Micah 2:7: IS THE SPIRIT OF THE LORD STRAITENED?
‘O thou that art named the house of
Jacob, is the Spirit of the Lord straitened? Are these His doings?’—
MICAH 2:7
The greater part of so-called
Christendom is to-day 1 celebrating the gift of a Divine Spirit to the
Church; but it may well be asked whether the religious condition of
so-called Christendom is not a sad satire upon Pentecost. There seems
a woful contrast, very perplexing to faith, between the bright promise
at the beginning and the history of the development in the future. How
few of those who share in to-day’s services have any personal
experience of such a gift! How many seem to think that that old story
is only the record of a past event, a transient miracle which has no
kind of relation to the experience of the Christians of this day!
There were a handful of believers in one of the towns of Asia Minor,
to whom an Apostle came, and was so startled at their condition that
he put to them in wonder the question that might well be put to
multitudes of so-called Christians amongst us: ‘Did you receive the
Holy Ghost when you believed?’ And their answer is only too true a
transcript of the experience of large masses of people who call
themselves Christians: ‘We have not so much as heard whether there be
any Holy Ghost.’
I desire, then, dear brethren,
to avail myself of this day’s associations in order to press upon your
consciences and upon my own some considerations naturally suggested by
them, and which find voice in those two indignant questions of the old
Prophet:—‘Is the Spirit of the Lord straitened?’ ‘Are these’—the
phenomena of existing popular Christianity—‘are these His doings?’ And
if we are brought sharp up against the consciousness of a dreadful
contrast, it may do us good to ask what is the explanation of so
cloudy a day following a morning so bright.
I. First, then, I have to ask
you to think with me of the promise of the Pentecost.
What did it declare and hold
forth for the faith of the Church? I need not dwell at any length upon
this point. The facts are familiar to you, and the inferences drawn
from them are commonplace and known to us all. But let me just
enumerate them as briefly as may be.
‘Suddenly there came a sound, as
of the rushing of a mighty wind, and it filled all the house where
they were sitting. And there appeared cloven tongues as of fire, and
it sat upon each of them; and they were all filled with the Holy
Ghost.’
What lay in that? First, the
promise of a Divine Spirit by symbols which express some, at all
events, of the characteristics and wonderfulness of His work. The
‘rushing of a mighty wind’ spoke of a power which varies in its
manifestations from the gentlest breath that scarce moves the leaves
on the summer trees to the wildest blast that casts down all which
stands in its way.
The natural symbolism of the
wind, to popular apprehension the least material of all material
forces, and of which the connection with the immaterial part of a
man’s personality has been expressed in all languages, points to a
divine, to an immaterial, to a mighty, to a life-giving power which is
free to blow whither it listeth, and of which men can mark the
effects, though they are all ignorant of the force itself.
The other symbol of the fiery
tongues which parted and sat upon each of them speaks in like manner
of the divine influence, not as destructive, but full of quick,
rejoicing energy and life, the power to transform and to purify.
Whithersoever the fire comes, it changes all things into its own
substance. Whithersoever the fire comes, there the ruddy spires shoot
upwards towards the heavens. Whithersoever the fire comes, there all
bonds and fetters are melted and consumed. And so this fire
transforms, purifies, ennobles, quickens, sets free; and where the
fiery Spirit is, there are energy, swift life, rejoicing activity,
transforming and transmuting power which changes the recipient of the
flame into flame himself.
Then, still further, in the fact
of Pentecost there is the promise of a Divine Spirit which is to
influence all the moral side of humanity. This is the great and
glorious distinction between the Christian doctrine of inspiration and
all others which have, in heathen lands, partially reached similar
conceptions—that the Gospel of Jesus Christ has laid emphasis upon the
Holy Spirit, and has declared that holiness of heart is the touchstone
and test of all claims of divine inspiration. Gifts are much, graces
are more. An inspiration which makes wise is to be coveted, an
inspiration which makes holy is transcendently better. There we find
the safeguard against all the fanaticisms which have sometimes invaded
the Christian Church, namely, in the thought that the Spirit which
dwells in men, and makes them free from the obligations of outward law
and cold morality, is a Spirit that works a deeper holiness than law
dreamed, and a more spontaneous and glad conformity to all things that
are fair and good, than any legislation and outward commandment could
ever enforce. The Spirit that came at Pentecost is not merely a Spirit
of rushing might and of swift-flaming energy, but it is a Spirit of
holiness, whose most blessed and intimate work is the production in us
of all homely virtues and sweet, unpretending goodnesses which can
adorn and gladden humanity.
Still further, the Pentecost
carried in it the promise and prophecy of a Spirit granted to all the
Church. ‘They were all filled with the Holy Ghost.’ This is the true
democracy of Christianity, that its very basis is laid in the thought
that every member of the body is equally close to the Head, and
equally recipient of the life. There is none now who has a Spirit
which others do not possess. The ancient aspiration of the Jewish
law-giver: ‘Would God that all the Lord’s people were prophets, and
that the Lord would put His Spirit upon them,’ is fulfilled in the
experience of Pentecost; and the handmaiden and the children, as well
as the old men and the servants, receive of that universal gift.
Therefore sacerdotal claims, special functions, privileged classes,
are alien to the spirit of Christianity, and blasphemies against the
inspiring God. If ‘one is your Master, all ye are brethren,’ and if we
have all been made to drink into one Spirit, then no longer hath any
man dominion over our faith nor power to intervene and to intercede
with God for us.
And still further, the promise
of this early history was that of a Spirit which should fill the whole
nature of the men to whom He was granted; filling—in the measure, of
course, of their receptivity—them as the great sea does all the creeks
and indentations along the shore. The deeper the creek, the deeper the
water in it; the further inland it runs, the further will the
refreshing tide penetrate the bosom of the continent. And so each man,
according to his character, stature, circumstances, and all the
varying conditions which determine his power of receptivity, will
receive a varying measure of that gift. Yet it is meant that all shall
be full. The little vessel, the tiny cup, as well as the great cistern
and the enormous vat, each contains according to its capacity. And if
all are filled, then this quick Spirit must have the power to
influence all the provinces of human nature, must touch the moral,
must touch the spiritual. The temporary manifestations and
extraordinary signs of His power may well drop away as the flower
drops when the fruit has set. The operations of the Divine Spirit are
to be felt thrilling through all the nature, and every part of the
man’s being is to be recipient of the power. Just as when you take a
candle and plunge it into a jar of oxygen it blazes up, so my poor
human nature immersed in that Divine Spirit, baptized in the Holy
Ghost, shall flame in all its parts into unsuspected and hitherto
inexperienced brightness. Such are the elements of the promise of
Pentecost.
II. And now, in the next
place, look at the apparent failure of the promise.
‘Is the Spirit of the Lord
straitened?’ Look at Christendom. Look at all the churches. Look at
yourselves. Will any one say that the religious condition of any body
of professed believers at this moment corresponds to Pentecost? Is not
the gap so wide that to fill it up seems almost impossible? Is not the
stained and imperfect fulfilment a miserable satire upon the promise?
