EXODUS, Section 1 of 2 (Ex.
1-14).
C H Mackintosh
PREFACE TO THE THIRD EDITION.
The writer cannot suffer a new edition of this volume to issue from the
press without a line or
two of deep thankfulness to the Lord for His grace, in making use of
such a feeble
instrumentality in the furtherance of His truth, and the edification of
His people. Blessed be
His name, when He takes up a book or a tract, He can make it effectual
in the
accomplishment of His gracious ends. He can clothe, with spiritual
power, page and
paragraphs which, to us, might seem pointless and powerless. May He
continue to own and
bless this service, and His name shall have all the praise.
C. H. M. Dublin, April, 1862.
Exodus 1
We now approach, by the mercy of God, the study of the Book of Exodus,
of which the great
prominent theme is redemption. The first five verses recall to the mind
the closing scenes of
the preceding book. The favoured objects of God's electing love are
brought before us; and we
find ourselves, very speedily, conducted, by the inspired penman, into
the section of the book.
In our meditations on the Book of Genesis, we were led to see that the
conduct of Joseph's
brethren toward him was that which led to their being brought down into
be looked at in two ways. In the first place, we can read therein a
deeply solemn lesson as
taught in
encouraging lesson, as taught in God's actings toward
And, first, as to
out the results of their treatment of him who stands before the
spiritual mind as the marked
type of the Lord Jesus Christ? They, utterly regardless of the anguish
of his soul, consigned
Joseph into the hands of the uncircumcised. And what was the issue, as
regards them They
were carried down into Egypt, there to experience those deep and
painful exercises of heart
which are so graphically and touchingly presented in the closing
chapters of Genesis. Nor was
this all. A long and dreary season awaited their offspring in that very
land in which Joseph
had found a dungeon.
But then God was in all this, as well as man; and it is His prerogative
to bring good out of
evil. Joseph's brethren might sell him to the Ishmaelites, and the
Ishmaelites might sell him to
Potiphar, and Potiphar might cast him into prison; but Jehovah was
above all, and He was
accomplishing His own mighty ends. "The wrath of man shall praise
him." The time had not
arrived in which the heirs were ready for the inheritance, and the
inheritance for the heirs.
The brickkilns of Egypt were to furnish a rigid school for the seed of
Abraham, while, as yet,
"the iniquity of the Amorites" was rising to a head, amid the
"hills and valleys" of the
promised land.
All this is deeply interesting and instructive. There are "wheels
within wheels" in the
government of God. He makes use of an endless variety of agencies, in
the accomplishment
of His unsearchable designs. Potiphar's wife, Pharaoh's butler,
Pharaoh's dreams, Pharaoh
himself, the dungeon, the throne, the fetters, the royal signet, the
famine—all are at His
sovereign disposal, and all be made instrumental in the development of
His stupendous
counsels. The spiritual mind delights to dwell upon this. It delights
to range through the wide
domain of creation and providence, And to recognise, in all, the
machinery which an All-wise
and an Almighty God is using for the purpose of unfolding His counsels
of redeeming love.
True, we may see many traces of the serpent; many deep and well-defined
footprints of the
enemy of God and man; many things which we cannot explain nor even
comprehend;
suffering innocence and successful wickedness may furnish an apparent
basis for the infidel-
reasoning of the sceptic mind; but the true believer can piously repose
in the assurance that
"the Judge of all the earth shall do right." He knows right
well that,
Blind unbelief is sure to err,
And scan His ways in vain;
God is His own interpreter,
and He will make it plain."
Blessed be God for the consolation and encouragement flowing out of
such reflections as
these. We need them, every hour, while passing through an evil world,
in which the enemy
has wrought such appalling mischief, in which the lusts and passions of
men produce such
bitter fruits, and in which the path of the true disciple presents
roughnesses which mere nature
could never endure. Faith knows, of a surety, that there is One behind
the scenes whom the
world sees not nor regards; and, in the consciousness of this, it can
calmly say, "it is well,"
and, "it shall be well."
The above train of thought is distinctly suggested by the opening lines
of our book. "God's
counsel shall stand, and he will do all his pleasure." The enemy
may oppose; but God will
ever prove Himself to be above him; and all we need is a spirit of
simple, child-like
confidence and repose in the divine purpose. Unbelief will rather look
at the enemy's efforts
to countervail, than at God's power to accomplish. It is on the latter
that faith fixes its eye.
Thus it obtains victory, and It has to do with God and His infallible
faithfulness. It rests not
upon the ever shifting sands of human affairs and earthly influences,
but upon the immovable
rock of God's eternal Word. That is faith's holy and solid
resting-place. Come what may, it
abides in that sanctuary of strength. "Joseph died, and all his
brethren, and all that
generation." What then? Could death affect the counsels of the
living God? Surely not. He
only waited for the appointed moment, the due time, and then the most
hostile influences
were made instrumental in the development of His purposes.
"Now there arose up a new king over Egypt, which knew not Joseph.
And he said unto his
people, Behold, the people of the children of Israel are more and
mightier than we: come on,
let us deal wisely with them, lest they multiply, and it come to pass
that when there falleth out
any war they join also unto our enemies, and fight against us, and so
get them up out of the
land." (Vv. 8-10) All this is the reasoning of a heart that had
never learnt to take God into its
calculations. The unrenewed heart never can do so; and hence, the
moment you introduce
God, all its reasonings fall to the ground. Apart from, or independent
of Him, they may seem
very wise; but only bring Him in, and they are proved to be perfect
folly.
But why should we allow our minds to be, in any wise, influenced by
reasonings and
calculations which depend, for their apparent truth, upon the total
exclusion of God? To do so
is, in principle, and according to its measure, practical atheism. In
Pharaoh's case, we see that
he could accurately recount the various contingencies of human affairs,
the multiplying of the
people, the falling out of war, their joining with the enemy, their escape
out of the land. All
these circumstances he could, with uncommon sagacity, put into the
scale; but it never once
occurred to him that God could have anything whatever to do in the
matter. Had he only
thought of this, it would have upset his entire reasoning, and have
written folly upon all his
schemes.
Now it is well to see that it is ever thus with the reasonings of man's
sceptic mind. God is
entirely shut out; yea, the truth and consistency thereof depend upon
His being kept out. The
death-blow to all scepticism and infidelity is the introduction of God
into the scene. Till He is
seen, they may strut up and down upon the stage, with an amazing show
of wisdom and
cleverness; but the moment the eye catches even the faintest glimpse of
that Blessed One,
they are stripped of their cloak, and disclosed in all their nakedness
and deformity.
In reference to the king of Egypt, it may, assuredly, be said, he did
"greatly err," not knowing
God, or His changeless counsels. He knew not that, hundreds of years back,
before ever he
had breathed the breath of mortal life, God's word and oath—"two
immutable things"—had
infallibly secured the full and glorious deliverance of that very
people whom he was going, in
his wisdom, to crush. All this was unknown to him; and, therefore, all
his thoughts and plans
were founded upon ignorance of that grand foundation-truth of all
truths, namely, that GOD
IS. He vainly imagined that he, by his management, could prevent the
increase of those
concerning whom God had said, "they shall be as the stars of
heaven, and as the sand which is
upon the sea-shore." His wise dealing, therefore, was simply
madness and folly.
The wildest mistake which a man can possibly fall into is to act
without taking God into his
account. Sooner or later, the thought of God will force itself upon
him, and then comes the
awful crash of all his schemes and calculations. At best, everything
that is undertaken,
independently of God, can last but for the present time. It cannot, by
any possibility, stretch
itself into eternity. All that is merely human, however solid, however
brilliant, or however
attractive, must fall into the cold grasp of death, and moulder in the
dark, silent tomb. The
clod of the valley must cover man's highest excellencies and brightest
glories; mortality is
engraved upon his brow, and all his schemes are evanescent. On the
contrary, that which is
connected with, and based upon, God, shall endure for ever. "His
name shall endure for ever,
and his memorial to all generations."
What a sad mistake, therefore, for a feeble mortal to set himself up
against the eternal God, to
"rush upon the thick bosses of the shield of the Almighty!"
As well might the monarch of
Egypt have sought to stem, with his puny hand, the ocean's tide, as to
prevent the increase of
those who were the subjects of Jehovah's everlasting purpose. Hence,
although "they did set
over them taskmasters to afflict them with their burdens," yet,
"the more they afflicted them,
the more they multiplied and grew." Thus it must ever be. "He
that sitteth in the heavens shall
laugh; the Lord shall have them in derision." (Ps. 2: 4) Eternal
confusion shall be inscribed
upon all the opposition of men and devils. This gives sweet rest to the
heart, in the midst of a
scene where all is, apparently, so contrary to God and so contrary to
faith. Were it not for the
settled assurance that "the wrath of man shall praise" the
Lord, the spirit would often be cast
down, while contemplating the circumstances and influences which
surround one in the
world. Thank God, "we look not at the things which are seen, but
at the things which are not
seen: for the things which are seen are temporal; but the things which
are not seen are
eternal." (2 Cor. 4: 18) In the power of this, we may well say,
"rest in the Lord, and wait
patiently for him: fret not thyself because of him who prospereth in
his may, because of the
man who bringeth wicked devices to pass." (Ps. 37: 7) How fully
might the truth of this be
seen in the case of both the oppressed and the oppressor, as set before
us in our chapter! Had
Israel "looked at the things that are seen," what were they?
Pharaoh's wrath, stern taskmasters,
afflictive burdens, rigorous service, hard bondage, mortar and brick.
But, then, "the things
which are not seen," what were they? God's eternal purpose, His
unfailing promise, the
approaching dawn of a day of salvation, the "burning lamp" of
Jehovah's deliverance.
Wondrous contrast Faith alone could enter into it. Nought save that
precious principle could
enable any poor, oppressed Israelite to look from out the smoking
furnace of Egypt, to the
green fields and vine-clad mountains of the land of Canaan. Who could
possibly recognise in
those oppressed slaves, toiling in the brick-kilns of Egypt, the heirs
of salvation, and the
objects of Heaven's peculiar interest and favour.
Thus it was then, and thus it is now. "We walk by faith, not by
sight." (2 Cor. 5: 7) "It doth not
yet appear what we shall be." (l John 3: 2) We are "here in
the body pent," "absent from the
Lord." As to fact, we are in Egypt, yet, in spirit, we are in the
heavenly Canaan. Faith brings
the heart into the power of divine and unseen things, and thus enables
it to mount above
everything down here, in this place "where death and darkness
reign. Oh! for that simple
child-like faith that sits beside the pure and eternal fountain of
truth, there to drink those deep
and refreshing draughts, which lift up the fainting spirit, and impart
energy to the new man, in
its upward and onward course.
The closing verses of this section of our book present an edifying
lesson in the conduct of
those God-fearing women, Shiphrah and Puah. They would not carry out
the king's cruel
scheme, but braved his wrath, and hence, God made them houses.
"Them that honour me I
will honour, and they that despise me shall be lightly esteemed."
(1 Sam. 2: 30) May we ever
remember this, and act for God, under all circumstances!
Exodus 2
This section of our book abounds in the weightiest principles of divine
truth—principles,
which range themselves under the three following heads, namely, the
power of Satan, the
power of God, and the power of faith.
In the last verse of the previous chapter, we read, "And Pharaoh
charged all his people,
saying, Every son that is born ye shall cast into the river." This
was Satan's power. The river
was the place of death; and, by death, the enemy sought to frustrate
the purpose of God. It has
ever been thus. The serpent has, at all times, watched, with malignant
eye, those instruments
which God was about to use for his own gracious ends. Look at the case
of Abel, in Genesis 4.
What was that but the serpent watching God's vessel and seeking to put
it out of the way by
death? Look at the case of Joseph, in Gen. 37. There you have the enemy
seeking to put the
man of God's purpose in the place of death. Look at the case of
"the seed royal," in 2 Chron.
22, the act of Herod, in Matt. 2, the death of Christ, in Matt. 27. In
all these cases, you find
the enemy seeking, by death, to interrupt the current of divine action.
But, blessed be God, there is something beyond death. The entire sphere
of divine action, as
connected with redemption, lies beyond the limits of death's domain.
When Satan has
exhausted his power, then God begins to show Himself. The grave is the
limit of Satans
activity; but there it is that divine activity begins. This is a
glorious truth. Satan has the power
of death; but God is the God of the living; and He gives life beyond
the reach and power of
death—a life which Satan cannot touch. The heart finds sweet relief in
such a truth as this, in
the midst of a scene where death reigns. Faith can stand and look on at
Satan putting forth the
plenitude of his power. It can stay itself upon God's mighty
instrumentality of resurrection. It
can take its stand at the grave which has just closed over a beloved
object, and drink in, from
the lips of Him who is "the resurrection and the life," the
elevating assurance of a glorious
immortality. It knows that God is stronger than Satan, and it can,
therefore, quietly wait for
the full manifestation of that superior strength, and, in thus waiting,
find its victory and its
settled peace. We have a noble example of this power of faith in the
opening verses of our
chapter.
"And there went a man of the house of Levi, and took to wife a
daughter of Levi. And the
woman conceived and bare a son; and when she saw him that he was a
goodly child, she hid
him three months. And when she could no longer hide him, she took for
him an ark of
bulrushes and daubed it with slime and with pitch, and put the child
therein; and she laid it in
the flags by the river's brink. And his sister stood afar off, to wit
what would be done to him."
(Ex. 2: 1-4)Here we have a scene of touching interest, in whatever way
we contemplate it. In
point of fact, it was simply faith triumphing over the influences of
nature and death, and
leaving room for the God of resurrection to act in His own proper
sphere and character. True,
the enemy's power is apparent, in the circumstance that the child had
to be placed in such
position—a position of death, in principle. And, moreover, a sword was
piercing through the
mother's heart, in thus beholding her precious offspring laid, as it
were, in death. Satan might
act, and nature might weep; but the Quickener of the dead was behind
the dark cloud, and
faith beheld Him there, gilding heaven's side of that cloud with His
bright and life-giving
beams. "By faith Moses when he was born was hid three months of
his parents, because they
saw he was a proper child; and they were not afraid of the king's
commandment." (Heb. 11:
23)
Thus, this honoured daughter of Levi teaches us a holy lesson. Her
"ark of bulrushes, daubed
with slime and pitch," declares her confidence in the truth that
there was a something which
could keep out the waters of death, in the case of this "proper
child," as well as in the case of
Noah, "the preacher of righteousness. Are we to suppose, for a
moment, that this "Ark" was
the invention of mere nature? Was it nature's mere thought that devised
it, or nature's
ingenuity that constructed it? Was the babe placed in the ark at the
suggestion of a mother's
heart, cherishing the fond but visionary hope of thereby saving her
treasure from the ruthless
hand of death? Were we to reply to the above inquiries in the affirmative,
we should, I
believe, lose the beauteous teaching of this entire scene. How could we
ever suppose that the
"ark" was devised by one who saw no other portion or destiny
for her child but death by
drowning? Impossible. We can only look upon that significant structure,
as faith's draft
handed in at the treasury of the God of resurrection. devised by the
hand of faith, as a vessel
of mercy, to carry "a proper child" safety over death's dark
waters, into the place assigned him
by the immutable purpose of the living God. When we behold this
daughter of Levi bending
over that ark of bulrushes," which her faith had constructed, and
depositing therein her babe,
we see her "walking in the steps of that faith of her father
Abraham, which he had," when "he
rose up from before his dead," and purchased the cave of Macpelah
from the sons of Heth.
(Gen. 23) We do not recognise in her the energy of mere nature, hanging
over the object of its
affections, about to fall into the iron grasp of the king of terrors.
No; but we trace in her the
energy of a faith which enabled her to stand, as a conqueror, at the
margin of death's cold
flood, and behold the chosen servant of Jehovah in safety at the other
side.
Yes, my reader, faith can take those bold and lofty flights into regions
far removed from this
land of death and wide-spread desolation. Its eagle eye can pierce the
gloomy clouds which
gather around the tomb, and behold the God of resurrection displaying
the results of His
everlasting counsels, in the midst of a sphere which no arrow of death
can reach. It can take
its stand upon the top of the Rock of Ages, and listen, in holy
triumph, while the surges of
death are lashing its base.
And what, let me ask, was "the king's commandment" to one who
was in possession of this
heaven-born principle? What weight had that commandment with one who
could calmly
stand beside her "ark of bulrushes" and look death straight
in the face? The Holy Ghost
replies, "they were not afraid of the king's commandment."
The spirit that knows ought of
communion with Him who quickens the dead, is not afraid of anything.
Such an one can take
up the triumphant language of 1 Cor: 15 and say, "O death, where
is thy sting? O grave, where
is thy victory? The sting of death is sin, and the strength of sin is
the law. But thanks be to
God which giveth us the victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ."
He can give forth these
words of triumph over a martyred Abel; over Joseph in the pit; over
Moses in his ark of
bulrushes; in the midst of "the seed royal," slain by the
hand of Athaliah; and in the babes of
Bethlehem, murdered by the mandate of the cruel Herod; and far above
all, he can utter them
at the tomb of the Captain of our salvation.
Now, it may be, there are some who cannot trace the activities of
faith, in the matter of the
ark of bulrushes. Many may not be able to travel beyond the measure of
Moses' sister, when
"she stood afar off, to wit, what would be done to him." It
is very evident that "his sister" was
not up to " the measure of faith" possessed by "his
mother." No doubt, she possessed deep
interest and true affection, such as we may trace in "Mary
Magdalene and the other Mary
sitting over against the sepulchre." (Matt. 27: 61) But there was
something far beyond either
interest or affection in the maker of the "ark." True, she
did not "stand afar off to wit what
would be done to" her child, and hence, what frequently happens,
the dignity of faith might
seem like indifference, on her part. It was not, however, indifference,
but true elevation—the
elevation of faith. If natural affection did not cause her to linger
near the scene of death, it
was only because the power of faith was furnishing her with nobler
work, in the presence of
the God of resurrection. Her faith had cleared the stage for Him, and most
gloriously did He
show Himself thereon.
"And the daughter of Pharaoh came down to wash herself at the
river; and her maidens
walked along by the river's side; and when she saw the ark among the
flags she sent her maid
to fetch it. And when she had opened it she saw the child; and, behold,
the babe wept. And
she had compassion on him, and said, This is one of the Hebrews'
children." Here, then, the
divine response begins to break, in sweetest accents, on the ear of
faith. God was in all this.
rationalism, or scepticism, or infidelity, or atheism, may laugh at
such an idea. And faith can
laugh also; but the two kinds of laughter are very different. The
former laughs, in cold
contempt, at the thought of divine interference in the trifling affair
of a royal maiden's walk
by the river's side. The latter laughs, with real heart-felt gladness,
at the thought that God is in
everything. And, assuredly, if ever God was in anything, He was in this
walk of Pharaoh's
daughter, though she knew it not.
The renewed mind enjoys one of its sweetest exercises, while tracing
the divine footsteps in
circumstances and events in which a thoughtless spirit sees only blind
chance or rigid fate.
The most trifling matter may, at times, turn out to be a most important
link in a chain of
events by which the Almighty God is helping forward the development of
His grand designs.
Look, for instance, at Esther 4: 1, and what do you see? A heathen
monarch, spending a
restless night. No uncommon circumstance, we may suppose; and, yet,
this very circumstance
was a link in a great chain of providence at the end of which you find
the marvellous
deliverance of the oppressed seed of Israel.
Thus was it with the daughter of Pharaoh, in her walk by the river's
side. Little did she think
that she was helping forward the purpose of "the Lord God of the
Hebrews" How little idea
had she that the weeping babe, in that ark of bulrushes, was yet to be
Jehovah's instrument in
shaking the land of Egypt to its very centre! Yet so it was. The Lord
can make the wrath of
man to praise Him, and restrain the remainder. How plainly the truth of
this appears in the
following passage!
"Then said his sister to Pharaoh's daughter, Shall I go and call
to thee a nurse of the Hebrew
women, that she may nurse the child for thee? And Pharaoh's daughter
said unto her, Go. And
the maid went and called the child's mother. And Pharaoh's daughter
said unto her, Take this
child sway, and nurse it for me, and I will give thee thy wages. And
the woman took the child
and nursed it. And the child grew and she brought him unto Pharaohs
daughter, and he
became her son. And she called his name Moses: and she said, Because I
drew him out of the
water." (Ex. 2: 7-10) The beautiful faith of Moses' mother here
meets its full reward; Satan is
confounded; and the marvellous wisdom of God is displayed. Who would
have thought that
the one who had said, "If it be a son, then ye shall kill
him," and, again, "every son that is born
ye shall cast into the river," should have in his court one of
those very sons, and such "a son."
The devil was foiled by his own weapon, inasmuch as Pharaoh, whom he
was using to
frustrate the purpose of God, is used of God to nourish and bring up
Moses, who was to be
His instrument in confounding the power of Satan. Remarkable
providence! Admirable
wisdom! Truly, Jehovah is "wonderful in counsel and excellent in
working." May we learn to
trust Him with more artless simplicity, and thus our path shall be more
brilliant, and our
testimony more effective.
In considering the history of Moses, we must look at him in two ways,
namely, personally and
typically.
First, in his personal character, there is much, very much, for us to
learn. God had not only to
raise him up, but also to train him, in one way or another, for the
lengthened period of eighty
years-first in the house of Pharaoh's daughter; and then at "the
backside of the desert." This, to
our shallow thoughts, would seem an immense space of time to devote to
the education of a
minister of God. But then God's thoughts are not as our thoughts. He
knew the need of those
forty years, twice told, in the preparation of His chosen vessel. When
God educates, He
educates in a manner worthy of Himself and His most holy service. He
will not have a novice
to do His work. The servant of Christ has to learn many a lesson, to
undergo many an
exercise, to pass through many a conflict, in secret, ere he is really
qualified to act in public.
Nature does not like this. It would rather figure in public than learn
in private. It would rather
be gazed upon and admired by the eye of man than be disciplined by the
hand of God. But it
will not do. We must take God's way. Nature may rush into the scene of
operation; but God
does not want it there. It must be withered, crushed, set aside. The
place of death is the place
for nature. If it will be active, God will so order matters, in His
infallible faithfulness and
perfect wisdom, that the results of its activity will prove its utter
defeat and confusion. He
knows what to do with nature, where to put it, and where to keep it. Oh
that we may all be in
deeper communion with the mind of God, in reference to self and all
that pertains thereto.
Then shall we make fewer mistakes. Then shall our path be steady and
elevated, our spirit
tranquil, and our service effective.
"And it came to pass in those days, when Moses was grown, that he
went out unto his
brethren, and looked on their burdens; and he spied an Egyptian smiting
an Hebrew, one of
his brethren. And he looked this way and that way, and when he saw there
was no man, he
slew the Egyptian, and hid him in the sand." This was zeal for his
brethren; but it was "not
according to knowledge." God's time was not yet come for judging
Egypt and delivering
Israel; and the intelligent servant will ever wait for God's time.
"Moses was grown;" and "he
was learned in all the wisdom of the Egyptians;" and, moreover,
"he supposed his brethren
would have understood how that God by his hand would deliver
them." all this was true; yet
he evidently ran before the time, and when one does this failure must
be the issue. [In
Stephen's address to the council, at Jerusalem, there is an allusion to
Moses' acting, to which
it may be well to advert. "And when he was full forty years old it
came into his heart to visit
his brethren, the children of Israel. And seeing one of them suffer
wrong, he defended him,
and avenged him that was oppressed, and smote the Egyptian; for he
supposed his brethren
would have understood how that God, by his hand, would deliver them;
but they understood
not." (Acts 7: 23-25) It is evident that Stephen's object, in his
entire address, has to bring the
history of the nation to bear upon the consciences of those whom he had
before him; and it
would have been quite foreign to this object, and at variance with the
Spirit's rule in the New
Testament, to raise a question as to whether Moses had not acted before
the divinely-
appointed time.
Moreover, he merely says, "it came into his heart to visit his
brethren." He does not say that
God sent him, at that time. Nor does this, in the least, touch the
question of the moral
condition of those who rejected him. "They understood not."
This was the fact as to them,
whatever Moses might have personally to learn in the matter. The
spiritual mind can have no
difficulty in apprehending this.
Looking at Moses, typically, we can see the mission of Christ to
Israel, and their rejection of
Him, and refusal to have Him to reign over them. On the other hand,
looking at Moses,
personally, we find that he, like others, made mistakes and displayed
infirmities; sometimes
went too fast, and sometimes too slow. All this is easily understood,
and only tends to
magnify the infinite grace and exhaustless patience of God.]
And not only is there
failure in the end, but also manifest uncertainty, and lack of calm
elevation and holy independence in the progress of a work begun before
God's time. Moses
"looked this way and that way." There is no need of this when
a man is acting with and for
God, and in the full intelligence of His mind, as to the details of his
work. If God's time had
really come, and if Moses was conscious of being divinely commissioned
to execute
judgement upon the Egyptian, and if he felt assured of the divine
presence with him, he would
not have "looked this way and that way."
This action teaches a deep practical lesson to all the servants of God.
There are two things by
which it is superinduced: namely, the fear of man's wrath, and the hope
of man's favour. The
servant of the living God should neither regard the one nor the other.
What avails the wrath or
favour of a poor mortal, to one who holds the divine commission, and
enjoys the divine
presence? It is, in the judgement of such an one, less than the small
dust of the balance.
"Have not I commanded thee? Be strong and of a good courage; be
not afraid, neither be thou
dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with thee, whithersoever thou
goest." (Joshua 1: 9) "Thou,
therefore, gird up thy loins, and arise, and speak, unto them all that
I command thee: be not
dismayed at their faces, lest I confound thee before them. For, behold,
I have made thee this
day a defended city, and an iron pillar, and brazen walls against the
whole land, against the
kings of Judah, against the princes thereof, against the priests
thereof, and against the people
of the land. And they shall fight against thee, but they shall not
prevail against thee; for I am
with thee, saith the Lord, to deliver thee." (Jer 1: 17-19)
When the servant of Christ stands upon the elevated ground set forth in
the above quotations,
he will not "look this way and that way;" he will act on
wisdom's heavenly counsel, "let thine
eyes look straight on, and thine eyelids look straight before
thee." Divine intelligence will
ever lead us to look upward and onward. Whenever we look around to shun
a mortal's frown
or catch his smile, we may rest assured there is something wrong; we
are off the proper
ground of divine service. We lack the assurance of holding the divine
commission, and of
enjoying the divine presence, both of which are absolutely essential.
True, there are many who, through profound ignorance, or excessive
self-confidence, stand
forward in a sphere of service for which God never intended them, and
for which He,
therefore, never qualified them. And not only do they thus stand
forward, but they exhibit an
amount of coolness and self-possession perfectly amazing to those who
are capable of
forming an impartial judgement about their gifts and merits. But all
this will very speedily
find its level; nor does it in the least interfere with the integrity
of the principle that nothing
can effectually deliver a man from the tendency to "look this way
and that way," save the
consciousness of the divine commission and the divine presence. When
these are possessed,
there is entire deliverance from human influence, and consequent
independence. No man is in
a position to serve others who is not wholly independent of them; but a
man who knows his
proper place can stoop and wash his brethren's feet.
When we turn away our eyes from man, and fix them upon the only true
and perfect Servant,
we do not find him looking this way and that way, for this simple
reason, that He never had
His eye upon men, but always upon God. He feared not the wrath of man
nor sought his
favour. He never opened His lips to elicit human applause, nor kept
them closed to avoid
human censure. This gave holy stability and elevation to all He said
and did. Of Him alone
could it be truly said, "His leaf shall not wither, and whatsoever
he doeth shall prosper."
Everything He did turned to profitable account, because everything was
done to God. Every
action, every word, every movement, every look, every thought, was like
a beauteous cluster
of fruit, sent up to refresh the heart of God. He was never afraid of
the results of His work,
because He always acted with and for God, and in the full intelligence
of His mind. His own
will, though divinely perfect, never once mingled itself in ought that
He did, as a man, on the
earth. He could say, "I came down from heaven, not to do mine own
will, but the will of him
that sent me." Hence, He brought forth fruit, "in its
season" He did "always those things which
pleased the Father," and, therefore, never had any occasion to
"fear," to "repent," or to "look
this way and that way."
