Hebrews 4:12. The Sword of the Lord - Sermon Notes
THE word of God is a name for Christ
as well as for the Scriptures. The Scriptures are meant in this place, but
the Lord Jesus is never dissevered therefrom: indeed, he is the substance
of the written word. Scripture is what it is because the Lord Jesus
embodies himself in it. Let us consider from this text
I. THE QUALITIES OF THE WORD.
1. It is divine. It is the word of God.
2. It is living. "The word of God is
quick."
In contrast to our words, which pass away, God's word lives on.
It has life in itself. It is "the living and incorruptible seed."
It creates life where it comes.
It can never be destroyed and exterminated.
3. It is effectual: "quick, and
powerful;"
It carries conviction and conversion.
It works comfort and confirmation.
It has power to raise us to great heights of holiness and happiness.
4. It is cutting: "Sharper than any
two-edged sword."
It cuts all over. It is all edge. It is
sharpness itself.
It wounds more or less all who touch it.
It kills self-righteousness, sin, unbelief.
5. It is piercing: "even to the
dividing asunder;"
It forces its way into the hard heart.
It penetrates the smallest opening, like the arrow which entered between
the joints of the harness.
6. It is discriminating: "to the
dividing asunder of soul and spirit;"'
It separates things much alike: natural
and spiritual religion.
It divides the outer from the inner: external and internal religion,
"joints and marrow."
It does this by its own penetrating and discerning qualities.
7. It is revealing: "a discerner of
the thoughts and intents of the heart."
It cleaves the man as the butcher
cleaves a carcase and opens up the secret faculties and tendencies of the
soul.
Laying bare thoughts, intents, and inner workings.
Criticizing them and putting a right estimate on them.
Tracing their windings and showing their dubious character.
Approving that which is good and condemning the evil.
All this we have seen in the
preaching of the word of God.
Have you not felt it to be so?
II. THE LESSONS WHICH WE SHOULD LEARN THEREFROM.
That we do greatly reverence the word,
as truly spoken of God.
That we come to it for quickening for our own souls.
That we come to it for power when fighting the battles of truth.
That we come to it for cutting force to kill our own sins and to help us
in destroying the evils of the day.
That we come to it for piercing force when men's consciences and hearts
are hard to reach.
That we use it to the most obstinate to arouse their consciences and
convict them of sin.
That we discriminate by its means between truth and falsehood.
That we let it criticize us, our opinions, projects, acts, and all about
us.
Let us keep to this sword of the
Lord, for none other is living and powerful as this is.
Let us grasp its hilt with firmer grip than ever.
Sharpeners
All the great conquests which Christ
and his saints achieve in this world are got with this sword. When Christ
comes forth against his enemies, this sword is girded on his thigh (Ps.
14:3): "Gird thy sword upon thy thigh, O most mighty"; and his victory
over them is ascribed to it (verse 4), "And in thy majesty ride
prosperously because of truth," that is, the word of truth.
We read of Apollos (Acts 18:28), that he "mightily convinced the Jews." He
did, as it were, knock them down with the weight of his reasoning. And out
of what armory fetched he the sword with which he so prevailed? See the
same verse, "Showing by the Scriptures that Jesus was Christ." He,
therefore, is said to be "mighty in the Scriptures" (verse 24).
Bless God for the efficacy of the word upon thy soul. Did ever its point
prick thy heart, its edge fetch blood of thy lusts? Bless God for it. You
would do as much to a surgeon for lancing a sore, and severing a putrified
part from thy body, though he put thee to exquisite torture in the doing
of it. And I hope thou thinkest God hath done thee a greater kindness ....
There is not another sword like this in all the world that can cure with
cutting; not another arm could use this sword, to have done thus with it
besides the Spirit of God. None could do such feats with Scanderberg's as
himself.
The word of God is too sacred a thing and preaching too solemn a work to
be toyed and played with, as is the usage of some who make a sermon but
matter of wit and fine oratory. If we mean to do good, we must come unto
men's hearts, not in word only, but with power. Satan moves not for a
thousand squibs and wit-cracks of rhetoric. Draw, therefore, this sword
out of your scabbard, and strike with its naked edge; this you will find
the only way to pierce your people's consciences and fetch blood of their
sins. William Gurnall
When the heathen saw the converts reading the book, which had produced the
change, they enquired if they talked to it. "No," they answered, "it talks
to us, for it is the Word of God." "What then!" replied the strangers.
"Does it speak?" "Yes," rejoined the Christians, "it speaks to the heart."
Life of Moffat
Miss Whatele? says, "To rouse the torpid and unexercised mind of a Moslem
woman is wonderful, for they are sunk in ignorance and degradation. But
while I was reading to one of them a few weeks ago, she exclaimed, 'Why,
it is just as if I were out in the dark, and you held a lamp to me that I
might see my way.'"
The Rev. James Wall, of Rome, relates the following instances of
conversion through the reading of the Scriptures: One of the converts,
when first presented with a New Testament, said, "Very well; it is the
very size for me to make my cigarettes? and so he began to smoke it away.
He smoked away all the Evangelists, till he was at the tenth chapter of
John, when it struck him that he must read a bit of it, for if he didn't,
there would soon be no more left to read. The first word struck home, and
the man read himself into Christ.
A secret society of political conspirators, who sought to achieve their
purposes by assassination, were in the habit of placing a Bible (as a
blind) on the table of the room where they met for deliberation. One
night, when there happened to be little business to transact, and they
were all rather sleepy, a member of the society opened the Bible and saw a
verse that went right to his heart. He soon returned to the book and read
more of it, and now he was a very earnest follower of the Lord Jesus.