‘If the Lord be with us,’ said one of the heroes of ancient Israel,
‘wherefore is all this come upon us?’ I am sure that we may say the
same. If the Lord be with us, what is the meaning of the state of
things which we see around us, and must recognise in ourselves? Do any
existing churches present the final perfect form of Christianity as
embodied in a society? Would not the best thing that could happen, and
the thing that will have to happen some day, be the disintegration of
the existing organisations in order to build up a more perfect
habitation of God through the Spirit? I do not wish to exaggerate. God
knows there is no need for exaggerating. The plain, unvarnished story,
without any pessimistic picking out of the black bits and forgetting
ail the light ones, is bad enough.
Take three points on which I do
not dwell and apply them to yourselves, dear brethren, and estimate by
them the condition of things around us. First, say whether the
ordinary tenor of our own religious life looks as if we had that
Divine Spirit in us which transforms everything into its own beauty,
and makes men, through all the regions of their nature, holy and pure.
Then ask yourselves the question whether the standard of devotion and
consecration in any church witnesses of the presence of a Divine
Spirit. A little handful of people, the best of them very partially
touched with the life of God, and very imperfectly consecrated to His
service, surrounded by a great mass about whom we can scarcely, in the
judgment of charity, say even so much, that is the description of most
of our congregations. ‘Are these His doings?’ Surely somebody else’s
than His.
Take another question. Do the
relations of modern Christians and their churches to one another
attest the presence of a unifying Spirit? ‘We have all been made to
drink into one Spirit,’ said Paul. Alas, alas! does it seem as if we
had? Look round professing Christendom, look at the rivalries and the
jealousies between two chapels in adjoining streets. Look at the gulfs
between Christian men who differ only on some comparative trifle of
organisation and polity, and say if such things correspond to the
Pentecostal promise of one Spirit which is to make all the members
into one body? ‘Is the Spirit of the Lord straitened? Are these His
doings?’
Take another branch of evidence.
Look at the comparative impotence of the Church in its conflict with
the growing worldliness of the world. I do not forget how much is
being done all about us to-day, and how still Christ’s Gospel is
winning triumphs, but I do not suppose that any man can look
thoughtfully and dispassionately on the condition, say, for instance,
of Manchester, or of any of our great towns, and mark how the populace
knows nothing and cares nothing about us and our Christianity, and
never comes into our places of worship, and has no share in our hopes
any more than if they lived in Central Africa, and that after eighteen
hundred years of nominal Christianity, without feeling that some
malign influence has arrested the leaping growth of the early Church,
and that somehow or other that lava stream, if I might so call it,
which poured hot from the heart of God in the old days has had its
flow checked, and over its burning bed there has spread a black and
wrinkled crust, whatsoever lingering heat there may still be at the
centre. ‘If God be with us, why has all this come upon us?’
III. And now, lastly, let us
think for a moment of the solution of the contradiction.
The indignant questions of my
text may be taken, with a little possibly permissible violence, as
expressing and dismissing some untrue explanations. One explanation
that sometimes is urged is, the Spirit of the Lord is straitened. That
explanation takes two forms. Sometimes you hear people saying,
‘Christianity is effete. We have to go now to fresh fountains of
inspiration, and turn away from these broken cisterns that can hold no
water.’ I am not going to argue that question. I do not think for my
part that Christianity will be effete until the world has got up to it
and beyond it in its practice, and it will be a good while before that
happens. Christianity will not be worn out until men have copied and
reduced to practice the example of Jesus Christ, and they have not
quite got that length yet. No shadow of a fear that the gospel has
lost its power, or that God’s Spirit has become weak, should be
permitted to creep over our hearts. The promise is, ‘I will send
another Comforter, and He shall abide with you for ever .’ It is a
permanent gift that was given to the Church on that day. We have to
distinguish in the story between the symbols, the gift, and the
consequences of the gift. The first and the last are transient, the
second is permanent. The symbols were transient. The people who came
running together saw no tongues of fire. The consequences were
transient. The tongues and the miraculous utterances were but for a
time. The results vary according to the circumstances; but the central
thing, the gift itself, is an irrevocable gift, and once bestowed is
ever with the Church to all generations.
Another form of the explanation
is the theory that God in His sovereignty is pleased to withhold His
Spirit for reasons which we cannot trace. But it is not true that the
gift once given varies in the degree in which it is continued. There
is always the same flow from God. There are ebbs and flows in the
spiritual power of the Church. Yes! and the tide runs out of your
harbours. Is there any less water in the sea because it does? So the
gift may ebb away from a man, from a community, from an epoch, not
because God’s manifestation and bestowment fluctuate, but because our
receptivity changes. So we dismiss, and are bound to dismiss, if we
are Christians, the unbelieving explanation, ‘The Spirit of the Lord
is straitened,’ and not to sit with our hands folded, as if an
inscrutable sovereignty, with which we have nothing to do, sometimes
sent more and sometimes less of His spiritual gifts upon a waiting
Church. It is not so. ‘With Him is no variableness.’ The gifts of God
are without repentance; and the Spirit that was given once, according
to the Master’s own word already quoted, is given that He may abide
with us for ever.
Therefore we have to come back
to this, which is the point to which I seek to bring you and myself,
in lowly penitence and contrite acknowledgment—that it is all our own
fault and the result of evils in ourselves that may be remedied, that
we have so little of that divine gift; and that if the churches of
this country and of this day seem to be cursed and blasted in so much
of their fruitless operations and formal worship, it is the fault of
the churches, and not of the Lord of the churches. The stream that
poured forth from the throne of God has not lost itself in the sands,
nor is it shrunken in its volume. The fire that was kindled on
Pentecost has not died down into grey ashes. The rushing of the mighty
wind that woke on that morning has not calmed and stilled itself into
the stagnancy and suffocating breathlessness of midday heat. The same
fulness of the Spirit which filled the believers on that day is
available for us all. If, like that waiting Church of old, we abide in
prayer and supplication, the gift will be given to us too, and we may
repeat and reproduce, if not the miracles which we do not need, yet
the necessary inspiration of the highest and the noblest days and
saints in the history of the Church. ‘If ye, being evil, know how to
give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Heavenly
Father give the Holy Spirit to them that ask Him?’ ‘Ask and ye shall
receive,’ and be filled ‘with the Holy Ghost and with power.’
Micah 2:13 CHRIST THE BREAKER
‘The Breaker is come up before
them: they have broken up, and have passed through the gate, and are
gone out by it: and their king shall pass before them, and the Lord on
the head of them.’— MICAH ii. 13
Micah was contemporary with
Isaiah. The two prophets stand, to a large extent, on the same level
of prophetic knowledge. Characteristic of both of them is the
increasing clearness of the figure of the personal Messiah, and the
increasing fulness of detail with which His functions are described.
Characteristic of both of them is the presentation which we find in
this text of that Messiah’s work as being the gathering together of
the scattered captive people and the leading them back in triumph into
the blessed land.
Such is the image which
underlies my text. Of course I have nothing to do now with questions
as to any narrower and nearer historical fulfilment, because I believe
that all these Messianic prophecies which were susceptible of, and
many of which obtained, a historical and approximate fulfilment in the
restoration of the Jews from the Babylonish captivity, have a higher
and broader and more real accomplishment in that great deliverance
wrought by Jesus Christ, of which all these earlier and partial and
outward manifestations were themselves prophecies and shadows.
So I make no apology for taking
the words before us as having their only real accomplishment in the
office and working of Jesus Christ. He is ‘the Breaker which is come
up before us.’ He it is that has broken out the path on which we may
travel, and in whom, in a manner which the Prophet dreamed not of,
‘the Lord is at the head’ of us, and our King goes before us. So that
my object is simply to take that great name, the Breaker, and to see
the manifold ways in which in Scripture it is applied to the various
work of Jesus Christ in our redemption.