Now in this, as in everything else, the blessed Master stands in marked
contrast with His most
honoured and eminent servants. Even a Moses "feared," and a,
Paul "repented;" but the Lord
Jesus never did either. He never had to retrace a step, to recall a
word, or correct a thought.
All was absolutely perfect. All was "fruit in season." The
current of His holy and heavenly life
flowed onward without a ripple and without a curve. His will was
divinely subject. The best
and most devoted men make mistakes; but it is perfectly certain that
the more we are enabled,
through grace, to mortify our own will, the fewer our mistakes will be.
Truly happy it is when,
in the main, our path is really a path of faith and single-eyed
devotedness to Christ.
Thus it was with Moses. He was a man of faith-a man who drank deeply
into the spirit of his
Master, and walked with marvellous steadiness in His footprints. True,
he anticipated, as has
been remarked, by forty years, the Lord's time of judgement on Egypt
and deliverance for
Israel; yet, when we turn to the inspired commentary, in Hebrews 11, we
find nothing about
this. We there find only the divine principle upon which, in the main,
his course was founded.
"By faith Moses, when he was come to years, refused to be called
the son of Pharaoh's
daughter, choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God
than to enjoy the
pleasures of sin for a season; esteeming the reproach of Christ greater
riches than the
treasures in Egypt; for he had respect unto the recompense of the
reward. By faith he forsook
Egypt, not fearing the wrath of the king; for he endured as seeing him
who is invisible." (Ver.
24-27)
This quotation furnishes a most gracious view of the actings of Moses.
It is ever thus the Holy
Ghost deals with the history of Old Testament saints. When He writes a
man's history, He
presents him to us as he is, and faithfully sets forth all his failures
and imperfections. But
when, in the New Testament, he comments upon such history, He merely
gives the real
principle and main result of a man's life. Hence, though we read, in
Exodus, that "Moses
looked this way and that way"—that "he feared and said,
surely this thing is known"—and,
finally, "Moses fled from the face of Pharaoh;" yet, we are
taught, in Hebrews, that what he
did, he did "by faith"—that he did not fear" the wrath
of the king"—that "he endured as seeing
him who is invisible."
Thus will it be, by and by, when "the Lord comes, who both will
bring to light the hidden
things of darkness, and will make manifest the counsels of the hearts:
and then shall every
man have praise of God." (1 Cor. 4: 5) This is a precious and
consolatory truth for every
upright mind and every loyal heart. Many a "Counsel" the
"heart" may form, which, from
various causes, the hand may not be able to execute. All such
"counsels" will be made
"manifest" when "the Lord comes." Blessed be the
grace that has told us so! The affectionate
counsels of the heart are far more precious to Christ than the most
elaborate works of the
hand. The latter may shine before the eye of man; the former are
designed only for the heart
of Jesus. The latter may be spoken of amongst men; the former will be
made manifest before
God and His holy angels. May all the servants of Christ have their
hearts undividedly
occupied with His person, and their eyes steadily fixed upon His
advent.
In contemplating the path of Moses, we observe how that faith led him
entirely athwart the
ordinary course of nature. It led him to despise all the pleasures, the
attractions, and the
honours of Pharaoh's court. And not only that, but also to relinquish
an apparently wide
sphere of usefulness. Human expediency would have conducted him along
quite an opposite
path. It would have led him to use his influence on behalf of the
people of God—to act for
them instead of suffering with them. According to man's judgement,
Providence would seem
to have opened for Moses a wide and most important sphere of labour;
and surely if ever the
hand of God was manifest in placing a man in a distinct position, it
was in his case. By a most
marvellous interposition—by a most unaccountable chain of
circumstances, every link of
which displayed the finger of the Almighty—by an order of events which
no human foresight
could have arranged, had the daughter of Pharaoh been made the
instrument of drawing
Moses out of the water, and of nourishing and educating him until he
was "full forty years
Old." With all these circumstances in his view, to abandon his
high, honourable, and
influential position, could only be regarded as the result of a
misguided zeal which no sound
judgement could approve.
Thus might poor blind nature reason. But faith thought differently; for
nature and faith are
always at issue. They cannot agree upon a single point. Nor is there
anything, perhaps, in
reference to which they differ so widely as what are commonly called
"openings of
Providence." Nature will constantly regard such openings as
warrants for self-indulgence;
whereas faith will find in them opportunities for self-denial. Jonah
might have deemed it a
very remarkable opening of Providence to find a ship going to Tarshish;
but in truth it was an
opening through which he slipped off the path of obedience.
No doubt, it is the Christian's privilege to see his Father's hand, and
hear His voice, in
everything; but he is not to be guided by circumstances. A Christian so
guided is like a vessel
at sea without rudder or compass; she is at the mercy of the waves and
the winds. God's
promise to His child is, "I will guide thee with mine eye."
(Ps: 32: 8) His warning is, "Be not
as the horse or as the mule, which have no understanding; whose mouth
must be held in with
bit and bridle, lest they come near unto thee." It is much better
to be guided by our Father's
eye, than by the bit and bridle of circumstances; and we know that in
the ordinary acceptation
of the term, "Providence" is only another word for the
impulse of circumstances.
Now, the power of faith may constantly be seen in refusing and
forsaking the apparent
openings of Providence. It was so in the case of Moses. "By faith
he refused to be called the
son of Pharaoh's daughter;" and "by faith he forsook
Egypt." Had he judged according to the
sight of his eyes, he would have grasped at the proffered dignity, as
the manifest gift of a kind
Providence, and he would have remained in the court of Pharaoh as in a
sphere of usefulness
plainly thrown open to him by the hand of God. But, then, he walked by
faith, and not by the
sight of his eyes; and, hence, he forsook all. Noble example! May we
have grace to follow it!
And observe what it was that Moses "esteemed greater riches than
the treasures in Egypt;" it
was the "reproach of Christ." It was not merely reproach for
Christ. "The reproaches of them
that reproached thee have fallen upon me." The Lord Jesus, in perfect
grace, identified
Himself with His people. He came down from heaven, leaving His Father's
bosom, and laying
aside all His glory, He took His people's place, confessed their sins,
and bore their judgement
on the cursed tree. Such was His voluntary devotedness, He not merely
acted for us, but made
Himself one with us, thus perfectly delivering us from all that was or
could be against us.
Hence, we see how much in sympathy Moses was with the spirit and mind
of Christ, in
reference to the people of God. He was in the midst of all the ease the
pomp and dignity of
Pharaoh's house, where "the pleasures of sin," and "the
treasures of Egypt," lay scattered
around him, in richest profusion. All these things he might have
enjoyed if he would. He
could have lived and died in the midst of wealth and splendour. His
entire path, from first to
last, might, if he had chosen, have been enlightened by the sunshine of
royal favour: but that
would not have been "faith;" it would not have been
Christ-like. From his elevated position,
he saw his brethren bowed down beneath their heavy burden, and faith
led him to see that his
place was to be with them. Yes; with them, in all their reproach, their
bondage, their
degradation, and their sorrow. Had he been actuated by mere benevolence,
philanthropy, or
patriotism, he might have used his personal influence on behalf of his
brethren. He might
have succeeded in inducing Pharaoh to lighten their burden, and render
their path somewhat
smoother, by royal grants in their favour; but this would never do,
never satisfy a heart that
had a single pulsation in common with the heart of Christ. Such a heart
Moses, by the grace
of God, carried in his bosom; and, therefore, with all the energies and
all the affections of that
heart, he threw himself, body, soul, and spirit, into the very midst of
his oppressed brethren.
He "chose rather to suffer affliction with the people of
God." And, moreover, he did this "by
faith."
Let my reader ponder this deeply. We must not be satisfied with wishing
well to, doing
service for, or speaking kindly on behalf of, the people of God. We
ought to be fully
identified with them, no matter how despised or reproached they may be.
It is, in a measure,
an agreeable thing to a benevolent and generous spirit, to patronise
Christianity; but it is a
wholly different thing to be identified with Christians, or to suffer
with Christ. A patron is
one thing, a martyr is quite another. This distinction is apparent
throughout the entire book of
God. Obadiah took care of God's witnesses, but Elijah was a witness for
God. Darius was so
attached to Daniel that he lost a night's rest on his account, but
Daniel spent that selfsame
night in the lion's den, as a witness for the truth of God. Nicodemus
ventured to speak a word
for Christ, but a more matured discipleship would have led him to
identify himself with
Christ.
These considerations are eminently practical. The Lord Jesus does not
want patronage; He
wants fellowship. The truth concerning Him is declared to us, not that
we might patronise His
cause on earth, but have fellowship with His Person in heaven. He
identified Himself with us,
at the heavy cost of all that love could give. He might have avoided
this. He might have
continued to enjoy His eternal place "in the bosom of the Father."
But how, then, could that
mighty tide of love, which was pent up in His heart, flow down to us
guilty and hell-deserving
sinners? Between Him and us there could be no oneness, save on
conditions which involved
the surrender of everything on His part. But, blessed, throughout the
everlasting ages, be His
adorable Name, that surrender was voluntarily made. "He gave
himself for us, that he might
redeem us from all iniquity, and purify unto himself a peculiar people,
zealous of good
works." (Titus 2: 14) He would not enjoy His glory alone. His
loving heart would gratify itself
by associating "many sons" with Him in that glory.
"Father," He says, "I will that they also
whom thou hast given me be with Me where I am, that they may behold my
glory, which thou
hast given me; for thou lovedst me before the foundation of the
world." (John 17: 24) Such
were the thoughts of Christ in reference to His people; and we can
easily see how much in
sympathy with these precious thoughts was the heart of Moses. He,
unquestionably, partook
largely of his Master's spirit; and he manifested that excellent spirit
in freely sacrificing every
personal consideration, and associating himself, unreservedly, with the
people of God.
The personal character and actings of this honoured servant of God will
come before us again
in the next section of our book. We shall here briefly consider him as
a type of the Lord Jesus
Christ. That he was a type of Him is evident from the following
passage, "The Lord thy God
will raise up unto thee a Prophet from the midst of thee, of thy
brethren, like unto me; unto
him ye shall hearken." (Deut. 18: 15) We are not, therefore,
trafficking in human imagination
in viewing Moses as a type; it is the plain teaching of scripture, and,
in the closing verses of
Exodus 2. we see this type in a double way: first, in the matter of his
rejection by Israel; and,
secondly, in his union with a stranger in the land of Midian. These
points have already been,
in some measure, developed in the history of Joseph, who, being cast
out by his brethren,
according to the flesh, forms an alliance with an Egyptian bride. Here,
as in the case of
Moses, we see shadowed forth Christ's rejection by Israel, and His
union with the Church, but
in a different phase. In Joseph's case, we have the exhibition of
positive enmity against his
person. In Moses it is the rejection of his mission. In Joseph's case
we read, "they hated him,
and could not speak peaceably unto him." (Gen. 37: 4) In the case
of Moses, the word is,
"Who made thee a prince and a judge over us?" In short, the
former was personally hated; the
latter, officially refused.
So also in the mode in which the great mystery of the Church is
exemplified, in the history of
those two Old Testament saints. "Asenath" presents quite a different
phase of the Church
from that which we have in the person of "Zipporah." The
former was united to Joseph in the
time of his exaltation; the latter was the companion of Moses, in the
obscurity of his desert
life. (Comp. Gen. 41: 41-45 with Ex. 2: 15; 3: 1) True, both Joseph and
Moses were, at the
time of their union with a stranger, rejected by their brethren; yet
the former was "governor
over all the land of Egypt;" whereas the latter tended a few sheep
at "the backside of the
desert."
Whether, therefore, we contemplate Christ, as manifested in glory: or
as hidden from the
world's gaze, the Church is intimately associated with Him. And now,
inasmuch as the world
seeth Him not, neither can it take knowledge of that body which is
wholly one with Him.
"The world knoweth us not, because it knew him not." (2 John
3: 1) By and by, Christ will
appear in His glory, and the Church with Him. "When Christ our
life shall appear, then shall
ye also appear with him in glory." (Col. 3: 4) And, again,
"The glory which thou gavest me I
have given them; that they may be one, even as we are one: I in them,
and thou in me, that
they may be made perfect in one; and that the world may know that thou
hast sent me, and
hast loved them as thou hast loved Me." (John 17: 22, 23)
[There are two distinct unities spoken of in John 17: 21, 23. The first
is that unity which the
Church was responsible to have maintained, but in which she has utterly
failed. The second,
that unity which God will infallibly accomplish, and which He will
manifest in glory. If the
reader will turn to the passage he will at once see the difference,
both as to character and
result, of the two.]
Such, then, is the Church's high and holy position. She is one with Him
who is cast out by this
world, but who occupies the throne of the Majesty in the heavens. The
Lord Jesus made
Himself responsible for her on the cross, in order that she might share
with Him His present
rejection and His future glory. Would that all who form a part of such
a highly privileged
body were more impressed with a sense of what becomes them as to course
and character
down here! Assuredly, there should be a fuller and clearer response on
the part of all the
children of God, to that love wherewith He has loved them, to that
salvation wherewith He
has saved them, and to that dignity wherewith He has invested them. The
walk of the
Christian should ever be the natural result of realised privilege, and
not the constrained result
of legal vows and resolutions, the proper fruit of a position known and
enjoyed by faith, and
not the fruit of one's own efforts to reach a position "by works
of law." All true believers are a
part of the bride of Christ. Hence they owe Him those affections which
become that relation.
The relationship is not obtained because of the affections, but the
affections flow out of the
relationship.
So let it be, O Lord, with all thy beloved and blood bought people.
Exodus 3
We shall now resume the personal history of Moses, and contemplate him
during that deeply-
interesting period of his career which he spent in retirement-a period
including, as we should
say, forty of his very best years—the prime of life. This is full of
meaning. The Lord had
graciously, wisely, and faithfully, led His dear servant apart from the
eyes and thoughts of
men, in order that He might train him under His own immediate hand.
Moses needed this.
True, he had spent forty years in the house of Pharaoh; and, while his
sojourn there was not
without its influence and value, yet was it as nothing when compared
with his sojourn in the
desert. The former might be valuable; but the latter was indispensable.
Nothing can possibly make up for the lack of secret communion with God,
or the training and
discipline of His school "All the wisdom of the Egyptians"
would not have qualified Moses
for his future path. He might have pursued a most brilliant course
through the schools and
colleges of Egypt. He might have come forth laden with literary
honours—his intellect stored
with learning, and his heart full of pride and self-sufficiency. He
might have taken out his
degree in the school of man, and yet have to learn his alphabet in the
school of God. Mere
human wisdom and learning; how valuable soever in themselves, can never
constitute any one
a servant of God, nor equip him for any department of divine service.
Such things may qualify
unrenewed nature to figure before the world; but the man whom God will
use must be
endowed with widely different qualifications—such qualifications as can
alone be found in
the deep and hallowed retirement of the Lord's presence.
All God's servants have been made to know and experience the truth of
these statements.
Moses at Horeb, Elijah at Cherith, Ezekiel at Chebar, Paul in Arabia,
and John at Patmos, are
all striking examples of the immense practical importance of being
alone with God. and when
we look at the Divine Servant, we find that the time He spent in
private was nearly ten times
as long as that which He spent in public. He, though perfect in
understanding and in will,
spent nearly thirty years in the obscurity of a carpenter's house at
Nazareth, ere He made His
appearance in public. And, even when He had entered upon His public
career, how oft did He
retreat from the gaze of men, to enjoy the sweet and sacred retirement
of the divine presence!
Now we may feel disposed to ask, how could the urgent demand for
workmen ever be met, if
all need such protracted training, in secret, ere they come forth to
their work? This is the
Master's care—not ours. He can provide the workmen, and He can train
them also. This is not
man's work. God alone can provide and prepare a true minister. Nor is
it a question with Him
as to the length of time needful for the education of such an one. We
know He could educate
him in a moment, if it were His will to do so. One thing is evident,
namely, that God has had
all His servants very much alone with Himself, both before and after
their entrance upon their
public work; nor will any one ever get on without this. The absence of
secret training and
discipline will, necessarily leave us barren, superficial, and
theoretic. A man who ventures
forth upon a public career ere he has duly weighed himself in the
balances of the sanctuary, or
measured himself in the presence of God, is like a ship putting out to
sea without proper
ballast: he will doubtless overset with the first stiff breeze. On the
contrary, there is a depth, a
solidity, and a steadiness flowing from our having passed from form to
form in the school of
God, which are essential elements in the formation of the character of
a true and effective
servant of God.
Hence, therefore, when we find Moses, at the age of forty years, taken
apart from all the
dignity and splendour of a court, for the purpose of spending forty
years in the obscurity of a
desert, we are led to expect a remarkable course of service; nor are we
disappointed. The man
whom God educates, is educated, and none other. It lies not within the
range of man to
prepare an instrument for the service of God. The hand of man could
never mould "a vessel
meet for the Master's use." The One who is to use the vessel can
alone prepare it; and we have
before us a singularly beautiful sample of His mode of preparation.
"Now, Moses kept the flock of Jethro, his father-in law, the
priest of Midian: and he led the
flock to the backside of the desert, and came to the mountain of God,
even to Horeb." (Ex. 3:
1) Here, then, we have a marvellous change of circumstances. In Genesis
46: 31, we read,
"every shepherd is an abomination to the Egyptians;" and yet
Moses, who was "learned in all
the wisdom of the Egyptians," is transferred from the Egyptian
court to the back of a
mountain to tend a flock of sheep, and to be educated for the service
of God. Assuredly, this
is not "the manner of man." This is not nature's line of
things. Flesh and blood could not
understand this. We should have thought that Moses' education was
finished when he had
become master of all Egypt's wisdom, and that, moreover, in immediate
connection with the
rare advantages which a court life affords. We should have expected to
find in one so highly
favoured, not only a solid and varied education; but also such an
exquisite polish as would fit
him for any sphere of action to which he might be called. But then, to
find such a man with
such attainments, called away from such a position to mind sheep at the
back of a mountain,
is something entirely beyond the utmost stretch of human thought and
feeling. It lays prostrate
in the dust all man's pride and glory. It declares plainly that this
world's appliances are of little
value in the divine estimation; yea, they are as "dung and
dross," not only in the eyes of the
Lord, but also in the eyes of all those who have been taught in His
school.
There is a very wide difference between human and divine education. The
former has for its
end the refinement and exaltation of nature; the latter begins with
withering it up and setting
it aside. "The natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit
of God; for they are
foolishness unto him; neither can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned." (1
Cor. 2: 14) Educate the "natural man" as much as you please,
and you cannot make him a
"spiritual man." "That which is born of the flesh is
flesh; and that which is born of the Spirit is
spirit:" (John 3: 6) If ever an educated "natural man"
might look for success in the service of
God, Moses might have counted upon it; he was "grown," he was
"learned," he was "mighty in
word and deed," and yet he had to learn something at "the
backside of the desert," which
Egypt's schools could never have taught him. Paul learnt more in Arabia
than ever he had
learnt at the feet of Gamaliel.* None can teach like God; and all who
will learn of Him must
be alone with Him. "In the desert God will teach thee." There
it was that Moses learnt his
sweetest, deepest, most influential and enduring lessons. Thither, too,
must all repair who
mean to be educated for the ministry.
{*Let not my reader suppose for a moment that the design of the above
remarks is to detract
from the value of really useful information, or the proper culture of
the mental powers. By no
means. If, for example, he is a parent, let him store his child's mind
with useful knowledge;
let him teach him everything which may, hereafter, turn to account in
the Master's service: let
him not burden him with ought which he would have to "lay aside in
running his Christian
course, nor conduct him, for educational purposes through a region from
which it is well-nigh
impossible to come forth with an unsoiled mind. You might just as well
shut him up for ten
years in a coal mine, in order to qualify him for discussing the
properties of light and shade,
as cause him to wade through the mire of a heathen mythology, in order
to fit him for the
interpretation of the oracles of God, or prepare him for leading the
flock of Christ}
Beloved reader, may you prove, in your own deep experience, the real
meaning of "the
backside of the desert," that sacred spot where nature is laid in
the dust, and God alone
exalted. There it is that men and things—the world and self—present
circumstances and their
influence, are all valued at what they are really worth. There it is,
and there alone, that you
will find a divinely-adjusted balance in which to weigh all within and
all around. There are no
false colours, no borrowed plumes, no empty pretensions there. The
enemy of your soul
cannot gild the sand of that place. All is reality there. The heart
that has found itself in the
presence of God, at "the backside of the desert," has right
thoughts about everything. It is
raised far above the exciting influence of this world's schemes. The
din and noise! the bustle
and confusion of Egypt do not fall upon the ear in that distant place.
The crash in the
monetary and commercial world is not heard there. The sigh of ambition
is not heaved there.
This world's fading laurels do not tempt there. The thirst for gold is
not felt there. The eye is
never dimmed with lust, nor the heart swollen with pride there. Human
applause does not
elate, nor human censure depress there. In a word, everything is set
aside save the stillness
and light of the divine presence. God's voice alone is heard—His light
enjoyed—His thoughts
received. This is the place to which all must go to be educated for the
ministry; and there all
must remain, if they would succeed in the ministry.
Would that all who come forward to serve in public knew more of what it
is to breathe the
atmosphere of this place. We should, then, have far less vapid attempts
at ministry, but far
more effective Christ-honouring service.
Let us now enquire what Moses saw and what he heard at "the
backside of the desert." We
shall find him learning lessons which lay far beyond the reach of
Egypt's most gifted masters.
It might appear, in the eyes of human reason, a strange loss of time
for a man like Moses to
spend forty years doing nothing save to keep a few sheep in the
wilderness. But he was there
with God, and the time that is thus spent is never lost. It is salutary
for us to remember that
there is something more than mere doing necessary on the part of the
true servant. A man who
is always doing will be apt to do too much. Such an one would need to
ponder over the
deeply-practical words of the perfect Servant, "He wakeneth
morning by morning, he
wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learned." (Isa. 1: 4) This is an
indispensable part of the
servant's business. The servant must frequently stand in his master's
presence, in order that he
may know what he has to do. The "ear" and the
"tongue" are intimately connected, in more
ways than one; but, in a spiritual or moral point of view, if my ear be
closed and my tongue
loose, I shall be sure to talk a great deal of folly. "Wherefore,
my beloved brethren, let every
man be swift to hear, slow to speak." (James 1: 19) This
seasonable admonition is based upon
two facts, namely, that everything good comes from above, and that the
heart is brim full of
naughtiness, ready to flow over. Hence, the need of keeping the ear
open and the tongue quiet
rare and admirable attainments! -attainments in which Moses made great
proficiency at "the
backside of the desert," and which all can acquire, if only they
are disposed to learn in that
school.
"And the angel of the Lord appeared unto him in a flame of fire,
out of the midst of a bush:
and he looked, And behold the bush burned with fire, and the bush was
not consumed. And
Moses said, I will now turn aside, and see this great sight, why the
bush is not burnt." (Ex. 3:
2, 3) This was, truly, "a great sight"—a bush burning, yet
not burnt. The palace of Pharaoh
could never have afforded such a sight. But it was a gracious sight as
well as a great sight, for
therein was strikingly exhibited the condition of God's elect. They
were in the furnace of
Egypt; and Jehovah reveals Himself in a burning bush. But as the bush
was not consumed, so
neither were they, for God was there. "The Lord of hosts is with
us, the God of Jacob is our
refuge." (Ps. 46) Here is strength and security—victory and peace.
God with us, God in us,
and God for us. This is ample provision for every exigence.
Nothing can be more interesting or instructive than the mode in which
Jehovah was pleased to
reveal Himself to Moses, as presented in the above quotation. He was
about to furnish him
with his commission to lead forth His people out of Egypt, that they
might be His assembly—
His dwelling-place, in the wilderness, and in the land of Canaan; and
the place from which
He speaks is a burning bush. Apt, solemn, and beautiful symbol of
Jehovah dwelling in the
midst of His elect and redeemed congregation! "Our God is a
consuming fire," not to consume
us, but to consume all in us and about us which is contrary to His
holiness, and, as such,
subversive of our true and permanent happiness. "Thy testimonies
are very sure; holiness
becometh thy house, O Lord, for ever."
There are various instances, both in the Old and New Testaments, in
which we find God
displaying Himself as "a consuming fire." Look, for example,
at the case of Nadab and Abihu,
in Leviticus 10. This was a deeply solemn occasion. God was dwelling in
the midst of His
people, and He would keep them in a condition worthy of Himself. He
could not do
otherwise. It would neither be for His glory nor for their profit, were
He to tolerate ought in
them inconsistent with the purity of His presence. God's dwelling-place
must be holy.
So, also, in Joshua 7 we have another striking proof, in the case of
Achan, that Jehovah could
not possibly sanction, by His presence, evil, in any shape or form, how
covert soever that evil
might be. He was "a Consuming fire," and, as such, He should
act, in reference to any attempt
to defile that assembly in the midst of which He dwelt. To seek to
connect God's presence
with evil unjudged, is the very highest character of wickedness.
Again, in Acts 5 Ananias and Sapphira teach us the same solemn lesson.
God the Holy Ghost
was dwelling in the midst of the Church, not merely as an influence,
but as a divine Person, in
such a way as that one could lie to Him. The Church was, and is still,
His dwelling place; and
He must rule and judge in the midst thereof. Men may walk in company
with deceit,
covetousness, and hypocrisy; but God cannot. If God is going to walk
with us, we must judge
our ways, or we will judge them for us. (See also 1 Cor. 11: 29-32)
In all these cases, and many more which might be adduced, we see the
force of that solemn
word, "holiness becometh thy house, O Lord, for ever." The
moral effect of this will ever be
similar to that produced in the case of Moses, as recorded in our
chapter. "Draw not nigh
hither: put off thy shoes from off thy feet, for the place whereon thou
standest is holy
ground." (Verse 5) The place of God's presence is holy, and can
only be trodden with unshod
feet. God, dwelling in the midst of His people, imparts a character of
holiness to their
assembly, which is the basis of every holy affection and every holy
activity. The character of
the dwelling place takes its stamp from the character of the Occupant.
The application of this to the Church, which is now the habitation of
God, through the Spirit,
is of the very utmost practical importance. While it is blessedly true
that God, by His Spirit,
inhabits each individual member of the Church, thereby imparting a
character of holiness to
the individual; it is equally true that He dwells in the assembly; and,
hence the assembly must
be holy. The centre round which the members are gathered is nothing
less than the Person of a
living, victorious, and glorified Christ. The energy by which they are
gathered is nothing less
than God the Holy Ghost; and the Lord God Almighty dwells in them and
walks in them. (See
Matt. 18: 20; 1 Cor. 6: 19; 1 Cor. 3: 16, 17; Eph. 2: 21, 22) Such
being the holy elevation
belonging to God's dwelling-place, it is evident that nothing which is
unholy, either in
principle or practice, must be tolerated. Each one connected therewith
should feel the weight
and solemnity of that word, "the place whereon thou standest is
holy ground." "If any man
defile the temple of God, him will God destroy."(1 Cor. 3: 17)
Most weighty words these, for
every member of God's assembly—for every stone in His holy temple! May
we all learn to
tread Jehovah's courts, with unshod feet!
However, the visions of Horeb bear witness to the grace of the God of
Israel as well as to His
holiness. If God's holiness is infinite, His grace is infinite also;
and, while the manner in
which He revealed Himself to Moses, declared the former, the very fact
of His revealing
Himself at all evidenced the latter. He came down, because He was
gracious; but when come
down, He should reveal Himself as holy. "Moreover he said, I am
the God of thy father, the
God of Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob. And Moses hid
his face; for he was
afraid to look upon God." (Verse 6) The effect of the divine
presence must ever be to make
nature hide itself; and, when we stand before God, with unshod feet and
covered head, i.e. in
the attitude of soul which those acts so aptly and beautifully express,
we are prepared to
hearken to the sweet accents of grace. When man takes his suited place,
God can speak, in the
language of unmingled mercy.
