Exodus 17:8 WAR WITH AMALEK.
NO. 712
DELIVERED SUNDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 23RD, 1866,
BY C. H. SPURGEON
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.
Then came Amalek, and fought with
Israel in Rephidim. Exodus 17:8
THERE were two great trials
which the children of Israel had to endure in, passing onward to the
promised rest,-their wants and their enemies; but I must add a third,
which sprang out of these two by reason of the unbelief of their hearts;
that third evil, far worse than the other two, was their sins. Probably,
my brethren, you have found out by now that you could contentedly endure
your wants, and could courageously contend with your foes, if you were not
weakened and hampered by your sins. A man’s worst foes are those of his
own household. As for Israel’s wants, I think Israel may be congratulated
in having known them; for, suppose they could have brought with them
enough provision from Goshen, or could have been supplied by trading
purveyors, they would never have been honored to feed upon the manna which
dropped from heaven; and suppose a canal had been digged for them to flow
at the edge of the whole road of march, or that they could have found a
succession of wells hard by the spots where they pitched their tents, then
they never would have drank of that marvelous rock whose flints gushed
with water, of which the apostle tells us that it was Christ, or an
eminent type of Christ. They were gentlemen-commoners upon the bounty of
heaven; courtiers fed from the table of the King of kings; they were
lifted up to eat angels’ food; they were satisfied with royal dainties. In
this light, they are to be congratulated for their wants, for, if they had
not known hunger, nor thirst, neither had they eaten manna, nor had they
drank the water from the rock. And you, beloved, are much in the same
case. The day will come when in clearer light than this, you will thank
God for your necessities, and be of the same mind as the apostle, who
said, “Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my infirmities, that
the power of Christ may rest upon me;” and again, “for when I am weak,
then am I strong.” (2Co 12:9-10) You will thank God that your necessities
were the platform for his providence to display its care upon, that the
very wilderness was a boon to you because he prepared a table for you in
the midst of it, and might have left you to prepare one for yourself, if
it had not been a desert place.
As for the enemies which beset the children of Israel, I was about to say
they might almost be congratulated on account of them too, for, fierce as
they were, yet they could never have had victories if they had not known
battles. The foemen of Israel were but so many sheaves for Israel’s
victorious sword to reap: as the wild beasts of the wood yield food to the
hunter, so were the haters of Israel as a prey unto their valiant men.
Over every enemy of his people the right hand of the Lord was gloriously
exalted. You too, brethren, you will have reason to thank God for all your
enemies. If your life were one of perpetual peace, it is clear there could
be no triumphs; if there were not campaigns of warfare, there would be no
shouts of them that triumph, no trophies to hang up in the halls of
memory. Oh if we can be kept from sins, if we can be preserved from their
power, we may be thankful for wants, and even thankful for foes when we
look at them in the light of the fiery pillar of God’s promised presence.
But our sins! our sins! our sins! what shall we do with them? If it were
not for the victorious blood by which we conquer, we might lie down in
despair; for who among us is, alone and unaided, a match for his sins?
This morning we thought of considering the war with Amalek as a typical
representation of the experience of God’s people, and our prayer is that
we may speak so that those who are greatly troubled and afflicted may
derive some comfort from the truth advanced, and that lagging saints may
be stimulated to fight the battles of their Master, lest the curse go out
against them, “because they came not up to the help of the Lord, to the
help of the Lord against the mighty.” We shall use the text three ways,
first, as a picture of the experience of each individual Christian;
secondly, as a representation of the history of each separate church; and
thirdly, as a very excellent description of the history of the entire
church of the living God, from its first day even till its close.
I. First, then, we have here
The Experience Of Every Individual Christian.