I. I follow entirely the lead of
corresponding passages in other portions of Scripture, and to begin
with, I ask you to think of that great work of our Divine Redeemer by
which He has broken for the captives the prison-house of their
bondage.
The image that is here before us
is either that of some foreign land in which the scattered exiles were
bound in iron captivity, or more probably some dark and gloomy prison,
with high walls, massive gates, and barred windows, wherein they were
held; and to them sitting hopeless in the shadow of death, and bound
in affliction and iron, there comes one mysterious figure whom the
Prophet could not describe more particularly, and at His coming the
gates flew apart, and the chains dropped from their hands; and the
captives had heart put into them, and gathering themselves together
into a triumphant band, they went out with songs and everlasting joy
upon their heads; freemen, and on the march to the home of their
fathers. ‘The Breaker is gone up before them; they have broken, and
passed through the gate, and are gone out by it.’
And is not that our condition?
Many of us know not the bondage in which we are held. We are held in
it all the more really and sadly because we conceit ourselves to be
free. Those poor, light-hearted people in the dreadful days of the
French Revolution, used to keep up some ghastly mockery of society and
cheerfulness in their prisons; and festooned the bars with flowers,
and made believe to be carrying on their life freely as they used to
do; but for all that, day after day the tumbrils came to the gates,
and morning after morning the jailer stood at the door of the dungeons
with the fatal list in his hand, and one after another of the triflers
was dragged away to death. And so men and women are living a life
which they fancy is free, and all the while they are in bondage, held
in a prison-house. You, my brother! are chained by guilt; you are
chained by sin, you are chained by the habit of evil with a strength
of which you never know till you try to shake it off.
And there comes to each of us a
mighty Deliverer, who breaks the gates of brass, and who cuts the bars
of iron in sunder. Christ comes to us. By His death He has borne away
the guilt; by His living Spirit He will bear away the dominion of sin
from our hearts; and if the Son will make us free we shall be free
indeed. Oh! ponder that deep truth, I pray you, which the Lord Christ
has spoken in words that carry conviction in their very simplicity to
every conscience: ‘He that committeth sin is the slave of sin.’ And as
you feel sometimes—and you all feel sometimes—the catch of the fetter
on your wrists when you would fain stretch out your hands to good,
listen as to a true gospel to this old word which, in its picturesque
imagery, carries a truth that should be life. To us all ‘the Breaker
is gone up before us,’ the prison gates are open. Follow His steps,
and take the freedom which He gives; and be sure that you ‘stand fast
in the liberty wherewith Christ hath made you free, and be not
entangled again with any yoke of bondage.’
Men and women! Some of you are
the slaves of your own lusts. Some of you are the slaves of the
world’s maxims. Some of you are held in bondage by some habit that you
abominate, but cannot get away from. Here is freedom for you. The dark
walls of the prison are round us all. ‘The Scripture hath shut up all
in sin, that He might have mercy upon all.’ Blessed be His name! As
the angel came to the sleeping Apostle, and to his light touch the
iron gates swung obedient on their hinges, and Roman soldiers who
ought to have watched their prey were lulled to sleep, and fetters
that held the limbs dropped as if melted; so, silently, in His meek
and merciful strength, the Christ comes to us all, and the iron gate
which leadeth out into freedom opens of its own accord at His touch,
and the fetters fall from our limbs, and we go forth free men. ‘The
Breaker is gone up before us.’
II. Again, take another
application of this same figure found in Scripture, which sets forth
Jesus Christ as being the Opener of the path to God.
‘I am the Way and the Truth and
the Life, no man cometh to the Father but by Me,’ said He. And again,
‘By a new and living way which He hath opened for us through the veil’
(that is to say, His flesh), we can have free access ‘with confidence
by the faith of Him.’ That is to say, if we rightly understand our
natural condition, it is not only one of bondage to evil, but it is
one of separation from God. Parts of the divine character are always
beautiful and sweet to every human heart when it thinks about them.
Parts of the divine character stand frowning before a man who knows
himself for what he is; and conscience tells us that between God and
us there is a mountain of impediment piled up by our own evil. To us
Christ comes, the Path-finder and the Path; the Pioneer who breaks the
way for us through all the hindrances, and leads us up to the presence
of God.
For we do not know God as He is
except by Jesus Christ. We see fragments, and often distorted
fragments, of the divine nature and character apart from Jesus, but
the real divine nature as it is, and as it is in its relation to me, a
sinner, is only made known to me in the face of Jesus Christ. When we
see Him we see God; Christ’s tears are God’s pity, Christ’s gentleness
is God’s meekness, Christ’s tender, drawing love is not only a
revelation of a most pure and sweet Brother’s heart, but a
manifestation through that Brother’s heart of the deepest depths of
the divine nature. Christ is the heart of God. Apart from Him, we come
to the God of our own consciences and we tremble; we come to the God
of our own fancies and we presume; we come to the God dimly guessed at
and pieced together from out of the hints and indications of His
works, and He is little more than a dead name to us. Apart from Christ
we come to a peradventure which we call a God; a shadow through which
you can see the stars shining. But we know the Father when we believe
in Christ. And so all the clouds rising from our own hearts and
consciences and fancies and misconceptions, which we have piled
together between God and ourselves, Christ clears away; and thus He
opens the path to God.
And He opens it in another way
too, on which I cannot dwell. It is only the God manifest in Jesus
Christ that draws men’s hearts to Him. The attractive power of the
divine nature is ail in Him who has said, ‘I, if I be lifted up, will
draw all men unto Me.’ The God whom men know, or think they know,
outside of the revelation of divinity in Jesus Christ, is a God before
whom they sometimes tremble, who is far more often their terror than
their love, who is their ‘ghastliest doubt’ still more frequently than
He is their ‘dearest faith.’ But the God that is in Christ woos and
wins men to Him, and from His great sweetness there streams out, as it
were, a magnetic influence that draws hearts to Him. The God that is
in Christ is the only God that humanity ever loved. Other gods they
may have worshipped with cowering terror and with far-off lip
reverence, but this God has a heart, and wins hearts because He has.
So Christ opens the way to Him.
And still further, in a yet
higher fashion, that Saviour is the Path-breaker to the Divine
Presence, in that He not only makes God known to us, and not only
makes Him so known to us as to draw us to Him, but in that likewise
He, by the fact of His Cross and passion, has borne and borne away the
impediments of our own sin and transgression which rise for ever
between us and Him, unless He shall sweep them out of the way. He has
made ‘the rough places plain and the crooked things straight’;
levelled the mountains and raised the valleys, and cast up across all
the wilderness of the world a highway along which ‘the wayfaring man
though a fool’ may travel. Narrow understandings may know, and selfish
hearts may love, and low-pitched confessions may reach the ear of the
God who comes near to us in Christ, that we in Christ may come near to
Him. The Breaker is gone up before us; ‘having therefore, brethren,
boldness to enter into the holiest of all . . . by a new and living
way, which He hath consecrated for us . . . let us draw near with true
hearts’
III. Then still further,
another modification of this figure is found in the frequent
representations of Scripture, by which our Lord is the Breaker, going
up before us in the sense that He is the Captain of our life’s march.