"And the Lord said, I have surely seen the affliction of my people
which are in Egypt, and
have heard their cry by reason of their taskmasters; for I know their
sorrows. And I am come
down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring
them up out of that land
unto a good land and a large, unto a land flowing with milk and honey.
. . . . Now, therefore,
behold, the cry of the children of Israel is come up unto me; and I
have also seen the
oppression wherewith the Egyptians oppress them." (Ver. 7-9) Here
the absolute, free,
unconditional grace of the God of Abraham, and the God of Abraham's
seed, shines forth in
all its native brightness, unhindered by the "ifs" and
"buts," the vows, resolutions, and
conditions of man's legal spirit. God had come down to display Himself,
in sovereign grace,
to do the whole work of salvation, to accomplish His promise made to
Abraham, and repeated
to Isaac and Jacob. He had not come down to see if, indeed, the
subjects of His promise were
in such a condition as to merit His salvation. It was sufficient for
Him that they needed it.
Their oppressed state, their sorrows, their tears, their sighs, their
heavy bondage, had all come
in review before Him; for, blessed be His name, He counts His people's
sighs and puts their
tears into His bottle. He was not attracted by their excellencies or
their virtues. It was not on
the ground of aught that was good in them, either seen or foreseen,
that he was about to visit
them, for He knew what was in them. In one word, we have the true
ground of His gracious
acting set before us in the words, "I am the God of Abraham,"
and "I have seen the affliction
of my people."
These words reveal a great fundamental principle in the ways of God. It
is on the ground of
what He is, that He ever acts. "I AM," secures all for
"MY PEOPLE." Assuredly He was not
going to leave His people amid the brick-kilns of Egypt, and under the
lash of Pharaoh's
taskmasters. They were His people, and He mould act toward them in a
manner worthy of
Himself. To be His people—to be the favoured objects of Jehovah's
electing love—the
subjects of His unconditional promise, settled everything. Nothing
should hinder the public
display of His relationship with those for whom His eternal purpose had
secured the land of
Canaan. He had come down to deliver them; and the combined power of
earth and hell could
not hold them in captivity one hour beyond His appointed time. He might
and did use Egypt
as a school, and Pharaoh as a schoolmaster; but when the needed work
was accomplished,
both the school and the schoolmaster were set aside, and His people
were brought forth with a
high hand and an outstretched arm.
Such, then, was the double character of the revelation made to Moses at
Mount Horeb. What
he saw and what he heard combined the two elements of holiness and
grace—elements
which, as we know, enter into, and distinctly characterise, all the
ways and all the
relationships of the blessed God, and which should also mark the ways
of all those who, in
any wise, act for, or have fellowship with, Him. Every true servant is
sent forth from the
immediate presence of God, with all its holiness and all its grace; and
he is called to be holy
and gracious—he is called to be the reflection of the grace and
holiness of the divine
character; and, in order that he may be so, he should not only start
from the immediate
presence of God, at the first, but abide there, in spirit, habitually.
This is the true secret of
effectual service.
"Childlike, attend what thou wilt say
Go forth and do it, while 'tis day,
Yet never leave my sweet retreat."
The spiritual man alone can understand the meaning of the two things,
"go forth and do," and,
"yet never leave." In order to act for God outside, I should
be with Him inside. I must be in the
secret sanctuary of His presence, else I shall utterly fail.
Very many break down on this point. There is the greatest possible
danger of getting out of
the solemnity and calmness of the divine presence, amid the bustle of
intercourse with men,
and the excitement of active service. This is to be carefully guarded
against. If we lose that
hallowed tone of spirit which is expressed in "the unshod
foot," our service will, very
speedily, become vapid and unprofitable. If I allow my work to get
between my heart and the
Master, it will be little worth. We can only effectually serve Christ
as we are enjoying Him. It
is while the heart dwells upon His powerful attractions that the hands
perform the most
acceptable service to His name; nor is there any one who can minister
Christ with unction,
freshness, and power to others, if he be not feeding upon Christ, in
the secret of his own soul.
True, he may preach a sermon, deliver a lecture, utter prayers, write a
book, and go through
the entire routine of outward service, and yet not minister Christ. The
man who will present
Christ to others must be occupied with Christ for himself.
Happy is the man who ministers thus, whatever be the success or
reception of his ministry.
For should his ministry fail to attract attention, to command
influence, or to produce apparent
results, he has his sweet retreat and his unfailing portion in Christ,
of which nothing can
deprive him. Whereas, the man who is merely feeding upon the fruits of
his ministry, who
delights in the gratification which it affords, or the attention and
interest which it commands,
is like a mere pipe, conveying water to others, and retaining only rust
itself. This is a most
deplorable condition to be in; and yet is it the actual condition of
every servant who is more
occupied with his work and its results, than with the Master and His
glory.
This is a matter which calls for the most rigid self-judgement. The
heart is deceitful, and the
enemy is crafty; and, hence there is great need to hearken to the word
of exhortation, "be
sober, be vigilant." It is when the soul is awakened to a sense of
the varied and manifold
dangers which beset the servant's path, that it is, in any measure,
able to understand the need
there is for being much alone with God: it is there one is secure and
happy. It is when we
begin, continue, and end our work at the Master's feet, that our
service will be of the right
kind.
From all that has been said, it must be evident to any reader that
every servant of Christ will
find the air of "the backside of the desert" most salutary.
Horeb is really the starting post for
all whom God sends forth to act for Him. It was at Horeb that Moses
learnt to put off his
shoes and hide his face. Forty years before he had gone to work; but
his movement was
premature. It was amid the flesh-subduing solitudes of the mount of
God, and forth from the
burning bush, that the divine commission fell on the servant's ear,
"Come now, therefore, and
I will send thee unto Pharaoh, that thou mayest bring forth my people,
the children of Israel,
out of Egypt." (Ver. 10) Here was real authority. There is a vast
difference between God
sending a man, and a man running unsent. But it is very manifest that
Moses was not ripe for
service when first he set about acting. If forty years of secret
training were needful for him,
how could he have got on without it? Impossible! He had to be divinely
educated, and
divinely commissioned; and so must all who go forth upon a path of
service and testimony for
Christ. Oh! that these holy lessons may be deeply graven on all our
hearts, that so our every
work may wear upon it the stamp of the Master's authority, and the
Masters approval.
However, we have something further to learn at the foot of Mount Horeb.
The soul finds it
seasonable to linger in this place. "It is good to be here."
The presence of God is ever a deeply
practical place; the heart is sure to be laid open there. The light
that shines in that holy place
makes everything manifest; and this is what is so much needed in the
midst of the hollow
pretension around us, and the pride and self complacency within.
We might be disposed to think that, the very moment the divine
commission was given to
Moses, his reply would be, "Here am I," or "Lord, what
wilt thou have me to do?" But no; he
had yet to be brought to this. Doubtless, he was affected by the
remembrance of his former
failure. If a man acts in anything without God, he is sure to be
discouraged, even when God is
sending him. "And Moses said unto God, Who am I that I should go
unto Pharaoh, and that I
should bring forth the children of Israel out of Egypt?" (Ver. 11)
This is very unlike the man
who, forty years before, "supposed that his brethren would have
understood how that God, by
his hand, would deliver them." Such is man!—at one time too hasty;
at another time too slow.
Moses had learnt a greet deal since the day in which he smote the
Egyptian. He had grown in
the knowledge of himself, and this produced diffidence and timidity.
But, then, he manifestly
lacked confidence in God. If I am merely looking at myself, I shall do
"nothing;" but if I am
looking at Christ, "I can do all things." Thus, when
diffidence and timidity led Moses to say,
"Who am I" God's answer was, "Certainly I will be with
thee." (Ver. 12.) This ought to have
been sufficient. If God be with me, it makes very little matter who I
am, or what I am. When
God says, "I will send thee," and "I will be with
thee," the servant is amply furnished with
divine authority and divine power; and he ought, therefore, to be
perfectly satisfied to go
forth.
But Moses puts another question; for the human heart is full of
questions. "And Moses said
unto God, Behold, when I come unto the children of Israel and shall say
unto them, The God
of your fathers hath sent me unto you; and they shall say to me, What
is his name? what shall
I say unto them?" It is marvellous to see how the human heart
reasons and questions, when
unhesitating obedience is that which is due to God; and still more
marvellous is the grace that
bears with all the reasonings and answers all the questions. Each
question seems but to elicit
some new feature of divine grace.
"And God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and he said, Thus shalt
thou say unto the
children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you." (Ver. 14) The
title which God here gives
Himself is one of wondrous significancy. In tracing through Scripture
the various names
which God takes, we find them intimately connected with the varied need
of those with
whom He was in relation. "Jehovah-jireh," (the Lord will
provide.) "Jehovah-nissi," (the Lord
my banner.) "Jehovah-shalom," (the Lord send peace.)
"Jehovah-tsidkenu," (the Lord our
righteousness.) All these His gracious titles are unfolded to meet the
necessities of His
people; and when He calls Himself "I AM," it comprehends them
all. Jehovah, in taking this
title, was furnishing His people with a blank cheque, to be filled up
to any amount. He calls
Himself "I AM," and faith has but to write over against that
ineffably precious name whatever
me want. God is the only significant figure, and human need may add the
ciphers. If we want
life, Christ says, "I AM the life." If we want righteousness,
He is "THE LORD OUR
RIGHTEOUSNESS." If we want peace, "He is our peace" If we
want wisdom, sanctification,
and redemption," He "is made" all these "unto
us." In a word, we may travel through the wide
range of human necessity, in order to have a just conception of the
amazing depth and
fullness of this profound and adorable name, "I AM."
What a mercy to be called to walk in companionship with One who bears
such a name as this!
We are in the wilderness, and there we have to meet with trial, sorrow,
and difficulty; but, so
long as we have the happy privilege of betaking ourselves, at all
times, and under all
circumstances, to One who reveals Himself in His manifold grace, in
connection with our
every necessity and weakness, we need not fear the wilderness: God was
about to bring His
people across the sandy desert, when He disclosed this precious and
comprehensive name;
and, although the believer now, as being endowed with the Spirit of
adoption, can cry, "Abba
Father," yet is he not deprived of the privilege of enjoying
communion with God in each and
every one of those manifestations which He has been pleased to make of
Himself. For
example, the title "God" reveals Him as acting in the
solitariness of His own being, displaying
His eternal power and Godhead in the works of creation. "The Lord
God" is the title which He
takes in connection with man. Then, as "the Almighty God," He
rises before the view of His
servant Abraham, in order to assure his heart in reference to the
accomplishment of His
promise touching the seed. As Jehovah, He made Himself known to Israel,
in delivering them
out of the land of Egypt, and bringing them into the land of Canaan.
Such were the various measures and various modes in which "God
spake in times past unto
the fathers, by the prophets:" (Heb. 1: 1) and the believer, under
this dispensation or economy,
as possessing the spirit of sonship, can say, "It was my Father
who thus revealed himself—
thus spoke—thus acted."
Nothing can be more interesting or practically important in its way
than to follow out those
great dispensational titles of God. These titles are always used in
strict moral consistency with
the circumstances under which they are disclosed; but there is, in the
name "I AM," a height,
a depth, a length, a breadth, which truly pass beyond the utmost
stretch of human conception.
"When God would teach mankind His name,
He calls Himself the great "I AM,"
And leaves a blank—believers may
Supply those things for which they pray."
And, be it observed, it is only in connection with His own people that
He takes this name. He
did not address Pharaoh in this name. When speaking to him, He calls
Himself by that
commanding and majestic title, "The Lord God of the Hebrews;"
i.e., God, in connection with
the very people whom he was seeking to crush. This ought to have been
sufficient to show
Pharaoh his awful position with respect to God. "I AM" would
have conveyed no intelligible
sound to an uncircumcised ear—no divine reality to an unbelieving
heart. When God manifest
in the flesh declared to the unbelieving Jews of His day those words,
"before Abraham was, I
am," they took up stones to cast at Him. It is only the true
believer who can feel, in any
measure, the power, or enjoy the sweetness of that ineffable name,
"I AM." Such an one can
rejoice to hear from the lips of the blessed Lord Jesus such
declarations as these:—"I am that
bread of life," "I am the light of the world," "I
am the good shepherd,'' "I am the resurrection
and the life," "I am the way, the truth, and the life,"
"I am the true vine," "I am alpha and
Omega, "I am the bright and morning star." In a word, he can
take every name of divine
excellence and beauty, and, having placed it after "I AM,"
find JESUS therein, and admire,
adore, and worship.
Thus, there is a sweetness, as well as a comprehensiveness, in the name
"I AM," which is
beyond all power of expression. Each believer can find therein that
which exactly suits his
own spiritual need, whatever it be. There is not a single winding in
all the Christian's
wilderness journey, not a single phase of his soul's experience, not a
single point in his
condition which is not divinely met by this title, for the simplest of
all reasons, that whatever
he wants, he has but to place it, by faith, over against " I
AM" and find it all in Jesus. To the
believer, therefore, however feeble and faltering, there is unmingled
blessedness in this name.
But, although it was to the elect of God that Moses was commanded to
say, "I AM hath sent
me unto you," yet is there deep solemnity and reality in that
name, when looked at with
reference to the unbeliever. If one who is yet in his sins
contemplates, for a moment, this
amazing title, he cannot, surely, avoid asking himself the question,
"How do I stand as to this
Being who calls Himself, "I AM THAT I AM.' If, indeed, it be true
that HE Is, then what is
He to me? What am I to write over against this solemn name, "I
AM" I shall not rob this
question of its characteristic weight and power by any words of my own;
but I pray that God
the Holy Ghost may make it searching to the conscience of any reader
who really needs to be
searched thereby.
I cannot close this section without calling the attention of the
Christian reader to the deeply-
interesting declaration contained in the 15th verse: "And God
said, moreover, unto Moses,
Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, The Lord God of your
fathers, the God of
Abraham, the God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, hath sent me unto you:
this is my name for
ever, and this is my memorial to all generations." This statement
contains a very important
truth—a truth which many professing Christians seem to forget, namely,
that God's
relationship with Israel is an eternal one. He is just as much Israel's
God now, as when He
visited them in the land of Egypt. Moreover, He is just as Positively
dealing with them now as
then, only in a different way. His word is clear and emphatic:
"This is my name for ever." He
does not say, 'This is my name for a time, so long as they continue
what they ought to be." No;
"this is my name for ever, and this is my memorial unto all
generations." Let my reader
ponder this. "God hath not cast away his people which he
foreknew." (Rom. 11: 2) They are
His people still, whether obedient or disobedient, united together, or
scattered abroad;
manifested to the nations, or hidden from their view. They are His
people, and He is their
God. Exodus 3: 15 is unanswerable. The professing church has no warrant
whatever, for
ignoring a relationship which God says is to endure " for
ever." Let us beware how we tamper
with this weighty word, "for ever." If we say it does not mean
for ever, when applied to Israel,
what proof have we that it means for ever when applied to us? God means
what He says; and
He will, ere long, make manifest to all the nations of the earth, that
His connection with Israel
is one which shall outlive all the revolutions of time. "The gifts
and calling of God are
without repentance." When He said, "this is my name for
ever," He spoke absolutely. " I AM"
declared Himself to be Israel's God for ever; and all the Gentiles
shall be made to understand
and bow to this; and to know, moreover, that all God's providential
dealings with them, and
all their destinies, are connected, in some way or other, with that
favoured and honoured,
though now judged and scattered, people. "When the Most High
divided to the nations their
inheritance, when be separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of
the people, according
to the number of the children of Israel. For the Lord's portion is his
people. Jacob is the lot of
his inheritance." (Deut. 32: 8, 9)
Has this ceased to be true? Has Jehovah given up His "
portion," and surrendered "the lot of
His inheritance?" Does His eye of tender love no longer rest on
Israel's scattered tribes, long
lost to man's vision are the walls of Jerusalem no longer before Him!
or has her dust ceased to
be precious in His sight? To reply to these inquiries would be to quote
a large portion of the
Old Testament, and not a little of the New but this would not be the
place to enter elaborately
upon such a subject. I would only say, in closing this section, let not
Christendom " be
ignorant of this mystery, that blindness in part is happened to Israel,
until the fullness of the
Gentiles be come in. And so all Israel shall be saved." (Rom. 11:
25, 26)
Exodus 4
We are still called to linger at the foot of Mount Horeb, at "the
backside of the desert;" and,
truly, the air of this place is most healthful for the spiritual
constitution. Man's unbelief and
God's boundless grace are here made manifest in a striking way.
"And Moses answered and said, But, behold, they will not believe
me, nor hearken unto my
voice: for they will say, The Lord hath not appeared unto thee."
How hard it is to overcome
the unbelief of the human heart! How difficult man ever finds it to
trust God! How slow he is
to venture forth upon the naked promise of Jehovah. Anything, for
nature, but that. The most
slender reed that the human eye can see is counted more substantial, by
far, as a basis for
nature's confidence, than the unseen "Rock of ages." Nature
will rush, with avidity, to any
creature stream or broken cistern, rather than abide by the unseen
"Fountain of living waters.
"We might suppose that Moses had seen and heard enough to set his
fears entirely aside. The
consuming fire in the unconsumed bush, the condescending grace, the
precious, endearing,
and comprehensive titles, the divine commission, the assurance of the
divine presence,—all
these things might have quelled every anxious thought, and imparted a
settled assurance to
the heart. Still, however, Moses raises questions, and still God
answers them; and, as we have
remarked, each successive question brings out fresh grace. "And
the Lord said unto him, What
is that in thine hand? And he said, A rod." The Lord would just
take him as he was, and use
what he had in his hand. The rod with which he had tended Jethro's
sheep was about to be
used to deliver the Israel of God, to chastise the land of Egypt, to
make a way through the
deep, for the ransomed of the Lord to pass over, and to bring forth
water from the flinty rock
to refresh Israel's thirsty hosts in the desert. God takes up the
weakest instruments to
accomplish His mightiest ends. "A rod," "a ram's
horn," "a cake of barley meal," "an earthern
pitcher," "a shepherds sling," anything, in short, when
used of God, will do the appointed
work. Men imagine that splendid ends can only be reached by splendid
means; but such is not
God's way. He can use a crawling worm as well as a scorching sun, a
gourd as well as a
vehement east wind. (See Jonah.)
But Moses had to learn a deep lesson, both as to the rod and the hand
that was to use it. and
the people had to be convinced. Cast it on the ground. And he cast it
on the ground, and it
became a serpent; and Moses fled from before it. And the Lord said unto
Moses, Put forth
thine hand and take it by the tail. And he put forth his hand and
caught it, and it became a rod
in his hand: that they may believe that the Lord God of their fathers,
the God of Abraham, the
God of Isaac, and the God of Jacob, hath appeared unto thee." This
is a deeply significant
sign. The rod became a serpent, so that Moses fled from it; but, being
commissioned by
Jehovah, he took the serpent by the tail, and it became a rod. Nothing
could more aptly
express the idea of Satan's power being turned against himself. This is
largely exemplified in
the ways of God. Moses himself was a striking example. The serpent is
entirely under the
hand of Christ; and when he has reached the highest point in his mad
career, he shall be
hurled into the lake of fire, there to reap the fruits of his work
throughout eternity's countless
ages. "That old serpent, the accuser, and the adversary,"
shall be eternally crushed beneath the
rod of God's Anointed.
"Then the end—beneath His rod,
Man's last enemy shall fall;
Hallelujah! Christ in God,
God in Christ, is all in all."
"And the Lord said furthermore unto him, Put now thine hand into
thy bosom. And he put his
hand into his bosom; and when he took it out, behold, his hand was
leprous as snow. And he
said, Put thine hand into thy bosom again. And he put his hand into his
bosom again, and
plucked it out of his bosom; and, behold, it was turned again as his
other flesh." The leprous
hand and the cleansing thereof present to us the moral effect of sin,
as also the way in which
sin has been met in the perfect work of Christ. The clean hand, placed
in the bosom, becomes
leprous; and the leprous hand placed there becomes clean. Leprosy is
the well-known type of
sin; and sin came in by the first man and was put sway by the second.
"By man came death,
by man came also the resurrection of the dead." (1 Cor. 15: 21)
Man brought in ruin, man
brought in redemption; man brought in guilt, man brought in pardon; man
brought in sin, man
brought in righteousness; man filled the scene with death, man
abolished death and filled the
scene with life, righteousness, and glory. Thus, not only shall the
serpent himself be eternally
defeated and confounded, but every trace of his abominable work shall
be eradicated and
wiped away by the atoning sacrifice of Him who "was manifested
that he might destroy the
works of the devil."
"And it shall come to pass, if they will not believe also these
two signs, neither hearken unto
thy voice, that thou shalt take of the water of the river, and pour it
upon the dry land; and the
water which thou takest out of the river shall become blood upon the
dry land." This was a
solemn and most expressive figure of the consequence of refusing to bow
to the divine
testimony. This sign was only to be wrought in the event of their
refusing the other two. It
was, first, to be a sign to Israel, and afterwards a plague upon Egypt.
(Comp. Ex. 7: 17)
All this, however, fails to satisfy the heart of Moses. "And Moses
said unto the Lord, O my
Lord, I am not eloquent, neither heretofore, nor since thou hast spoken
unto thy servant; but I
am slow of speech and of a slow tongue." Terrible backwardness!
Nought save Jehovah's
infinite patience could have endured it. Surely when God Himself had
said, "I will be with
thee," it was an infallible security. in reference to everything
which could possibly be needed.
If an eloquent tongue were necessary, what had Moses to do but to set
it over against "I AM?"
Eloquence, wisdom, might, energy, everything was contained in that
exhaustless treasury.
"And the Lord said unto him, Who hath made man's mouth? or who
maketh the dumb, or
deaf, or the seeing, or the blind? have not I the Lord? Now, therefore,
go, and I will be with
thy mouth, and teach thee what thou shalt say." Profound,
adorable, matchless grace! worthy
of God! There is none like unto the Lord our God, whose patient grace
surmounts all our
difficulties, and proves itself amply sufficient for our manifold need
and weakness. "I THE
LORD" Ought to silence for ever the reasonings of our carnal
hearts. But, alas! these
reasonings are hard to be put down. Again and again they rise to the
surface, to the
disturbance of our peace, and the dishonour of that blessed One, who
sets Himself before our
souls, in all His own essential fullness, to be used according to our
need.
It is well to bear in mind that when we have the Lord with us, our very
deficiencies and
infirmities become an occasion for the display of His all-sufficient
grace and perfect patience.
Had Moses remembered this, his want of eloquence need not have troubled
him. The Apostle
Paul learnt to say, "most gladly, therefore, will I rather glory
in my infirmities, that the power
of Christ may rest upon me. Therefore I take pleasure in infirmities,
in reproaches, in
necessities, in persecutions, in distresses, for Christ's sake: for
when I am weak then am I
strong." (2 Cor. 12: 9, 10) This is, assuredly, the utterance of
one who had reached an
advanced form in the school of Christ. It is the experience of one who
would not have been
much troubled because of not possessing an eloquent tongue, inasmuch as
he had found an
answer to every description of need in the precious grace of the Lord
Jesus Christ.
The knowledge of this truth ought to have delivered Moses from his
diffidence and inordinate
timidity. When the Lord had so graciously assured him that He would be
with his mouth, it
should have set his mind at rest as to the question of eloquence. The
Maker of man's mouth
could fill that mouth with the most commanding eloquence, if such were
needed. This, in the
judgement of faith, is most simple; but, alas! the poor doubting heart
would place far more
confidence in an eloquent tongue than in the One who created it. This
would seem most
unaccountable, did we not know the materials of which the natural heart
is composed. That
heart cannot trust God; and hence it is that even the people of God,
when they suffer
themselves to be, in any measure, governed by nature; exhibit such a
humiliating lack of
confidence in the living God. Thus, in the scene before us, we find
Moses still demurring.
"And he said, O my Lord, send, I pray thee, by the hand of him
whom thou wilt send." This
was, in reality, casting from him the high honour of being Jehovah's
sole messenger to Egypt
and to Israel.
It were needless to say that divinely-wrought humility is an
inestimable grace. To "be clothed
with humility" is a divine precept; and humility is,
unquestionably, the most becoming dress
in which a worthless sinner can appear. But, it cannot be called
humility to refuse to take the
place which God assigns, or to tread the path which His hand marks out
for us. That it was not
true humility in Moses is obvious from the fact that "the anger of
the Lord was kindled
against him." So far from its being humility, it had actually
passed the limit of mere
weakness. So long as it wore the aspect of an excessive timidity,
however reprehensible,
God's boundless grace bore with it, and met it with renewed assurances;
but when it assumed
the character of unbelief and slowness of heart, it drew down Jehovah's
just displeasure; and
Moses, instead of being the sole, is made a joint, instrument in the
work of testimony and
deliverance.
Nothing is more dishonouring to God or more dangerous for us than a
mock humility. When
we refuse to occupy a position which the grace of God assigns us,
because of our not
possessing certain virtues and qualifications, this is not humility,
inasmuch as if we could but
satisfy our own consciences in reference to such virtues and
qualifications, We should then
deem ourselves entitled to assume the position. If, for instance, Moses
had possessed such a
measure of eloquence as he deemed needful, we may suppose he would have
been ready to
go. Now the question is, how much eloquence would he have needed, to
furnish him for his
mission? The answer is, without God no amount of human eloquence would
have availed;
but, with God, the merest stammerer would have proved an efficient
minister.
This is a real practical truth. Unbelief is not humility, but thorough
pride. It refuses to believe
God because it does not find, in self, a reason for believing. This is
the very height of
presumption. If, when God speaks, I refuse to believe, on the ground of
something in myself, I
make Him a liar. (1 John 5: 10) When God declares His love, and I
refuse to believe because I
do not deem myself a sufficiently worthy object, I make Him a liar and
exhibit the inherent
pride of my heart. The bare supposition that I could ever be worthy of
ought save the lowest
pit of hell, can only be regarded as the most profound ignorance of my
own condition and of
God's requirements. And the refusal to take the place which the
redeeming love of God
assigns me, on the ground of the finished atonement of Christ, is to
make God a liar, and cast
gross dishonour upon the sacrifice of the cross. God's love flows forth
spontaneously. It is not
drawn forth by my deserts, but by my misery. Nor is it a question as to
the place which I
deserve, but which Christ deserves. Christ took the sinner's place, on
the cross, that the sinner
might take His place in the glory. Christ got what the sinner deserved,
that the sinner might
get what Christ deserves. Thus, self is totally set aside, and this is
true humility. No one can
be truly humble until he has reached heaven's side of the cross; but there
he finds divine life,
divine righteousness, and divine favour. He is done with himself for
ever, as regards any
expectation of goodness or righteousness, and he feeds upon the
princely wealth of another.
He is morally prepared to join in that cry which shall echo through the
spacious vault of
heaven, throughout the everlasting ages, "Not unto us, O Lord, not
unto us, but unto thy name
give glory." (Ps. 115: 1)
It would ill become us to dwell upon the mistakes or infirmities of so
honoured a Servant as
Moses, of whom we read that he "was verily faithful in all his
house, as a servant, for a
testimony of those things which were to be spoken after." (Heb. 3:
5) But, though we should
not dwell upon them, in a spirit of self-complacency, as if we would
have acted differently, in
his circumstances, we should, nevertheless, learn from such things
those holy and seasonable
lessons which they are manifestly designed to teach. We should learn to
judge ourselves and
to place more implicit confidence in God—to set self aside, that He
might act in us, through
us, and for us. This is the true secret of power.
We have remarked that Moses forfeited the dignity of being Jehovah's
sole instrument in that
glorious work which He was about to accomplish. But this was not all.