Missionary Herald
Hebrews 4:16 Boldness at the Throne - Sermon Notes
PRAYER occupies a most important
place in the life of the Christian. His vigor, happiness, growth, and
usefulness depend thereon. In Scripture, the utmost encouragements are
held out to prayer. This verse is one of the sweetest of invitations to
prayer.
I. HERE IS OUR GREAT RESORT DESCRIBED: "The throne of grace."
Once it was called "the mercy seat," but now "the throne." In drawing near
to God in prayer, we come
1. To God as a King, with reverence, confidence, and submission.
2. To one who gives as a King;
therefore we ask largely and expectantly. He has riches of grace and
power.
3. To one who sits upon a throne "of
grace" on purpose to dispense grace. It is his design, his object in
displaying himself as King.
4. To one who in hearing prayer is
enthroned and glorified. Grace is at its utmost when believers pray; it is
grace on the throne.
5. To one who even in hearing prayer
acts as a sovereign, but whose sovereignty is all of grace.
To the throne of the great God, poor sinners are invited to come. Oh, the
privilege of having audience with the King of Grace!
II. HERE IS A LOVING EXHORTATION: "Let us come."
It is the voice of one who goes with us. It is an invitation
1. From Paul, a man like ourselves, but an experienced believer who had
much tried the power of prayer.
2. From the whole church speaking in
him.
3. From the Holy Spirit, for the
apostle spoke by inspiration. The Spirit, making intercession in us, says,
"Let us come."
Let us not be indifferent to this sympathetic call. At once let us draw
near to God.
III. HERE IS A QUALIFYING ADVERB: "Let us come boldly."
Not proudly, presumptuously, nor with the tone of demand, for it is the
throne, yet "boldly," for it is the throne of grace.
By this adverb, "boldly," is meant
1. We may come constantly, at all times.
2. We may come unreservedly, with
all sorts of petitions.
3. We may come freely, with simple
words.
4. We may come hopefully, with full
confidence of being heard.
5. We may come fervently, with
importunity of pleading.
IV. HERE IS A REASON GIVEN FOR BOLDNESS. "Let us therefore come."
1. "That we may obtain mercy, and find grace;" not that we may utter good
words; but may actually obtain blessings.
We may come when we need great mercy,
because of our sin.
We may come when we have little grace.
We may come when we are in great need of more grace.
2. There are many other reasons for
coming at once, and boldly.
Our character may urge us. We are
invited to come for "mercy," and therefore undeserving sinners may come.
The character of God encourages us to be bold.
Our relation to him as children gives us great freedom.
The Holy Spirit's guidance draws us near the throne.
The promises invite us by their greatness, freeness, sureness, etc.
Christ is already given to us, and therefore God will deny us nothing.
Our former successes at the throne give us solid confidence.
3. The great reason of all for bold
approach is in Jesus.
He once was slain, and the mercy-seat
is sprinkled with his blood.
He is risen and has justified us by his righteousness.
He has ascended and taken possession of all covenant blessings on our
behalf. Let us ask for that which is our own.
He is sympathetic, tender, and careful
for us; we must be heard.
Let us come to the throne, when we
are sinful, to find mercy.
Let us come to the throne, when we are weak, to find help.
Let us come to the throne, when we are tempted, to find grace.
Expositions
When God enacts laws, he is on a
throne of legislation: when he administers these laws he is on a throne of
government: when he tries his creatures by these laws, he is on a throne
of judgment, but when he receives petitions, and dispenses favors, he is
on a throne of grace.
The idea of a throne inspires awe, bordering upon terror. It repels rather
than invites. Few of us could approach it without trembling. But what is
the throne of the greatest earthly monarch that ever swayed a scepter? The
God we address is the King of kings. In his eye an Alexander is a worm;
yea, all nations before him are less than nothing and vanity. How can we
approach his infinite majesty? Blessed be his name, he is on a throne of
grace; and we are allowed, and even commanded, to come to it boldly.
William Jay
It is styled a throne of grace, because God's gracious and free favor
cloth there accompany his glorious majesty. Majesty and mercy do there
meet together. This was, under the law, typified by the ark. At each end
thereof was an angel, to set forth God's glorious majesty. The cover of it
is styled a "mercy-seat" (Exod. 25:17-18). William Gouge
A holy boldness, a chastened familiarity, is the true spirit of right
prayer. It was said of Luther that, when he prayed, it was with as much
reverence as if he were praying to an infinite God, and with as much
familiarity as if he were speaking to his nearest friend. G. S. Bonyes
This word boldly signifies liberty without restraint. You may be free, for
you are welcome. You may use freedom of speech. The word is so used, (Acts
2:29; 4:13). You have liberty to speak your minds freely; to speak all
your heart, your ails, and wants, and fears, and grievances. As others may
not fetter you in speaking to God by prescribing what words you should
use; so you need not restrain yourselves, but freely speak all that your
condition requires. David Clarkson
A petitioner once approached Augustus with so much fear and trembling that
the emperor cried, "What, man! do you think you are giving a sop to an
elephant?'' He did not care to be thought a hard and cruel ruler. When men
pray with a slavish bondage upon them, with cold, set phrases, and a
crouching solemnity, the free Spirit of the Lord may well rebuke them. Art
thou coming to a tyrant? Holy boldness, or at least a childlike hope, is
most becoming in a Christian.
Obtaining mercy comes first; then finding grace to help in time of need.