We have, in the words of my
text, the image of the gladly-gathered people flocking after the
Leader. ‘They have broken up, and have passed through the gate, and
are gone out by it; and their King shall pass before them, and the
Lord on the head of them.’ The Prophet knew not that the Lord their
King, of whom it is enigmatically said that He too, as well as ‘the
Breaker,’ is to go before them, was in mysterious fashion to dwell in
that Breaker; and that those two, whom He sees separately, are yet in
a deep and mysterious sense one. The host of the captives, returning
in triumphant march through the wilderness and to the promised land,
is, in the Prophet’s words, headed both by the Breaker and by the
Lord. We know that the Breaker is the Lord, the Angel of the Covenant
in whom is the name of Jehovah.
And so we connect with all these
words of my text such words as designate our Saviour as the Captain of
our salvation; such words as His own in which He says, ‘When He
putteth forth His sheep He goeth before them’—such words as His
Apostle used when he said, ‘Leaving us an ensample that we should
follow in His steps.’ And by all there is suggested this—that Christ,
who breaks the prison of our sins, and leads us forth on the path to
God, marches at the head of our life’s journey, and is our Example and
Commander; and Himself present with us through all life’s changes and
its sorrows.
Here is the great blessing and
peculiarity of Christian morals that they are all brought down to that
sweet obligation: ‘Do as I did.’ Here is the great blessing and
strength for the Christian life in all its difficulties—you can never
go where you cannot see in the desert the footprints, haply spotted
with blood, that your Master left there before you, and planting your
trembling feet in the prints, as a child might imitate his father’s
strides, may learn to recognise that all duty comes to this: ‘Follow
Me’; and that all sorrow is calmed, ennobled, made tolerable, and
glorified, by the thought that He has borne it.
The Roman matron of the legend
struck the knife into her bosom, and handed it to her husband with the
words, ‘It is not painful!’ Christ has gone before us in all the
dreary solitude, and in all the agony and pains of life. He has
hallowed them all, and has taken the bitterness and the pain out of
each of them for them that love Him. If we feel that the Breaker is
before us, and that we are marching behind Him, then whithersoever He
leads us we may follow, and whatsoever He has passed through we may
pass through. We carry In His life the all-sufficing pattern of duty.
We have in His companionship the all-strengthening consolation. Let us
leave the direction of our road in His hands, who never says ‘Go!’ but
always ‘Come!’ This General marches in the midst of His battalions and
sets His soldiers on no enterprises or forlorn hopes which He has not
Himself dared and overcome.
So Christ goes as our Companion
before us, the true pillar of fire and cloud in which the present
Deity abode, and He is with us in real companionship. Our joyful march
through the wilderness is directed, patterned, protected, companioned
by Him, and when He ‘putteth forth His own sheep,’ blessed be His
name, ‘He goeth before them.’
IV. And now, lastly, there is
a final application of this figure which sets forth our Lord as the
Breaker for us of the bands of death, and the Forerunner ‘entered for
us into the heavens.’
Christ’s resurrection is the
only solid proof of a future life. Christ’s present resurrection life
is the power by partaking in which, ‘though we were dead, yet shall we
live.’
He has trodden that path, too,
before us. He has entered into the great prison-house into which the
generations of men have been hounded and hurried; and where they lie
in their graves, as in their narrow cells. He has entered there; with
one blow He has struck the gates from their hinges, and has passed
out, and no soul can any longer be shut in as for ever into that
ruined and opened prison. Like Samson, He has taken the gates which
from of old barred its entrance, and borne them on His strong
shoulders to the city on the hill, and now Death’s darts are blunted,
his fetters are broken, and his gaol has its doors wide open, and
there is nothing for him to do now but to fall upon his sword and to
kill himself, for his prisoners are free. ‘Oh, death! I will be thy
plague; oh, grave! I will be thy destruction.’ ‘The Breaker has gone
up before us’; therefore it is not possible that we should be holden
of the impotent chains that He has broken.
The Forerunner is for us entered
and passed through the heavens, and entered into the holiest of all.
We are too closely knit to Him, if we love Him and trust Him, to make
it possible that we shall be where He is not, or that He shall be
where we are not. Where He has gone we shall go. In heaven, blessed be
His name! He will still be the leader of our progress and the captain
at the head of our march. For He crowns all His other work by this,
that having broken the prison-house of our sins, and opened for us the
way to God, and been the leader and the captain of our march through
all the pilgrimage of life, and the opener of the gate of the grave
for our joyful resurrection, and the opener of the gate of heaven for
our triumphal entrance, He will still as the Lamb that is in the midst
of the Throne, go before us, and lead us into green pastures and by
the still waters, and this shall be the description of the growing
blessedness and power of the saints’ life above, ‘These are they which
follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth.’
Micah
4:5 AS GOD, SO WORSHIPPER
‘. . . All the peoples will walk
every one in the name of his god, and we will walk in the name of the
Lord our God for ever and ever.’— MICAH iv. 5 (R.V.) .
This is a statement of a general
truth which holds good of all sorts of religion. ‘To walk’ is
equivalent to carrying on a course of practical activity. ‘The name’
of a god is his manifested character. So the expression ‘Walk in the
name’ means, to live and act according to, and with reference to, and
in reliance on, the character of the worshipper’s god. In the Lord’s
prayer the petition ‘Hallowed be Thy name’ precedes the petition ‘Thy
will be done.’ From reverent thoughts about the name must flow life in
reverent conformity to the will.
I. A man’s god is what rules
his practical life.
Religion is dependence upon a
Being recognised to be perfect and sovereign, whose will guides, and
whose character moulds, the whole life. That general statement may be
broken up into parts; and we may dwell upon the attitude of
dependence, or of that of submission, or upon that of admiration and
recognition of ideal perfection, or upon that of aspiration; but we
come at last to the one thought—that the goal of religion is likeness
and the truest worship is imitation. Such a view of the essence of
religion gives point to the question, What is our god? and makes it a
very easily applied, and very searching test, of our lives. Whatever
we profess, that which we feel ourselves dependent on, that which we
invest, erroneously or rightly, with supreme attributes of excellence,
that which we aspire after as our highest good, that which shapes and
orders the current of our lives, is our god. We call ourselves
Christians. I am afraid that if we tried ourselves by such a test,
many of us would fail to pass it. It would thin the ranks of all
churches as effectually as did Gideon’s ordeal by water, which brought
down a mob of ten thousand to a little steadfast band of three
hundred. No matter to what church we belong, or how flaming our
professions, our practical religion is determined by our answer to the
question, What do we most desire? What do we most eagerly pursue?
England has as much need as ever the house of Jacob had of the
scathing words that poured like molten lead from the lips of Isaiah
the son of Amoz, ‘Their land is full of silver and gold, neither is
there any end of their treasures. Their land is also full of idols:
they worship the work of their own hands.’ Money, knowledge, the good
opinion of our fellows, success in a political career—these, and the
like, are our gods. There is a worse idolatry than that which bows
down before stocks and stones. The aims that absorb us; our highest
ideal of excellence; that which possessed, we think would secure our
blessedness; that lacking which everything else is insipid and
vain—these are our gods: and the solemn prohibition may well be
thundered in the ears of the unconscious idolaters not only in the
English world, but also in the English churches. ‘Thou shalt not give
My glory to another, nor My praise to graven images.’
II. The worshipper will
resemble his god in character.