"The anger of the Lord
was kindled against Moses; and he said, Is not Aaron the Levite thy
brother? I know that he
can speak well: and, also, behold, he cometh forth to meet thee; and
when he seeth thee, he
will be glad in his heart. And thou shalt speak unto him, and put words
in his mouth: and I
will be with thy mouth, and with his mouth, and will teach you what ye
shall do. And he shall
be thy spokesman unto the people: and he shall be, even he shall be to
thee instead of a
mouth, and thou shalt be to him instead of God. And thou shalt take
this rod in thine hand,
wherewith thou shalt do signs." (Ex. 4: 14-17) This passage
contains a mine of most precious
practical instruction. We have noted the timidity and hesitation of
Moses, notwithstanding the
varied promises and assurances with which divine grace had furnished
him. And, nom,
although there was nothing gained in the way of real power, although
there was no more
virtue or efficacy in one mouth than in another, although it was Moses
after all who was to
speak unto Aaron; yet was Moses quite ready to go when assured of the
presence and co-
operation of a poor feeble mortal like himself; whereas he could not go
when assured, again
and again, that Jehovah would be with him.
Oh! my reader, does not all this hold up before us a faithful mirror in
which you and I can see
our hearts reflected? Truly it does. We are more ready to trust
anything than the living God.
We move along, with bold decision, when we possess the countenance and
support of a poor
frail mortal like ourselves; but we falter, hesitate, and demur, when
we have the light of the
Master's countenance to cheer us, and the strength of His omnipotent
arm to support us. This
should humble us deeply before the Lord, and lead us to seek a fuller
acquaintance with Him,
so that we might trust Him with a more unmixed confidence, and walk on
with a firmer step,
as having Him alone for our resource and portion.
No doubt, the fellowship of a brother is most valuable—"Two are
better than one"—whether
in labour, rest, or conflict. The Lord Jesus, in sending forth His
disciples, "sent them two by
two,"—for unity is ever better than isolation—still, if our
personal acquaintance with God,
and our experience of His presence, be not such as to enable us, if
needful, to walk alone, we
shall find the presence of a brother of very little use. It is not a
little remarkable, that Aaron,
whose companionship seemed to satisfy Moses, was the man who afterwards
made the golden
calf. (Ex. 32: 21) Thus it frequently happens, that the very person
whose presence we deem
essential to our progress and success, afterwards proves a source of
deepest sorrow to our
hearts. May we ever remember this!
However, Moses, at length, consents to go; but ere he is fully equipped
for his work, he must
pass through another deep exercise; yea, he must have the sentence of
death inscribed by the
hand of God upon his very nature. He had learnt deep lessons at
"the backside of the desert;"
he is called to learn something deeper still, "by the way in the
inn." It is no light matter to be
the Lord's servant. No ordinary education will qualify a man for such a
position. Nature must
be put in the place of death and kept there. " We had the sentence
of death in ourselves, that
we should not trust in ourselves, but in God which raiseth the dead. (2
Cor. 1: 9) Every
successful servant will need to know something of this. Moses was
called to enter into it, in
his own experience, ere he was morally qualified. He was about to sound
in the ears of
Pharaoh the following deeply-solemn message, "Thus saith the Lord,
Israel is my son, even
my first-born: and I say unto thee, Let my son go, that he may serve
me: and if thou refuse to
let him go, behold I will slay thy son, even thy firstborn." Such
was to be his message to
Pharaoh; a message of death, a message of judgement; and, at the same
time, his message to
Israel was a message of life and salvation. But, be it remembered, that
the man who will
speak, on God's behalf, of death and judgement, life and salvation, must,
ere he does so, enter
into the practical power of these things in his own soul. Thus it was
with Moses. We have
seen him, at the very outset, in the place of death, typically; but
this was a different thing
from entering into the experience of death in his own person. Hence we
read, "And it came to
pass, by the way in the inn, that the Lord met him, and sought to kill
him. Then Zipporah took
a sharp stone, and cut off the foreskin of her son, and cast it at his
feet, and said, Surely a
bloody husband art thou to me. So he let him go: then she said, A
bloody husband thou art,
because of the circumcision." This passage lets us into a deep
secret, in the personal and
domestic history of Moses. It is very evident that Zipporah's heart
had, up to this point, shrunk
from the application of the knife to that around which the affections
of nature were entwined.
She had avoided that mark which had to be set in the flesh of every
member of the Israel of
God. She was not aware that her relationship with Moses was one
involving death to nature.
She recoiled from the cross. This was natural. But Moses had yielded to
her in the matter; and
this explains to us the mysterious scene "in the inn." If
Zipporah refuses to circumcise her
son, Jehovah will lay His hand upon her husband; and if Moses spares
the feelings of his wife,
Jehovah will "seek to kill him." The sentence of death must
be written on nature; and if we
seek to avoid it in one way, we shall have to encounter it in another.
It has been already remarked, that Zipporah furnishes an instructive
and interesting type of the
Church. She was united to Moses, during the period of his rejection;
and from the passage just
quoted, we learn that the Church is called to know Christ, as the One
related to her "by
blood." It is her privilege to drink of his cup, and be baptised
with His baptism. Being
crucified with Him, she is to be conformed to His death; to mortify her
members which are on
the earth; to take up the cross daily, and follow Him. Her relationship
with Christ is founded
upon blood, and the manifestation of the power of that relationship
will, necessarily, involve
death to nature. "And ye are complete in him, which is the head of
all principality and power;
in whom also ye are circumcised with the circumcision made without
hands, in putting off the
body of the sins of the flesh by the circumcision of Christ; buried
with him in baptism,
wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the operation
of God, mho hath raised
him from the dead." (Col. 2: 10-12)
Such is the doctrine as to the Church's place with Christ—a doctrine
replete with the richest
privileges for the Church, and each member thereof. Everything, in
short, is involved: the
perfect remission of sin, divine righteousness, complete acceptance, everlasting
security, full
fellowship with Christ in all His glory. "Ye are complete in
him." This, surely, comprehends
everything. What could be added to one who is "complete"
Could "philosophy, "the tradition
of men," "the rudiments of the world," "meats, drinks,
holy days, new moons," "Sabbaths"
"Touch not" this, "taste not that, "handle
not" the other, "the commandments and doctrines of
men," "days and months, and times, and years," could any
of these things, or all of them put
together, add a single jot or tittle to one whom God has pronounced
"complete?" We might
just as well enquire, if man could have gone forth upon the fair
creation of God, at the close
of the six days' work, to give the finishing touch to that which God
had pronounced "very
good?"
Nor is this completeness to be, by any means, viewed as a matter of
attainment, some point
which we have not yet reached, but after which we must: diligently
strive, and of the
possession of which we cannot be sure until we lie upon a bed of death,
or stand before a
throne of judgement. It is the portion of the feeblest, the most
inexperienced, the most
unlettered child of God. The very weakest saint is included in the
apostolic "ye." All the
people of God "are complete in Christ." The apostle does not
say, "ye will be," "ye may be,"
"hope that ye may be," "pray that ye may be:" no;
he, by the Holy Ghost, states, in the most
absolute and unqualified manner, that "ye are complete." This
is the true Christian starting-
post: and for man to make a goal of what God makes a starting-post, is
to upset everything.
But, then, some will say, "have we no sin, no failure, no
imperfection?" Assuredly we have.
"If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the
truth is not in us." (1 John 1: 8)
We have sin in us, but no sin on us. Moreover, our standing is not in
self, but in Christ. It is
"in him" we "are complete." God says the believer
in Christ, with Christ, and as Christ. This is
his changeless condition, his everlasting standing. "The body of
the sins of the flesh" is "put
off by the circumcision of Christ." The believer is not in the
flesh, though the flesh is in him.
He is united to Christ in the power of a new and an endless life, and
that life is inseparably
connected with divine righteousness in which the believer stands before
God. The Lord Jesus
has put away everything that was against the believer, and He has
brought him nigh to God, in
the self-same favour as that which He Himself enjoys. In a word, Christ
is his righteousness.
This settles every question, answers every objection, silences every
doubt. "Both he that
sanctifieth and they who are sanctified, are all of one." (Heb. 2:
11)
The foregoing line of truth has flowed out of the deeply-interesting
type presented to us in the
relationship between Moses and Zipporah. We must, now, hasten to close
this section, and
take our leave, for the present, of "the backside of the
desert," though not of its deep lessons
and holy impressions, so essential to every servant of Christ, and
every messenger of the
living God. All who would serve effectually, either in the important
work of evangelization,
or in the varied ministries of the house of God—which is the
Church—will need to imbibe
the precious instructions which Moses received at the foot of Mount
Horeb, and "by the way
in the inn."
Were these things properly attended to, we should not have so many
running unsent—so
many rushing into spheres of ministry for which they were never
designed. Let each one who
stands up to preach, or teach, or exhort, or serve in any way,
seriously enquire if, indeed, he
be fitted, and taught, and sent of God. If not, his work will neither
be owned of God nor
blessed to men, and the sooner he ceases, the better for himself and
for those upon whom he
has been imposing the heavy burden of hearkening to him. Neither a
humanly-appointed, nor
a self-appointed ministry, will ever suit within the hallowed precincts
of the Church of God.
All must be divinely gifted, divinely taught, and divinely sent.
"And the Lord said to Aaron, Go into the wilderness to meet Moses.
And he went and met
him in the mount of God, and kissed him. And Moses told Aaron all the
words of the Lord
who had sent him, and all the signs which he had commanded him."
This was a fair and
beauteous scene—a scene of sweet brotherly love and union—a scene which
stands in
marked contrast with many of those scenes which were afterwards enacted
in the wilderness-
career of these two men. Forty years of wilderness life are sure to
make great changes in men
and things. Yet it is sweet to dwell upon those early days of one's
Christian course, before the
stern realities of desert life had, in any measure, checked the gush of
warm and generous
affections—before deceit, and corruption, and hypocrisy had well-nigh
dried up the springs of
the heart's confidence, and placed the whole moral being beneath the
chilling influences of a
suspicious disposition.
That such results have been produced, in many cases, by years of
experience, is, alas! too
true. Happy is he who, though his eyes have been opened to see nature
in a clearer light than
that which this world supplies, can, nevertheless, Serve his generation
by the energy of that
grace which flows forth from the bosom of God. Who ever knew the depths
and windings of
the human heart as Jesus knew them? "He knew all, and needed not
that any should testify of
man: for he knew what was in man." (John 2: 24, 25) So well did He
know man that He could
not commit Himself unto him. He could not accredit man's professions,
or endorse his
pretensions. And yet, who so gracious as He? Who so loving, so tender,
so compassionate, so
sympathising? With a heart
that understood all, He could feel for all. He did not suffer His
perfect knowledge of human worthlessness to keep Him aloof from human
need. "He went
about doing good." Why? Was it because He imagined that all those
who flocked around Him
were real? No; but because God was with him." (Acts 10: 38) This
is our example. Let us
follow it, though, in doing so, we shall have to trample on self and all
its interests, at every
step of the way.
Who would desire that wisdom, that knowledge of nature, that
experience, which only lead
men to ensconce themselves within the enclosures of a hard-hearted
selfishness, from which
they look forth with an eye of dark suspicion upon everybody? Surely
such a result could
never follow from ought of a heavenly or excellent nature. God gives
wisdom; but it is not a
wisdom which locks the heart against all the appeals of human need and
misery. He gives a
knowledge of nature; but it is not a knowledge which causes us to grasp
with a selfish
eagerness that which we, falsely, call " our own." He gives
experience; but it is not an
experience which results in suspecting everybody except myself. If I am
walking in the
footprints of Jesus, if I am imbibing, and therefore manifesting, His
excellent spirit, if, in
short, I can say, "to me to live is Christ;" then, would I
walk through the world, with a
knowledge of what the world is; while I come in contact with man, with
a knowledge of what
I am to expect from him; I am able, through grace, to manifest Christ
in the midst of it all.
The springs which move me, and the objects which animate me, are all
above, where He is,
who if "the same yesterday, and today, and for ever." (Heb.
13: 8) It was this which sustained
the heart of that beloved and honoured servant, whose history, even so
far, has furnished us
with such deep and solid instruction. It was this which carried him
through the trying and
varied scenes of his wilderness course. And we may safely assert that,
at the close of all,
notwithstanding the trial and exercise of forty years, Moses could
embrace his brother, when
he stood on Mount Hor, with the same warmth as he had when first he met
him, "in the mount
of God." True, the two occasions were very different. At "the
mount of God" they met, and
embraced, and started together on their divinely-appointed mission.
Upon "Mount Hor" they
met by the commandment of Jehovah, in order that Moses might strip his
brother of his
priestly robes, and see him gathered to his fathers, because of an
error in which he himself
had participated. (How solemn! How touching!) Circumstances vary: men
may turn away
from one; but with God "is no variableness, neither shadow of
turning." (James 1: 17)
"And Moses and Aaron went and gathered together all the elders of
the children of Israel; and
Aaron spake all the words which the Lord had spoken unto Moses, and did
the signs in the
sight of the people. And the people believed; and when they heard that
the Lord had visited
the children of Israel and that he had looked upon their affliction,
then they bowed their heads
and worshipped." (Ver. 29-31) When God works, every barrier must
give way. Moses had
said, "the people will not believe me." But the question was
not, as to whether they would
believe him, but whether they would believe God. When a man is enabled
to view himself
simply as the messenger of God. he may feel quite at ease as to the
reception of his message.
It does not detract, in the smallest degree, from his tender and
affectionate solicitude, in
reference to those whom he addresses. Quite the contrary; but it
preserves him from that
inordinate anxiety of spirit which can only tend to unfit him for calm,
elevated, steady
testimony. The messenger of God should ever remember whose message he
bears. When
Zacharias said to the angel, "Whereby shall I know this?" was
the latter perturbed by the
question? Not in the least. His calm, dignified reply was, "I am
Gabriel, that stand in the
presence of God; and am sent to speak unto thee, and to show thee:
these glad tidings." (Luke
1: 18, 19) The angel rises before the doubting mortal, with a keen and
exquisite sense of the
dignity of his message. It is as if he would say, "How can you
doubt, when a messenger has
actually been dispatched from the very Presence-chamber of the Majesty
of heaven?" Thus
should every messenger of God, in his measure, go forth, and, in this
spirit, deliver his
message.
Exodus 5 & 6
The effect of the first appeal to Pharaoh seemed ought but encouraging.
The thought of losing
Israel made him clutch them with greater eagerness and watch them with
greater vigilance.
Whenever Satan's power becomes narrowed to a point, his rage increases.
Thus it is here. The
furnace is about to be quenched by the hand of redeeming love; but, ere
it is, it blazes forth
with greater fierceness and intensity. The devil does not like to let
go any one whom he has
had in his terrible grasp. He is "a strong man armed," and
while he "keepeth his palace, his
goods are in peace." But, blessed be God, there is "a
stronger than he," who has taken from
him "his armour wherein he trusted," and divided the spoils
among the favoured objects of
His everlasting love.
"And afterward, Moses and Aaron went in, and told Pharaoh, Thus
saith the Lord God of
Israel, let my people go, that they may hold a feast unto me in the
wilderness." (Ex. 5: 3) Such
was Jehovah's message to Pharaoh. He claimed full deliverance for the
people, on the ground
of their being His; and, in order that they might hold a feast to Him
in the wilderness. Nothing
can ever satisfy God in reference to His elect, but their entire
emancipation from the yoke of
bondage. "Loose him, and let him go" is, really, the grand
motto in God's gracious dealings
with those who, though held in bondage by Satan, are, nevertheless, the
objects of His eternal
love.
When we contemplate Israel amid the brick-kilns of Egypt, we behold a
graphic figure of the
condition of every child of Adam by nature. There they were, crushed
beneath the enemy's
galling yoke, and having no power to deliver themselves. The mere
mention of the word
liberty only caused the oppressor to bind his captives with a stronger
fetter, and to lade them
with a still more grievous burden. It was absolutely necessary that
deliverance should come
from without. But from whence has it to come? Where were the resources
to pay their
ransom? or where was the power to break their chains? And, even were
there both the one and
the other, where was the will? Who would take the trouble of delivering
them? Alas! there
was no hope, either within or around. They had only to look up, their
refuge was in God. He
had both the power and the will. He could accomplish a redemption both
by price and by
power. In Jehovah, and in Him alone, was there salvation for ruined and
oppressed Israel.
Thus is it in every case. "Neither is there salvation in any
other: for there is none other name
under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved." (Acts 4:
12) The sinner is in the
hands of one who rules him with despotic power. He is "sold under
sin" "led captive by Satan
at his will"—fast bound in the fetters of lust, passion, and
temper, "without strength"—
"without hope"—"without God." Such is the sinner's
condition. How, then, can he help
himself? What can he do? He is the slave of another, and everything he
does is done in the
capacity of a slave. His thoughts, his words, his acts, are the
thoughts, words, and acts of a
slave. Yea, though he should weep and sigh for emancipation, his very
tears and sighs are the
melancholy proofs of his slavery. He may struggle for freedom; but his
very struggle, though
it evinces a desire for liberty, is the positive declaration of his
bondage.
Nor is it merely a question of the sinner's condition; his very nature
is radically corrupt—
wholly under the power of Satan. Hence, he not only needs to be
introduced into a new
condition, but also to be endowed with a new nature. The nature and the
condition go
together. If it were possible for the sinner to better his condition,
what would it avail so long
as his nature was irrecoverably bad? A nobleman might take a beggar off
the streets and adopt
him; he might endow him with a noble's wealth and set him in a noble's
position; but he could
not impart to him nobility of nature; and thus the nature of a
beggarman would never be at
home in the condition of a nobleman. There must be a nature to suit the
condition; and there
must be a condition to suit the capacity, the desires, the affections,
and the tendencies of the
nature.
Now, in the gospel of the grace of God, we are taught that the believer
is introduced into an
entirely new condition; that he is no longer viewed as in his former
state of guilt and
condemnation, but as in a state of perfect and everlasting
justification; that the condition in
which God now sees him is not only one of full pardon; but it is such
that infinite holiness
cannot find so much as a single stain. He has been taken out of his
former condition of guilt,
and placed absolutely and eternally in a new condition of unspotted
righteousness. It is not, by
any means, that his old condition is improved. This was utterly
impossible. "That which is
crooked cannot be made straight." "Can the Ethiopian change
his skin, or the leopard his
spots?" Nothing can be more opposed to the fundamental truth of
the gospel than the theory
of a gradual improvement in the sinner's condition. He is born in a
certain condition, and until
he is "born again" he cannot be in any other. We may try to
improve. He may resolve to be
better for the future turn over a new leaf"—to live a different
sort of life; but, all the while, he
has not moved a single hair's breadth out of his real condition as a
sinner. He may become
"religious" as it is called, he may try to pray, he may
diligently attend to ordinances, and
exhibit an appearance of moral reform; but none of these things can, in
the smallest degree,
affect his positive condition before God.
The case is precisely similar as to the question of nature. How can a
man alter his nature? He
may make it undergo a process, he may try to subdue it, to place it
under discipline; but it is
nature still. "That which is born of the flesh is flesh."
There must be a new nature as well as a
new condition. And how is this to be had? By believing God's testimony
concerning His Son.
"As many as received him, to them gave he power to become the sons
of God, even to them
that believe on his Name: which were born, not of blood, nor of the
will of the flesh, nor of
the will of man, but of God." (John 1: 12, 13) Here we learn that
those who believe on the
name of the only-begotten Son of God, have the right or privilege of
being sons of God. They
are made partakers of a new nature. They have gotten eternal life.
"He that believeth on the
Son hath everlasting life." (John 3: 36) "Verily, verily, I
say unto you, he that heareth my
word, and believeth on him that sent me, hath everlasting life, and
shall not come into
condemnation; but is passed from death unto life. " (John 5: 24)
"And this is life eternal, that
they might know thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou
hast sent." (John 17.3)
"And this is the record, that God hath given to us eternal life,
and this life is in his Son." "He
that hath the Son hath life." (1 John 5: 11, 12)
Such is the plain doctrine of the Word in reference to the momentous
questions of condition
and nature. But on what is all this founded How is the believer
introduced into a condition of
divine righteousness and made partaker of the divine nature? It all
rests on the great truth that
"JESUS DIED AND ROSE AGAIN." That Blessed One left the bosom
of eternal love—the
throne of glory—the mansions of unfading light came down into this
world of guilt and
woe—took upon Him the likeness of sinful flesh; and, having perfectly
exhibited and
perfectly glorified God, in all the movements of His blessed life here
below, He died upon the
cross, under the full weight of His people's transgressions. By so
doing, He divinely met all
that was, or could be, against us. He magnified the law and made it
honourable; and, having
done so, He became a curse by hanging on the tree. Every claim was met,
every enemy
silenced, every obstacle removed. "Mercy and truth are met
together; righteousness and peace
have kissed each other." Infinite justice was satisfied, and
infinite love can flow, in all its
soothing and refreshing virtues, into the broken heart of the sinner;
while, at the same time,
the cleansing and atoning stream that flowed from the pierced side of a
crucified Christ,
perfectly meets all the cravings of a guilty and convicted conscience.
The Lord Jesus, on the
cross, stood in our place. He was our representative. He died,
"the just for the unjust." "He
was made sin for us." (2 Cor. 5: 21; 2 Peter 3: 18) He died the
sinner's death, was buried, and
rose again, having accomplished all. Hence, there is absolutely nothing
against the believer.
He is linked with Christ and stands in the same condition of
righteousness. "As he is so are we
in this world." (1 John 4: 17)
This gives settled peace to the conscience. If I am no longer in a
condition of guilt, but in a
condition of justification; if God only sees me in Christ and as
Christ, then, clearly, my
portion is perfect peace. "Being justified by faith, we have peace
with God through our Lord
Jesus Christ." (Rom. 5: 1) The blood of the Lamb has cancelled all
the believer's guilt, blotted
out his heavy debt, and given him a perfectly blank page, in the
presence of that holiness
which "cannot look upon sin."
But the believer has not merely found peace with God; he is made a
child of God, so that he
can taste the sweetness of communion with the Father and the Son,
through the power of the
Holy Ghost. The cross is to be viewed in two ways: first, as satisfying
God's claims; secondly,
as expressing God's affections. If I look at my sins in connection with
the claims of God as a
Judge, I find, in the cross, a perfect settlement of those claims. God,
as a Judge, has been
divinely satisfied—yea, glorified, in the cross. But there is more than
this. God had affections
as well as claims; and, in the cross of the Lord Jesus Christ, all
those affections are sweetly
and touchingly told out into the sinner's ear; while, at the same time,
he is made the partaker
of a new nature which is capable of enjoying those affections and of
having fellowship with
the heart from which they flow. "For Christ also hath once
suffered for sins, the just for the
unjust, that he might bring us to God." (1 Peter 3: 18) Thus we
are not only brought into a
condition, but unto a Person, even God Himself, and we are endowed with
a nature which
can delight in Him. We also
joy in God, through our Lord Jesus Christ, by whom we have
now received the atonement." (Rom. 5: 11)
What force and beauty, therefore, can we see in those emancipating
words, "Let my people
go, that they may hold a feast unto me in the wilderness."
"The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he hath anointed me to preach the gospel; he hath sent me to
heal the broken-hearted,
to preach deliverance to the captives, and recovering of sight to the
blind, to set at liberty
them that are bruised." (Luke 4: 18) The glad tidings of the
gospel announce full deliverance
from every yoke of bondage. Peace and liberty are the boons which that
gospel bestows on all
who believe it, as God has declared it.
And mark, it is "that they may hold a feast to me." If they
were to get done with Pharaoh, it
was that they might begin with God. This was a great change. Instead of
toiling under
Pharaoh's taskmasters, they were to feast in company with Jehovah; and,
although they were
to pass from Egypt into the wilderness, still the divine presence was
to accompany them; and
if the wilderness was rough and dreary, it was the way to the land of
Canaan. The divine
purpose was, that they should hold a feast unto the Lord, in the
wilderness; and, in order to do
this, they should be "let go" out of Egypt.
However, Pharaoh was in no wise disposed to yield obedience to the
divine mandate. "Who is
the Lord," said he, "that I should obey his voice to let
Israel go. I know not the Lord, neither
will I let Israel go." (Ex. 5: 2) Pharaoh most truly expressed, in
these words, his real
condition. His condition was one of ignorance and consequent
disobedience. Both go
together. If God be not known, He cannot be obeyed; for obedience is
ever founded upon
knowledge. When the soul is blessed with the knowledge of God, it finds
this knowledge to
be life, (John 17: 3) and life is power; and when I get power I can
act, It is obvious that one
cannot act without life; and therefore it is most unintelligent to set
people upon doing certain
things, in order to get that by which alone they can do anything.
But Pharaoh was as ignorant of himself as he was of the Lord. He did
not know that he was a
poor, vile worm of the earth, and that he had been raised up for the
express purpose of
making known the glory of the very One whom he said he knew not. (Ex.
9: 16; Rom. 9: 17)
"And they said, The God of the Hebrews has met with us: let us go,
we pray thee, three days
journey into the desert, and sacrifice unto the Lord our God; lest he
fall upon us with
pestilence or with the sword, And the king of Egypt said unto them,
Wherefore do ye, Moses
and Aaron, let the people from their work? Get you unto your burdens .
. . . . let there more
work be laid upon the men, that they may labour therein; and let them
not regard vain words."
(Ver. 3-9)
What a development of the secret springs of the human heart we have
here! What complete
incompetency to enter into the things of God! All the divine titles and
the divine revelations
were, in Pharaoh's estimation, "vain words." What did he know
or care about "three days
journey into the wilderness," or "a feast to Jehovah?"
How could he understand the need of
such a journey, or the nature or object of such a feast? Impossible. He
could understand
burden-bearing and brick-making; these things had an air of reality
about them, in his
judgement; but as to ought of God, His service, or His worship, he
could only regard it in the
light of an idle chimera, devised by those who only wanted an excuse to
make their escape
from the stern realities of actual life.
Thus has it, too often, been with the wise and great of this world.
They have ever been the
most forward to write folly and vanity upon the divine testimonies.
Hearken, for example, to
the estimate which the "most noble Feasts" formed of the
grand question at issue between
Paul and the Jews: "they had certain questions against him of
their own superstition, and of
one Jesus which was dead, whom Paul affirmed to be alive." (Acts
25: 19) Alas! how little he
knew what he was saying! How little he knew what was involved in the
question, as to
whether "Jesus" was "dead" or "alive!" He
thought not of the solemn bearing of that
momentous question upon himself and his friends, Agrippa and Bernice;
but that did not alter
the matter; he and they know somewhat more about it now, though in
their passing moment
of earthly glory they regarded it as a superstitious question, wholly
beneath the notice of men
of common sense, and only fit to occupy the disordered brain of
visionary enthusiasts. Yes;
the stupendous question which fixes the destiny of every child of
Adam—on which is
founded the present and everlasting condition of the Church and the
world which stands
connected with all the divine counsels—this question was, in the
judgement of Feasts, a vain
superstition.
Thus was it in Pharaoh's case. He knew nothing of "the Lord God of
the Hebrews"—the great
"I AM," and hence he regarded all that Moses and Aaron had
said to him, in reference to
doing sacrifice to God, as "vain words." The things of God
must ever seem vain, profitless,
and unmeaning, to the unsanctified mind of man. His name may be made
use of as part of the
flippant phraseology of a cold and formal religiousness; but He Himself
is not known. His
precious name, which, to a believer's heart, has wrapped up in it all
that he can possibly need
or desire, has no significancy, no power, no virtue for an unbeliever.
All, therefore, connected
with God, His words, His counsels, His thoughts, His ways, everything,
in short, that treats of,
or refers to, Him, is regarded as "vain words."
However, the time is rapidly approaching when it will not be thus. The
judgement-seat of
Christ, the terrors of the world to come, the surges of the lake of
fire, will not be "Vain
words." Assuredly not; and it should be the great aim of all who,
through grace, believe them
now to be realities, to press them upon the consciences of those who,
like Pharaoh, regard the
making of bricks as the only thing worth thinking about—the only thing
that can be called
reel and solid.