You cannot reverse God's order. You will not find grace to help in time of
need till you have sought and found mercy to save. You have no right to
reckon on God's help and protection and guidance, and all the other
splendid privileges which he promises to "the children of God by faith in
Jesus Christ," until you have this first blessing, the mercy of God in
Christ Jesus; for it is "in" Jesus Christ that all the promises of God are
yea and Amen. F. R. Havergal
Hebrews 5:2 Compassion on the Ignorant - Sermon Notes
Who can have compassion on the
ignorant, and on them that are out of the way. Hebrews 5:2
MEN who are ignorant should not be met with scorn, nor faultfinding, nor
neglect, for they need compassion.
We should lay ourselves out to bear with such for their good. A disciple
who has been taught all that he knows by a gracious Savior should have
compassion on "the ignorant."
A wanderer who has been restored should have compassion on "them that are
out of the way."
A priest should have compassion on the people with whom he is one flesh
and blood, and assuredly our Lord, who is our great High Priest, has
abundant compassion upon the ignorant.
Let us think of his great pity towards them.
I. WHAT IS THIS IGNORANCE? It is moral and spiritual, and deals
with eternal things.
1. It is fearfully common among all ranks.
2. It leaves them strangers to
themselves.
They know not their own ignorance.
They are unaware of the heart's depravity.
They are unconscious of the heinousness of their actual sin.
They dream not of their present and eternal danger.
They have not discovered their inability for all that is good.
3. It leaves them unacquainted with
the way of salvation. They choose other ways.
They have a mixed and injurious notion
of the one way.
They often question and cavil at this one and only way.
4. It leaves them without the
knowledge of Jesus.
They know not his person, his offices,
his work, his character his ability, his readiness to save them.
5. It leaves them strangers to the
Holy Spirit.
They perceive not his inward strivings.
They are ignorant of regeneration.
They cannot comprehend the truth, which he teaches.
They cannot receive his sanctification.
6. It is most ruinous in its
consequences.
It keeps men out of Christ.
It does not excuse them when it is willful, as it usually is.
II. WHAT IS THERE IN THIS
IGNORANCE WHICH IS LIABLE TO PROVOKE US, AND THEREFORE DEMANDS COMPASSION?
1. Its folly. Wisdom is worried with the absurdities of ignorance.
2. Its pride. Anger is excited by the vanity of self-conceit.
3. Its prejudice. It will not hear nor learn; and this is vexatious.
4. Its obstinacy. It refuses reason; and this is very exasperating.
5. Its opposition. It contends against plain truth, and this is trying.
6. Its density. It cannot be enlightened: it is profoundly foolish.
7. Its unbelief. Witnesses to divine truth are denied credence.
8. Its willfulness. It chooses not to know. It is hard teaching such.
9. Its relapses. It returns to folly, forgets and refuses wisdom, and this
is a sore affliction to true love.
III. HOW OUR LORD'S COMPASSION TOWARDS THE IGNORANT IS SHOWN. "He
can have compassion on the ignorant." This he clearly shows:
1. By offering to teach them.
2. By actually receiving them as disciples.
3. By instructing them little by little, most condescendingly.
4. By teaching them the same things over again, patiently.
5. By never despising them notwithstanding their dullness.
6. By never casting them off through weariness of their stupidity.
To such a compassionate Lord let us come, ignorant as we are.
For such a compassionate Lord let us labor among the most ignorant, and
never cease to pity them.
Notes
It is a sad thing for the blind man
who has to read the raised type when the tips of his fingers harden, for
then he cannot read the thoughts of men which stand out upon the page; but
it is far worse to lose sensibility of soul, for then you cannot peruse
the book of human nature, but must remain untaught in the sacred
literature of the heart. You have heard of the "iron duke," but an iron
Christian would be a very terrible person: a heart of flesh is the gift of
divine grace, and one of its sure results is the power to be very pitiful,
tender, and full of compassion. C. H. S.
Ignorance is the devil's college. Christmas Evans
What the Papists cry up as the mother of devotion, we cry down as the
father of superstition. William Secker
That there should one man die ignorant who had capacity for knowledge,
this I call a tragedy. Were it to happen more than twenty times in the
minute, as by some computations it does, what a line of tragedies!
The miserable fraction of science which our united mankind, in a wide
universe of nescience, has acquired, why is not this, with all diligence,
imparted to all? Thomas Carlyle
Utter ignorance is a most effectual fortification to a bad state of the
mind. Prejudice may perhaps be removed; unbelief may be reasoned with;
even demoniacs have been compelled to bear witness to the truth; but the
stupidity of confirmed ignorance not only defeats the ultimate efficacy of
the means for making men wiser and better, but stands in preliminary
defiance to the very act of their application. It reminds us of an
account, in one of the relations of the French Egyptian Campaigns, of the
attempt to reduce a garrison posted in a bulky fort of mud. Had the
defenses been of timber, the besiegers might have set fire to and burnt
them; had they been of stone, they might have shaken and ultimately
breached them by the battery of their cannon, or they might have
undermined and blown them up. But the huge mound of mud had nothing
susceptible of fire or any other force; the missiles from the artillery
were discharged but to be buried in the dull mass; and all the means of
demolition were baffled. John Foster
In "Eyesight, Good and Bad," by Dr. R. B. Carter, the writer says,
"Nothing is more common than for defective sight to be punished at
obstinacy or stupidity. For my own part, I have long learned to look upon
obstinate and stupid children as mainly artificial productions, and shall
not readily forget the pleasure with which I heard from the master of the
great elementary school at Edinburgh, where twelve hundred children attend
daily, that his fundamental principle of management was that there were no
naughty boys and no boobies."
I used to reproach myself for religious stupidity when I was not well; but
I see now that God is my kind Father, not my hard taskmaster expecting me
to be full of life and zeal when physically exhausted. It takes long to
learn such lessons. One has to penetrate deeply into the heart of Christ
to begin to know its tenderness and sympathy and forbearance.
