forsaken; but they change their character and are no longer
+destructive, but only disciplinary. 'Serpents' still 'bite' if we
+have 'broken down hedges,' but there is an antidote.
+
+The command to make a brazen or copper serpent, and set it on some
+conspicuous place, that to look on it might stay the effect of the
+poison, is remarkable, not only as sanctioning the forming of an
+image, but as associating healing power with a material object. Two
+questions must be considered separately,--What did the method of
+cure say to the men who turned their bloodshot, languid eyes to it?
+and What does it mean for us, who see it by the light of our Lord's
+great words about it? As to the former question, we have not to take
+into account the Old Testament symbolism which makes the serpent the
+emblem of Satan or of sin. Serpents had bitten the wounded. Here was
+one like them, but without poison, hanging harmless on the pole.
+Surely that would declare that God had rendered innocuous the else
+fatal creatures. The elevation of the serpent was simply intended to
+make it visible from afar; but it could not have been set so high as
+to be seen from all parts of the camp, and we must suppose that the
+wounded were in many cases carried from the distant parts of the
+wide-spreading encampment to places whence they could catch a
+glimpse of it glittering in the sunshine. We are not told that trust
+in God was an essential part of the look, but that is taken for
+granted. Why else should a half-dead man lift his heavy eyelids to
+look? Such a one knew that God had commanded the image to be made,
+and had promised healing for a look. His gaze was fixed on it, in
+obedience to the command involved in the promise, and was, in some
+measure, a manifestation of faith. No doubt the faith was very
+imperfect, and the desire was only for physical healing; but none
+the less it had in it the essence of faith. It would have been too
+hard a requirement for men through whose veins the swift poison was
+burning its way, and who, at the best, were so little capable of
+rising above sense, to have asked from them, as the condition of
+their cure, a trust which had no external symbol to help it. The
+singularity of the method adopted witnesses to the graciousness of
+God, who gave their feebleness a thing that they could look at, to
+aid them in grasping the unseen power which really effected the
+cure. 'He that turned himself to it,' says the Book of Wisdom, 'was
+not saved by the thing which he saw, but by Thee, that art the
+Saviour of all.'
+
+Our Lord has given us the deepest meaning of the brazen serpent.
+Taught by Him, we are to see in it a type of Himself, the
+significance of which could not be apprehended till Calvary had
+given the key. Three distinct points of parallel are suggested by
+His use of the incident in His conversation with Nicodemus. First,
+He takes the serpent as an emblem of Himself. Now it is clear that
+it is so, not in regard to the saving power that dwells in Him, but
+in regard to His sinless manhood, which was made 'in the likeness of
+sinful flesh,' yet 'without sin.' The symbolism which takes the
+serpent as the material type of sin comes into view now, and is
+essential to the full comprehension of the typical significance of
+the incident.
+
+Secondly, Jesus laid stress on the 'lifting up' of the serpent. That
+'lifting up' has two meanings. It primarily refers to the
+Crucifixion, wherein, just as the death-dealing power was manifestly
+triumphed over in the elevation of the brazen serpent, the power of
+sin is exhibited as defeated, as Paul says, 'triumphing over them
+in it' (Col. ii. 14,15). But that lifting up on the Cross draws
+after it the elevation to the throne, and to that, or, rather, to
+both considered as inseparably united, our Lord refers when He
+says,' I, if I be lifted up from the earth, will draw all men unto
+Me.'
+
+Thirdly, the condition of healing is paralleled. 'When he looked
+unto the serpent of brass, he lived.' 'That whosoever believeth may
+in Him have eternal life.' From the serpent no healing power flowed;
+but our eternal life is '_in_ Him,' and _from_ Him it flows into our
+poisoned, dying nature. The sole condition of receiving into ourselves
+that new life which is free from all taint of sin, and is mighty enough
+to arrest the venom that is diffused through every drop of blood, is
+faith in Jesus lifted on the Cross to slay the sin that is slaying
+mankind, and raised to the throne to bestow His own immortal and
+perfect life on all who look to Him. The bitten Israelite might be all
+but dead. The poison wrought swiftly; but if he from afar lifted his
+glazing eyeballs to the serpent on the pole, a swifter healing overtook
+the death that was all but conqueror, and cast it out, and he who was
+borne half unconscious to the foot of the standard went away a sound
+man, 'walking, and leaping, and praising God.' So it may be with any
+man, however deeply tainted with sin, if he will trust himself to Jesus,
+and from 'the ends of the earth' 'look unto' Him 'and be saved,' His
+power knows no hopeless cases. He _can_ cure all. He _will_ cure our
+most ingrained sin, and calm the hottest fever of our poisoned blood,
+if we will let Him. The only thing that we have to do is to gaze, with
+our hearts in our eyes and faith in our hearts, on Him, as He is lifted
+on the Cross and the throne. But we must so gaze, or we die, for none
+but He can cast out the coursing venom. None but He can arrest the
+swift-footed death that is intertwined with our very natures.