As we have already said, the
goal of religion is likeness, and the truest worship is imitation. It
is proved by the universal experience of humanity that the level of
morality will never rise above the type enshrined in their gods; or if
it does, in consequence of contact with a higher type in a higher
religion, the old gods will be flung to the moles and the bats. ‘They
that make them are like unto them; so is every one that trusteth in
them.’ That is a universal truth. The worshippers were in the
Prophet’s thought as dumb and dead as the idols. They who ‘worship
vanity’ inevitably ‘become vain.’ A Venus or a Jupiter, a Baal or an
Ashtoreth, sets the tone of morals.
This truth is abundantly
enforced by observation of the characters of the men amongst us who
are practical idolaters. They are narrowed and lowered to correspond
with their gods. Low ideals can never lead to lofty lives. The worship
of money makes the complexion yellow, like jaundice. A man who
concentrates his life’s effort upon some earthly good, the attainment
of which seems to be, so long as it is unattained, his passport to
bliss, thereby blunts many a finer aspiration, and makes himself blind
to many a nobler vision. Men who are always hunting after some paltry
and perishable earthly good, become like dogs who follow scent with
their noses at the ground, and are unconscious of everything a yard
above their heads. We who live amidst the rush of a great commercial
community see many instances of lives stiffened, narrowed,
impoverished, and hardened by the fierce effort to become rich. And
wherever we look with adequate knowledge over the many idolatries of
English life, we see similar processes at work on character.
Everywhere around us ‘the peoples are walking every one in the name of
his god.’ That character constitutes the worshipper’s ideal; it is a
pattern to which he aims to be assimilated; it is a good the
possession of which he thinks will make him blessed; it is that for
which he willingly sacrifices much which a clearer vision would teach
him is far more precious than that for which he is content to barter
it.
The idolaters walking in the
name of their god is a rebuke to the Christian men who with faltering
steps and many an aberration are seeking to walk in the name of the
Lord their God. If He is in any real and deep sense ‘our God,’ we
shall see in Him the realised ideal of all excellence, the fountain of
all our blessedness, the supreme good for our seeking hearts, the
sovereign authority to sway our wills; the measure of our conscious
possession of Him will be the measure of our glad imitation of Him,
and our joyful spirits, enfranchised by the assurance of our loving
possession of Him who is love, will hear Him ever whisper to us, ‘Be
ye perfect as your Father which is in heaven is perfect.’ The desire
to reproduce in the narrow bounds of our human spirits the infinite
beauties of the Lord our God will give elevation to our lives, and
dignity to our actions attainable from no other source. If we hallow
His name, we shall do His will, and earth will become a foretaste of
heaven.
III. The worshipper will
resemble his god in fate.
We may observe that it is only
of God’s people that Micah in our text applies the words ‘for ever and
ever.’ ‘The peoples’’ worship perishes. They walk for a time in the
name of their god, but what comes of it at last is veiled in silence.
It is Jehovah’s worshippers who walk in His name for ever and ever,
and of whom the great words are true, ‘Because I live ye shall live
also.’ We may be sure of this that all the divine attributes are
pledged for our immortality; we may be sure, too, that a soul which
here follows in the footsteps of Jesus, which in its earthly life
walked in the name of the Lord its God, will continue across the
narrow bridge, and go onward ‘for ever and ever’ in direct progress in
the same direction in which it began on earth. The imitation, which is
the practical religion of every Christian, has for its only possible
result the climax of likeness. The partial likeness is attained on
earth by contemplation, by aspiration, and by effort; but it is
perfected in the heavens by the perfect vision of His perfect face.
‘We shall be like Him, for we shall see Him as He is.’ Not till it has
reached its goal can the Christian life begun here be conceived as
ended. It shall never be said of any one who tried by God’s help to
walk ‘in the name of the Lord’ that he was lost in the desert, and
never reached his journey’s end. The peoples who walked in the name of
any false god will find their path ending as on the edge of a
precipice, or in an unfathomable bog; loss, and woe, and shame will be
their portion. But ‘the name of the Lord is a strong tower,’ into
which whoever will may run and be safe, and to walk in the name of the
Lord is to walk on a way ‘that shall be called the Way of Holiness,
whereon no ravenous beast shall go up, but the redeemed shall walk
there,’ and all that are on it ‘shall come with singing to Zion, and
everlasting joy shall be upon their heads.’
Micah 5:7: ‘A DEW FROM THE LORD’
‘The remnant of Jacob shall be in
the midst of many people as a dew from the Lord, that tarrieth not for
man, nor waiteth for the sons of men.’— MICAH v. 7 .
The simple natural science of
the Hebrews saw a mystery in the production of the dew on a clear
night, and their poetic imagination found in it a fit symbol for all
silent and gentle influences from heaven that refreshed and quickened
parched and dusty souls. Created by an inscrutable process in silence
and darkness, the dewdrops lay innumerable on the dry plains and hung
from every leaf and thorn, each little globule a perfect sphere that
reflected the sun, and twinkled back the beams in its own little
rainbow. Where they fell the scorched vegetation lifted its drooping
head. That is what Israel is to be in the world, says Micah. He saw
very deep into God’s mind and into the function of the nation.
It may be a question as to
whether the text refers more especially to the place and office of
Israel when planted in its own land, or when dispersed among the
nations. For, as you see, he speaks of ‘the remnant of Jacob’ as if he
was thinking of the survivors of some great calamity which had swept
away the greater portion of the nation. Both things are true. When
settled in its own land, Israel’s office was to teach the nations God;
when dispersed among the Gentiles, its office ought to have been the
same. But be that as it may, the conception here set forth is as true
to-day as ever it was. For the prophetic teachings, rooted though they
may be in the transitory circumstances of a tiny nation, are ‘not for
an age, but for all time,’ and we get a great deal nearer the heart of
them when we grasp the permanent truths that underlie them, than when
we learnedly exhume the dead history which was their occasion.
Micah’s message comes to all
Christians, and very eminently to English Christians. The subject of
Christian missions is before us to-day, and some thoughts in the line
of this great text may not be inappropriate.
We have here, then,
I. The function of each
Christian in his place.
‘The remnant of Jacob shall be
as a dew from the Lord in the midst of many nations.’ What made Israel
‘as a dew’? One thing only; its religion, its knowledge of God, and
its consequent purer morality. It could teach Greece no philosophy, no
art, no refinement, no sensitiveness to the beautiful. It could teach
Rome no lessons of policy or government. It could bring no wisdom to
Egypt, no power or wealth to Assyria. But God lit His candle and set
it on a candlestick, that it ‘might give light to all that were in the
house.’
The same thing is true about
Christian people. We cannot teach the world science, we cannot teach
it philosophy or art, but we can teach it God. Now the possibility
brings with it the obligation. The personal experience of Jesus Christ
in our hearts, as the dew that brings to us life and fertility,
carries with it a commission as distinct and imperative as if it had
been pealed into each single ear by a voice from heaven. That which
made Israel the ‘dew amidst many nations,’ parched for want of it,
makes Christian men and women fit to fill the analogous office, and
calls upon them to discharge the same functions. For—in regard to all
our possessions, and therefore most eminently and imperatively in
regard to the best—that which we have, we have as stewards, and the
Gospel, as the Apostle found, was not only given to him for his own
individual enjoyment, elevation, ennobling, emancipation, salvation,
but was ‘committed to his charge,’ and he was ‘entrusted’ with it, as
he says, as a sacred deposit.