Alas! that even Christians should so frequently be found living in the
region of sight, the
region of earth, the region of nature, as to lose the deep, abiding,
influential sense of the
reality of divine and heavenly things. We want to live more in the
region of faith, the region
of heaven, the region of the "new creation." Then we should
see things as God sees them,
think about them as He thinks; and our whole course and character would
be more elevated,
more disinterested, more thoroughly separated from earth and earthly
things.
But Moses' sorest trial did not arise from Pharaoh's judgement about
his mission The true and
Wholehearted servant of Christ must ever expect to be looked on, by the
men of this world, as
a mere visionary enthusiast. The point of view from which they
contemplate him is such as to
lead us to look for this judgement and none other. The more faithful he
is to his heavenly
Master, the more he walks in His footsteps, the more conformed he is to
His image, the more
likely he is to be considered, by the sons of earth, as one
"beside himself." This, therefore,
should neither disappoint nor discourage him. But then it is a far more
painful thing when his
service and testimony are misunderstood, unheeded, or rejected by those
who are themselves
the specific objects thereof. When such is the case, he needs to be
much with God, much in
the secret of His mind, much in the power of communion, to have his
spirit sustained in the
abiding reality of his path and service. Under such trying
circumstances, if one be not fully
persuaded of the divine commission, and conscious of the divine
presence, he will be almost
sure to break down.
Had not Moses been thus upheld, his heart must have utterly failed him
when the augmented
pressure of Pharaoh's power elicited from the officers of the children
of Israel such
desponding and depressing words as these:—"The Lord look upon you,
and judge; because ye
have made our savour to be abhorred in the eyes of Pharaoh, and in the
eyes of his servants, to
put a sword in their hand to slay us." This was gloomy enough; and
Moses felt it so, for "he
returned unto the Lord, and said, Lord, wherefore hast thou so evil
entreated this people? Why
is it that thou hast sent me? For since I came unto Pharaoh to speak in
thy name, he hath done
evil to this people; neither hast thou delivered thy people at
all." The aspect of things had
become most discouraging, at the very moment when deliverance seemed at
hand; just as, in
nature, the darkest hour of the night is often that which immediately
precedes the dawn of the
morning. Thus will it assuredly be, in Israel's history, in the latter
day. The moment of most
profound darkness and depressing gloom will precede the bursting of
"the Sun of
Righteousness" from behind the cloud, with healing in His fingers,
to heal eternally, "the hurt
of the daughter of His people."
We may well question how far genuine faith, or a mortified will, dictated
the "wherefore?"
and the "why?" of Moses, in the above quotation. Still, the
Lord does not rebuke a
remonstrance drawn forth by the intense pressure of the moment. He most
graciously replies,
" Now shalt thou see what I will do to Pharaoh: for with a strong
hand shall he let them go,
and with a strong hand shall he drive them out of his land." (Ex.
6: 1) This reply breathes
peculiar grace. Instead of reproving the petulance which could presume
to call in question the
unsearchable ways of the great I AM, that ever gracious One seeks to
relieve the harassed
spirit of His servant, by unfolding to him what He was about to do.
This was worthy of the
blessed God—the unupbraiding Giver of every good and every perfect
gift. "He knoweth our
frame; he remembereth that we are dust." (Ps. 103: 24)
Nor is it merely in His actings that He would cause the heart to find
its solace, but in
Himself—in His very name and character. This is full, divine, and
everlasting blessedness.
When the heart can find its sweet relief in God Himself—when it can
retreat into the strong
tower which His name affords—when it can find, in His character, a
perfect answer to all its
need, then truly, it is raised far above the region of the creature-it
can turn away from earth's
fair promises—it can place the proper value on man's lofty pretensions.
The heart which is
endowed with an experimental knowledge of God can not only look forth
upon earth, and say
"all is vanity," but it can also look straight up to Him, and
say, "all my springs are in thee."
"And God spake unto Moses, and said unto him, I am the Lord: and I
appeared unto Abraham,
unto Isaac, and unto Jacob, by the name of God Almighty; but by my name
JEHOVAH was I
not known to them. And I have also established my covenant with them to
give them the land
of Canaan, the land of their pilgrimage, wherein they were strangers.
And I have also heard
the groaning of the children of Israel, whom the Egyptians keep in
bondage; and I have
remembered my covenant." "JEHOVAH" is the title which He
takes as the Deliverer of His
people, on the ground of His covenant of pure and sovereign grace He
reveals Himself as the
great self-existing Source of redeeming love, establishing His
counsels, fulfilling His
promises, delivering His elect people from every enemy and every evil.
It was Israel's
privilege ever to abide under the safe covert of that significant
title—a title which displays
God acting for His own glory, and taking up His oppressed people in
order to show forth in
them that glory.
"Wherefore say unto the children of Israel, I am the Lord, and I
will bring you out from under
the burdens of the Egyptians, and I will rid you out of their bondage,
and I will redeem you
with a stretched out arm, and with great judgements. And I will take
you to me for a people,
and I will be to yon a God; and ye shall know that I am the Lord your
God, which bringeth
you out from under the burdens of the Egyptians. And I will bring you
in unto the land
concerning the which I did swear to give it unto Abraham, to Isaac, and
to Jacob; and I will
give it you for an heritage: I am the Lord. " (Ver. 6-8.) All this
speaks the purest, freest,
richest grace. Jehovah presents Himself to the hearts of His people as
the One who was to act
in them, for them, and with them, for the display of His own glory.
Ruined and helpless as
they were, He had come down to show forth His glory, to exhibit His
grace, and to furnish a
sample of His power, in their full deliverance. His glory and their
salvation were inseparably
connected. They were afterwards reminded of all this, as we read in the
book of
Deuteronomy. "The Lord did not set His love upon yon nor choose
you, because ye were more
in number than any people; for ye were the fewest of all people; but
because the Lord loved
you, and because he would keep the oath which he had sworn unto your
fathers, hath the Lord
brought you out with a mighty hand, and redeemed you out of the house
of bondmen, from
the hand of Pharaoh king of Egypt." (Ex. 7: 7, 8)
Nothing is more calculated to assure and establish the doubting,
trembling heart than the
knowledge that God has taken us up, just as we are, and in the full
intelligence of what we
are; and, moreover, that He can never make any fresh discovery to cause
an alteration in the
character and measure of His love. "Having loved his own which
were in the world, he loved
them unto the end." (John 13) Whom He loves and as He loves, He
loves unto the end. This is
an unspeakable comfort. God knew all about us—He knew the very worst of
us, when He
manifested His love to us in the gift of His Son. He knew what we
needed, and He provided
it. He knew what was due, and He paid it. He knew what was to be
wrought, and He wrought
it. His own requirements had to be met, and He met them. It is all His
own work. Hence, we
find Him saying to Israel, as in the above passage, "I will bring
you out"—"I will bring you
in"—"I will take you to me"—"I will give you the
land"—"I am Jehovah." It was all what He
could do, as founded upon what He was. Until this great truth is fully
laid hold of, until it
enters into the soul, in the power of the Holy Ghost, there cannot be
settled peace. The heart
can never be happy or the conscience at rest until one knows and
believes that all divine
requirements have been divinely answered.
The remainder of our section is taken up with a record of "the
heads of their fathers' houses,"
and is very interesting, as showing us Jehovah coming in and numbering
those that belonged
to Himself, though they were still in the possession of the enemy. Israel
was God's people,
and He here counts up those on whom He had a sovereign claim. Amazing
grace! To find an
object in those who were in the midst of all the degradation of
Egyptian bondage! This was
worthy of God. The One who had made the worlds, who was surrounded by
hosts of unfallen
angels, ever ready to "do his pleasure," should come down for
the purpose of taking up a
number of bondslaves with whom He condescended to connect His name. He
came down and
stood amid the brick-kilns of Egypt, and there beheld a people groaning
beneath the lash of
the task-masters, and He uttered those memorable accents, "Let my
people go;" and, having so
said, He proceeded to count them up, as much as to say, "These are
mine; let me see how
many I have, that not one may be left behind." "He taketh up
the beggar from the dunghill, to
set him amongst the princes of his people, and to make him inherit the
throne of glory." (1
Sam. 2)
Exodus 7—11
These five chapters form one distinct section, the contents of which
may be distributed into
the three following divisions, namely, the ten judgements from the hand
of Jehovah; the
resistance of "Jannes and Jambres;" and the four objections
of Pharaoh.
The whole land of Egypt was made to tremble beneath the successive
strokes of the rod of
God. All from the monarch on his throne to the menial at the mill, were
made to feel the
terrible weight of that rod. "He sent Moses his servant, and Aaron
whom he had chosen. They
showed his signs among them, and wonders in the land of Ham. He sent
darkness and made it
dark; and they rebelled not against his word. He turned their waters
into blood, and slew their
fish. !heir land brought forth frogs in abundance, in the chambers of
their kings. He spake,
and there came divers sorts of flies and lice in all their coasts. He
gave them hail for rain, and
flaming fire in their land. He smote their vines: also, and their
fig-trees; and brake the trees of
their coasts. He spake, and their locusts came, and the caterpillars,
and that without number,
and did eat up all the herbs in their land, and devoured the fruit of
their ground. He smote also
all the firstborn in their land, the chief of all their strength. (Ps.
105: 26-36)
Here the inspired Psalmist has given a condensed view of those
appalling afflictions which
the hardness of Pharaoh's heart brought upon his land and upon his
people. This haughty
monarch had set himself to resist the sovereign will and course of the
Most High God; and, as
a just consequence, he was given over to judicial blindness and
hardness of heart. "And the
Lord hardened the heart of Pharaoh, and he hearkened not unto them, as
the Lord had spoken
unto Moses. And the Lord said unto Moses, Rise up early in the morning,
and stand before
Pharaoh: and say unto him, Thus saith the Lord God of the Hebrews, Let
my people go, that
they may serve me. For I will at this time send all my plagues upon
thine heart, and upon thy
servants, and upon thy people; that thou mayest know that there is none
like me in all the
earth. For now I will stretch out my hand that I may smite thee and thy
people with pestilence;
and thou shalt be cut off from the earth. And in very deed for this
cause have I raised thee up,
for to show in thee my power; and that my name. may be declared
throughout all the earth."
(Ex. 9: 12-16)
In contemplating Pharaoh and his actings, the mind is carried forward
to the stirring scenes of
the Book of Revelation, in which we find the last proud oppressor of
the people of God
bringing down upon his kingdom and upon himself the seven vials of the
wrath of the
Almighty. It is God's purpose that Israel shall be pre-eminent in the
earth; and, therefore,
every one who presumes to stand in the way of that pre-eminence must be
set aside. Divine
grace must find its object; and every one who would act as a barrier in
the way of that grace
must be taken out of the way. Whether it be Egypt, Babylon, or
"the beast that was, is not, and
shall be present," it matters not. Divine power will clear the
channel for divine grace to flow,
and eternal woe be to all who stand in the way. They shall taste,
throughout the everlasting
course of ages, the bitter fruit of having exalted themselves against
"the Lord God of the
Hebrews." He has said to His people, "no weapon that is
formed against thee shall prosper,"
and His infallible faithfulness will assuredly make good what His
infinite grace hath
promised.
Thus, in Pharaoh's case, when he persisted in holding, with an iron
grasp, the Israel of God,
the vials of divine wrath were poured forth upon him; and the land of
Egypt was covered,
throughout its entire length and breadth, with darkness, disease, and
desolation. So will it be,
by and by, when the last great oppressor shall emerge from the
bottomless pit, armed with
Satanic power, to crush beneath his "foot of pride" the
favoured objects of Jehovah's choice.
His throne shall be overturned, his kingdom devastated by the seven
last plagues, and, finally,
he himself plunged, not in the Red Sea, but "in the lake that
burneth with fire and brimstone."
(Comp. Rev. 17: 8; Rev. 20: 10)
Not one jot or one tittle of what God has promised to Abraham, Isaac,
and Jacob, shall fail.
He will accomplish all. Notwithstanding all that has been said and done
to the contrary, God
remembers His promises, and He will fulfil them. They are all "yea
and amen in Christ Jesus."
Dynasties have risen and acted on the stage of this world; thrones have
been erected on the
apparent ruins of Jerusalem's ancient glory; empires have flourished
for a time, and then
fallen to decay; ambitious potentates have contended for the possession
of "the land of
promise"—all these things have taken place; but Jehovah has said
concerning Palestine," the
land shall not be sold for ever: for the land is mine." (Lev. 25:
23) No one, therefore, shall
ever finally possess that land but Jehovah Himself, and He will inherit
it through the seed of
Abraham. One plain passage of scripture is quite sufficient to
establish the mind in reference
to this or any other subject. The land of Canaan is for the seed of
Abraham, and the seed of
Abraham for the land of Canaan; nor can any power of earth or hell ever
reverse this divine
order. The eternal God has pledged His word, and the blood of the
everlasting covenant has
flowed to ratify that word. Who, then, shall make it void? "Heaven
and earth shall pass away,
but that word shall never pass away." Truly, "there is none
like unto the God of Jeshurun, who
rideth upon the heaven in thy help, and in his excellency on the sky.
The eternal God is thy
refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms, and he shall thrust
out the enemy from before
thee; and shall say, Destroy them. Israel then shall dwell in safety
alone: the fountain of Jacob
shall be upon a land of corn and wine; also his heavens shall drop down
dew. Happy art thou,
O Israel: who is like unto thee, O people saved by the Lord, the shield
of thy help, and who is
the sword of thy excellency! and thine enemies shall be found liars
unto thee; and thou shalt
tread upon their high places." (Deut. 33: 46-29)
We shall now consider, in the second place, the opposition of
"Jannes and Jambres," the
magicians of Egypt. We should not have known the names of these ancient
opposers of the
truth of God, had they not been recorded by the Holy Ghost, in
connection with "the perilous
times" of which the Apostle Paul warns his son Timothy. It is
important that the Christian
reader should clearly understand the real nature of the opposition
given to Moses by those
magicians, and in order that he may have the subject fully before him,
I shall quote the entire
passage from St. Paul's Epistle to Timothy. It is one of deep and awful
solemnity.
"This know, also, that in the last days perilous times shall come.
for men shall be lovers of
their own selves, covetous, boasters, proud, blasphemers, disobedient
to parents, unthankful,
unholy, without natural affection, truce-breakers, false accusers,
incontinent, fierce, despisers
of those that are good, traitors, heady, high minded, lovers of
pleasures rather than lovers of
God; having a form of godliness, but denying the power thereof: from
such turn away. For of
this sort are they which creep into houses, and lead captive silly
women laden with sins, led
away with divers lusts, ever learning, and never able to come to the
knowledge of the truth.
Now as Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses, so do these also resist the
truth: men of corrupt
minds, reprobate concerning the faith. But they shall proceed no
further: for their folly shall
be manifest unto all, as theirs also was." (2 Tim. 3: 1-9)
Now, it is peculiarly solemn to mark the nature of this resistance to
the truth. The mode in
which "Jannes and Jambres withstood Moses" was simply by
imitating, so far as they were
able, whatever he did. We do not find that they attributed his actings
to a false or evil energy,
but rather that they sought to neutralise their power upon the
conscience, by doing the same
things. What Moses did they could do, so that, after all there was no
great difference. One was
as good as the other. A miracle is a miracle. If Moses wrought miracles
to get the people out
of Egypt, they could work miracles to keep them in; so where was the
difference?
From all this we learn the solemn truth that the most Satanic
resistance to God's testimony, in
the world, is offered by those who, though they imitate the effects of
the truth, have but "the
form of godliness," and "deny the power thereof."
Persons of this class can do the same
things, adopt the same habits and forms, use the same phraseology,
profess the same opinions
as others. If the true Christian, constrained by the love of Christ,
feeds the hungry, clothes the
naked, visits the sick, circulates the scriptures, distributes tracts,
supports the gospel, engages
in prayer, sings praise, preaches the gospel, the formalist can do
every one of these things;
and this, be it observed, is the special character of the resistance
offered to the truth " in the
last days''—this is the spirit of " Jannes and Jambres." How
needful to understand this! How
important to remember that, "as Jannes and Jambres withstood
Moses, so do" those self-
loving, world-seeking, pleasure-hunting professors, "resist the
truth!" They would not be
without "a form of godliness;" but, while adopting "the
form," because it is customary, they
hate "the power," because it involves self-denial. "The
power" of godliness involves the
recognition of God's claims, the implanting of His kingdom in the
heart, and the consequent
exhibition thereof in the whole life and character; but the formalist
knows nothing of this.
"The power" of godliness could never comport with any one of
those hideous features set
forth in the foregoing quotation; but" the form," while it
covers them over, leaves them
wholly unsubdued; and this the formalist likes. He does not want his
lusts subdued, his
pleasures interfered with, his passions curbed, his affections
governed, his heart purified. He
wants just as much religion as will enable him "to make the best
of both worlds." He knows
nothing of giving up the world that is, because of having; found
"the world to come."
In marking the forms of Satan's opposition to the truth of God, we find
that his method has
ever been, first, to oppose it by open violence; and then, if that did
not succeed, to corrupt it
by producing a counterfeit. Hence, he first sought to slay Moses, (Ex.
2: 15), and having failed
to accomplish his purpose, he sought to imitate his works.
Thus, too, has it been in reference to the truth committed to the
Church of God. Satan's early
efforts showed themselves in connection with the wrath of the chief
priests and elders, the
judgement-seat, the prison, and the sword. But, in the passage just
quoted from 2 Timothy, we
find no reference to any such agency. Often violence has made way for
the far more wily and
dangerous instrumentality of a powerless form, an empty profession, a
human counterfeit.
The enemy, instead of appearing with the sword of persecution in his
hand, walks about with
the cloak of profession on his shoulders. He professes and imitates
that which he once
opposed and persecuted; and, by so doing, gains most appalling
advantages, for the time
being. The fearful forms of moral evil which, from age to age, have
stained the page of
human history, instead of being found only where we might naturally
look for them, amid the
dens and caves of human darkness, are to be found carefully arranged
beneath the drapery of
a cold, powerless, uninfluential profession; and this is one of Satan's
grand masterpieces.
That man, as a fallen, corrupt creature, should love himself, be
covetous, boastful, proud, and
the like, is natural; but that he should be all these, beneath the fair
covering of "a form of
godliness," marks the special energy of Satan in his resistance to
the truth in "the last days."
That man should stand forth in the bold exhibition of those hideous
vices, lusts, and passions,
which are the necessary results of departure from the source of
infinite holiness and purity, is
only what might be expected, for man will be what he is to the end of
the chapter. But on the
other hand, when we find the holy name of the Lord Jesus Christ
connected with man's
wickedness and deadly evil—when we find holy principles connected with
unholy
practices—when we find all the characteristics of Gentile corruption,
referred to in the first
chapter of Romans, associated with "a form of godliness,"
then, truly, we may say, these are
the terrible features of "the last days"—this is the
resistance of "Jannes and Jambres."
However, there were only three things in which the magicians of Egypt
were able to imitate
the servants of the true and living God, namely, in turning their rods
into serpents, (Ex. 7: 12)
turning the water into blood, (Ex. 7: 29) and bringing up the frogs;
(Ex. 8: 7) but, in the
fourth, which involved the exhibition of life, in connection with the
display of nature's
humiliation, they were totally confounded, and obliged to own, "
this is the finger of God."
(Ex. 8: 16-19) Thus it is also with the latter-day resisters of the
truth. All that they do is by the
direct energy of Satan, and lies within the range of his power.
Moreover, its specific object is
to "resist the truth."
The three things which "Jannes and Jambres" were able to
accomplish were characterised by
Satanic energy, death, and uncleanness; that is to say, the serpents,
the blood, and the frogs.
Thus it was they "withstood Moses;" and "so do these
also resist the truth," and hinder its
moral weight and action upon the conscience. There is nothing which so
tends to deaden the
power of truth us the fact that persons who are not under its influence
at all, do the self-same
things as those who are. This is Satan's agency just now. He seeks to
have all regarded as
Christians. He would fain make us believe ourselves surrounded by
"a Christian world;" but it
is counterfeit Christianity, which, so far from being a testimony to
the truth, is designed by
the enemy of the truth, to withstand its purifying and elevating
influence.
In short, the servant of Christ and the witness for the truth is
surrounded, on all sides, by the
spirit of "Jannes and Jambres;" and it is well for him to
remember this—to know thoroughly
the evil with which he has to grapple—to bear in mind that it is
Satan's imitation of God's
reality, produced, not by the wand of an openly-wicked magician, but by
the actings of false
professors, who have "a form of godliness, hut deny the power
thereof," who do things
apparently right and good, but who have neither the life of Christ in
their souls, the love of
God in their hearts, nor the power of the word in their consciences.
"But," adds the inspired apostle, "they shall proceed no
further, for their folly shall be
manifested unto all, as theirs also was." Truly the
"folly" of "Jannes and Jambres" was
manifest unto all, when they not only failed to imitate the further
actings of Moses and Aaron,
but actually became involved in the judgements of God. This is a solemn
point. The folly of
all who are merely possessed of the form will, in like manner, be made
manifest. They will
not only be quite unable to imitate the full and proper effects of
divine life and power, but
they will themselves become the subjects of those judgements which will
result from the
rejection of that truth which they have resisted.
Will any one say that all this has no voice for a day of powerless
profession? Assuredly, it has.
It should speak to each conscience in living power; it should tell on
each heart, in accents of
impressive solemnity. It should lead each one to enquire seriously
whether he is testifying for
the truth, by walking in the power of godliness, or hindering it, and
neutralising its action, by
having only the form. The effect of the power of godliness will be seen
by our" continuing in
the things which we have learned." None will continue, save those
who are taught of God;
those, by the power of the Spirit of God, have drunk in divine
principle, at the pure fountain
of inspiration.
Blessed be God, there are many such throughout the various sections of
the professing
Church. There are many, here and there, whose consciences have been
bathed in the atoning
blood of "the Lamb of God," whose hearts beat high with
genuine attachment to His Person,
and whose spirits are cheered by "that blessed hope" of
seeing Him as He is, and of being
eternally conformed to His image. It is encouraging to think of such.
It is an unspeakable
mercy to have fellowship with those who can give a reason of the hope
that is in them, and for
the position which they occupy. May the Lord add to their number daily.
May the power of
godliness spread far and wide in these last days, so that a bright and
well-sustained testimony
may be raised to the name of Him who is worthy.
The third point in our section yet remains to be considered, namely,
Pharaoh's four subtle
objections to the full deliverance and complete separation of God's
people from the land of
Egypt. The first of these we have in Ex. 8: 25. "And Pharaoh
called for Moses and Aaron, and
said, Go ye, sacrifice to your God in the land." It is needless to
remark here, that whether the
magicians withstood, or Pharaoh objected, it was in reality, Satan that
stood behind the
scenes; and his manifest object, in this proposal of Pharaoh, was to
hinder the testimony to
the Lord's name—a testimony connected with the thorough separation of
His people from
Egypt. There could, evidently, be no such testimony had they remained
in Egypt, even though
they were to sacrifice to Him. They would have taken common ground with
the
uncircumcised Egyptians, and put Jehovah on a level with the gods of
Egypt. In this case an
Egyptian could have said to an Israelite, "I see no difference
between us; you have your
worship and we have ours; it is all alike."
As a matter of course, men think it quite right for every one to have a
religion, let it be what it
may. Provided we are sincere, and do not interfere with our neighbour's
creed, it does not
matter what shape our religion may happen to wear. Such are the
thoughts of men in
reference to what they call religion; but it is very obvious that the
glory of the name of Jesus
finds no place in all this. The demand for separation is that which the
enemy will ever
oppose, and which the heart of man cannot understand. The heart may
crave religiousness
because conscience testifies that all is not right; but it craves the
world as well. It would like
to "sacrifice to God in the land;" and Satan's object is
gained when people accept of a worldly
religion, and refuse to "come out and be separate." (2 Cor.
6) His unvarying purpose, from the
beginning, has been to hinder the testimony to God's name on the earth.
Such was the dark
tendency of the proposal, "Go ye, sacrifice to your God in the
land." What a complete damper
to the testimony, had this proposal been acceded to! God's people in
Egypt and God Himself
linked with the idols of Egypt! Terrible blasphemy!
Reader, we should deeply ponder this. The effort to induce Israel to
worship God in Egypt
reveals a far deeper principle than we might, at first sight, imagine.
The enemy would rejoice,
at any time, by any means, or under any circumstances, to get even the
semblance of divine
sanction for the world's religion. He has no objection to such
religion. He gains his end as
effectually by what is termed "the religious world" as by any
other agency; and, hence, when
he can succeed in getting a true Christian to accredit the religion of
the day, he gains a grand
point. As a matter of actual fact, one knows that nothing elicits such
intense indignation as the
divine principle of separation from this present evil world. You may
hold the same opinions,
preach the same doctrines, do the same work; but if you only attempt,
in ever so feeble a
manner, to act upon the divine commands, " from such turn
away," (2 Tim. 3: 5) and "come
out from among them," (2 Cor. 6: 17) you may reckon assuredly upon
the most vigorous
opposition. Now how is this to be accounted for? Mainly by the fact
that Christians, in
separation from this world's hollow religiousness, bear a testimony for
Christ which they
never can bear while connected with it.
There is a very wide difference between human religion and Christ. A
poor, benighted Hindu
might talk to you of his religion, but he knows nothing of Christ. The
apostle does not say, "if
there be any consolation in religion;" though, doubtless, the
votaries of each kind of religion
find what they deem consolation therein. Paul, on the other hand, found
his consolation in
Christ, having fully proved the worthlessness of religion, and that
too, in its fairest and most
imposing form. (Comp. Gal. 1: 13, 14; Phil. 3: 4-11)
True, the Spirit of God speaks to us of "pure religion and
undefiled;" but the unregenerate
man cannot, by any means, participate therein; for how could he
possibly take part in ought
that is "pure and undefiled?" This religion is from heaven,
the source of all that is pure and
lovely; it is exclusively before the eye of "God and the
Father:" it is for the exercise of the
functions of that new name, with which all are endowed who believe on
the name of the Son
of God. (John 1: 12, 13; James 1: 18; 1 Peter 1: 23; 1 John 5: 1)
Finally, it ranges itself under
the two comprehensive heads of active benevolence and personal
holiness; "To visit the
fatherless and widows in their affliction, and to keep himself
unspotted from the world."
(James 1: 27)
Now if you go through the entire catalogue of the genuine fruits of
Christianity, you will find
them all classed under these two heads; and it is deeply interesting to
observe that, whether
we turn to the eighth of Exodus or to the first of James, we find
separation from the world put
forward as an indispensable quality in the true service of God, Nothing
could be acceptable
before God—nothing could receive from His hand the stamp of "pure
and undefiled," which
was polluted by contact with an "evil world." "Come out
from among them, and be ye
separate, saith the Lord, and touch not the unclean thing; and I will
receive you, and will be a
father unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the Lord
Almighty." (2 Cor. 6:
17, 18)
There was no meeting-place for Jehovah and His redeemed in Egypt; yes,
with them,
redemption and separation from Egypt were one and the same thing. God
had said, "I am
come down to deliver them," and nothing short of this could either
satisfy or glorify Him. A
salvation which would have left them still in Egypt, could not possibly
be God's salvation.
Moreover, we must bear in mind that Jehovah's purpose, in the salvation
of Israel, as well as
in the destruction of Pharaoh, was, that "His name might be
declared throughout all the
earth;" and what declaration could there be of that name or
character, were His people to
attempt to worship Him in Egypt? Either none whatever or an utterly
false one. Wherefore, it
was essentially necessary, in order to the full and faithful
declaration of God's character, that
His people should be wholly delivered and completely separated from
Egypt, and it is as
essentially necessary now, in order to a clear and unequivocal
testimony for the Son of God,
that all who are really His should be separated from this present
world. Such is the will of
God; and for this end Christ gave Himself. "Grace unto you, and
peace from God the Father,
and our Lord Jesus Christ, who gave himself for our sins, that he might
deliver us from this
present evil world, according to the will of God and our Father: to
whom be glory for ever and
ever. Amen."(Gal. 1: 3-5)
The Galatians were beginning to accredit a carnal and worldly
religion—a religion of
ordinances—a religion of "days, and months, and times, and
years;" and the apostle
commences his epistle by telling them that the Lord Jesus Christ gave
Himself for the purpose
of delivering His people from that very thing. God's people must be
separate, not, by any
means, on the ground of their superior personal sanctity, but because
they are His people, and
in order that they may rightly and intelligently answer His gracious
end in taking them into
connection with Himself, and attaching His name to them. A people,
still amid the
defilements and abominations of Egypt, could not have been a witness
for the Holy One; nor
can any one, now, while mixed up with the defilements of a corrupt
worldly religion, possibly
be a bright and steady witness for a crucified and risen Christ.