The love of Jesus
what it is
Only His sufferers know.
Elizabeth Prentiss
Hebrews
5:8 The Education of Sons of God - Sermon Notes
Though he were a Son, yet learned
he obedience by the things which he suffered. Hebrews 5:8
IT is always consoling to us to behold the footsteps of our Lord. When we
see him tried, we cheerfully submit to the like trial. When we perceive
that in his case an exception to the rule of chastening might have been
expected, and yet none was made, we are encouraged to bear our sufferings
patiently.
When we see the great Elder Brother put to more rather than less of trial,
we are fully drawn to obey the will of God by submission.
I. SONSHIP DOES NOT EXEMPT FROM SUFFERING.
1. Not even Jesus, as a Son, escaped suffering.
He was the Son, peculiarly, and above
all others.
He was the honored and beloved first-born.
He was the faithful and sinless Son.
He was soon to be the glorified Son in an eminent sense.
2. No honor put upon sons of God
will exempt them from suffering.
3. No holiness of character, nor
completeness of obedience, can exempt the children of God from the school
of suffering.
4. No prayer of God's sons, however
earnest, will remove every thorn in the flesh from them.
5. No love in God's child, however
fervent, will prevent his being tried.
The love and wisdom of God ensure the discipline of the house for all the
heirs of heaven without a single exception.
II. SUFFERING DOES NOT MAR SONSHIP.
The case of our Lord is set forth as a model for all the sons of God.
1. His poverty did not disprove his Sonship (Luke 2:12).
2. His temptations did not shake his Sonship (Matt. 4:3).
3. His endurance of slander did not jeopardize it (John 10:36).
4. His fear and sorrow did not put it in dispute (Matt. 26:39).
5. His desertion by men did not invalidate it (John 16:32).
6. His being forsaken of God did not alter it (Luke 23:46).
7. His death cast no doubt thereon (Mark 15:39). He rose again and, thus,
proved his Father's pleasure in him (John 20:17).
Never was there a truer, or lovelier, or more beloved Son than the
sufferers. "A man of sorrows, and acquainted with grief."
III. OBEDIENCE HAS TO BE LEARNED EVEN BY SONS.
Even he in whom there was no natural depravity, but perfect, inherent
purity, had to learn obedience.
1. It must be learned experimentally.
What is to be done and suffered can
only be learned in the actual exercise of obedience.
How it is done must be discovered by practice.
The actual doing of it is only possible in trial.
2. It must be learned by
suffering.
Not by words from the most instructive
of teachers.
Nor by observation of the lives of others.
Nor even by perpetual activity on our own part. This might make us fussy
rather than obedient; we must suffer.
3. It must be learned for use in
earth and in heaven.
On earth by sympathy with others.
In heaven by perfect praise to God growing out of experience.
IV. SUFFERING HAS A PECULIAR
POWER TO TEACH TRUE SONS.
It is a better tutor than all else, because:
1. It touches the man's self: his bone, his flesh, his heart.
2. It tests his graces, and sweeps
away those shams which are not proofs of obedience, but presences of
self-will.
3. It goes to the root, and tests
the truth of our new nature. It shows whether repentance, faith, prayer,
etc., are mere importations, or home-grown fruits.
4. It tests our endurance, and makes
us see how far we are established in the obedience which we think we
possess. Can we say, "Though he slay me, yet will I trust in him"?
The anxious question: Am I a son?
The aspiring desire: Let me learn obedience.
The accepted discipline: I submit to suffer.
Blossomings of the Rod
Corrections are pledges of our
adoption and badges of our sonship. One Son God hath without sin, but none
without sorrow. As God corrects none but his own, so all that are his
shall be sure to have it, and they shall take it for a favor, too (1 Cor.
1 l:32). John Trapp
I bear my willing witness that I owe more to the fire, and the hammer, and
the file, than to anything else in my Lord's workshop. I sometimes
question whether I have ever learned anything except through the rod. When
my school-room is darkened, I see most. C. H. S.
If aught can teach us
aught, Affliction's looks,
Making us look unto ourselves so near,
Teach us to know ourselves beyond all books,
Or all the learned schools that ever were.
This mistress lately plucked me by the ear,
And many a golden lesson hath me taught;
Hath made my senses quick, and reason clear,
Reformed my will, and rectified my thought.
Sir John Davies
"I never," said Luther, "knew the
meaning of God's word, until I came into affliction. I have always found
it one of my best schoolmasters." On another occasion, referring to some
spiritual temptation on the morning of the preceding day, he said to a
friend (Justin Jonas),"Doctor, I must mark the day; I was yesterday at
school." In one of his works, he most accurately calls affliction "the
theology of Christians": "Theologium Christianorum." "I have learned more
divinity," said Dr. Rivet, confessing to God of his last days of
affliction, "in these ten days that thou art come to visit me, than I did
in fifty years before. Thou teachest me after a better manner than all
those doctors, in reading whom I spent so much time." Charles Bridges
A minister was recovering from a dangerous illness, when one of his
friends addressed him thus, "Sir, though God seems to be bringing you up
from the gates of death, yet it will be a long time before you will
sufficiently retrieve your strength, and regain vigor enough of mind to
preach as usual." The good man answered: "You are mistaken, my friend; for
this six weeks' illness has taught me more divinity than all my past
studies and all my ten years' ministry put together." New Cyclopedia of
Anecdote
Not to be unhappy is
unhappiness,
And misery not to have known misery;
For the best way unto discretion is
The way that leads us by adversity;
And men are better showed what is amiss
By the expert finger of calamity
Than they can be with all that fortune brings,
Who never shows them the true face of things.