Observe, the children of Israel were emancipated from bondage, and had
left Egypt behind, even as you and I have been rescued from our natural
estate and are no longer the servants of sin. They had been redeemed by
blood sprinkled upon the door posts and upon the lintel, and we too have
had redemption applied to our souls, and have seen that God has looked
upon the blood and has passed over us. They had feasted upon the paschal
lamb as we have done, for Jesus has become to us our meat and our drink,
and our soul is satisfied with him. They had been pursued by their
enemies, even as we were pursued by our old sins, but they had seen these
furious foes all drowned in the Red Sea, which they had passed through
dry-shod; and we, too, have seen our past sins for ever buried in the Red
Sea of atoning blood. Our iniquities, which threatened to drive us back
into the Egypt of despair, are gone for ever; they sank like lead in the
mighty waters, the depths have covered them-there is not one of them left;
Israel sung a new song upon the other side of the sea; and we too have
rejoiced in God, and like Miriam we have sounded the loud timbrel of
exultation and have danced with holy joy, while our lips have chanted the
hymn of victory- “Sing unto the Lord, for he hath triumphed gloriously.”
Many of us are now free from the yoke of sin and Satan, and as the Lord’s
freemen we glorify his name. Oh that all of us were in such a happy state!
The children of Israel were probably anticipating ease, forgetting that
the promised land was yet many days’ journey beyond them. Inexperience and
childishness made them expect a continuance of uninterrupted song and
feasting, and there was a time when we indulged the same foolish hopes. We
said to ourselves, “Let us be at peace, for the warfare is over; now may
we take our ease. Pharaoh is drowned, the horses and the chariots have
sunk like lead in the mighty waters; no whips of the taskmaster now, no
bricks to make without straw, no more shall we be trodden down by a cruel
people and worn out with the labors of the brick-kiln; with a high hand
and a mighty arm have we been brought forth; let us rejoice and be merry,
let us be glad all our days, and dance the desert through.” That was the
voice of our inexperience and folly; how soon were our budding hopes
nipped by an unexpected frost! for, like Israel, we soon experienced
tribulations. Suddenly there came upon us the thirst and the hunger which
only Heaven’s love could supply; and when we least dreamed of it, the
fierce Amalek of temptation came down like a wolf on the fold. Young
Christian, do not dream that as soon as you are converted your struggle is
over, but conclude that your conflict has but just begun. Some persons
look upon regeneration as being the change of the old nature into a new;
experience teaches us that this is a very false description of the new
birth. Conversion and regeneration do not change the old nature; that
remaineth still the same; but we have at our new birth infused into us a
new nature, a new principle, and this new principle at once begins a
contest with the old principle; hence the apostle tells us of the old man
and of the new man; he speaks of the flesh lusting against the spirit, and
the spirit striving against the flesh. I do not care what the doctrinal
statement of any man may be upon the subject; I am sure that the
experience of the most of us will prove to a demonstration that there are
two natures within us, that only a complex description can describe us at
all; we find a company of two armies within us, and the fight goes on,
and, if anything, waxes hotter every day. We do trust that the right
principle grows stronger, and we hope that through grace the evil
principle is weakened and mortified; but, at present, it is with most of
us a very sharp contest, and were it not for divine strength, we might
throw down our weapons in hopelessness. Young Christian, you have begun a
life of warfare, rest assured of that. You would never be told to endure
hardness as a good soldier of Jesus Christ if it were not so (2Ti 2:4). You
must not put that sword up into its scabbard, but rather grind it sharp
and hold it always ready in your hand (Ep 6:17). Watch constantly, and pray
without ceasing (Mt 26:41); for, till you get your foot upon the golden
pavement of the New Jerusalem, you must wear a warrior’s harness, and bear
a warrior’s toils (1Pe 2:11). Indeed, dear friends, there was that in the
camp of the children of Israel which ought to have taught them to expect
trouble, for was there not a voice heard among the murmuring host, “Is the
Lord among us or not?” That croaking voice of unbelief foreboded ill. How
could they expect to know peace when they doubted the God of peace. “There
is no peace, saith my God, to the wicked;” and in proportion as the
righteous are at all like the wicked, in that proportion they lose peace.