Remember, too, that, strange as
it may seem, the only way by which that knowledge of God which was
bestowed upon Israel could become the possession of the world was by
its first of all being made the possession of a few. People talk about
the unfairness, the harshness, of the providential arrangement by
which the whole world was not made participant of the revelation which
was granted to Israel. The fire is gathered on to a hearth. Does that
mean that the corners of the room are left uncared for? No! the
brazier is in the middle—as Palestine was, even geographically in the
centre of the then civilised world—that from the centre the beneficent
warmth might radiate and give heat as well as light to ‘all them that
are in the house.’
So it is in regard to all the
great possessions of the race. Art, literature, science, political
wisdom, they are all intrusted to a few who are made their apostles;
and the purpose is their universal diffusion from these human centres.
It is in the line of the analogy of all the other gifts of God to
humanity, that chosen men should be raised up in whom the life is
lodged, that it may be diffused.
So to us the message comes: ‘The
Lord hath need of thee.’ Christ has died; the Cross is the world’s
redemption. Christ lives that He may apply the power and the benefits
of His death and of His risen life to all humanity. But the missing
link between the all sufficient redemption that is in Christ Jesus,
and the actual redemption of the world, is ‘the remnant of Jacob,’ the
Christian Church which is to be ‘in the midst of many people, as a dew
from the Lord.’
Now, that diffusion from
individual centres of the life that is in Jesus Christ is the chiefest
reason—or at all events, is one chief reason—for the strange and
inextricable intertwining in modern society, of saint and sinner, of
Christian and non-Christian. The seed is sown among the thorns; the
wheat springs up amongst the tares. Their roots are so matted together
that no hand can separate them. In families, in professions, in
business relations, in civil life, in national life, both grow
together. God sows His seed thin that all the field may smile in
harvest. The salt is broken up into many minute particles and rubbed
into that which it is to preserve from corruption. The remnant of
Jacob is in the midst of many peoples; and you and I are encompassed
by those who need our Christ, and who do not know Him or love Him; and
one great reason for the close intertwining is that, scattered, we may
diffuse, and that at all points the world may be in contact with those
who ought to be working to preserve it from putrefaction and decay.
Now there are two ways by which
this function may be discharged, and in which it is incumbent upon
every Christian man to make his contribution, be it greater or
smaller, to the discharge of it. The one is by direct efforts to
impart to others the knowledge of God in Jesus Christ which we have,
and which we profess to be the very root of our lives. We can all do
that if we will, and we are here to do it. Every one of us has
somebody or other close to us, bound to us, perhaps, by the tie of
kindred and love, who will listen to us more readily than to anybody
else. Christian men and women, have you utilised these channels which
God Himself, by the arrangements of society, has dug for you, that
through them you may pour upon some thirsty ground the water of life?
We could also help, and help far more than any of us do, in associated
efforts for the same purpose. The direct obligation to direct efforts
to impart the Gospel cannot be shirked, though, alas! it is far too
often ignored by us professing Christians.
But there is another way by
which ‘the remnant of Jacob’ is to be ‘a dew from the Lord,’ and that
is by trying to bring to bear Christian thoughts and Christian
principles upon all the relations of life in which we stand, and upon
all the societies, be they greater or smaller—the family, the city, or
the nation—of which we form parts. We have heard a great deal lately
about what people that know very little about it, are pleased to call
‘the Nonconformist conscience,’ I take the compliment, which is not
intended, but is conveyed by the word. But I venture to say that what
is meant, is not the ‘Nonconformist’ conscience, it is the Christian
conscience. We Nonconformists have no monopoly, thank God, of that.
Nay, rather, in some respects, our friends in the Anglican churches
are teaching some of us a lesson as to the application of Christian
principles to civic duty and to national life. I beseech you, although
I do not mean to dwell upon that point at all at this time, to ask
yourselves whether, as citizens, the vices, the godlessness, the
miseries—the removable miseries—of our great town populations, lie
upon your hearts. Have you ever lifted a finger to abate drunkenness?
Have you ever done anything to help to make it possible that the
masses of our town communities should live in places better than the
pigsties in which many of them have to wallow? Have you any care for
the dignity, the purity, the Christianity of our civic rulers; and do
you, to the extent of your ability, try to ensure that Christ’s
teaching shall govern the life of our cities? And the same question
may be put yet more emphatically with regard to wider subjects,
namely, the national life and the national action, whether in regard
to war or in regard to other pressing subjects for national
consideration. I do not touch upon these; I only ask you to remember
the grand ideal of my text, which applies to the narrowest circle—the
family; and to the wider circles—the city and the nation, as well as
to the world. Time was when a bastard piety shrank back from
intermeddling with these affairs and gathered up its skirts about it
in an ecstasy of unwholesome unworldliness. There is not much danger
of that now, when Christian men are in the full swim of the currents
of civic, professional, literary, national life. But I will tell you
of what there is a danger—Christian men and women moving in their
families, going into town councils, going into Parliament, going to
the polling booths, and leaving their Christianity behind them. ‘The
remnant of Jacob shall be as a dew from the Lord.’
Now let me turn for a moment to
a second point, and that is
II. The function of English
Christians in the world.
I have suggested in an earlier
part of this sermon that possibly the application of this text
originally was to the scattered remnant. Be that as it may, wherever
you go, you find the Jew and the Englishman. I need not dwell upon the
ubiquity of our race. I need not point you to the fact that, in all
probability, our language is destined to be the world’s language some
day. I need do nothing more than recall the fact that a man may go on
board ship, in Liverpool or London, and go round the world; everywhere
he sees the Union Jack, and everywhere he lands upon British soil. The
ubiquity of the scattered Englishman needs no illustration.
But I do wish to remind you that
that ubiquity has its obligation. We hear a great deal to-day about
Imperialism, about ‘the Greater Britain,’ about ‘the expansion of
England.’ And on one side all that new atmosphere of feeling is good,
for it speaks of a vivid consciousness which is all to the good in the
pulsations of the national life. But there is another side to it that
is not so good. What is the expansion sought for? Trade? Yes!
necessarily; and no man who lives in Lancashire will speak lightly of
that necessity. Vulgar greed, and earth-hunger? that is evil. Glory?
that is cruel, blood-stained, empty. My text tells us why expansion
should be sought, and what are the obligations it brings with it. ‘The
remnant of Jacob shall be in the midst of many people as a dew from
the Lord’ There are two kinds of Imperialism: one which regards the
Empire as a thing for the advantage of us here, in this little land,
and another which regards it as a burden that God has laid on the
shoulders of the men whom John Milton, two centuries ago, was not
afraid to call ‘His Englishmen.’
Let me remind you of two
contrasted pictures which will give far more forcibly than anything I
can say, the two points of view from which our world-wide dominion may
be regarded. Here is one of them: ‘By the strength of my hand I have
done it, and by my wisdom, for I am prudent. And I have removed the
bounds of the people, and have robbed their treasures, and my hand
hath found as a nest the riches of the people; and as one gathereth
eggs that are left, have I gathered all the earth; and there was none
that moved a wing, or opened a mouth, or peeped.’ That is the voice of
the lust for Empire for selfish advantages. And here is the other one:
‘The kings of Tarshish and of the isles shall bring presents; yea, all
kings shall fall down before Him; all nations shall serve Him, for He
shall deliver the needy when he crieth, the poor also, and him that
hath no helper. He shall redeem their soul from deceit and violence,
and precious shall their blood be in His sight.’ That is the voice
that has learned: ‘He that is greatest among you, let him be your
servant’; and that the dominion founded on unselfish surrender for
others is the only dominion that will last. Brethren! that is the
spirit in which alone England will keep its Empire over the world.