Samuel Daniel
Hebrews 10:9. The First and The Second - Sermon Notes
He taketh away the first, that he
may establish the second. Hebrews 10:9
THE way of God is to go from good to better.
This excites growing wonder and gratitude.
This makes men desire, and pray, and believe, and expect. This aids man in
his capacity to receive the best things. The first good thing is removed,
that the second may the more fitly come. Upon this last fact we will
meditate, noticing:
I. THE GRAND INSTANCE. First came the Jewish sacrifices, and then
came Jesus to do the will of God.
1. The removal of instructive and consoling ordinances.
While they lasted they were of great value, and they were removed because,
when Jesus came:
They were needless as types.
They would have proved burdensome as services.
They might have been dangerous as temptations to formalism.
They would have taken off the mind from the substance which they had
formerly shadowed forth.
2. The establishment of the real,
perfect, everlasting atonement.
This is a blessed advance, for:
No one who sees Jesus regrets Aaron.
No one who knows the simplicity of the gospel wishes to be brought under
the perplexities of the ceremonial law.
No one who feels the liberty of Zion desires to return to the bondage of
Sinai.
Beware of setting up any other
ordinances; for this would be to build again what God has cast down; if
not to do even worse.
Beware of imagining that the second
can fail as the first did. The one was "taken away"; but the other is
established by God himself.
II. INSTANCES IN HISTORY. These are many. Here are a few:
1. The earthly paradise has been taken away by sin; but the Lord has given
us salvation in Christ, and heaven.
2. The first man has failed; behold
the Second Adam.
3. The first covenant is broken, and
the second gloriously takes its place.
4. The first temple, with its
transient glories, has melted away; but the second and spiritual house
rises beneath the eye and hand of the Great Architect.
III. INSTANCES IN EXPERIENCE.
1. Our first righteousness is taken away by conviction of sin, but the
righteousness of Christ is established.
2. Our first peace has been blown
down as a tottering fence, but we shelter in the Rock of Ages.
3. Our first strength has proved
worse than weakness, but the Lord is our strength and our song; he also
has become our salvation.
4. Our first guidance led us into
darkness; now we give up self, superstition, and philosophy, and trust in
the Spirit of our God.
5. Our first joy died out like
thorns which crackle under a pot; but now we joy in God.
IV. INSTANCES TO BE EXPECTED.
1. Our body decaying shall be renewed in the image of our risen Lord.
2. Our earth passing away, and its
elements being dissolved, there shall be new heavens and a new earth.
3. Our family removed one by one, we
shall be charmed by the grand reunion in the Father's house above.
4. Our all being taken away, we find
more than all in God.
5. Our life ebbing out, the eternal
life comes rolling up in a full tide of glory. Let us not grieve at the
taking away of the first. Let us expect the establishment of the second.
Meliora
The Law is a Gospel pre-figured, and
the Gospel a Law consummated. Bishop Hall
The sin-destroyer being come, we are no longer under the sin-revealer.
Martin Boos
No need of prophets to inquire:
The Sun is risen the stars retire:
The Comforter is come, and sheds
His holy unction on our heads.
Josiah Conder
When Alexander went upon a hopeful expedition, he gave away his gold; and
when he was asked what he kept for himself, he answered, "Spem majorum et
meliorum" the hope of greater and better things .... A Christian's motto
always is, or always should be, Spero meliora I hope for better things.
Thomas Brooks, in "The Best Things Reserved Till Last"
On a cold, windy March day, a gentleman stopped at an apple-stand, whose
proprietor was a rough-looking Italian. He alluded to the severe weather,
when, with a cheerful smile and tone, the Italian replied: "Yes, pritty
cold; but by-and-by tink of dat!" In other words, the time of warm
skies, flowers, and songs was near, and was to be thought of. The humble
vendor little thought of the impression made by his few words. "By-and-by
think of that!"
The Jewish rabbins report (how truly is uncertain) that when Joseph, in
the times of plenty, had gathered much corn in Egypt, he threw the chaff
into the River Nile, that so, flowing to the neighboring cities and
nations more remote, they might know what abundance was laid up, not for
themselves alone, but for others also. So God, in his abundant goodness,
to make us know what glory there is in heaven, hath thrown some husks to
us here in this world, that so, tasting the sweetness thereof, we might
aspire to his bounty that is above, and draw out this happy conclusion to
the great comfort of our precious souls that if a little earthly glory
do so much amaze us, what will the heavenly do? If there be such glory in
God's footstool, what is there in his throne? If he give us so much in the
land of our pilgrimage, what will he not give us in our own country? If he
bestoweth so much on his enemies, what will he not give to his friends?
John Spencer
There are certain words which, occurring frequently, are like a bunch of
keys, and enable us to unlock the treasures in this epistle. Such a key is
"better"; and we find the Lord Jesus described as being better than angels
(1:4; illustrated in John 5:4-6), better than Moses (3), Joshua (4), and
Aaron (7); his blood speaking better things than that of Abel (12:24);
himself the Surety of a better testament, established upon better promises
(7:22; 8:6). The old covenant based upon man's promise (Exod. 19:8;
24:7-8) was broken in forty days; but the performance by the Son of God
was the foundation of the better covenant. "The two tables of the
testimony were in the hand of Moses" (Exod. 32:15; Gal. 3:19), but God's
law is within the heart of our Surety (Ps. 40:8; compare Deut. 10:1-2).
That word was spoken by angels (Heb. 2:2; Acts 7:53); but this by him who
is "so much better than angels." E. A. H. (Mrs. Gordon)
Hebrews12:13 Lame Sheep - Sermon Notes
And make straight paths for your
feet, lest that which is lame be turned out of the way; but let it rather
be healed. Hebrews 12:13
WE sometimes meet with those who are fleet of foot and joyous of spirit.