The answer given by Moses to Pharaoh's first objection was a truly
memorable one. "And
Moses said, It is not meet so to do; for we shall sacrifice the
abomination of the Egyptians to
the Lord our God; lo, shall we sacrifice the abomination of the
Egyptians before their eyes,
and will they not stone us? We mill go three days' journey into the
wilderness, and sacrifice to
the Lord our God, as he shall command us." (Ex. 8: 26, 27) Here is
true separation from
Egypt—"three days journey." Nothing less than this could
satisfy faith. The Israel of God
must be separated from the land of death and darkness, in the power of
resurrection. The
waters of the Red Sea must roll between God's redeemed and Egypt, ere
they can properly
sacrifice to Jehovah. Had they remained in Egypt, they would have to
sacrifice to the Lord the
very objects of Egypt's abominable worship.* This would never do. There
could be no
tabernacle, no temple, no altar, in Egypt. It had no site, throughout
its entire limits, for ought
of that kind. In point of fact, as we shall see further on, Israel
never presented so much as a
single note of praise, until the whole congregation stood, in the full
power of an accomplished
redemption, on Canaan's side of the Red Sea. Exactly so is it now. The
believer must know
where the death and resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ have, for
ever, set him, ere he can
be an intelligent worshipper, an acceptable servant, or an effectual
witness.
{*The word "abominations" has reference to that which the
Egyptians worshipped.}
It is not a question of being a child of God, and, as such, a saved
person. Many of the children
of God are very far from knowing the full results, as regards
themselves, of the death and
resurrection of Christ. They do not apprehend the precious truth, that
the death of Christ has
made an end of their sins for ever, and that they are the happy partakers
of His resurrection
life, with which sin can have nothing whatever to do. Christ became a
curse for us, not, as
some would teach us, by being born under the curse of a broken law, but
by hanging on a tree.
(Compare attentively Deut. 21: 23; Gal. 3: 13) We were under the curse,
because we had not
kept the law; but Christ, the perfect Man, having magnified the law and
made it honourable,
by the very fact of His obeying it perfectly, became a curse for us, by
hanging on the tree.
Thus, in His life He magnified God's law; and in His death He bore our
curse. There is,
therefore, now, no guilt, no curse, no wrath, no condemnation for the
believer; and, albeit, he
must be manifested before the judgement-seat of Christ, he will find
that judgement-seat
every hit as friendly by and by, as the mercy-seat is now. It will make
manifest the truth of his
condition, namely, that there is nothing against him; what he is, it is
God "that hath wrought
him." He is God's workmanship. He was taken up in a state of death
and condemnation, and
made just what God would have him to be. The Judge Himself has put away
all his sins, and
is his righteousness, so that the judgement-seat cannot but be friendly
to him; yea, it will be
the full, public, authoritative declaration to heaven, earth, and hell,
that the one who is
washed from his sins in the blood of the Lamb, is as clean as God can
make him. (See John 5:
24; Rom. 8: 1; 2 Cor. 5: 5, 10, 11; Eph. 2: 10.) All that had to be
done, God Himself has done
it. He surely will not condemn His own work. The righteousness that was
required, God
Himself has provided it. He, surely, will not find any flaw therein.
The light of the judgement
seat will be bright enough to disperse every mist and cloud which might
tend to obscure the
matchless glories and eternal virtues which belong to the cross, and to
show that the believer
is "clean every whit." (John 13: 10; John 15: 3; Eph. 5: 27)
It is because these foundation-truths are not laid hold of in the
simplicity of faith that many of
the children of God complain of their lack of settled peace—the
constant variation in their
spiritual condition—the continual ups and downs in their experience.
Every doubt in the heart
of a Christian is a dishonour done to the word of God and the sacrifice
of Christ. It is because
he does not, even now, bask in the light which shall shine from the
judgement-seat, that he is
ever afflicted with a doubt or a fear. And yet those things which so
many have to deplore—
those fluctuation's and waverings are but trifling consequences,
comparatively, inasmuch as
they merely affect their experience. The effect produced upon their
worship, their service, and
their testimony, is far more serious, inasmuch as the Lord's honour is
concerned. But, alas !
this latter is but little thought of, generally speaking, simply
because personal salvation is the
grand object—the aim and end, with the majority of professing
Christians. We are prone to
look upon everything that affects ourselves as essential; whereas, all
that merely affects the
glory of Christ in and by us is counted non-essential.
However, it is well to see with distinctness, that the same truth which
gives the soul settled
peace, puts it also into the position of intelligent worship,
acceptable service, and effectual
testimony. In the fifteenth chapter of 1 Corinthians, the apostle sets
forth the death and
resurrection of Christ as the grand foundation of everything.
"Moreover brethren, I declare
unto you the gospel which I preached unto you, which also ye have
received, and wherein ye
stand; by which also ye are saved, if ye keep in memory what I preached
unto you, unless ye
have believed in vain. For I delivered unto you first of all that which
I also received, how that
Christ died for our sins according to the scriptures, and that he was
buried, and that he rose
again the third day according to the scriptures." (Ver. 1-4) Here
is the gospel, in one brief and
comprehensive statement. A dead and risen Christ is the ground-work of
salvation. "He was
delivered for our offences, and raised again for our
justification." (Rom. 4: 25) To see Jesus,
by the eye of faith, nailed to the cross, and seated on the throne,
must give solid peace to the
conscience and perfect liberty to the heart. We can look into the tomb
and see it empty; we
can look up to the throne, and see it occupied, and go on our way
rejoicing. The Lord Jesus
settled everything on the cross on behalf of His people; and the proof
of this settlement is that
He is now at the right hand of God. A risen Christ is the eternal proof
of an accomplished
redemption; and if redemption is an accomplished fact, the believer's
peace is a settled reality.
We did not make peace and never could make it; indeed, any effort on
our part to make peace
could only tend more fully to manifest us as peace breakers. But
Christ, having made peace
by the blood of His cross, has taken His scat on high, triumphant over
every enemy. By Him
God preaches peace. The Lord of the gospel conveys this peace; and the
soul that believes the
gospel has peace—settled peace before God, for Christ is his peace.
(See Acts 10: 36; Rom. 5:
1; Eph. 2: 14; Col. 1: 20.) In this way, God has not only satisfied His
own claims, but, in so
doing, He has found out a divinely-righteous vent through which His
boundless affections
may flow down to the guiltiest of Adam's guilty progeny.
Then, as to the practical result of all this. The cross of Christ has
not only put away the
believer's sins, but also dissolved for ever His connection with the
world; and, on the ground
of this, he is privileged to regard the world as a crucified thing, and
to be regarded by it as a
crucified one. Thus it stands with the believer and the world. It is
crucified to him and he to
it. This is the real, dignified position of every true Christian. The
world's judgement about
Christ was expressed in the position in which it deliberately placed
Him. It got its choice as to
whether it would have a murderer or Christ. It allowed the murderer to
go free, but nailed
Christ to the cross, between two thieves. Now, if the believer walks in
the footprints of
Christ—if he drinks into, and manifests, His spirit, he will occupy the
very same place in the
world's estimation; and, in this way, he will not merely know that, as
to standing before God,
he is crucified with Christ, but be led to realise it in his walk and
experience every day.
But while the cross has thus effectually cut the connection between the
believer and the
world, the resurrection has brought him into the power of new ties and
associations. If, in the
cross, we see the world's judgement about Christ, in resurrection we
see God's judgement.
The world crucified Him; but "God hath highly exalted him."
Man gave Him the very lowest,
God the very highest, place; and, inasmuch as the believer is called
into full fellowship with
God, in his thoughts about Christ, he is enabled to turn the tables
upon the world, and look
upon it as a crucified thing. If, therefore, the believer is on one
cross and the world on
another, the moral distance between the two is vast indeed. And if it
is vast in principle, so
should it be in practice. The world and the Christian should have
absolutely nothing in
common; nor will they, except so far as he denies his Lord and Master.
The believer proves
himself false to Christ, to the very same degree that he has fellowship
with the world.
All this is plain enough; but, my beloved Christian reader, where does
it put us as regards this
world? Truly, it puts us outside and that completely. We are dead to
the world and alive with
Christ. We are at once partakers of His rejection by earth and His
acceptance in heaven; and
the joy of the latter makes us count as nothing the trial connected
with the former. To be cast
out of earth, without knowing that I have a place and a portion on
high, would be intolerable;
but when the glories of heaven fill the soul's vision, a little of
earth goes a great way.
But some may feel led to ask, "What is the world?" It would
be difficult to find a term more
inaccurately defined than "world," or
"worldliness;" for we are generally disposed to make
worldliness begin a point or two above where we are ourselves. The Word
of God, however,
has, with perfect precision, defined what" the world" is,
when it marks it as that which is "not
of the Father." Hence, the deeper my fellowship with the Father,
the keener will be my sense
of what is worldly. This is the divine way of teaching. The more you
delight in the Father's
love, the more you reject the world. But who reveals the Father The
Son. How? By the power
of the Holy Ghost. Wherefore, the more I am enabled, in the power of an
ungrieved Spirit, to
drink in the Son's revelation of the Father, the more accurate does my
judgement become as
to what is of the world. It is as the limits of God's kingdom expand in
the heart, that the
judgement as to worldliness becomes refined. You can hardly attempt to
define worldliness. It
is, as some one has said, "shaded off gradually from white to jet
black." This is most true.
You cannot place a bound and say, "here is where worldliness begins;"
but the keen and
exquisite sensibilities of the divine nature recoil from it; and all we
need is, to walk in the
power of that nature, in order to keep aloof from every form of
worldliness. "Walk in the
Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh." Walk with
God, and ye shall not walk with
the world. Cold distinctions and rigid rules will avail nothing. The
power of the divine life is
what we want. We want to understand the meaning and spiritual
application of the "three
days' journey into the wilderness" whereby we are separated for
ever, not only from Egypt's
brick-kilns and taskmasters, but also from its temples and altars.
Pharaoh's second objection partook very much of the character and
tendency of the first. "And
Pharaoh said, I will let you go, that ye may sacrifice to the Lord your
God in the wilderness;
only ye shall not go very far away." (Ex. 8: 28) If he could not
keep them in Egypt, he would
at least seek to keep them near it, so that he might act upon them by
its varied influences. In
this way, they might be brought back again. and the testimony more
effectually quashed than
if they had never left Egypt at all. There is always much more serious
damage done to the
cause of Christ by persons seeming to give up the world and returning
to it again, than if they
had remained entirely of it; for they virtually confess that, having
tried heavenly things, they
have discovered that earthly things are better and more satisfying.
Nor is this all. The moral effect of truth upon the conscience of
unconverted people is sadly
interfered with, by the example of professors going back again into
those things which they
seemed to have left. Not that such cases afford the slightest warrant
to any one for the
rejection of God's truth, inasmuch as each one is personally
responsible and will have to give
account of himself to God. Still, however, the effect in this, as well
as in everything else, is
bad. " For if after they have escaped the pollutions of the world,
through the knowledge of the
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ, they are again entangled therein and
overcome, the latter end
is worse with them than the beginning. For it would have been better
for them not to hare
known the way of righteousness than, after they have known it, to turn
from the holy
commandment delivered unto them.(2 Peter 2: 20, 21.)
Wherefore, if people do not "go very far away," they had
better not go at all. The enemy knew
this well; and hence his second objection. The maintenance of a border
position suits his
purpose amazingly. Those who occupy this ground are neither one thing
nor the other; and, in
point of fact, whatever influence they possess, tells entirely in the
wrong direction.
It is deeply important to see that Satan's design, in all these
objections, was to hinder that
testimony to the name of the God of Israel, which could only be
rendered by a "three days'
journey into the wilderness." This was, in good truth, going
"very far away." It was much
farther than Pharaoh could form any idea of, or than he could follow
them. And oh! how
happy it would be if all who profess to set out from Egypt would
really, in the spirit of their
minds and in the tone of their character, go thus far away from it I if
they would intelligently
recognise the cross and grave of Christ as forming the boundary between
them and the world!
No man, in the mere energy of nature, can take this ground. The
Psalmist could say," Enter
not into judgement with thy servant, for in thy sight shall no man
living be justified." (Ps. 143:
2) So also is it with regard to true and effectual separation from the
world. "No man living"
can enter into it. It is only as "dead with Christ,'' and
"risen again with him, through faith of
the operation of God," that any one can either be
"justified" before God, or separated from the
world This is what we may all going " very far away. May all who
profess and call themselves
Christians go thus far! Then will their lamp yield a steady light. Then
would their trumpet
give a certain sound. Their path would be elevated; their experience
deep and rich. Their
peace would flow as a river; their affections would be heavenly and
their garments unspotted.
And, far above all, the name of the Lord Jesus Christ would be
magnified in them, by the
power of the Holy Ghost, according to the will of God their Father.
The third objection demands our most special attention. "And Moses
and Aaron were brought
again unto Pharaoh: and he said unto them, go, serve the Lord your God;
but who are they that
shall go? And Moses said, We will go with our young and with our old,
with our sons and
with our daughters, with our flocks and with our herds, will we go: for
we must hold a feast
unto the Lord. And he said unto them, Let the Lord be so with you, as I
will let you go and
your little ones: look to it; for evil is before you. Not so; go now ye
that are men, and serve
the Lord; for that ye did desire. And they were driven out from
Pharaoh's presence." (Ex. 10:
8-11) Here again we have the enemy aiming a deadly blow at the
testimony to the name of the
God of Israel. Parents in the wilderness and their children in Egypt!
Terrible anomaly! This
would only have been a half deliverance, at once useless to Israel and
dishonouring to Israel's
God. This could not be. If the children remained in Egypt, the parents
could not possibly be
said to have left it, inasmuch as their children were part of
themselves. The most that could be
said in such a case was, that in part they were serving Jehovah, and in
part Pharaoh. But
Jehovah could have no part with Pharaoh. He should either have all or
nothing. This is a
weighty principle for Christian parents. May we lay it deeply to heart!
It is our happy
privilege to count on God for our children, and to "bring them up
in the nurture and
admonition of the Lord." (Eph. 6) We should not be satisfied with
any other portion for" Our
little ones" than that which we ourselves enjoy.
Pharaoh's fourth and last objection had reference to the flocks and
herds. "And Pharaoh called
unto Moses, and said, Go ye, serve the Lord; only let your flocks and
herds be stayed: let your
little ones also go with you." (Ex. 10: 24.) With what
perseverance did Satan dispute every
inch of Israel's way out of the land of Egypt! He first sought to keep
them in the land, then to
keep them near the land, next to keep part of themselves in the land,
and, finally, when he
could not succeed in any of these three, he sought to send them forth
without any ability to
serve the Lord. If he could not keep the servants, he would seek to
keep their ability to serve,
which would answer much the same end. If he could not induce them to
sacrifice in the land,
he would send them out of the land without sacrifices.
In Moses' reply to this last objection, we are furnished with a fine
statement of the Lord's
paramount claim upon His people and all pertaining to them. "And
Moses said, Thou must
give us also sacrifices and burnt offerings, that we may sacrifice unto
the Lord our God. Our
cattle also shall go with us; there shall not an hoof be left behind:
for thereof must we take to
serve the Lord our God; and we know not with what we must serve the
Lord until we come.
thither." (Ver. 25, 26) It is only when the people of God take
their stand, in simple Childlike
faith, upon that elevated ground, on which death and resurrection set
them, that they can have
anything like an adequate sense of His claims upon them. "We know
not with what we must
serve the Lord until we come thither." That is, they had no
knowledge of the divine claim or
their responsibility, until they had gone "three days'
journey." These things could not be
known amid the dense and polluted atmosphere of Egypt. Redemption must
be known as an
accomplished fact, ere: there can be any just or full perception of
responsibility. All this is
perfect and beautiful. "If any man will do his will, he shall know
of the doctrine." I must be
up out of Egypt, in the power of death and resurrection, and then, but
not until then, shall I
know what the Lord's service really is. It is when we take our stand,
by faith, in that "large
room," that wealthy place into which the precious blood of Christ
introduces us; when we
look around us and survey the rich, rare, and manifold results of
redeeming love; when we
gaze upon the Person of Him who has brought us into this place, and
endowed us with these
riches, then we are constrained to say, in the language of one of our
own poets,
"Were the whole realm of nature mine,
That were an offering far too small;
Love so amazing, so divine,
Demands my heart, my life, my all."
"There shall not an hoof be left behind." Noble words! Egypt
is not the place for ought that
pertains to God's redeemed. He is worthy of all, "body, soul, and
spirit;" all we are and all we
have belongs to Him. "We are not our own, we are bought with a
price;" and it is our happy
privilege to consecrate ourselves and all that we possess to Him whose
we are, and whom we
are called to serve. There is nought of a legal spirit in this. The
words, "until we come
thither," furnish a divine guard against this horrible evil. We
have travelled the "three days'
journey," ere a word concerning sacrifice can be heard or
understood. We are put in full and
undisputed possession of resurrection life and eternal righteousness.
We have left that land of
death and darkness; we have been brought to God Himself, so that we may
enjoy Him, in the
energy of that life with which we are endowed, and in the sphere of
righteousness in which
we are placed: thus it is our joy to serve. There is not an affection
in the heart of which He is
not worthy; there is not a sacrifice in all the flock too costly for
His altar. The more closely
we walk with Him, the more we shall esteem it to be our meat and drink
to do His blessed
will. The believer counts it his highest privilege to serve the Lord.
He delights in every
exercise and every manifestation of the divine nature. He does not move
up and down with a
grievous yoke upon his neck, or an intolerable weight upon his
shoulder. The yoke is broken
"because of the anointing," the burden has been for ever
removed, by the blood of the cross,
while he himself walks abroad, "redeemed, regenerated, and
disenthralled," in pursuance of
those soul-stirring words, "LET MY PEOPLE GO."
NOTE.—We shall consider the contents of Ex. 11 in connection with the
security of Israel,
under the shelter of the blood of the paschal lamb.
Exodus 12
"And the Lord said unto Moses, Yet will I bring one plague more
upon Pharaoh, and upon
Egypt; afterwards he will let you go hence: when he shall let you go,
he shall surely thrust you
out hence altogether." (Ex. 11: 1) One more heavy blow must fall
upon this hard-hearted
monarch and his land, ere he will be compelled to let go the favoured
objects of Jehovah's
sovereign grace.
How utterly vain it is for man to harden and exalt himself against God;
for, truly, He can
grind to powder the hardest heart, and bring down to the dust the
haughtiest spirit. "Those that
walk in pride he is able to abase." (Dan. 4: 37) Man may fancy
himself to be something; he
may lift up his head, in pomp and vain glory, as though he were his own
master. Vain man
how little he knows of his real condition and character He is but the
tool of Satan, taken up
and used by him, in his malignant efforts to counteract the purposes of
God. The most
splendid intellect, the most commanding genius, the most indomitable
energy, if not under the
direct control of the Spirit of God, are but so many instruments in
Satan's hand to carry
forward his dark designs. No man is his own master; he is either
governed by Christ or
governed by Satan. The king of Egypt might fancy himself to be a free
agent, yet was he but a
tool in the hands of another. Satan was behind the throne; and, as the
result of Pharaoh's
having set himself to resist the purposes of God, he was judicially
handed over to the blinding
and hardening influence of his self-chosen master.
This will explain to us an expression occurring very frequently
throughout the earlier chapters
of this book. "The Lord hardened Pharaoh's heart." There is
no need, whatever, for any one to
seek to avoid the full, plain sense of this most solemn statement. If
man resists the light of
divine testimony, he is shut up to judicial blindness and hardness of
heart. God leaves him to
himself, and then Satan comes in and carries him headlong to perdition.
There was abundant
light for Pharaoh, to show him the extravagant folly of his course in
seeking to detain those
whom God had commanded him to let
go. But the real disposition of his heart was to act
against God, and therefore God left him to himself, and made him a
monument for the display
of His glory "through all the earth." There is no difficulty
in this to any, save those whose
desire is to argue against God—"to rush upon the thick bosses of
the shield of the
Almighty"—to ruin their own immortal souls.
God gives people, at times, according to the real bent of their hearts'
desire. ". . . . . . because
of this, God shall send them strong delusion, that they should believe
a lie; that they all might
be damned who believed not the truth, but had pleasure in
unrighteousness." (2 Thess. 2: 11,
12) If men will not have the truth when it is put before them, they
shall, assuredly, have a lie.
If they will not have Christ, they shall have Satan; if they will not
have heaven, they shall
have hell.* Will the infidel mind find fault with this? Ere it does so,
let it prove that all who
are thus judicially dealt with have fully answered their
responsibilities. Let it, for instance,
prove, in Pharaoh's case, that he acted, in any measure, up to the
light he possessed. The same
is to be proved in every case. Unquestionably, the task of proving
rests on those who are
disposed to quarrel with God's mode of dealing with the rejecters of
His truth. The simple-
hearted child of God will justify Him, in view of the most inscrutable
dispensations; and even
if he cannot meet and satisfactorily solve the difficult questions of a
sceptical mind, he can
rest perfectly satisfied with this word, "shall not the Judge of
all the earth do right?" There is
far more wisdom in this method of settling an apparent difficulty, than
in the most elaborate
argument; for it is perfectly certain that: the heart which is in a
condition to reply against
God," will not be convinced by the arguments of man.
{*There is a vast difference between the divine method of dealing with
the heathen (Rom. 1)
and with the rejecters of the gospel. (2 Thess. 1, 2) In reference to
the former, we read, "And
even as they did not like to retain God in their knowledge, God gave
them over to a reprobate
mind:" but with respect to the latter the word is "because
they received not the love of the
truth that they might be saved, . . . God shall send them strong delusion, that they should
believe a lie; that they all might be damned." The heathen refuse
the testimony of creation,
and are, therefore, left to themselves. The rejecters of the gospel
refuse the full blaze of light
which shines from the cross, and, therefore, "a strong
delusion" will, ere long, be sent from
God upon them. This is deeply solemn for an age like this, in the which
there is so much light
and so much profession.}
However, it is God's prerogative to answer all the proud reasonings,
and bring down the lofty
imaginations of the human mind. He can write the sentence of death upon
nature, in its fairest
forms. "It is appointed unto men once to die." This cannot be
avoided. Man may seek to hide
his humiliation in various ways to cover his retreat through the valley
of death, in the most
heroic manner possible; to call the last humiliating stage of his
career by the most honourable
titles he can devise; to gild the bed of death with a false light; to
adorn the funeral procession
and the grave with the appearance of pomp, pageantry, and glory; to
arise above the
mouldering ashes a splendid monument, on which are engraven the records
of human shame.
all these things he may do; but death is death after all, and he cannot
keep it off for a moment,
or make it ought else than what it is, namely, "the ravages of
sin."
The foregoing thoughts are suggested by the opening verse of Ex. 11.
"One plague more!"
Solemn word! It signed the death-warrant of Egypt's firstborn—"the
chief of all their
strength." "And Moses said, Thus saith the Lord, About
midnight will I go out into the midst
of Egypt; and all the firstborn in the land of Egypt shall die, from
the firstborn of Pharaoh that
sitteth upon his throne, even unto the firstborn of the maidservant
that is behind the mill; and
all the firstborn of beasts. And there shall be a great cry throughout
all the land of Egypt, such
as there was none like it, nor shall be like it any more." (Ex.
11: 4-6) This was to be the final
plague—death in every house. "But against any of the children of
Israel shall not a dog move
his tongue, against man or beast; that ye may know how that the Lord doth
put a difference
between the Egyptians and Israel." It is the Lord alone who can
"put a difference" between
those who are His and those who are not. It is not our province to-say
to any one, "stand by
thyself, I am holier than thou:" this is the language of a
Pharisee. "But when God puts a
difference!" we are bound to enquire what that difference is; and,
in the case before us, we
see it to be a simple question of life or death. This is God's grand
"difference." He draws a
line of demarcation, and on one side of this line is "life,"
on the other "death." Many of
Egypt's firstborn might have been as fair and attractive as those of
Israel, and much more so;
but Israel had life and light, founded upon God's counsels of redeeming
love, established, as
we shall see presently, by the blood of the lamb. This was Israel's
happy position; while, on
the other hand, throughout the length and breadth of the land of Egypt,
from the monarch on
the throne to the menial behind the mill, nothing was to be seen but
death; nothing to be heard
but the cry of bitter anguish, elicited by the heavy stroke of
Jehovah's rod. God can bring
down the haughty spirit of man. He can make the wrath of man to praise
Him, and restrain the
remainder. "And all these thy servants shall come down unto me,
and bow down themselves-
unto me, saying, Get thee out and all the people that follow thee: and
after that I will go out."
God will accomplish His own ends. His schemes of mercy must be carried
out at all cost, and
confusion of face must be the portion of all who stand in the way.
"O! give thanks unto the
Lord; for he is good: for His mercy endureth for ever...... To him that
smote Egypt in their
first-born: for his mercy endureth for ever: and brought out Israel
from among them; for his
mercy endureth for ever: with a strong hand, and with a stretched-out
arm; for his mercy
endureth for ever." (Psalm 136)
"And the Lord spake unto Moses and Aaron in the land of Egypt,
saying, This month shall be
unto you the beginning of months: it shall be the first month of the
year to you." (Ex. 12: 1, 2)
There is, here, a very interesting change in the order of time. The
common or civil year was
rolling on in its ordinary course, when Jehovah interrupted it in
reference to His people, and
thus, in principle, taught them that they were to begin a new era in
company with Him. Their
previous history was, henceforth, to be regarded as a blank. Redemption
was to constitute the
first step in real life.
This teaches a plain truth. A man's life is really of no account until
he begins to walk with
God, in the knowledge of full salvation and settled peace, through the
precious blood of the
Lamb. Previous to this he is, in the judgement of God, and in the
language of scripture, "dead
in trespasses and sins;" "alienated from the life of
God." His whole history is a complete
blank, even though, in man's account, it may have been one
uninterrupted scene of bustling
activity. All that which engages the attention of the man of this
world, the honours, the riches,
the pleasures, the attractions, of life, so called—all, when examined
in the light of the
judgement of God, when weighed in the balances of the sanctuary, must
be accounted as a
dismal blank, a worthless void, utterly unworthy of a place in the
records of the Holy Ghost.
"He that believeth not the Son shall not see life." (John 3:
36) Men speak of "seeing life,"
when they launch forth into society, travel hither and thither, and see
all that is to be seen; but
they forget that the only true, the only real, the only divine way to
"see life," is to "believe on
the Son of God."
How little do men think of this! They imagine that "real
life" is at an end when a man
becomes a Christian, in truth and reality, not merely in name and
outward profession;
whereas God's word teaches us that it is only then we can see life and
taste true happiness.
"He that hath the Son hath life." (1 John 5: 12) And, again,
"Happy is he whose transgression
is forgiven, whose sin is covered." (Ps. 32: 1) We can get life
and happiness only in Christ.
Apart from Him, all is death and misery, in Heaven's judgement,
whatever the outward
appearance may be. It is when the thick vail of unbelief is removed
from the heart, and we are
enabled to behold, with the eye of faith, the bleeding Lamb, bearing
our heavy burden of guilt
upon the cursed tree, that we enter upon the path of life, and partake
of the cup of divine
happiness—a life which begins at the cross, and flows onward into an
eternity of glory—a
happiness which, each day, becomes deeper and purer, more connected
with God and founded
on Christ, until we reach its proper sphere, in the presence of God and
the Lamb. To seek life
and happiness in any other way, is vainer work by far than seeking to
make bricks without
straw.