I need not remind you that the
gift which we have to carry to the heathen nations, the subject
peoples who are under the æs of our laws, is not merely our
literature, our science, our Western civilisation, still less the
products of our commerce, for all of which some of them are asking;
but it is the gift that they do not ask for. The dew ‘waiteth not for
man, nor tarrieth for the sons of men.’ We have to create the demand
by bringing the supply. We have to carry Christ’s Gospel as the
greatest gift that we have in our hands.
And now, I was going to have
said a word, lastly, but I see it can only be a word, about—
III. The failure to fulfil
the function.
Israel failed. Pharisaism was
the end of it—a hugging itself in the possession of the gift which it
did not appreciate, and a bitter contempt of the nations, and so
destruction came, and the fire on the hearth was scattered and died
out, and the vineyard was taken from them and ‘given to a nation
bringing forth the fruits thereof.’ Change the name, as the Latin poet
says, and the story is told about us. England largely fails in this
function; as witness in India godless civilians; as witness on every
palm-shaded coral beach in the South Seas, profligate beach-combers,
drunken sailors, unscrupulous traders; as witness the dying out of
races by diseases imported with profligacy and gin from this land. ‘A
dew from the Lord!’; say rather a malaria from the devil! ‘By you,’
said the Prophet, ‘is the name of God blasphemed among the Gentiles.’
By Englishmen the missionary’s efforts are, in a hundred cases,
neutralised, or hampered if not neutralised.
We have failed because, as
Christian people, we have not been adequately in earnest. No man can
say with truth that the churches of England are awake to the
imperative obligation of this missionary enterprise. ‘If God spared
not the natural branches, take heed lest He spare not thee.’ Israel’s
religion was not diffusive, therefore it corrupted; Israel’s religion
did not reach out a hand to the nations, therefore its heart was
paralysed and stricken. They who bring the Gospel to others increase
their own hold upon it. There is a joy of activity, there is a firmer
faith, as new evidences of its power are presented before them. There
is the blessing that comes down upon all faithful discharge of duty;
‘If the house be not worthy, your peace shall return to you.’ After
all, our Empire rests on moral foundations, and if it is administered
by us—and we each have part of the responsibility for all that is
done—on the selfish ground of only seeking the advantage of ‘the
predominant partner,’ then our hold will be loosened. There is no such
cement of empire as a common religion. If we desire to make these
subject peoples loyal fellow-subjects, we must make them true
fellow-worshippers. The missionary holds India for England far more
strongly than the soldier does. If we apply Christian principles to
our administration of our Empire, then instead of its being knit
together by iron bands, it will be laced together by the intertwining
tendrils of the hearts of those who are possessors of ‘like precious
faith.’ Brethren, there is another saying in the Old Testament, about
the dew. ‘I will be as the dew unto Israel,’ says God through the
Prophet. We must have Him as the dew for our own souls first. Then
only shall we be able to discharge the office laid upon us, to be in
the midst of many peoples as ‘dew from the Lord.’ If our fleece is wet
and we leave the ground dry, our fleece will soon be dry, though the
ground may be bedewed.
Micah 6:8: GOD’S REQUIREMENTS AND GOD’S GIFT
‘What doth the Lord require of
thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy
God?’— MICAH vi. 8
This is the Prophet’s answer to
a question which he puts into the mouth of his hearers. They had the
superstitious estimate of the worth of sacrifice, which conceives that
the external offering is pleasing to God, and can satisfy for sin.
Micah, like his great contemporary Isaiah, and the most of the
prophets, wages war against that misconception of sacrifice, but does
not thereby protest against its use. To suppose that he does so is to
misunderstand his whole argument. Another misuse of the words of my
text is by no means uncommon to-day. One has heard people say, ‘We are
plain men; we do not understand your theological subtleties; we do not
quite see what you mean by “Repentance toward God, and faith in Jesus
Christ.” “To do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with my
God,” that is my religion, and I leave all the rest to you.’ That is
our religion too, but notice that word ‘require.’ It is a harsh word,
and if it is the last word to be said about God’s relation to men,
then a great shadow has fallen upon life.
But there is another word which
Micah but dimly caught uttered amidst the thunders of Sinai, and which
you and I have heard far more clearly. The Prophet read off rightly
God’s requirements , but he had not anything to say about God’s gifts
. So his word is a half-truth, and the more clearly it is seen, and
the more earnestly a man tries to live up to the standard of the
requirements laid down here, the more will he feel that there is
something else needed, and the more will he see that the great central
peculiarity and glory of Christianity is not that it reiterates or
alters God’s requirements, but that it brings into view God’s gifts.
‘To do justly, to love mercy, to walk humbly with our God,’ is
possible only through repentance towards God, and faith in our Lord
Jesus Christ. And if you suppose that these words of my text disclose
the whole truth about God’s relation to men, and men’s to God, you
have failed to apprehend the flaming centre of the Light that shines
from heaven.
I. So, then, the first thing
that I wish to suggest is God’s requirements.
Now, I do not need to say more
than just a word or two about the summing-up in my text of the plain,
elementary duties of morality and religion. It covers substantially
the same ground, in a condensed form, as does the Decalogue, only that
Moses began with the deepest thing and worked outwards, as it were;
laying the foundation in a true relation to God, which is the most
important, and from which will follow the true relation to men. Micah
begins at the other end, and starting with the lesser, the more
external, the purely human, works his way inwards to that which is the
centre and the source of all.
‘To do justly,’ that is
elementary morality in two words. Whatever a man has a right to claim
from you, give him; that is the sum of duty. And yet not altogether
so, for we all know the difference between a righteous man and a good
man, and how, if there is only rigidly righteous action, there is
something wanting to the very righteousness of the action and to the
completeness of the character. ‘To do’ is not enough; we must get to
the heart, and so ‘ love mercy.’ Justice is not all. If each man gets
his deserts, as Shakespeare says, ‘who of us shall scape whipping?’
There must be the mercy as well as the justice. In a very deep sense
no man renders to his fellows all that his fellows have a right to
expect of him, who does not render to them mercy. And so in a very
deep sense, mercy is part of justice, and you have not given any poor
creature all that that poor creature has a right to look for from you,
unless you have given him all the gracious and gentle charities of
heart and hand. Justice and mercy do, in the deepest view, run into
one.
Then Micah goes deeper. ‘And to
walk humbly with thy God.’ Some people would say that this summary of
the divine requirements is defective, because there is nothing in it
about a man’s duty to himself, which is as much a duty as his duty to
his fellows, or his duty to God. But there is a good deal of my duty
to myself crowded into that one word, ‘humbly.’ For I suppose we might
almost say that the basis of all our obligations to our own selves
lies in this, that we shall take the right view—that is, the lowly
view—of ourselves. But I pass that.
‘To walk humbly with thy God.’
‘Can two walk together unless they be agreed?’ For walking with God
there must be communion, based in love, and resulting in imitation.