The cry of unbelief in your beam and mine, when it says, “Is the Lord
among us or not?” ought to warn us that we are not yet in the land of
rest, but shall have to fight with many an enemy before the banner may be
furled. Besides, Israel ought to have remembered that there was an ancient
fend between the children of Esau and the children of Jacob, for had not
Esau been supplanted by his brother (Ge 25:22)? Amalek, Duke Amalek as he
was called, was a descendant of Esau, and treasured up all his father’s
hatred and enmity towards the house of Israel. Did Israel expect to
journey near to Edom and not be attacked? And do you expect, Christian,
that sin shall be round about you and not assault you?
Is this vain world a friend to grace,
To help you on to God?
If you look for friendship from a sinful world you are grievously mistaken
(Ja 4:4). There is a deadly hereditary feud between the Christian and the
powers of darkness. It sprang up in the garden, in the day when God said,
“I will put enmity between thee and the woman, between thy seed and her
seed,” (Ge 3:15) and it continues still the same. You must fight if you
would win the crown (1Co 9:24-27 2Ti 4:7), and your pathway to the other
side of Jordan must be the pathway of an armed crusader, who has to
contend for every inch of the way if he is to win it. (1Ti 6:12)
In proceeding with the narrative we notice that they found opposition from
an unexpected quarter. Ignorance may have made them reckon upon the
friendliness of Amalek, for they evidently journeyed at their ease without
proper precaution, presuming upon the relationship and peaceableness of
the dwellers in the land. It is just where we feel most safe that we
should be most cautious. “A man’s foes are they of his own household.” I
do not think the Christian has so much to fear from open and avowed
enemies as from those deceitful foes who feign to be his friends. Sin is
never so much a Jezebel as when it paints its face with daubs of
respectability and patches of innocence. Things dubious are more dangerous
than things distinctly evil. The border land between right and wrong is
thronged with thieves and robbers; beware of cut throats ye who journey
there. Even right things may easily become wrong when they carry away our
hearts, and therefore we must guard against their attractions. Many people
need not be much afraid of being led into drunkenness and blasphemy, for
we are not likely to give way to these grosser evils; but we have far more
reason to watch against worldliness and pride, for these are enemies which
select the godly as their special object of attack.
Take heed to your virtues, Christian, for these, when exaggerated, become
your vices; take care of the good things in which you boast, for they may
furnish heat for the hatching of the vipers’ eggs of pride and
self-satisfaction.
Israel was assailed in a quarter which was unguarded because unlikely to
be attacked. In the [Dt 25:17-18] we find that Amalek fell upon the rear of
the host. The hindmost must have seemed to themselves to be the most
secure, for Pharaoh’s host had been destroyed, and what further was there
to fear? The weak and feeble came slowly on, at perfect ease, never so
much as suspecting the existence of a foe; the van, I have no doubt, they
kept well protected, for they knew not what hands might interrupt their
onward march, but the rear they thought might be left exposed, and there
it was the foe attacked them. Christian man, wherever thou dost diminish
thy caution, there, will the foe be upon thee. When thou sayest to
thyself, “My mountain standeth firm;” I shall never be moved,” concerning
such and such a thing, it is there that thou art most likely to fall. We
are strongest usually when we fancy ourselves weakest because we take the
matter to God, and weakest where we dream that we are strongest because we
refrain from prayer. It will be observed, I think, in most Christians’
experience that God has left them to see their weakness, where they
themselves reckoned that no Weakness could have been perceptible. Let us
then set a watch all around, and ask the Lord to be a wall of fire around
us, and a glory in the midst.
This attack of Amalek was rendered the more dangerous because it was on a
sudden. It seems that Amalek caught them in ambush, and fell upon them
without notice. There was no regular proclamation of war, no pitching of
the battle, no sending out of skirmishers and scouts, but the enemy fell
upon them on a sudden like a gang of banditti.