True, the enemy of souls spreads a gilding over this passing scene, in
order that men may
imagine it to be all gold. He sets up many a puppet-show to elicit the
hollow laugh from a
thoughtless multitude, who will not remember that it is Satan who is in
the box, and that his
object is to keep them from Christ, and drag them down into eternal
perdition. There is
nothing real, nothing solid, nothing satisfying, but in Christ. Outside
of Him, "all is vanity and
vexation of spirit." In Him alone true and eternal joys are to be
found; and we only begin to
live when we begin to live in, live on, live with, and live for Him.
"This month shall be unto
you the beginning of months: it shall be the first month of the year to
you. "The time spent in
the brick-kilns and by the flesh-pots must be ignored. It is,
henceforth, to be of no account
save that the remembrance thereof should, ever and anon, serve to
quicken and deepen their
sense of what divine grace had accomplished on their behalf.
"Speak ye unto all the congregation of Israel, saying, In the
tenth day of this month they shall
take to them every man a lamb according to the house of their fathers,
a lamb for an house . . .
Your lamb shall be without blemish, a male of the first year; ye shall
take it out from the
sheep or from the goats: and ye shall keep it up until the fourteenth
day of the same month;
and the whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall kill it in
the evening. "Here we
have the redemption of the people founded upon the blood of the lamb,
in pursuance of God's
eternal purpose. This imparts to it all its divine stability.
Redemption was no after-thought
with God. Before the world was, or Satan, or sin—before ever the voice
of God was heard
breaking the silence of eternity, and calling worlds into existence, He
had His deep counsels
of love; and these counsels could never find a sufficiently solid basis
in creation. All the
blessings, the privileges, and the dignities of creation were founded
upon a creature's
obedience, and the moment that failed, all was gone. But, then, Satan's
attempt to mar
creation only opened the way for the manifestation of God's deeper
purposes of redemption.
This beautiful truth is typically presented to us in the circumstance
of the lamb's being "kept
up" from the "tenth" to "the fourteenth day."
That this lamb pointed to Christ is
unquestionable. 1 Cor 5: 7, settles the application of this interesting
type beyond all question;
"for even Christ our Passover is sacrificed for us." We have,
in the first epistle of Peter, an
allusion to the keeping up of the lamb: "Forasmuch as ye know that
ye were not redeemed
with corruptible things, as silver and gold, from your vain
conversation, received by tradition
from your fathers; but with the precious blood of Christ, as of a lamb
without blemish and
without spot: who verily was foreordained before the foundation of the
world, but was
manifest in these last times for you.(Ex. 1: 18-20)
All God's purposes, from everlasting, had reference to Christ; and no
effort of the enemy
could possibly interfere with those counsels: yea, his efforts only
tended to the display of the
unfathomable wisdom and immovable stability thereof. If the "Lamb
without blemish and
without spot" was "foreordained before the foundation of the
world," then, assuredly,
redemption must have been in the mind of God before the foundation of
the world. The
Blessed One had not to pause in order to devise some plan to remedy the
terrible evil which
the enemy had introduced into His fair creation. No, He had only to
bring forth, from the
unexplored treasury of His precious counsels, the truth concerning the
spotless Lamb, who
was foreordained from everlasting, and to be "manifest in these
last times for us."
There was no need for the blood of the Lamb in creation, as it came
fresh from the hand of
the Creator, exhibiting in every stage, and every department of it, the
beauteous impress of
His hand—"the infallible proofs" of "His eternal power
and Godhead." (Rom. 1) But when,
"by one man," sin was introduced into the world, then came
out the higher, richer, fuller,
deeper thought of redemption by the blood of the Lamb. This glorious
truth first broke
through the thick clouds which surrounded our first parents, as they
retreated from the garden
of Eden; its glimmerings appear in the types and shadows of the Mosaic
economy; it burst
upon the world in full brightness, when "the dayspring from on
high" appeared in the Person
of "God manifest in the flesh;" and its rich and rare results
will be realised when the white-
robed, palm-bearing multitude shall cluster round the throne of God and
the Lamb, and the
whole creation shall rest beneath the peaceful sceptre of the Son of
David.
Now, the lamb taken on the tenth day, and kept up until the fourteenth
day, shows us Christ
foreordained of God, from eternity, but manifest for us, in time. God's
eternal purpose in
Christ becomes the foundation of the believer's peace. Nothing short of
this would do. We are
carried back far beyond creation, beyond the bounds of time, beyond the
entrance in of sin,
and everything that could possibly affect the ground-work of our peace.
The expression,
"fore-ordained before the foundation of the world," conducts
us back into the unfathomed
depths of eternity, and shows us God forming His own counsels of
redeeming love, and
basing them all upon the atoning blood of His own precious, spotless
Lamb. Christ was ever
the primary thought in the divine mind; and, hence, the moment He began
to speak or act, He
took occasion to shadow forth that One who occupied the highest place
in His counsels and
affections; and, as we pass along the current of inspiration, we find
that every ceremony,
every rite, every ordinance, and every sacrifice pointed forward to
"the Lamb of God that
taketh away the sin of the world," and not one more strikingly than
the Passover. The paschal
lamb, with all the attendant circumstances, forms one of the most
profoundly interesting and
deeply instructive types of Scripture.
In the interpretation of Exodus 12 we have to do with one assembly and
one sacrifice. "The
whole assembly of the congregation of Israel shall kill it in the
evening." (Ver. 6) It is not so
much a number of families with several lambs—a thing quite true in
itself—as one assembly
and one lamb. Each house was but the local expression of the whole assembly
gathered round
the lamb. The antitype of this we have in the whole Church of God,
gathered by the Holy
Ghost, in the name of Jesus, of which each separate assembly, wherever
convened, should be
the local expression.
"And they shall take of the blood, and strike it on the two side
posts, and on the upper door
posts of the houses, wherein they shall eat it. And they shall eat the
flesh in that night, roast
with fire, and unleavened bread; and with bitter herbs they shall eat
it. Eat not of it raw, nor
sodden at all with water, but roast with fire; his head with his legs,
and with the purtenance
thereof." (Ver. 7-9) We have to contemplate the paschal lamb in
two aspects, namely, as the
ground of peace and the centre of unity. The blood on the lintel secured
Israel's peace. "When
I see the blood, I will pass over you." (Ver. 13) There was
nothing more required, in order to
enjoy settled peace, in reference to the destroying angel, than the
application of the blood of
sprinkling. Death had to do its work in every house throughout the land
of Egypt. "It is
appointed unto men once to die. But God, in His great mercy, found an
unblemished
substitute for Israel on which the sentence of death was executed. Thus
God's claims and
Israel's need were met by one and the same thing, namely, the blood of
the lamb. That blood
outside proved that all was perfectly, because divinely, settled; and
therefore perfect peace
reigned within. A shade of doubt in the bosom of an Israelite, would
have been a dishonour
offered to the divinely-appointed ground of peace-the blood of
atonement.
True it is that each one within the blood-sprinkled door would,
necessarily, feel that were he
to receive his due reward, the sword of the destroyer should, most
assuredly, find its object in
him; but then the lamb was treated in his stead. This was the solid
foundation of his peace.
The judgement that was due to him fell upon a divinely- appointed
victim; and believing this,
he could feed in peace within. A single doubt would have made Jehovah a
liar; for He had
said, "when I see the blood, I will pass over you." This was
enough. It was no question of
personal worthiness. Self had nothing whatever to do in the matter. All
under the cover of the
blood were safe. They were not merely in a saveable state, they were
saved. They were not
hoping or praying to be saved, they knew it as an assured fact, on the
authority of that word
which shall endure throughout all generations. Moreover, they were not
partly saved and
partly exposed to judgement; they were wholly saved. The blood of the
lamb and the word of
the Lord formed the foundation of Israel's peace on that terrible night
in which Egypt's
firstborn were laid low. If an hair of an Israelite's head could be
touched, it would have
proved Jehovah's word void, and the blood of the lamb valueless.
It is most needful to be simple and clear as to what constitutes the
ground of a sinner's peace,
in the presence of God. So many things are mixed up with the finished
work of Christ, that
souls are plunged into darkness and uncertainty, as to their
acceptance. They do not see the
absolutely-settled character of redemption through the blood of Christ,
in its application to
themselves. They seem not to be aware that full forgiveness of sins
rests upon the simple fact
that a full atonement has been offered—a fact attested in the view of
all created intelligence,
by the resurrection of the sinner's Surety from the dead. They know
that there is no other way
of being saved but by the blood of the cross—but the devils know this,
yet it avails them
nought. What is so much needed is to know that we are saved. The Israelite not merely knew
that there was safety in the blood; he knew that he was safe. And why
safe? Was it because of
anything that he had done, or felt, or thought? By no means, but
because God had said, "when
I see the blood I will pass over you." He rested upon God's
testimony. He believed what God
said, because God said it. "He set to his seal that God was
true."
And, observe, my reader, it was not upon his own thoughts, feelings, or
experiences,
respecting the blood, that the Israelite rested. This would have been a
poor sandy foundation
to rest upon. His thoughts and feelings might be deep or they might be
shallow; but deep or
shallow, they had nothing to do with the ground of his peace. It was
not said, "when you see
the blood, and value it as you ought, I will pass over you." This
would have been sufficient to
plunge him in dark despair about himself, inasmuch as it was quite
impossible that the human
mind could ever sufficiently appreciate the precious blood of the Lamb.
What gave peace was
the fact that Jehovah's eye rested upon the blood, and that He knew its
worth. This
tranquillised the heart. The blood was outside, and the Israelite
inside, so that he could not
possibly see it; but God saw it, and that was quite enough.
The application of this to the question of a sinner's peace is very
plain. The Lord Jesus Christ,
having shed His precious blood, as a perfect atonement for sin, has
taken it into the presence
of God, and sprinkled it there; and God's testimony assures the
believing sinner, that
everything is settled on his behalf—settled not by his estimate of the
blood, but by the blood
itself which God estimates so highly, that because of it, without a
single jot or tittle added
thereto, He can righteously forgive all sin, and accept the sinner as
perfectly righteous in
Christ. How can any one ever enjoy settled peace, if his peace depends
upon his estimate of
the blood? Impossible. The loftiest estimate which the human mind can
form of the blood
must fall infinitely short of its divine preciousness; and, therefore,
if our peace were to
depend upon our valuing it as we ought, we could no more enjoy settled
peace than if we
were seeking it by "works of law." There must either be a
sufficient ground of peace in the
blood alone, or we can never have peace. To mix up our estimate with
it, is to upset the entire
fabric of Christianity, just as effectually as if we were to conduct
the sinner to the foot of
mount Sinai, and put him under a covenant of works. Either Christ's
atoning sacrifice is
sufficient or it is not. If it is sufficient, why those doubts and
fears? The words of our lips
profess that the work is finished; but the doubts and fears of the
heart declare that it is not.
Every one who doubts his full and everlasting forgiveness, denies, so
far as he is concerned,
the completeness of the sacrifice of Christ.
But there are very many who would shrink from the idea of deliberately
and avowedly calling
in question the efficacy of the blood of Christ, who, nevertheless,
have not settled peace. Such
persons profess to be quite assured of the sufficiency of the blood, if
only they were sure of an
interest therein—if only they had the right kind of faith. There are
many precious souls in this
unhappy condition. They are occupied with their interest and their
faith, instead of with
Christ's blood, and God's word. In other words, they are looking in at
self, instead of out at
Christ. This is not faith; and, as a consequence, they have not peace.
An Israelite within the
blood-stained lintel could teach such souls a most seasonable lesson.
He was not saved by his
interest in, or his thoughts about, the blood, but simply by the blood.
No doubt, he had a
blessed interest in it; and he would have his thoughts, likewise; but,
then, God did not say,
"When I see your interest in the blood, I will pass over
you." Oh! no; THE BLOOD, in all its
solitary dignity and divine efficacy, was set before Israel; and had
they attempted to place
even a morsel of unleavened bread beside the blood, as a ground of
security: they would have
made Jehovah a liar, and denied the sufficiency of His remedy.
We are ever prone to look at something in or connected with ourselves
as necessary, in order
to make up, with the blood of Christ, the groundwork of our peace.
There is a sad lack of
clearness and soundness on this vital point, as is evident from the
doubts and fears with which
so many of the people of God are afflicted. We are apt to regard the
fruits of the Spirit in us,
rather than the work of Christ for us, as the foundation of peace. We
shall see, presently, the
place which the work of the Holy Spirit occupies in Christianity; but
it is never set forth in
Scripture as being that on which our peace reposes. The Holy Ghost did
not make peace, but
Christ did. The Holy Ghost is not said to be our peace, but Christ is.
God did not send
preaching peace by the Holy Ghost, but by Jesus Christ. (Compare Acts
10: 36; Eph. 2: 14,
17; Col. 1: 20) My reader cannot be too simple in his apprehension of
this important
distinction. It is the blood of Christ which gives peace, imparts
perfect justification, divine
righteousness, purges the conscience, brings us into the holiest of
all, justifies God in
receiving the believing sinner, and constitutes our title to all the
joys, the dignities, and the
glories of heaven. (See Rom. 3: 24-28; Rom. 5: 9; Eph. 2: 13-18; Col.
1: 20-22; Heb. 9: 14;
Heb. 10: 19; 1 Peter 1: 19; 1 Peter 2: 24; 1 John 1: 7; Rev. 7: 14-17)
It will not, I fondly hope, be supposed that, in seeking to put
"the precious blood of Christ" in
its divinely-appointed place, I would write a single line which might
seem to detract from the
value of the Spirit's operations. God forbid. The Holy Ghost reveals
Christ; makes us to know,
enjoy, and feed upon Christ; He bears witness to Christ; He takes of
the things of Christ and
shows them unto us. He is the power of communion, the seal, the
witness, the earnest, the
unction. In short, His blessed operations are absolutely essential.
Without Him, we can neither
see, hear, know, feel, experience, enjoy, nor exhibit ought of Christ.
This is plain. The
doctrine of the Spirit's operations is clearly laid down in the word,
and is understood and
admitted by every true and rightly instructed Christian.
Yet, notwithstanding all this, the work of the Spirit is not the ground
of peace; for, if it were,
we could not have settled peace until Christ's coming, inasmuch as the
work of the Spirit, in
the Church, will not, properly speaking, be complete till then. He
still carries on His work in
the believer. "He maketh intercession with groanings which cannot
be uttered." (Rom 8) He
labours to bring us up to the predestinated standard, namely, perfect
conformity, in all things,
to the image of "the Son." He is the sole Author of every
right desire, every holy aspiration,
every pure affection, every divine experience, every sound conviction;
but, clearly, His work
in us will not be complete until we have left this present scene and
taken our place with
Christ in the glory. Just as, in the case of Abraham's servant, his
work was not complete, in
the matter of Rebecca, until he had presented her to Isaac.
Not so the work of Christ FOR us. That is absolutely and eternally complete.
He could say, "I
have finished the work which thou gavest me to do." (John 17: 4)
And, again, "It is finished."
(John 19: 30) The Holy Ghost cannot yet say He has finished His work.
As the true Vicar of
Christ upon earth, He still labours amid the varied hostile influences
which surround the
sphere of His operations. He works in the hearts of the people of God
to bring them up,
practically and experimentally, to the divinely-appointed standard. But
He never teaches a
soul to lean on His work for peace in the presence of God. His office
is to speak of Jesus.
"He," says Christ, "shall receive of mine and shall show
it unto you." (John 16: 13, 14) If,
then, it is only by the Spirit's teaching that any one can understand
the true ground of peace, it
is obvious that He can only present Christ's work as the foundation on
which the soul must
rest for ever; yea, it is in virtue of that work that He takes up His
abode and carries on His
marvellous operations in the believer. He is not our title, though He
reveals that title and
enables us to understand and enjoy it.
Hence, therefore, the paschal lamb, as the ground of Israel's peace, is
a marked and beautiful
type of Christ as the ground of the believer's peace. There was nothing
to be added to the
blood on the lintel; neither is there anything to be added to the blood
on the mercy-seat. The
"unleavened bread" and "bitter herbs" were
necessary, but not as forming, either in whole or
in part, the ground of peace. They were for the inside of the house and
formed the
characteristics of the communion there; but THE BLOOD OF THE LAMB WAS
THE
FOUNDATION OF EVERYTHING. It saved them from death and introduced them
into a
scene of life, light, and peace.' It formed the link between God and
His redeemed people. As a
people linked with God, on the ground of accomplished redemption, it
was their high
privilege to meet certain responsibilities; but these responsibilities
did not form the link, but
merely flowed out of it.
And I would further remind my reader that the obedient life of Christ
is not set forth in
Scripture as the procuring cause of our forgiveness. It was His death
upon the cross that
opened those everlasting floodgates of love which else should have
remained pent up for ever.
If he had remained to this very hour, going through the cities of
Israel, "doing good," the veil
of the temple would continue unrent, to bar the worshipper's approach
to God. It was His
death that rent that mysterious curtain "from top to bottom."
It is "by His stripes," not by His
obedient life, that "we are healed;" and those
"stripes" He endured on the cross, and nowhere
else. His own words, during the progress of His blessed life, are quite
sufficient to settle this
point. "I have a, baptism to be baptised with; and how am I
straitened till it be accomplished."
(Luke 12: 50) To what does this refer but to His death upon the cross,
which was the
accomplishment of His baptism and the opening up of a righteous vent
through which His
love might freely flow out to the guilty sons of Adam? Again, He says,
"except a corn of
wheat fall into the ground and die it abideth alone." (John 12:
24) He was that precious "corn
of wheat:" and He should have remained for ever "alone,"
even though incarnate, had He not,
by His death upon the accursed tree, removed out of the way everything
that could have
hindered the union of his people with Him in resurrection. "If it
die, it bringeth forth much
fruit."
My reader cannot too carefully ponder this subject. It is one of
immense weight and
importance. He has to remember two points in reference to this entire
question, namely, that
there could be no union with Christ, save in resurrection; and that
Christ only suffered for sins
on the cross. We are not to suppose that incarnation was, by any means,
Christ taking us into
union with Himself. This could not be. How could sinful flesh be thus
united? The body of sin
had to be destroyed by death. Sin had to be put away, according to the
divine requirement; all
the power of the enemy had to be abolished. How was all this to be
done? Only by the
precious, spotless Lamb of God submitting to the death of the cross.
"It became him, for
whom are all things, and by whom are all things, in bringing many sons
unto glory, to make
the captain of their salvation perfect through sufferings." (Heb.
2: 10) "Behold, I cast out
devils, and I do cures today and tomorrow, and the third day I shall be
perfected." (Luke 13:
32) The expressions "perfect" and "perfected" in
the above passages do not refer to Christ in
His own Person abstractedly, for He was perfect from all eternity, as
Son of God; and as to
His humanity, He was absolutely perfect likewise. But then, as
"the captain of salvation"—as
"bringing many sons unto glory"—as "bringing forth much
fruit"—-as associating redeemed
people with Himself, He had to reach "the third day" in order
to be "perfected." He went down
alone into the "horrible pit, and miry clay;" but, directly
He plants His "foot on the rock" of
resurrection, He associates with Himself the "many sons." (Ps
40: l-3) He fought the fight
alone; but, as the mighty Conqueror, He scatters around Him, in rich
profusion, the spoils of
victory, that we might gather them up and enjoy them for ever.
Moreover, we are not to regard the cross of Christ as a mere
circumstance in a life of sin-
bearing. It was the grand and only scene of sin-bearing. "His own
self bare our sins in his own
body on the tree." (1 Peter 2: 14) He did not bear them anywhere
else. He did not bear them in
the manger, nor in the wilderness, nor in the garden; but ONLY "ON
THE TREE." He never
had ought to say to sin, save on the cross; and there He bowed His
blessed head, and yielded
up His precious life, under the accumulated weight of His people's
sins. Neither did He ever
suffer at the hand of God save on the cross; and there Jehovah hid His
face from Him because
He was "made sin." (2 Cor. 5)
The above train of thought, and the various passages of scripture
referred to, may, perhaps,
enable my reader to enter more fully into the divine power of the
words, "When I see The
blood I will pass over you." The lamb needed to be without
blemish, no doubt, for what else
could meet the holy eye of Jehovah? But, had the blood not been shed,
there could have been
no passing over, for "without shedding of blood is no remission."
(Heb. 9: 22) This subject
will, the Lord permitting, come more fully and appropriately before us
in the types of
Leviticus. It demands the prayerful attention of every one who loves
our Lord Jesus Christ in
sincerity.
We shall now consider the second aspect of the Passover, as the centre
round which the
assembly was gathered, in peaceful, holy, happy fellowship. Israel,
saved by the blood, was
one thing; and Israel, feeding on the lamb, was quite another. They
were saved only by the
blood; but the object round which they were gathered was, manifestly,
the roasted lamb. This
is not, by any means, a distinction without a difference. The blood of
the Lamb forms the
foundation both of our connection with God, and our connection with one
another. It is as
those who are washed in that blood, that we are introduced to God and
to one another. Apart
from the perfect atonement of Christ, there could obviously be no
fellowship either with God
or His assembly. Still we must remember that it is to a living Christ
in heaven that believers
are gathered by the Holy Ghost. It is with a living Head we are
connected—to "a living stone"
we have come. He is our centre. Having found peace, through His blood,
we own Him as our
grand gathering point and connecting link. "Where two or three are
gathered together in my
name there am I in the midst of them." (Matt. 18: 20) The Holy
Ghost is the only Gatherer;
Christ Himself is the only object to which we are gathered; and our
assembly, when thus
convened, is to be characterised by holiness, so that the Lord our God
may dwell among us.
The Holy Ghost can only gather to Christ. He cannot gather to a system,
a name, a doctrine, or
an ordinance. He gathers to a Person, and that Person is a glorified
Christ in heaven. This
must stamp a peculiar character on God's assembly. Men may associate,
on any ground, round
any centre, or for any object they please; but, when the Holy Ghost
associates, it is on the
ground of accomplished redemption, around the Person of Christ, in
order to form a holy
dwelling place for God. (1 Cor. 3: 16, 17; 1 Cor. 6: 19; Eph. 2: 21,
22; 1 Peter 2: 4, 5)
We shall now look in detail at the principles brought before us in the
paschal feast. The
assembly of Israel, as under the cover of the blood, was to be ordered
by Jehovah in a manner
worthy of Himself. In the matter of safety from judgement, as we have
already seen, nothing
was needed but the blood; but in the fellowship which flowed out of
this safety, other things
were needed which could not be neglected with impunity.
And first, then, we read, "They shall eat the flesh in that night,
roast with fire, and unleavened
bread; and with bitter herbs they shall eat it. Eat not of it raw, nor
sodden at all with water,
but roast with fire; his head with his legs, and with the purtenance
thereof." (Ver. 8, 9) The
lamb, round which the congregation was assembled, and on which it
feasted, was a roasted
lamb-a lamb which had undergone the action of fire. In this we see
"Christ our Passover"
presenting Himself to the action of the fire of divine holiness and
judgement which found in
Him a perfect material. He could say, "Thou hast proved mine
heart; thou hast visited me in
the night; thou hast tried me and shalt find nothing; I am purposed
that my mouth shall not
transgress." (Ps. 17: 3) All in Him was perfect. The fire tried
Him and there was no dross.
"His head with his legs, and with the purtenance thereof."
That is to say, the seat of His
understanding; His outward, walk with all that pertained thereto—all
was submitted to the
action of the fire, and all was entirely perfect. The process of
roasting was therefore deeply
significant, as is every circumstance in the ordinances of God. Nothing
should be passed over,
because all is pregnant with meaning.
Eat not of it raw, nor sodden at all with water." Had it been
eaten thus, there would have been
no expression of the great truth which it was the divine purpose to
shadow forth; namely, that
our paschal Lamb was to endure, on the cross, the fire of Jehovah's
righteous wrath—a truth
of infinite preciousness to the soul. We are not merely under the
eternal shelter of the blood
of the Lamb, but we feed, by faith, upon the Person of the Lamb. Many
of us come short here.
We are apt to rest satisfied with being saved by what Christ has done
for us, without
cultivating holy communion with Himself. His loving heart could never
be satisfied with this.
He has brought us nigh to Himself, that we might enjoy Him, that we
might feed on Him, and
delight in Him. He presents Himself to us as the One who has endured,
to the uttermost, the
intense fire of the wrath of God, that He may, in this wondrous
character, be the food of our
ransomed souls.
But how was this lamb to be eaten? "With unleavened bread and
bitter herbs." Leaven is,
invariably, used, throughout scripture, as emblematical of evil.
Neither in the Old nor in the
New Testament is it ever used to set forth anything pure, holy, or
good. Thus, in this chapter,
"the feast of unleavened bread" is the type of that practical
separation from evil which is the
proper result of being washed from our sins in the blood of the Lamb,
and the proper
accompaniment of communion with His sufferings. Nought but perfectly
unleavened bread
could at all comport with a roasted lamb. A single particle of that which
was the marked type
of evil, would have destroyed the moral character of the entire
ordinance. How could we
connect any species of evil with our fellowship with a suffering
Christ? Impossible. All who
enter by the power of the Holy Ghost, into the meaning of the cross
will, assuredly, by the
same power, put away leaven from all their borders. "For even
Christ our Passover is
sacrificed for us: therefore let us keep the feast, not with old
leaven, neither with the leaven
of malice and wickedness; but with the unleavened bread of sincerity
and truth." (1 Cor. 5: 7,
8) The feast spoken of in this passage is that which, in the life and
conduct of the Church,
corresponds with the feast of unleavened bread. This latter lasted
"seven days;" and the
Church collectively, and the believer individually, are called to walk
in practical holiness,
during the seven days, or entire period, of their course here below;
and this, moreover, as the
direct result of being washed in the blood, and having communion with
the sufferings of
Christ.
The Israelite did not put away leaven in order to be saved, but because
he was saved; and if he
failed to put away leaven, it did not raise the question of security
through the blood, but
simply of fellowship with the assembly. "Seven days shall there be
no leaven found in your
houses: for whosoever eateth that which is leavened, even that soul
shall be cut off from the
congregation of Israel, whether he be a stranger, or born in the
land." (Ver. 19) The cutting off
of an Israelite from the congregation answers precisely to the
suspension of a Christian's
fellowship, if he be indulging in that which is contrary to the
holiness of the divine presence.
God cannot tolerate evil. A single unholy thought will interrupt the
soul's communion; and
until the soil contracted by any such thought is got rid of by
confession, founded on the
advocacy of Christ, the communion cannot possibly be restored. (See 1
John 1: 9-10) The
true-hearted Christian rejoices in this. He can ever "give thanks
at the remembrance of God's
holiness." He would not, if he could, lower the standard a single
hair's breadth. It is his
exceeding joy to walk in company with one who will not go on, for a
moment, with a single
jot or tittle of leaven."
Blessed be God, we know that nothing can ever snap asunder the link
which binds the true
believer to Him. We are "saved in the Lord," not with a
temporary or conditional, but "with an
everlasting salvation." But then salvation and communion are not
the same thing. Many are
saved, who do not know it; and many, also, who do not enjoy it. It is
quite impossible that I
can enjoy a blood-stained lintel if I have leavened borders. This is an
axiom in the divine life.
May it be written on our hearts! Practical holiness, though not the
basis of our salvation, is
intimately connected with our enjoyment thereof. An Israelite was not
saved by unleavened
bread, but by the blood; and yet leaven would have cut him off from
communion. And as to
the Christian, he is not saved by his practical holiness, but by the
blood; but if he indulges in
evil, in thought, word, or deed, he will have no true enjoyment of
salvation, and no true
communion with the Person of the Lamb.
This, I cannot doubt, is the secret of much of the spiritual barrenness
and lack of settled peace
which one finds amongst the children of God. They are not cultivating
holiness; they are not
keeping "the feast of unleavened bread." The blood is on the
lintel, but the leaven within their
borders keeps them from enjoying the security which the blood provides.