+
+
+
+
+BALAAM
+
+ 'He sent messengers therefore unto Balaam the son of
+ Beor to Pethor, which is by the river of the land of
+ the children of his people, to call him, saying, Behold
+ there is a people come out from Egypt: behold, they
+ cover the face of the earth, and they abide over against
+ me.'--NUM. xxii. 6.
+
+Give a general outline of the history. See Bishop Butler's great
+sermon.
+
+I. How much knowledge and love of good there may be in a bad man.
+
+Balaam was a prophet:
+
+_(a)_ He knew something of the divine character,
+
+_(b)_ He knew what righteousness was (Micah v. 8).
+
+_(c)_ He knew of a future state, and longed for 'the last end
+of the righteous.'
+
+He would not break the law of God, and curse by word of mouth:
+
+But yet for all that he wanted to curse. He wanted to do the wrong
+thing, and that made him bad. And when he durst not do it in one
+way, he did it in another.
+
+So he is a picture of the universal blending and mixture that there
+is even in bad men.
+
+It is not knowledge that makes a man good.
+
+It is not aspirations after righteousness. These dwell more or less
+in all souls.
+
+It is not desire 'to go to heaven'--everybody has that desire.
+
+Perfectly vicious men are devils. There is always the blending.
+
+Many of us are trusting to these vagrant wishes, but my friends, it
+is not what a man would sometimes like, but what the whole set and
+tenor of his life tends towards, that makes him. There may be plenty
+of backwater eddies and cross-currents in the sea, but the tide goes
+on all the same.
+
+ 'All these fancies and their whole array
+ One cunning bosom sin blows quite away,'
+
+'Let no man deceive you; he that doeth righteousness is righteous.'
+
+Do not trust your convictions; they are powerless in the fight.
+
+II. How men may deceive themselves about their condition, or the
+self-illusions and compromises of sin.
+
+These convictions will never, by themselves, keep a man from evil,
+but they may lead men to try to compromise, just as Balaam did. He
+would go, but he would not, for the life of him, curse; and he
+evidently thought that he was a hero in firmness and a martyr to
+duty.
+
+He would not curse in words, but he did it in another way--by means
+of Baal-peor.
+
+So we find men making compromises between duty and inclination;
+keeping the letter and breaking the spirit; obeying in some respects
+and indemnifying themselves for their obedience by their
+disobedience in others; very devout, attentive to all religious
+observances, and yet sinning on. And we find such men playing tricks
+upon themselves, and really deluding themselves into the idea that
+they are very good men!
+
+This is the great characteristic of sin, its deceitfulness. It
+always comes as an 'angel of light,' like some of those weird
+stories in which we read about a strange guest at a banquet who
+discloses a skeleton below the wedding garment!
+
+'Father of lies.' '_Nihil imbecillius denudato diabolo._' The
+more one sins, the less capable he becomes of discerning evil.
+Conscience becomes sophisticated, and it is always possible to
+refine away its judgments.
+
+'By reason of use have their senses exercised to discern.' 'Take
+heed lest any of you be hardened through the deceitfulness of sin.'
+
+III. The absurdity and unreasonableness of unrighteousness.
+
+We look at Balaam, and think, how could a man purpose anything so
+foolish as to go on seeking for an opportunity to break a law which
+he knew to be irrevocable!
+
+Yet what did he do but what every sinner does?
+
+All sin is the breach of law which at the very moment of breaking is
+known to be imperative.
+
+All sin is thus the overbearing of conscience, or the sophistication
+of conscience, and all sin is the incurring voluntarily of
+consequences which at the moment are or might be known to be
+certain, and far overbalancing any fancied 'wages of unrighteousness.'
+
+Thus all sin is the overbearing of reason or the sophisticating of
+reason by passion. Men know the absurdity of sin, and yet men will
+go on sinning. 'A rogue is a roundabout fool.' All wrongdoing is a
+mighty blunder. It is only righteousness which is congruous with a
+man's reason, with a man's conscience, with a man's highest
+happiness. 'The fear of the Lord,' that is wisdom.