Would to God that all were so! But as they are not, the lame must be
considered.
The road should be cleared for
tottering steps.
Our desire is that the whole band
may reach the journey's end in safety.
I. IN ALL FLOCKS THERE ARE LAME SHEER
1. Some are so from their very nature and birth.
Ready to despond and doubt.
Ready to disbelieve and fall into error.
Ready to yield to temptation, and so to prove unstable.
Unready and feeble in all practical duties.
2. Some have been ill-fed. This
brings on a foot-rot and lameness.
Many are taught false doctrine.
Many more receive indefinite, hazy doctrine.
Many others hear light, insubstantial, chaffy doctrine.
3. Some have been worried, and so
driven to lameness.
By Satan, with his insinuations and temptations.
By persecutors, with their slander, taunting, ridicule, etc.
By proud professors, unkindly pious, severely critical, etc.
By a morbid conscience, seeing evil where there is none.
4. Some have grown weary through the
roughness of the road.
Exceeding much ignorance has enfeebled
them.
Exceeding much worldly trouble has depressed them.
Exceeding much inward conflict has grieved them.
Exceeding much controversy has worried them.
5. Some have gradually become weak.
Backsliding by neglect of the means of
grace.
Backsliding through the evil influence of others.
Backsliding through pride of heart and self-satisfaction.
Backsliding through general coldness of heart.
6. Some have had a terrible fall.
This has broken their bones so as to
prevent progress.
This has snapped the sinew of their usefulness.
This has crippled them as to holy joy.
II. THE REST OF THE FLOCK MUST
SEEK THEIR HEALING.
1. By seeking their company, and not leaving them to perish by the way
through neglect, contempt, and despair.
2. By endeavoring to comfort them and to restore them. This can be done by
the more experienced among us; and those who are unfit for such difficult
work can try the next plan, which is so plainly mentioned in our text.
3. By making straight paths for our own feet.
By unquestionable holiness of life.
By plain gospel teaching in our own simple way.
By manifest joy in the Lord.
By avoiding all crooked customs which might perplex them.
By thus showing them that Jesus is to us "the way, the truth, and the
life." No path can be more straight than that of simple faith in Jesus.
III. THE SHEPHERD OF THE FLOCK
CARES FOR SUCH.
1. Their fears: they conclude that he will leave them.
2. The reason: to do so would be by
far the easier plan for him.
3. Their dread: if he did so, they
must inevitably perish.
4. Their comfort: he has provided
all the means of healing the lame.
5. Their hope: he is very gentle and
tender, and wills not that any one of them should wander and perish.
6. Their confidence: healing will
win him much honor and grateful affection; wherefore we conclude that he
will keep them.
Let us be careful to cause no offense or injury to the weakest.
Let us endeavor to restore such as are out of the way, and comfort those
who are sorely afflicted.
Sheep-Lore
Sheep are liable to many diseases,
many of them are weak and feeble; these a good shepherd taketh pity of,
and endeavors to heal and strengthen. So the saints of God are subject to
manifold weaknesses, temptations, and afflictions, which moved the
Almighty to great compassion, and sorely to rebuke the shepherds of Israel
for their cruelty and great remissness towards his flock: "The diseased
have ye not strengthened, neither have ye healed that which was sick,"
etc. And therefore he saith he would himself take the work into his own
hands; "I will bind up that which was broken, and will strengthen that
which was sick." etc. Benjamin Keach
Many preachers in our days are like Heraclitus, who was called "the dark
doctor." They affect sublime notions, obscure expressions, uncouth
phrases, making plain truths difficult, and easy truths hard. "They darken
counsel with words without knowledge" (Job 38:2). Studied expressions and
high notions in a sermon, are like Asahel's carcass in the way, that did
only stop men and make them gaze, but did no ways profit them or better
them. It is better to present Truth in her native plainness than to hang
her ears with counterfeit pearls. Thomas Brooks
Now Mr. Feeble-mind, when they were going out at the door, made as if he
intended to linger; the which, when Mr. Great-heart espied, he said,
"Come, Mr. Feeble-mind, pray do you go along with us; I will be your
conductor, and you shall fare as the rest."
Feeble-mind: "Alas! I want a suitable companion: you are all lusty and
strong; but I, as you see, am weak: I choose, therefore, rather to come
behind, lest, by reason of my many infirmities, I should be both a burden
to myself and to you. I am, as I said, a man of a weak and feeble mind,
and shall be offended and made weak at that which others can bear. I shall
like no laughing: I shall like no gay attire: I shall like no unprofitable
questions. Nay, I am so weak a man as to be offended with that which
others have a liberty to do. I do not know all the truth: I am a very
ignorant Christian man. Sometimes, if I hear any rejoice in the Lord, it
troubles me because I cannot do so, too. It is with me as it is with a
weak man among the strong, or as with a sick man among the healthy, or as
'a lamp despised,' so that I know not what to do. 'He that is ready to
slip with his feet is as a lamp despised in the thought of him that is at
ease' (Job 12:5)?"
"But, brother," said Mr. Great-heart, "I have it in commission to 'comfort
the feeble-minded,' and 'to support the weak.' You must needs go along
with us: we will wait for you; we will lend you our help; we will deny
ourselves of some things, both opinionate and practical, for your sake; we
will not enter into 'doubtful disputations' before you; we will be made
all things' to you, rather than you shall be left behind." John Bunyan
It should be between a strong saint and a weak as it is between two lute
strings that are tuned one to another; no sooner one is struck but the
other trembles; no sooner should a weak saint be struck, but the strong
should tremble. "Remember them that are in bonds, as bound with them"
(Heb. 13:3). Thomas Brooks
Hebrews 12:25 Hear! Hear! - Sermon Notes
See that ye refuse not him that
speaketh. For if they escaped not who refused him that spake on earth,
much more shall we not escape, if we turn away from him that speaketh from
heaven. Hebrews 12:25
JESUS still speaks to us in the gospel. What a privilege to hear such a
voice, with such a message! What cruel sin to refuse Jesus a hearing! Here
is a most urgent exhortation to yield him reverent attention.