Just so will sin do with you and me. If the devil
would send me a notice when he means to tempt me, I might readily contend
with him and defeat him, but this he will never do. He will not tell you
whether or not to-morrow he will tempt you in your business; this is not
his way of hunting for his game: “Surely in vain is the net spread in the
sight of any bird.” He will, if possible, take you unawares, and before
you can put on your armor his arrows will sorely wound you. We are not
ignorant of his devices (2Co 2:11). Well did the Master say, “What I say
unto you I say unto all, Watch!” And oh! with what vigilance, what holy
diligence must you and I watch against the windings and twistings of the
old serpent, who will, if possible, bite our heels or insinuate his venom
into our hearts.
I think I must not omit to say
that this attack of Amalek, though designed for the greatest mischief, did not
occur without a divine arrangement and overruling. We may be thankful that
though Satan selected the most suitable season for himself yet the Lord made his
devices of none effect. Amalek fell upon them when they were faint and weary,
but the manna and the flowing rock soon changed the face of affairs, and the
novelty of this gracious supply inspired the host with unusual courage. Fresh
from the feast, they had good stomach for the fray, and found congenial
occupation for their renewed vigor in hewing down their assailants. Satan may
beset us at our weakest point, but God hath a way of making us on a sudden
strong, so that in the end the attack cometh at a time when we are most fitted
to repel it. Have you not observed this? If your present trial had come at
another time you could not have borne it; if your present temptation had
presented itself but a day before, you would have fallen a victim to it; but it
came just after you had enjoyed such communion with Christ that sin had no
influence over you, the charms of Jesus made you blind to all other beauties.
You had had your mouth so filled with manna that you were made strong in the
strength of God to put to rout the host of your foes. Brother, be cautious
always, but be confident in God. Watch against the foe, but be thankful that
there is another Watcher who foreseeth all the devices of the devil, and who
will not deliver you into his hand, nor suffer you to perish.
(Ex 17:9) When the assault was made, the people were commanded to exert
themselves. The message was given, “Go, choose out men, and fight with Amalek.”
Israel never fought with Egypt. God fought for them, and they held their peace.
When we are in our natural state under the bondage of sin, it is of very little
use for us to fight against it; the only way of escape from the reigning power
of sin is through the precious blood and the working of divine grace. But this
was a different case. The children of Israel were not under the power of
Amalek-they were free men; and so we are not under the power of sin any longer.
The yoke of sin has been broken by God’s grace from off our necks, and now we
have to fight not as slaves against a master, but as freemen against a foe.
Moses never said to the children of Israel while they were in Egypt, “Go, fight
with Pharaoh.” Not at all: it is God’s work to bring us out of Egypt and make us
his people, but when we are delivered from bondage, although it is God’s work to
help us, we must be active in our cause. Now that we are alive from the dead we
must wrestle with principalities and powers and spiritual wickedness if we are
to overcome. “Go fight,” is the command. Do not many Christians act as if the
sin would be driven out of them through their sleeping soundly? Let them be sure
that a slumbering spirit is the best friend that sin, can find. If your lusts
are to be destroyed, they must be cut up root and branch by sheer force of
personal exertion through divine grace, they are not to be blown away by languid
wishes and sleepy desires. God will not relieve us of our sins as sometimes
persons have diseased limbs removed while under the influence of chloroform: we
shall see our sins die while our minds are thoroughly active against them, and
resolutely bent upon their destruction. “Go, fight with Amalek.” Greatly to be
deplored is the way in which some Christians say, “Ah, well! it is my besetting
sin,” or “It is my natural temperament,” or “It is my constitution.” Shame on
you, Christian. What if it be so! Do you mean to say to your Father’s face that
you have so great a love for the sin which he hates, that you will harbour it
and invent hiding-places for it? Why, when a sin does so easily beset you, you
must muster your whole force and cry to Heaven for strength that the dangerous
foe may be overcome, for one sin harboured in the soul will ruin you; one sin
really loved and indulged will become damnatory evidence against you, and prove
that you really do not love the Savior, for if you did you would hate every
false way. We must fight if we would overcome our sins.