+
+IV. The wages of unrighteousness.
+
+How Balaam's experiment ended--his death. He tried to make the 'best
+of both worlds,' so he ran with the hare and hunted with the hounds,
+and this was how it ended, as it always does, as it always will. How
+death ends all the illusions, sternly breaks down all the
+compromises, reveals all the absurdities!
+
+Men are one thing or the other. Learn, then, the lesson that no
+gifts, no talents, no convictions, no aspirations will avail.
+
+Let this sad figure which looks out upon us with grey streaming hair
+and uplifted hands from beside the altar on Pisgah speak to us.
+
+How near the haven it is possible to be cast away! Like Bunyan's way
+to hell from near the gate of the celestial city.
+
+Balaam said, 'Let me die the death of the righteous!' and his death
+was thus:--'Balaam they slew with the sword,' and his epitaph is
+'Balaam the son of Beor, who loved the wages of unrighteousness,'
+got them, and perished!
+
+
+
+
+AN UNFULFILLED DESIRE
+
+
+ '... Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my
+ last end be like his!'--NUM. xxiii. 10.
+
+ '... Balaam also the son of Beor they slew with the
+ sword.'--NUM. xiii. 8.
+
+Ponder these two pictures. Take the first scene. A prophet, who
+knows God and His will, is standing on the mountain top, and as he
+looks down over the valley beneath him, with its acacia-trees and
+swift river, there spread the tents of Israel. He sees them, and
+knows that they are 'a people whom the Lord hath blessed.' Brought
+there to curse, 'he blesses them altogether'; and as he gazes upon
+their ordered ranks and sees somewhat of the wondrous future that
+lay before them, his mind is filled with the thought of all the
+blessedness of that righteous nation, and the sigh of longing comes
+to his lips, 'May I be with them in life and death; may I have no
+higher honour, no calmer end, than to lie down and die as one of the
+chosen people, with memories of a divine hand that has protected me
+all through the past, and quiet hopes of the same hand holding me up
+in the great darkness!' A devout aspiration, a worthy desire!
+
+Look at the other picture. Midian has seduced Israel to idolatry and
+its constant companion, sensual sin. The old lawgiver has for his
+last achievement to punish the idolater. 'Avenge the children of
+Israel of the Midianites, afterwards thou shalt be gathered to thy
+people.' So each tribe gives its contingent to the fight, and under
+the fierce and prompt Phinehas, whose javelin had already smitten
+one of the chief offenders, they go forth. Fire and sword,
+devastation and victory, mark their track. The princes of Midian
+fall before the swift rush of the desert-born invaders. And--sad,
+strange company!--among them is the 'man who saw the vision of the
+Almighty, and knew the knowledge of the Most High'! he who had
+taught Moab the purest lessons of morality, and Midian, alas! the
+practice of the vilest profligacy; he who saw from afar 'the sceptre
+arise out of Israel and the Star from Jacob'; he who longed to 'die
+the death of the righteous'! The onset of the avenging host, with
+the 'shout of a king' in their midst; the terror of the flight, the
+riot of havoc and bloodshed, and, finally, the quick thrust of the
+sharp Israelite sword in some strong hand, and the grey hairs all
+dabbled with his blood--these were what the man came to who had once
+breathed the honest desire, 'Let me die the death of the righteous,
+and let my last end be like his'!
+
+I. There is surely a solemn lesson for us all here--as touching the
+danger of mere vague religious desires and convictions which we do
+not allow to determine our conduct.
+
+Balaam had evidently much knowledge. Look at these points--
+
+_(a)_ His knowledge of the covenant-name of God.
+
+_(b)_ His knowledge of a pure morality and a spiritual worship
+far beyond sacrificial notions, and in some respects higher than the
+then Old Testament standpoint.
+
+_(c)_ The knowledge (which is implied in the text) of a future
+state, which had gone far into the background, even if it had not
+been altogether lost, among the Israelites. Is it not remarkable
+that the religious ideas of this man were in advance of Israel's at
+this time; that there seems to have lingered among these 'outsiders'
+more of a pure faith than in Israel itself?
+
+What a lesson here as to the souls led by God and enlightened by Him
+beyond the pale of Judaism!
+
+But all this knowledge, of what use was it to Balaam? He knows about
+God: does he seek to serve Him? He preaches morality to Moab, and he
+teaches Midian to 'teach the children of Israel to commit
+fornication.' He knows something of the blessedness of a 'righteous
+man's' death, and perhaps sees faintly the shining gates beyond--but
+how does it all end? What a gulf between _knowledge_ and
+_life_!