I. THERE IS NEED OF THIS EXHORTATION FROM MANY CONSIDERATIONS.
1. The excellence of the word. It claims obedient attention.
2. The readiness of Satan to prevent
our receiving the divine word
3. Our own indisposition to receive
the holy, heavenly message.
4. We have rejected too long
already. It is to be feared that we may continue to do so, but our right
course is to hearken at once.
5. The word comes in love to our
souls; let us therefore heed it, and render love for love.
II. THERE ARE MANY WAYS OF REFUSING HIM THAT SPEAKETH.
1. Not hearing. Absence from public worship, neglect of Bible reading.
"Turn away from him."
2. Hearing listlessly, as if half
asleep, and unconcerned.
3. Refusing to believe.
Intellectually believing, but not with the heart.
4. Raising quibbles. Hunting up
difficulties, favoring unbelief.
5. Being offended. Angry with the
gospel, indignant at plain speech, opposing honest personal rebuke.
6. Perverting his words. Twisting
and wresting Scripture.
7. Bidding him depart. Steeling the
conscience, trifling with conviction, resorting to frivolous company for
relief.
8. Reviling him. Denying his Deity,
hating his gospel, and his holy way.
9. Persecuting him. Turning upon his
people as a whole, or assailing them as individuals.
III. THERE ARE MANY CAUSES Of THIS REFUSING.
1. Stolid indifference, which causes a contempt of all good things.
2. Self-righteousness, which makes
self an idol, and therefore rejects the living Savior.
3. Self-reliant wisdom, which is too
proud to hear the voice of God.
4. Hatred of holiness, which prefers
the willful to the obedient, the lustful to the pure, the selfish to the
divine.
5. Fear of the world, which listens
to threats, or bribes, or flatteries, and dares not act aright.
6. Procrastination, which cries
"tomorrow," but means "never."
7. Despair and unbelief, which
declare the gospel to be powerless to save, and unavailable as a
consolation.
IV. REFUSING TO HEAR CHRIST, THE HIGHEST AUTHORITY IS DESPISED.
"Him that speaketh from heaven"
1. He is of heavenly nature, and reveals to us what he has known of God
and heaven.
2. He came from heaven, armed with
heavenly authority.
3. He speaks from heaven at this
moment by his eternal Spirit in Holy Scripture, the ordinances and the
preaching of the gospel.
4. He will speak from heaven at the
judgment.
He is himself God, and therefore all that he saith hath divinity within
it.
V. THE DOOM TO BE FEARED IF WE REFUSE CHRIST.
Those to whom Moses spake on earth, who refused him, escaped not.
1. Let us think of their doom, and learn that equally sure destruction
will happen to all who refuse Christ.
Pharaoh and the Egyptians.
The murmurers dying in the wilderness.
Korah, Dathan, and Abiram.
2. Let us see how some have perished
in the church.
Judas, Ananias and Sapphira, etc.
3. Let us see how others perish who
remain in the world, and refuse to quit it for the fold of Christ.
They shall not escape by Annihilation,
nor by Purgatory, nor by Universal Restitutions.
They shall not escape by infidelity, hardness of heart, cunning, or
hypocrisy. They have refused the only way of escape, and therefore they
must perish for ever.
Instead of refusing, listen, learn,
obey.
Instead of the curse, you shall gain a blessing.
Warning Words
Our blessed Lord is represented as
"now speaking from heaven" to Christians generally; and even if we were,
contrary to all just reason, to confine the reference to the persons to
whom the Epistle was immediately written, he is said to speak to
multitudes who never saw or heard him in the days of his flesh. This could
be only by the agency of inspired men, whose commission to teach and
command "in the name of Christ" was proved by miracles. Those miracles
they attributed to him, as is plain from many passages in the Acts and the
Epistles. Thus Christ stands in the very position of power, authority, and
action, continually ascribed to Jehovah in the Old Testament, speaking by
his prophets. "This,"' observes Michaelis, "is saying of Christ the
greatest thing that can be said." Dr. J. Pye Smith
We seem to have done with the Word as it has passed through our ears; but
the Word, be it remembered, will never have done with us, till it has
judged us at the last day. Judge Hale
A nobleman, skilled in music, who had often observed the Hon. Rev. Mr.
Cadogan's inattention to his performance, said to him one day, "Come, I am
determined to make you feel the force of music; pay particular attention
to this piece." It was accordingly played. "Well, what do you say now?"
"Why, just what I said before." "What! can you hear this and not be
charmed? Well, I am quite surprised at your insensibility. Where are your
ears?" "Bear with me, my lord," replied Mr. Cadogan, "since I, too, have
had my surprise. I have often, from the pulpit, set before you the most
striking and affecting truths; I have sounded notes that might have raised
the dead; I have said, 'Surely he will feel now,' but you never seemed to
be charmed with my music, though infinitely more interesting than yours.
I, too, have been ready to say, with astonishment, 'where are his ears?'"
One of the modern thinkers had been upholding the doctrine of universal
salvation at a certain house with much zeal. A child who had listened to
his pestilent talk was heard to say to his companion, "We can now steal,
and lie, and do wicked things, for there is no hell when we die." If such
preachers gain much power in this country we shall not need to raise the
question of a hell hereafter, for we shall have one here. C. H. S.