Spiritual fighting must be conducted on most earnest and prudent principles.
They were to choose out men. So we must choose out our ways of contending with
sin. The best part of a man should be engaged in warfare with his sins. Certain
sins can only be fought by the understanding; we ought then to sit down, and
deliberately look at the evil, and learn its wickedness, by deliberately judging
and considering its motives and its consequences. Perhaps when we clearly see
what the sin is, Mr. Understanding, as Bunyan calls it, may be able to knock the
brains out of it. One peculiar order of sins are only to be overcome by a speedy
flight like that of the chaste Joseph. Sins of the flesh are never to be
reasoned or parleyed with; there is no more reasoning with them than with the
winds; understanding is nonplussed, for lust like a hurricane of sand blinds the
eyes. We must fly. It is true valor in such a case to turn the back. “Resist the
devil,” (Ja 4:7) says James but he does not say resist lust; Paul puts it thus-
“Flee youthful lusts.” (2Ti 2:22)
When warring with the legions of unrighteousness we shall need all the best
powers of our renewed nature, for the conflict will he stern. Oh! believer, you
will need to bring your veterans, your pick and choice thoughts into the fight
with Amalek; the faith which has endured the storm must face the foe, the love
which bears all things must march to the war. It is no child’s-play to fight
with sin. It needed all a Savior’s strength to tread it in the winepress when he
was here on earth, and it will want all your might and more to overcome it-you
will only overcome it indeed through the blood of the Lamb.
This makes me notice that though the men of Israel were to fight, and the chosen
men were to be selected, yet they were to fight under the command of Joshua,
that is, Jesus, the Savior. There is no fighting sin except under the leadership
of Christ. We must fight sin with His weapons, we must see its sinfulness by the
light of His sufferings, see its mischief in the sorrows of His death, see its
destruction in the triumphs of His resurrection. We must fly to the strong
(tower) for strength, and seek help where God hath laid it, namely, on Him that
is mighty. When Jesus leads we need not be afraid. Promptly to follow Jesus is
to secure a victory. His very Name puts his enemies to rout; who can withstand
the terrors of His arm?
The narrative points out to us that effort alone is not enough. Three men are
seen wending their way up the steep sides of the hill, solemnly walking along,
as if they had most weighty business on hand. They are seeking a point of
advantage, from which to gall the foe with the artillery of prayer. So mighty
was the prayer of Moses that all depended upon it. The petitions of Moses
discomfited the enemy more than the fighting of Joshua. The edge of Moses’
prayer was more powerful than the edge of Joshua’s sword. It matters not how
loudly Joshua shouts to his men, unless Moses fervently cries to his God. The
young soldier would soon have left the field if the old commander had left the
closet. Force and fervor, decision and devotion, valor and vehemence, must join
their forces, and all will be well. You must wrestle with your sin, but the
major part of the wrestling must be done alone in private with God.
Prayer, like Moses, holds up the token of the covenant before the Lord. The rod
was the emblem of God’s working with Moses, the symbol of God’s government in
Israel. Learn, O pleading saint, to hold up the promise and the oath of God
before him. He cannot deny his own declarations. Hold up the rod of promise, and
have what you will.
Moses grew weary, and then his friends assisted him. When at any time your
prayer flags, let faith support one hand, and let holy hope uplift the other,
and prayer seating itself upon the stone of Israel, the rock of our salvation
will continue and prevail. Beware of faintness in devotion; if Moses felt it who
can escape? It is far easier to fight with sin in public, than to pray against
it in private. It is remarked that Joshua never grew weary in the fighting, but
Moses did grow weary in the praying; the more spiritual an exercise, the more
difficult it is for flesh and blood to maintain it. Let us cry then for special
strength, and may the Spirit of God who helpeth our infirmities, as he allowed
help to Moses, enable us like him to continue with our hands steady till the
going down of the sun. It is not praying to-day nor yet to-morrow that will win
life’s battle, it is praying till the going down of the sun. It is not pleading
for a month, and then ceasing supplication, Christian, it is “till the going
down of the sun,” till the evening of life is over; till thou shalt come to the
rising of a better sun, or to the land where they need no sun, thou must
continue to pray.