+
+What is the use of correct ideas about God? They may be the
+foundations of holy thoughts, and they are meant to be so. I am not
+setting up emotion above principle, or fancying that there can be
+religion without theology; but for what are all our thoughts about
+God given us?
+
+_(a)_ That they may influence our hearts.
+
+_(b)_ That they may subdue our wills.
+
+_(c)_ That they may mould our practical life.
+
+If they do not do that--then _what_ do they do?
+
+They constitute a positive hindrance--like the dead lava-blocks that
+choke the mouth of a crater, or the two deposits on the bottom of a
+boiler, soot outside and crust inside, which keep the fire from
+getting at the water. They have lost their power because they are so
+familiar. They are weakened by not being practised. The very organs
+of intelligence are, as it were, ossified. Self-complacency lays
+hold on the possession of these ideas and shields itself against all
+appeals with the fact of possessing them. Many a man mistakes, in
+his own case, the knowledge of the truth for obedience to the truth.
+All this is seen in everyday life, and with reference to all manner
+of convictions, but it is most apparent and most fatal about
+Christian truth. I appeal to the many who hear and know all about
+'the word,' What more is needed? That you should do what you know
+('Be not hearers only'); that you should yield your whole being to
+Christ, the living Word.
+
+II. Balaam is an example of convictions which remain inefficacious.
+
+It was not without some sense of his own character, and some
+forebodings of what was possibly brooding over him, that he uttered
+these words of the text. But they were transitory emotions, and they
+passed away.
+
+I suppose that every man who hears the gospel proclaimed is, at some
+time or other, conscious of dawning thoughts which, if followed,
+would lead him to decision for Christ. I suppose that every man
+among us is conscious of thoughts visiting him many a time when he
+least expects them, which, if honestly obeyed, would work an entire
+revolution in his life.
+
+I do not wish to speak as if unbelieving men were the only people
+who were unfaithful to their consciences, but rather to deal with
+what is a besetting sin of us all, though it reaches its highest
+aggravation in reference to the gospel.
+
+Such stings of conviction come to us all, but how are they deadened?
+
+_(a)_ By simple neglect. Pay no attention to them; do not do
+anything in consequence, and they will gradually disappear. The
+voice unheard will cease to speak. Non-obedience to conscience will
+in the end almost throttle conscience.
+
+_(b)_ By angry rejection.
+
+_(c)_ By busy occupation with the outer world.
+
+_(d)_ By sinful occupation with it.
+
+Then consider that such dealing with our convictions leaves us far
+worse men than before, and if continued will end in utter
+insensibility.
+
+What should we do with such convictions? Reverently follow them. And
+in so doing they will grow and increase, and lead us at last to God
+and peace.
+
+Special application of all this to our attitude towards Christian
+truth.
+
+III. Balaam is an instance of wishes that are never fulfilled.
+
+He wished to die 'as the righteous.' How did he die? miserably; and
+why?
+
+(1) Because his wish was deficient in character.
+
+It was _one_ among a great many, feeble and not predominant,
+occasioned by circumstances, and so fading when these disappeared.
+Like many men's relation to the gospel who would _like_ to be
+Christians, and are not. These vagrant wishes are nothing; mere
+'catspaws' of wind, not a breeze. They are not real, even while they
+last, and so they come to nothing.
+
+(2) Because it was partially wrong in its object.
+
+He was willing to die the death, but not to live the life, of the
+righteous; like many men who would be very glad to 'go to heaven
+when they die,' but who will not be Christians while they live.
+
+Now, God forbid that I should say that his wish was wrong! But only
+it was not enough. Such a wish led to no action.
+
+Now, God hears the faintest wish; He does not require that we should
+will strongly, but He does require that we should desire, and that
+we should act according to our desires.
+
+Let the close be a brief picture of a righteous death. And oh! if
+you feel that it is blessed, then let that desire lead you to
+Christ, and all will be well. Remember that Bunyan saw a byway to
+hell at the door of the celestial city. Remember how Balaam ended,
+and stands gibbeted in the New Testament as an evil man, and the
+type of false teachers. Finally, beware of knowledge which is not
+operative in conduct, of convictions which are neglected and pass
+away, of vague desires which come to nought.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Expositions of Holy Scripture
+by Alexander Maclaren
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EXPOSITIONS OF HOLY SCRIPTURE ***
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