And that communion must be constant, and run through all the life,
like a golden thread through some web. So, then, here is the minimum
of the divine requirements, to give everybody what he has a right to,
including the mercy to which he has a right, to have a lowly estimate
of myself, and to live continually grasping the hand of God, and
conscious of His overshadowing wing at all moments, and of conformity
to His will at every step of the road. That is the minimum; and the
people who so glibly say, ‘That is my religion,’ have little
consciousness of how far-reaching and how deep-down-going the
requirements of this text are. The requirements result from the very
nature of God, and our relation to Him, and they are endorsed by our
own consciences, for we all know that these, and nothing less than
these are the duties that we owe to God. So much for God’s
requirements.
II. Our failure.
There is not one of us that has
come up to the standard. Man after man may be conceived of as bringing
in his hands the actions of his life, and laying them in the awful
scales which God’s hand holds. In the one are God’s requirements, in
the other my life; and in every case down goes the weight, and
‘weighed in the balances we are altogether lighter than vanity.’ We
stand before the great Master in the school, and one by one we take up
our copybooks; and there is not one of them that is not black with
blots and erasures and swarming with errors. The great cliff stands in
front of us with the victor’s prize on its topmost ledge, and man
after man tries to climb, and falls bruised and broken at the base.
‘There is none righteous, no, not one.’ Micah’s requirements come to
every man that will honestly take stock of his life and his character
as the statement of an unreached and unreachable ideal to which he
never has climbed nor ever can climb.
Oh, brethren! if these words are
all the words that are to be said about God and me, then I know not
what lies before the enlightened conscience except shuddering despair,
and a paralysing consciousness of inevitable failure. I beseech you,
take these words, and go apart with them, and test your daily life by
them. God requires me to do justly. Does there not rise before my
memory many an act in which, in regard to persons and in regard to
circumstances, I have fallen beneath that requirement? He requires me
‘to love mercy.’ He requires me ‘to walk humbly,’ and I have often
been inflated and self-conceited and presumptuous. He requires me to
walk with Himself, and I have shaken away His hand from me, and passed
whole days without ever thinking of Him, and ‘the God in whose hands’
my ‘breath is, and whose are all’ my ‘ways,’ I have ‘not glorified.’ I
cannot hammer this truth into your consciences. You have to do it for
yourselves. But I beseech you, recognise the fact that you are
implicated in the universal failure, and that God’s requirement is
God’s condemnation of each of us.
If, then, that is true, that all
have come short of the requirement, then there should follow a
universal sense of guilt, for there is the universal fact of guilt,
whether there be the sense of it or not. There must follow, too,
consequences resulting from the failure of each of us to comply with
these divine requirements, consequences very alarming, very fatal; and
there must follow a darkening of the thought of God. ‘I knew thee that
thou wert an austere man, reaping where thou didst not sow, and
gathering where thou didst not straw.’ That is the God of all the
people who take my text as the last word of their religion—God
‘requires of me. The blessed sun in the heavens becomes a lurid ball
of fire when it is seen through the mist of such a conception of the
divine character, and its relation to men. There is nothing that so
drapes the sky in darkness, and hides out the great light of God, as
the thought of His requirements as the last thought we cherish
concerning Him.
There follows, too, upon this
conception, and the failure that results to fulfil the requirements, a
hopelessness as to ever accomplishing that which is demanded of us.
Who amongst us is there that, looking back upon his past in so far as
it has been shaped by his own effort and his own unaided strength, can
look forward to a future with any hope that it will mend the past?
Brethren! experience teaches us that we have not fulfilled, and cannot
fulfil, what remains our plain duty, notwithstanding our inability to
discharge it—viz., ‘To do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk
humbly with our God.’ To think of God’s requirements, and of my own
failure, is the sure way to paralyse all activity; just as that man in
the parable who said, ‘Thou art an austere man,’ went away and hid his
talent in the earth. To think of God’s requirements and my own
failures, if heaven has nothing more to say to me than this stern
‘Thou shalt,’ is the short way to despair. And that is why most of us
prefer to be immersed in the trivialities of daily life rather than to
think of God, and of what He asks from us. For the only way by which
some of us can keep our equanimity and our cheerfulness is by ignoring
Him and forgetting what He demands, and never taking stock of our own
lives.
III. Lastly, my text leads us
to think of God’s gift.
I said it is a half-truth, for
it only tells us of what He desires us to be, and does not tell us of
how we may be it. It is meant, like the law of which it is a
condensation, to be the pedagogue , to lead the child to Jesus Christ,
the true Master, and the true Gift of God.
God ‘requires.’ Yes, and He
requires, in order that we should say to Him, ‘Lord, Thou hast a right
to ask this, and it is my blessedness to give it, but I cannot. Do
Thou give me what Thou dost require, and then I can.’
The gift of God is Jesus Christ,
and that gift meets all our failures. I have spoken of the sense of
guilt that rises from the consciousness of failure to keep the
requirements of the divine law; and the gift of God deals with that.
It comes to us as we lie wounded, bruised, conscious of failure,
alarmed for results, sensible of guilt, and dreading the penalties,
and it says to us, ‘Thine iniquity is taken away, and thy sin purged.’
‘God requires of thee what thou hast not done. Trust yourselves to Me,
and all iniquity is passed from your souls.’
I spoke of the hopelessness of
future performance, which results from experience of past failures;
and the gift of God deals with that. You cannot meet the requirements.
Christ will put His Spirit into your spirits, if you will trust
yourselves to Him, and then you will meet them, for the things which
are impossible with men are possible with God. So, if led by Micah, we
pass from God’s requirements to His gifts, look at the change in the
aspect which God bears to us. He is no longer standing strict to mark,
and stern to judge and condemn: but bending down graciously to help.
His last word to us is not ‘Thou shalt do’ but ‘I will give.’ His
utterance in the Gospel is not ‘do,’ but it is ‘take’; and the vision
of God, which shines out upon us from the life and from the Cross of
Jesus Christ, is not that of a great Taskmaster, but that of Him who
helps all our weakness, and makes it strength. A God who ‘requires’
paralyses men, shuts men out from hope and joy and fellowship; a God
who gives draws men to His heart, and makes them diligent in
fulfilling all His blessed requirements.
Think of the difference which
the conception of God as giving makes to the spirit in which we work.
No longer, like the Israelites in Egypt, do we try to make bricks
without straw, and break our hearts over our failures, or desperately
abandon the attempt, and live in neglect of God and His will; but
joyfully, with the clear confidence that ‘our labour is not in vain in
the Lord,’ we seek to keep the commandments which we have learned to
be the expressions of His love. One of the Fathers puts all in one
lovely sentence: ‘Give what Thou commandest, and command what Thou
wilt.’
Think, too, of the difference
which this conception of the giving rather than of the requiring God
brings into what we have to do. We have not to begin with effort, we
have to begin with faith. The fountain must be filled from the spring
before it can send up its crystal pillar flashing in the sunlight; and
we must receive by our trust the power to will and to do. First fill
the lamp with oil, and let the Master light it, and then let its blaze
beam forth. First, we have to go to the giving God, with thanks ‘unto
Him for His unspeakable gift’; and then we have to say to Him, ‘Thou
hast given me Thy Son. What dost Thou desire that I shall give to
Thee?’ We have first to accept the gift, and then, moved by the mercy
of God, to ask, ‘Lord I what wilt Thou have me to do?’