Long as they live should Christians pray,
For only while they pray they live.
Let us learn then that there is to be action, but there must be supplication. We
cannot expect to conquer Amalek without a combination of the two.
I will not detain you much longer over this point, only to remark that where
holy activity is joined with earnest supplication, the result as to our sins is
absolutely sure-the enemy must be defeated; we shall put our feet upon the necks
of all our sins. There is no fear of their overcoming us if we do but lay hold
on divine strength.
And, if ever we overcome sin once, it should be the signal for proclaiming a
general war against all sin. The fight and victory over Amalek brought from
God’s mouth the solemn declaration that there should be war with Amalek for ever
and ever. So must it be with you. Have you mastered one sin? Slay the next, and
the next, and the next. Can you curb your temper now? Now smite your pride. Is
your pride humbled? Now drive an arrow through the very liver of your sloth. And
is your sloth overcome? Now seek, by divine grace, to strike through the neck of
the next temptation. Onward to the total destruction of every Amalekite must the
child of Israel go. But notice that in the whole business the glory was given to
God. No pillar was erected on that field of Israel’s warfare in commemoration of
Joshua, but an altar as a memorial to Jehovah. That day Israel did not lift on
high the banner of Joshua, and sing of him as of the victorious Maccabaeus
See, the conquering hero comes!
Sound the trumpets, beat the drums!
but that day it was said, “Jehovah Nissi,” the Lord is our banner, for they
ascribed the glory and honor unto him whose right hand alone had gotten to him
the victory. So must we do in all our successes, for if we overcome a sin and
then boast ourselves, we are overcome by sin. If looking back upon the past we
say with congratulation, “God, I thank thee that I am not as other men are; I
thank thee for this and that;” but all the while are thinking that we have much
more reason to thank ourselves, we show that we are still with the fetters upon
our wrists dragged in captivity. I leave the point, hoping that some young
Christian may have received a lesson in experience. And yet I fear that we must
all learn experience for ourselves, and that what is told us by others is but an
idle tale, I pray that you who are coming up a new generation may not be as your
father’s were, a stiff-necked people, but that you may walk before the Lord with
greater holiness and smite Amalek with sterner’ determination than your sires
have done, that so the victory may he unto God through you.
II. In the second place, the whole narrative may be interpreted As The History
Of Any One Christian Church.
I draw a distinction between the general church and
any one particular church. In the olden times the churches of our Lord Jesus
Christ, though acknowledging one another and recognising their unity, were
distinct organisations managing their own affairs. And here I will digress so
far as to say, that the only Christian unity which you and I may ever expect to
see and to seek after is, not the amalgamation of all churches into one colossal
scheme of government, but the spiritual union of all the churches in working for
the Lord, each church exercising its discipline within its own bounds, and
carrying out of Christ’s commands within its own walls, and at the same time
recognising all other truly Christian churches as being parts of the one body of
Christ. Instead of attempting to destroy all these separate churches in order to
create unity, we should build up the walls of each house so that the whole city
may be compact together. Even the names which describe the varieties of our
conscientious convictions are useful, and are only cavilled at by a party who
under the cloak of being unsectarian are more sectarian than the worst of us
could even slanderously be said to be. Suppose that all the livery companies in
London should give up their distinctive names, so that there should be no
Goldsmiths’ Company, nor Cloth Workers, nor Merchant Tailors, nor Fishmongers,
but that all should be called citizens, it would be a wonderful piece of policy
and would singularly unite the citizens of London, would it not? We believe that
the reverse would be the case. The existence of the separate corporations, each
with its peculiar interests to maintain, but all bound up with the prosperity of
the city, help to create unity; and so the unity of the Savior’s body is
preserved rather than destroyed by each believer carrying out his convictions of
the Lord’s will, and not refusing to identify himself with those who think with
him, nor refusing to wear the name which describes them. Certain sectaries cry
out, “We are called Christians.” “Yes, I say, and are we not too?” Are they
brethren? So are we. Are they Christians? So are we. Do they seek to be
followers of Christ? So do we. There is the less need for some to parade the
name of Christians when they know that they are Christians. Let us try to live
out our Christianity rather than blazon it upon our door-posts.