Hebrews 13:5 Never, No Never, No Never - Sermon Notes
He hath said, I will never leave
thee, nor forsake thee. Hebrews 13:5
HERE is a divine word, directly from God's own mouth: "For himself hath
said." (See Revised Version.)
Here is a promise which has been frequently made: "He hath said." This
promise occurs again and again.
Here are some of the fat things full of marrow. The sentence is as full of
meaning as it is free from verbiage.
Here is the essence of meat, the quintessence of medicine.
May the Holy Spirit show us the treasure hid in this matchless sentence!
I. VIEW THE WORDS AS A QUOTATION.
The Holy Spirit led Paul to quote from the Scriptures, though he could
have spoken fresh words.
Thus, he put honor on the Old Testament.
Thus, he taught that words spoken to ancient saints belong to us.
Our apostle quotes the sense, not the exact words, and thus he teaches us
that the spirit of a text is the main thing.
We find the words which have been quoted.
In Genesis 28:15,"I will not leave
thee, until I have done that which I have spoken to thee of." Spoken to
Jacob when quitting home, and thus to young saints setting out in life.
In Deuteronomy 31:8,"He will be with thee, he will not fail thee, neither
forsake thee." To Joshua, and so to those who have lost a leader, and are
about to take the lead themselves, and to enter upon great wars and
rightings, in which courage will be tried.
In 1 Chronicles 28:20, "He will not fail thee, nor forsake thee, until
thou hast finished all the work." To Solomon, and thus to those who have a
weighty charge upon them, requiring much wisdom. We build a spiritual
temple.
In Isaiah 41:10,"Fear thou not; for I am with thee." To Israel, and so to
the Lord's tried and afflicted people.
II. VIEW THEM AS A HOUSEHOLD WORD
FROM GOD.
1. They are peculiarly a saying of God: "He hath said." This has been
said, not so much by inspiration as by God himself.
2. They are remarkably forcible from
having five negatives in them in the Greek.
3. They relate to God himself and
his people. "I"..."thee."
4. They ensure his presence and his
help. He would not be with us, and be inactive.
5. They guarantee the greatest good.
God with us means all good.
6. They avert a dreadful evil which
we deserve and might justly fear; namely, to be deserted of God.
7. They are such as he only could
utter and make true. Nobody else can be with us effectually in agony, in
death, in judgment.
8. They provide for all troubles,
losses, desertions, weaknesses, difficulties, places, seasons, dangers,
etc., in time and eternity.
9. They are substantiated by the
divine love, immutability, and faithfulness.
10.They are further confirmed by our
observation of the divine proceeding to others and to ourselves.
III. VIEW THEM AS A MOTIVE FOR CONTENTMENT.
"Let your conversation be without covetousness, and be content with such
things as ye have." These most gracious words:
Lead us to live above visible things
when we have stores in hand.
Lead us to present satisfaction however low our stores may be.
Lead us to see provision for all future emergencies.
Lead us into a security more satisfactory, sure, ennobling, and divine,
than all the wealth of the Indies could bestow.
Lead us to reckon discontent a kind of blasphemy of God.
Since God is always with us, what
can we want besides?
IV. VIEW THEM AS A REASON FOR COURAGE. "So that we may boldly say,
The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what man shall do unto me."
1. Our Helper is greater than our foes. "Jehovah is my helper."
2. Our foes are entirely in his
hand. "I will not fear what man shall do."
3. If permitted to afflict us, God
will sustain us under their malice.
What a blessed deliverance from fretting and from fearing have we in these
few words!
Let us not be slow to follow the
line of things which the Spirit evidently points out to us.
Notes
on "Nots"
Lord, the apostle dissuadeth the
Hebrews from covetousness with this argument, because God said, "I will
not leave thee, nor forsake thee." Yet I find not that God ever gave this
promise to all the Jews; but he spake it only to Joshua, when first made
commander against the Canaanites, yet this (without violence to the
analogy of faith) the apostle applieth to all good men in general. Is it
so, that we are heirs apparent to all promises made to thy servants in
Scripture? Are the charters of grace granted to them good to me also? Then
will I say with Jacob, "I have enough." But because I cannot entitle
myself to thy promises to them except I imitate their piety to thee, grant
I may take as much care in following the one as comfort in the other.
Thomas Fuller
Our friend, Dr. William Graham of Bonn, has lately departed this life, and
we are told that on his death bed one said to him, "He hath said, 'I will
never leave thee, nor forsake thee,'" to which the good man replied, with
his dying breath, "Not a doubt of it! Not a doubt of it!" C. H. S., in
the Sword and the Trowel, 1884
It is right to be contented with what we have, never with what we are.
Mackintosh
I have read, says Brooks, of a company of poor Christians who were
banished into some remote part; one standing by, seeing them pass along,
said that it was a very sad condition these poor people were in, to be
thus hurried from the society of men, and made companions with the beasts
of the field. "True;" said another, "it were a sad condition indeed if
they were carried to a place where they should not find their God. But let
them be of good cheer, God goes along with them, and will exhibit the
comforts of his presence whithersoever they go."
A heathen sage said to one of his friends, "Do not complain of thy
misfortunes, as long as Caesar is thy friend? What shall we say to those
whom the Prince of the kings of the earth calls his sons and his brethren?
"I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee" Ought not these words to cast
all fear and care forever to the ground? He who possesses him, to whom all
things belong, possesseth all things. F. W. Krummacher
The soul that on
Jesus has leaned for repose
I will not, I will not desert to his foes;
That soul though all hell should endeavor to shake,
I'll never, no never, no never forsake.
George Keith