I am not making an unscriptural distinction when I say, first of all, I am going
to regard the narrative as a picture of a church, and then afterwards as a
picture of the whole church. In any one church there will be, there must be, if
it be a church of God, earnest contention for the truth and against error. We,
as a church have, I trust been brought up out of Egypt, and are bound together
by a common deliverance. We have to fight with Amalek. For the defense of those
doctrines, which we have learned and which we believe to be the truth as it is
in Jesus, we are called to fight. We are not merely to hold them as the
unfaithful servant wrapped his talent in a napkin, but we are to publish what we
believe to be true, and, if any contravene, we are to hold our own, or rather,
hold the Master’s truth with a firm hand, and not be afraid to contend for it at
all hazards. Our chief war must always be with sin- with sin in ourselves, with
sin in others, with sin everywhere. This is the great point in the Christian’s
contention, and from this war the believer must never cease. Attack sin in every
place, and for this reason, if for no other, that sin and error will always
attack us. In this particular church I know there are divers errors that are
always falling upon us, and smiting some of the hindmost, the weakest and the
feeblest. One opens one’s eyes with astonishment sometimes to see what strange
errors people are falling into who should know better; but when you come to
recollect how hindmost they were, and how much the weakest they were, it is not
quite so great a marvel that they should be smitten by the foe. The fact is that
in such an age as this, if we do not attack error, error will eat us up; and it
comes to this-we must either fight sin, or sin as a fretting moth and a
devouring canker will utterly devour us. If there be not an earnest contention
for the truth amidst all the church members, there will soon be defalcations on
this side and defalcations on the other side. Each church should teach its own
distinctive principles with a vigorous, earnest, scriptural dogmatism. If we do
indeed hold the very truth as it is in Jesus, we must fight for it valiantly,
for if we do not fight Amalek, Amalek will certainly fight us, and the hindmost
will always be suffering and the weakest go to the wall. It is on behalf of the
weaker brethren, who are easily perverted, that we must watch and fight
perpetually.
To all Christian effort in every church must be added unceasing intercession.
The Christian pastor is in some respects comparable to Moses, for he is set
apart as a leader in the band of brethren; and as such his business is not only
to teach the people but to plead for them with God. I wish that some of our
pastors were sustained as they should be by their Aarons and their Hurs. Alas! I
know many a fainting brother whose hands are hanging down, who finds an Aaron to
pull them lower still, and a Hur to depress his spirits yet more. I would take
up a mourning, a lamentation, for my brethren who toil in honorable but obscure
spheres where cold neglect and chill indifference are their portion. Alas for
others, in the midst of churches rent with schism and polluted with heresy,
whose life is one perpetual burden unto them. I would God it were far otherwise
with them! I have to thank God, and under God to thank you, that so many of you
act the part of Aaron and of Hur, and are willing to hold up the pastor’s hands,
and the hands of all others my fellow laborers, the workers for Christ Jesus.
But some of you do not do it. Some of you neglect prayer in the closet for the
church’s work. I hope you are not neglecting prayer on your own account, but you
do not pray as you should for the Lord to advance the interests of truth in the
world; you neglect the prayer-meetings, and absent yourselves from the week-day
means of grace! Brethren, these things ought not so to be. If you cannot be
Moses you may be Aaron. If you cannot fight and assist Joshua, you may climb the
hill and succor Moses. If you can neither teach in the classes or in the Sunday
school, nor preach in the streets and so fight, you can at least be much in the
closet and much in prayer. Oh the untold benefits that come to a Christian
church from the quiet prayerful members! least known on earth but best known in
heaven. Let us have both at work. May the Lord Jesus help us to advance from
strength to strength in earnest effort of every kind, and may he at the same
time be our strength upon the mountain while we draw near to the throne in
prayer.
III. But lastly, The History Of The Whole Christian Church Is Here Before Us As
In A Picture.
The sacramental host of God’s elect is warring still on earth, Jesus Christ
being the Captain of their salvation. He has said, “Lo! I am with you always,
even to the end of the world.” Though this is the dispensation of the Holy
Spirit, yet is it not incorrect to say that the Lord Jesus Christ is still at
the head of his people. Hark to the shouts of war! Onward come the bands of
priest-craft, cowled monks, and shaven priests, with an allied host of England’s
silly clergy arrayed in gaudy vestments and tricked out with childish ornaments.
A fierce effort is making to restore the Romish Antichrist to his ancient seat.
Now let the people of God stand fast in their ranks, and let no man’s heart fail
him. It is true that just now in England the battle is turned against us, and
unless the Lord Jesus and the eternal Joshua shall lift his sword, I know not
what may become of the church of God in this land; but let us be of good
courage, and play the man. There never was a day when Protestantism seemed to
tremble more in the scales than now. The way to Rome and so the way to hell, is
paved (I suppose with good intentions) by those Anglican clergy whose vocation
it seems to be to show the long-suffering patience of a Protestant country.
Here we have a national church which has become the jackall for the lion of
Rome, and we greatly want a bold voice and a strong hand to preach and publish
the Old Gospel for which martyrs bled and confessors died. The Savior is, by his
Spirit, still on earth; let this cheer us. He is ever in the midst of the fight,
and therefore the battle is not doubtful. Meanwhile, what a sweet satisfaction
it is to see our Lord Jesus like a greater Moses upon the hill yonder,
prevalently pleading for his people! He is better than Moses, for his hands
never grow feeble; and if the prophetic hand of Jesus should grow weak, there is
his priestly office, like Aaron, to bear up one hand, and his princely office,
like Hur, a prince, to bear up the other; and so the three together, prophet,
priest, and king. He bears aloft the wonder-working rod,-Israel wins the day,
and Amalek is smitten. O anxious gazer! look not at the battle so much below,
for there thou shalt be enshrouded in smoke and amazed with garments rolled in
blood; but lift thine eyes yonder where thy Savior lives and pleads, for while
he intercedes the cause of God is safe. Let us fight as if it all depended upon
us, but let us look up and know that all depends upon him. Now by the lilies of
Christian purity and by the roses of the Savior’s atonement, by the roes and by
the hinds of the field, we charge you who are lovers of Jesus to do valiantly in
the Holy War; for truth and righteousness, for the kingdom and crown jewels of
your Master, against the harlot of Rome and the many-headed beast on which she
rides, charge ye with dauntless courage. Those who gave your fathers to the
flames and cast your sires to rot in the prison, let them know that the spirit
of your sires still lives in you; let them see that there is a seed still upon
earth in whose breast truth still finds a tabernacle-men who can suffer for
truth, and can boldly declare it in the midst of foes. Never become cowardly and
mean; never despair how can ye? Christ at your head like Joshua, and Christ in
heaven like Moses; Christ here with the holy gospel in his hand like a two-edged
sword, and Christ there with his atoning merits like a wonder-working rod. Be
strong and very courageous, and by his help who doeth valiantly ye shall yet
send up the shout Hallelujah! Hallelujah! Hallelujah! for the Lord God
omnipotent reigneth. The Lord bless you all for Jesus’ sake. Amen.
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