The allowance of
evil destroys our fellowship, though it does not break the link which
binds our souls eternally
to God. Those who belong to God's assembly must be holy. They have not
only been
delivered from the guilt and consequences of sin, but- also from the
practice of it, the power
of it, and the love of it. The very fact of being delivered by the
blood of the paschal lamb,
rendered Israel responsible to put away leaven from all their quarters.
They could not say, in
the frightful language of the antinomian, "now that we are
delivered, we may conduct
ourselves as we please." By no means. If they were saved by grace,
they were saved to
holiness. The soul that can take occasion, from the freedom of divine
grace, and the
completeness of the redemption which is in Christ Jesus, to
"continue in sin," proves very
distinctly that he understands neither the one nor the other.
Grace not only saves the soul with an everlasting salvation, but also
imparts a nature which
delights in everything that belongs to God, because it is divine. We
are made partakers of the
divine nature, which cannot sin, because it is born of God. To walk in
the energy of this
nature is, in reality, to keep" the feast of unleavened bread.
There is no "old leaven" nor
"leaven of malice and wickedness" in the new nature, because
it is of God, and God is holy,
and "God is love." Hence it is evident that we do not put
away evil from us in order to better
our old nature, which is irremediable; nor yet to obtain the new
nature, but because we have
it. We have life, and, in the power of that life, we put away evil. It
is only when we are
delivered from the guilt of sin that we can understand or exhibit the
true power of holiness.
To attempt it in any other way is hopeless labour. The feast of
unleavened bread can only be
kept beneath the perfect shelter of the blood.
We may perceive equal significancy and moral propriety in that which
was to accompany the
unleavened bread, namely, the "bitter herbs." We cannot enjoy
communion with the
sufferings of Christ, without remembering what it was which rendered
those sufferings
needful, and this remembrance must necessarily produce a chastened and
subdued tone of
spirit, which is aptly expressed by the bitter herbs in the paschal
feast. If the roasted lamb
expressed Christ's endurance of the wrath of God in His own Person, on
the cross, the bitter
herbs express the believer's recognition of the truth that He
"suffered for us." "The
chastisement of our peace was upon him, and with his stripes we are
healed." (Is 53: 5) It is
well, owing to the excessive levity of our hearts, to understand the
deep meaning of the bitter
herbs. Who can read such Psalms as the 6, 22, 38, 49, 88, and 109, and
not enter, in some
measure, into the meaning of the unleavened bread with bitter herbs?
Practical holiness of life
with deep subduedness of soul must flow from real communion with
Christ's suffering, for it
is quite impossible that moral evil and levity of spirit can exist in
view of those sufferings.
But, it may be asked, is there not a deep joy for the soul in the
consciousness that Christ has
borne our sins; that He has fully drained, on our behalf, the cup of
God's righteous wrath?
Unquestionably. This is the solid foundation of all our joy. But can we
ever forget that it was
for "our sins" He suffered? Can we ever lose sight of the
soul-subduing truth that the blessed
Lamb of God bowed His head beneath the weight of our transgressions.
Surely not. We must
eat our lamb with bitter herbs, which, be it remembered, do not set
forth the tears of a
worthless and shallow sentimentality, but the deep and real experiences
of a soul that enters,
with spiritual intelligence and power, into the meaning and into the
practical effect of the
cross.
In contemplating the cross, we find in it that which cancels all our
guilt. This imparts sweet
peace and joy. But we find in it also the complete setting aside of
nature, the crucifixion of
"the flesh," the death of "the old man." (See Rom.
6: 6; Gal. 2: 20; Gal. 6: 14; Col 2: 11 This,
in its practical results, will involve much that is "bitter"
to nature. It will call for self-denial,
the mortification of our members which are on the earth, (Col. 3: 5)
the reckoning of self to
be dead indeed unto sin. (Rom. 6) All these things may seem terrible to
look at; but when one
gets inside the bloodstained door-post he thinks quite differently. The
very herbs which, to an
Egyptian's taste, would, no doubt, have seemed so bitter, formed an
integral part of Israels
redemption feast. Those who are redeemed by the blood of the Lamb, who
know the joy of
fellowship with Him, esteem it a "feast" to put away evil and
to keep nature in the place of
death.
"And ye shall let nothing of it remain until the morning; and that
which remaineth of it until
the morning ye shall burn with fire." (Ver. 10) In this command,
we are taught that the
communion of the congregation was, in no wise, to be separated from the
sacrifice on which
that communion was founded. The heart must ever cherish the vivid
remembrance that all
true fellowship is inseparably connected with accomplished redemption.
To think of having
communion with God, on any other ground is to imagine that He could
have fellowship with
our evil; and to think of fellowship with man, on any other ground, is
but to form an unholy
club, from which nothing could issue but confusion and iniquity. In a
word, all must be
founded upon, and inseparably linked with, the blood. This is the
simple meaning of eating
the paschal lamb the same night on which the blood was shed. The
fellowship must not be
separated from its foundation.
What a beauteous picture, then, we have in the blood-sheltered assembly
of Israel, feeding
peacefully on the roasted lamb, with unleavened bread and bitter herbs!
No fear of
judgement, no fear of the wrath of Jehovah, no fear of the terrible
hurricane of righteous
vengeance which was sweeping vehemently over the land of Egypt, at the
midnight hour. All
was profound peace within the blood-stained lintel. They had no need to
fear anything from
without; and nothing within could trouble them, save leaven, which
would have proved a
death-blow to all their peace and blessedness. What a picture for the
Church! What a picture
for the Christian! May we gaze upon it with an enlightened eye and a teachable
spirit!
However, we are not yet done with this most instructive ordinance. We
have been looking at
Israel's position, and Israel's food, let us now look at Israels habit.
"And thus shall ye eat it; with your loins girded, your shoes on
your feet, and your staff in
your hand; and ye shall eat it in haste; it is the Lord's
Passover." (Ver. 11) They were to eat it
as a people prepared to leave behind them the land of death and
darkness, wrath and
judgement, to move onward toward the land of promise—their destined
inheritance. The
blood which had preserved them from the fate of Egypt's firstborn was
also the foundation of
their deliverance from Egypt's bondage; and they were now to set out
and walk with God
toward the land that flowed with milk and honey. True, they had not yet
crossed the Red Sea;
they had not yet gone the "three days' journey." Still they
were, in principle, a redeemed
people, a separated people, a pilgrim people, an expectant people, a
dependent people; and
their entire habit was to be in keeping with their present position and
future destiny. The
girded loins bespoke intense separation from all around them, together
with a readiness to
serve. The shod feet declared their preparedness to leave that scene;
while the staff was the
expressive emblem of a pilgrim people, in the attitude of leaning on
something outside
themselves. Precious characteristics! Would that they were more
exhibited by every member
of God's redeemed family.
Beloved Christian reader, let us "meditate on these things."
We have tasted, through grace, the
cleansing efficacy of the blood of Jesus; as such it is our privilege
to feed upon His adorable
Person and delight ourselves in His "unsearchable riches;" to
have fellowship in His
sufferings and be made conformable to His death. Oh! let us, therefore,
be seen with the
unleavened bread and bitter herbs, the girded loins, the shoes and
staff. In a word, let us be
marked as a holy people, a crucified people, a watchful and diligent
people—a people
manifestly "on our way to God"—on our way to
glory—"bound for the kingdom." May God
grant us to enter into the depth and power of all these things; so that
they may not be mere
theories in our intellects mere principles of scriptural knowledge and
interpretation; but
living, divine realities, known by experience, and exhibited in the
life, to the glory of God.
We shall close this section by glancing, for a moment, at verses 43-49.
Here we are taught
that while it was the place and privilege of every true Israelite to
eat the Passover, yet no
uncircumcised stranger should participate therein. "There shall no
stranger eat thereof ....all
the congregation of Israel shall keep it." Circumcision was
necessary ere the Passover could
be eaten. In other words, the sentence of death must be written upon
nature ere we can
intelligently feed upon Christ, either as the ground of peace or the
centre of unity.
Circumcision has its antitype in the cross. The male alone was
circumcised. The female was
represented in the male. So, in the cross, Christ represented His
Church, and, hence, the
Church is crucified with Christ; nevertheless, she lives by the life of
Christ, known and
exhibited on earth, through the power of the Holy Ghost. "And when
a stranger shall sojourn
with thee, and will keep the Passover unto the Lord, let all his males
be circumcised, and then
let him come near and keep it; and he shall be as one that is born in
the land: for no
uncircumcised person shall eat thereof." "They that are in
the flesh cannot please God." (Rom.
8: 8)
The ordinance of circumcision formed the grand boundary line between
the Israel of God and
all the nations that were upon the face of the earth; and the cross of
the Lord Jesus Christ
forms the boundary between the church and the world. It matters not, in
the smallest degree,
what advantages of person or position a man possessed, he could have no
part with Israel until
he submitted to that flesh-cutting operation. A circumcised beggar was
nearer to God than an
uncircumcised king. So, also, now, there can be no participation in the
joys of God's
redeemed, save by the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ; and that cross
sweeps away all
pretensions, levels all distinctions, and unites all in one holy
congregation of blood-washed
worshippers. The cross forms a boundary so lofty, and a defence so
impenetrable, that not a
single atom of earth or of nature can cross over or pass through to
mingle itself with "the new
creation." All things are of God, who hath reconciled us to
himself." (2 Cor 5: 18)
But, not only was Israel's separation from all strangers strictly
maintained, in the institution of
the Passover; Israel's unity was also as clearly enforced. "In one
house shall it be eaten: thou
shalt not carry forth ought of the flesh abroad out of the house.
neither shall ye break a bone
thereof." (Ver. 46) Here is as fair and beauteous a type as we
could have of the "one body and
one Spirit. The Church of God is one. God sees it as such, maintains it
as such, and will
manifest it as such, in the view of angels, men, and devils,
notwithstanding all that has been
done to interfere with that hallowed unity. Blessed be God, the unity
of His Church is as
much in His keeping as is her justification, acceptance, and eternal
security. "He keepeth all
his bones; not one of them is broken." (Ps. 34: 20) And, again,
"a bone of him shall not be
broken." (John 19: 36) Despite the rudeness and hard-heartedness
of Rome's soldiery, and
despite all the hostile influences which have been set to work, from
age to age, the body of
Christ is one and its divine unity can never be broken. "THERE IS
ONE BODY AND ONE
SPIRIT;" and that, moreover, down here, on this very earth. Happy
are they who have got
faith to recognise this precious truth, and faithfulness to carry it
out, in these last days;
notwithstanding the almost insuperable difficulties which attend upon
their profession and
their practice! I believe God will own and honour such.
The Lord deliver us from that spirit of unbelief which would lead us to
judge by the sight of
our eyes, instead of by the light of His changeless Word!
Exodus 13
In the opening verses of this chapter, we are taught, clearly and
distinctly, that personal
devotedness and personal holiness are fruits which redeeming love
produces in those who are
the happy subjects thereof. The dedication of the firstborn and the
feast of unleavened bread
are here set forth in their immediate connection with the deliverance
of the people out of the
land of Egypt. "Sanctify unto me all the firstborn, whatsoever
openeth the womb among the
children of Israel, both of man and of beast: it is mine. And Moses
said unto the people,
Remember this day, in which ye came out from Egypt, out of the house of
bondage; for by
strength of hand the Lord brought you out from this place: there shall
no leavened bread be
eaten." And again, " Seven days thou shalt eat unleavened
bread, and in the seventh day shall
be a feast to the Lord. Unleavened bread shall be eaten seven days: and
there shall no
leavened bread be seen with thee: neither shall there be leaven seen
with thee in all thy
quarters."
Then we have the reason of both these significant observances laid
down. "And thou shalt
show thy son in that day, saying, This is done because of that which
the Lord did unto me
when I came forth out of Egypt." And, again, "It shall be,
when thy son asketh thee in time to
come, saying, What is this? that thou shalt say unto him, By strength
of hand the Lord brought
us out from Egypt, from the house of bondage. and it came to pass, when
Pharaoh would
hardly let us go, that the Lord slew all the firstborn in the land of
Egypt, both the firstborn of
man and the firstborn of beast: therefore I sacrifice to the Lord all
that openeth the matrix,
being males; but all the firstborn of my children I redeem."
The more fully we enter, by the power of the Spirit of God, into the
redemption which is in
Christ Jesus, the more decided will be our separation, and the more
whole-hearted will be our
devotedness. The effort to produce either the one or the other, until
redemption is known, will
prove the most hopeless labour possible. All our doings must be
"because of that which the
Lord hath done," and not in order to get anything from Him.
Efforts after life and peace prove
that we are, as yet, strangers to the power of the blood; whereas the
pure fruits of an
experienced redemption are to the praise of Him who has redeemed us.
"For by grace are ye
saved, through faith; and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of
God; not of works lest Any
man should boast; for we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus
unto good works,
which God hath before prepared that we should walk in them." (Eph.
2: 8, 10) God has
already prepared a path of good works for us to walk in; and He, by
grace, prepares us to walk
therein. It is only as saved that we can walk in such a path. Were it
otherwise, we might boast;
but seeing that we ourselves are as much God's workmanship as the path
in which we walk,
there is no room whatever for boasting.
True Christianity is but the manifestation of the life of Christ,
implanted in us by the
operation of the Holy Ghost, in pursuance of God's eternal counsels of
sovereign grace; and
all our doings, previous to the implantation of this life, are but
"dead works," from which we
need to have our consciences purged just as much as from "wicked
works." (Heb. 9: 14) The
term "dead works," comprehends all works which men do with
the direct object of getting
life. If a man is seeking for life, it is very evident that he has not
yet gotten it. He may be very
sincere in seeking it, but his very sincerity only makes it the more
obvious that, as yet, he has
not consciously reached it. Hence, therefore, everything done in order
to get life is a dead
work, inasmuch as it is done without life—the life of Christ, the only
true life, the only source
from whence good works can flow. And, observe, it is not a question of
"wicked works;" no
one would think of getting life by such. No; you will find, on the
contrary, that persons
continually have recourse to "dead works," in order to ease
their consciences, under the sense
of "wicked works," whereas divine revelation teaches us that
the conscience needs to be
purged from the one as well as the other.
Again, as to righteousness, we read that "all our righteousnesses
are as filthy rags." It is not
said that "all our wickednesses," merely, "are as filthy
rags." This would, at once, be admitted.
But the fact is, that the very best fruit which we can produce, in the
shape of religiousness and
righteousness, is represented, on the page of eternal truth, as
"dead works," and "filthy rags."
Our very efforts after life, do but prove us to be dead; and our very
efforts after righteousness
do but prove us to be enwrapped in filthy rags. It is only as the
actual possessors of eternal life
and divine righteousness that we can walk in the divinely-prepared path
of good works. Dead
works and filthy rags could never be suffered to appear in such a path.
None but "the
redeemed of the Lord" can walk therein. It was as a redeemed
people that Israel kept the feast
of unleavened bread, and dedicated their firstborn to Jehovah. The
former of these
observances we have already considered; as to the latter, it contains a
rich mine of instruction.
The destroying angel passed through the land of Egypt to destroy all
the firstborn; but Israel's
firstborn escaped through the death of a divinely-provided substitute.
Accordingly, these latter
appear before us, in this chapter, as a living people, dedicated to
God. Saved by the blood of
the lamb, they are privileged to consecrate their ransomed life to Him
who had ransomed it.
Thus it was only as redeemed that they possessed life. The grace of God
alone had made them
to differ, and had given them the place of living men in His presence.
In their case, assuredly,
there was no room for boasting; for, as to any personal merit or
worthiness, we learn from this
chapter that they were put on a level with an unclean and worthless
thing. "Every firstling of
an ass thou shalt redeem with a lamb; and if thou wilt not redeem it,
then thou shalt break his
neck; and all the firstborn of man among thy children shalt thou
redeem." (Ver. 13) There
were two classes, the clean and the unclean; and man was classed with
the latter. The lamb
was to answer for the unclean; and if the ass were not redeemed, his
neck was to be broken;
so that an unredeemed man was. put upon a level with an unclean animal,
and that, moreover,
in a condition than which nothing could be more worthless and
unsightly. What a humiliating
picture of man in his natural condition! Oh! that our poor proud hearts
could enter more into
it. Then should we rejoice more unfeignedly in the happy privilege of
being washed from our
guilt in the blood of the Lamb, and having all our personal vileness
left be hind for ever, in
the tomb where our Surety lay buried.
Christ was the Lamb—the clean, the spotless Lamb. We are unclean. But
for ever adored be
His matchless name! He took our position; and, on the cross, was made
sin, and treated as
such. That which we should have endured throughout the countless ages
of eternity, He
endured for us on the tree. He bore all that was due to us, there and
then, in order that we
might enjoy what is due to Him, for ever. He got our deserts that we
might get His. The clean
took, for a time, the place of the unclean, in order that the unclean
might take for ever the
place of the clean. Thus, whereas, by nature, we are represented by the
loathsome figure of an
ass with his neck broken; by grace we are represented by a risen and
glorified Christ in
heaven. Amazing contrast! It lays man's glory in the dust and magnifies
the riches of
redeeming love. It silences man's empty boastings and puts into his
mouth a hymn of praise to
God and the Lamb, which shall swell throughout the courts of heaven
during the everlasting
ages.*
{*It is interesting to see that by nature we are ranked with on unclean
animal; by grace we are
associated with Christ the spotless Lamb. There can be nothing lower
than the place which
belongs to us by nature; nothing higher than that which belongs to us
by grace. Look, for
example, at an ass with his neck broken; there is what an unredeemed
man is worth. Look at
"the precious blood of Christ;" there is what a redeemed man
is worth. "Unto you that believe
is the preciousness." That is, all who are washed in the blood
partake of Christ's preciousness.
As He is "a living stone," they are "living
stones;" as He is "a precious stone, they are
"precious stones." They get life and preciousness all from
Him and in Him. They are as He is.
Every stone in the edifice is precious, because purchased at no less a
price than "the blood of
the Lamb." May the people of God know more fully their place and
privileges in Christ!}
How forcibly is one here reminded of the apostle's memorable and
weighty words to the
Romans, " Now if we be dead with Christ, we believe that we shall
also live with him;
knowing that Christ being raised from the dead, dieth no more; death
hath no more dominion
over him. For in that he died, he died unto sin once; but in that he
liveth he liveth unto God.
Likewise reckon ye also yourselves to be dead indeed unto sin, but
alive unto God through
Jesus Christ our Lord. Let not sin therefore reign in your mortal body,
that ye should obey it in
the lusts thereof. Neither yield ye your members as instruments of
unrighteousness unto sin:
but yield yourselves unto God, as those that are alive from the dead,
and your members as
instruments of righteousness unto God. For sin shall not have dominion
over you: for ye are
not under the law, but under grace." (Rom. 6: 8-14) We are not
only ransomed from the power
of death and the grave, but also united to Him who has ransomed us at
the heavy cost of His
own precious life, that we might, in the energy of the Holy Ghost,
dedicate our new life, with
all its powers, to His service, so that His worthy name may be
glorified in us according to the
will of God and our Father.
We are furnished, in the last few verses of Exodus 13 with a touching
and beautiful example
of the Lord's tender consideration of His people's need. "He
knoweth our frame; He
remembereth that we are dust." (Psalm 103: 14) When He redeemed
Israel and took them into
relationship with Himself, He, in His unfathomed and infinite grace,
charged Himself with all
their need and weakness. It mattered not what they were or what they
needed, when I AM was
with them, in all the exhaustless treasures of that name. He had to
conduct them from Egypt
to Canaan, and we here find Him occupying Himself in selecting a
suitable path for them.
"And it came to pass, when Pharaoh had let the people go, that God
led them not through the
may of the land of the Philistines, although that was near; for God
said, Lest peradventure the
people repent when they see war, and they return to Egypt: but God led
the people about
through the way of the wilderness of the Red Sea." (Ver. 17, 18)
The Lord, in His condescending grace, so orders for His people, that
they do not, at their first
setting out, encounter heavy trials which might have the effect of
discouraging their hearts
and driving them back. "The way of the wilderness" was a much
more protracted route; but
God had deep and varied lessons to teach His people, which could only
be learnt in the desert.
They were, afterwards, reminded of this fact, in the following passage:
"And thou shalt
remember all the way which the Lord thy God led thee, these forty
years, in the wilderness, to
humble thee, and to prove thee, to know what was in thine heart,
whether thou wouldest keep
his commandments or no. And he humbled thee, and suffered thee to
hunger, and fed thee
with manna, which thou knewest not, neither did thy fathers know, that
he might make thee
know that man doth not live by bread only, but by every word that
proceedeth out of the
mouth of the Lord doth man live. Thy raiment waxed not old upon thee,
neither did thy foot
swell, these forty years." (Deut. 8: 2-4) Such precious lessons as
these could never have been
learnt in "the way of the land of the Philistines." In that
way, they might have learnt what war
was, at an early stage of their career; but "in the way of the
wilderness," they learnt what flesh
was, in all its crookedness, unbelief, and rebellion. But I AM was
there, in all His patient
grace, unerring wisdom, and infinite power. None but Himself could have
met the demand.
None but He could endure the opening up of the depths of a human heart.
To have my heart
unlocked anywhere, save in the presence of infinite grace, would plunge
me in hopeless
despair. The heart of man is but a little hell. What boundless mercy, then,
to be delivered
from its terrible depths!
"Oh! to grace how great a debtor
Daily I'm constrained to be;
Let that grace, Lord, like a fetter,
Bind my wandering heart to thee!"
"And they took their journey from Succoth, and encamped in Etham,
in the edge of the
wilderness. And the Lord went before them by day in a pillar of cloud,
to lead them the way;
and by night in a pillar of fire, to give them light; to go by day and
night: he took not away the
pillar of the cloud by day, nor the pillar of fire by night, from
before the people." Jehovah not
only selected a path for His people, but He also came down to walk with
them therein, and
make Himself known to them according to their need. He not only
conducted them safely
outside the bounds of Egypt, but He also came down, as it were, in His
travelling chariot, to
be their companion through all the vicissitudes of their wilderness
journey. This was divine
grace. They were not merely delivered out of the furnace of Egypt and
then allowed to make
the best of their way to Canaan. Such was not God's manner toward them.
He knew that they
had a toilsome and perilous journey before them, through serpents and
scorpions, snares and
difficulties, drought and barrenness; and He, blessed be His name for
ever, would not suffer
them to go alone. He would be the companion of all their toils and
dangers; yea, "He went
before them." He was "a guide, a glory, a defence, to save
from every fear. Alas! that they
should ever have grieved that Blessed One by their hardness of heart.
Had they only walked
humbly, contentedly, and confidingly with Him, their march would have
been a triumphant
one from first to last. With Jehovah in their forefront, no power could
have interrupted their
onward progress from Egypt to Canaan. He would have carried them
through and planted
them in the mountain of His inheritance, according to His promise, and
by the power of His
right hand; nor should as much as a single Canaanite have been allowed
to remain therein to
be a thorn in their side. Thus will it be, by and by, when Jehovah
shall set His hand, a second
time, to deliver His people from under the power of all their
oppressors. day the Lord hasten
the time!
Exodus 14
"They that go down to the sea in ships, that do business in great
waters; these see the works of
the Lord, and his wonders in the deep." (Ps. 107: 23, 24) How true
is this! and yet our coward
hearts do so shrink from those "great waters!" We prefer
carrying on our traffic in the
shallows, and, as a result, we fail to see "the works" and
"wonders" of our God; for these can
only be seen and known "in the deep."
It is in the day of trial and difficulty that the soul experiences
something of the deep and
untold blessedness of being able to count on God. Were all to go on
smoothly, this would not
be so. It is not in gliding along the surface of a tranquil lake that
the reality of the Master's
presence is felt; but actually when the tempest roars, and the waves
roll over the ship. The
Lord does not hold out to us the prospect of exemption from trial and
tribulation; quite the
opposite: He tells us we shall have to meet both the one and the other;
but He promises to be
with us in them; and this is infinitely better. God's presence in the
trial is much better than
exemption from the trial. The sympathy of His heart with us is sweeter
far than the power of
His hand for us. The Master's presence with His faithful servants,
while passing through the
furnace, was better far than the display of His power to keep them out
of it. (Dan. 3) We
would frequently desire to be allowed to pass on our way without trial,
but this would involve
serious loss. The Lord's presence is never so sweet as in moments of
appalling difficulty.
Thus it was in Israel's case, as recorded in this chapter. They were
brought into an
overwhelming difficulty. They are called to "do business in great
waters." "They are at their
wit's end." Pharaoh, repenting himself of having let them go out
of his land, determines to
make one desperate effort to recover them. "And he made ready his
chariot, and took his
people with him: and he took six hundred chosen chariots, and all the
chariots of Egypt, and
captains over every one of them....... And when Pharaoh drew nigh, the
children of Israel
lifted up their eyes, and, behold, the Egyptians marched after them;
and they were sore afraid;
and the children of Israel cried out unto the Lord." Here was a
deeply-trying scene —one in
which human effort could avail nothing. As well might they have
attempted to put back with
a straw the ocean's mighty tide, as seek to extricate themselves by
ought that they could do.
The sea was before them, Pharaoh's hosts behind them, and the mountains
around them. And
all this, be it observed, permitted and ordered of God. He had marked
out their position before
"Pi-hahiroth, between Migdol and the sea, over against
Baal-zephon." Moreover, He
permitted Pharaoh to come upon them, And why? Just to display Himself
in the salvation of
His people, and the total overthrow of their enemies. "To him that
divided the Red Sea into
parts; for his mercy endureth for ever. And made Israel to pass through
the midst of it; for his
mercy endureth for ever: but overthrew Pharaoh and his host in the Red
Sea; for his mercy
endureth for ever." (Ps. 136)
There is not so much as a single position in all the desert-wanderings
of God's redeemed, the
boundaries of which are not marked off, with studious accuracy, by the
hand of unerring
wisdom and infinite love. The special bearings and peculiar influences
of each position are
carefully arranged. The Pi-hahiroths and the Migdols are all ordered
with immediate
reference to the moral condition of those whom God is conducting
through the windings and
labyrinths of the wilderness, and also to the display of His own
character. Unbelief may
ofttimes suggest the enquiry, "why is it thus?" God knows
why; and He will, without doubt,
reveal the why, whenever the revelation would promote His glory and His
people's good. How
often do we feel disposed to question as to the why and the wherefore
of our being placed in
such and such circumstances! How often do we perplex ourselves as to
the reason of our
being exposed to such and such trials! How much better to bow our heads
in meek subjection,
and say, 'it is well,' and 'it shall be well' When God fixes our position
for us, we may rest
assured it is a wise and salutary one; and even when we foolishly and
wilfully choose a
position for ourselves, He most graciously overrules our folly, and
causes the influences of
our self-chosen circumstances to work for our spiritual benefit.
It is when the people of God are brought into the greatest straits and
difficulties, that they are
favoured with the finest displays of God's character and actings; and
for this reason He
ofttimes leads them into a trying position, in order that He may the
more markedly show
Himself. He could have conducted Israel through the Red Sea, and far
beyond the reach of
Pharaoh's hosts, before ever the latter had started from Egypt; but
that would not have so fully
glorified His own name, or so entirely confounded the enemy, upon whom
He designed to
"get him honour." We too frequently lose sight of this great
truth, and the consequence is that
our hearts give way in the time of trial. If we could only look upon a
difficult crisis as an
occasion of bringing out, on our behalf, the sufficiency of divine
grace, it would enable us to
preserve the balance of our souls, and to glorify God, even in the
deepest waters.
We feel disposed, it may be, to marvel at Israel's language, on the
occasion now before us.
We may feel at a loss to account for it; but the more we know of our
own evil hearts of
unbelief, the more we shall see how marvellously like them we are. They
would seem to have
forgotten the recent display of divine power on their behalf. They had
seen the gods of Egypt
judged, and the power of Egypt laid prostrate beneath the stroke of
Jehovah's omnipotent
hand. They had seen the iron chain of Egyptian bondage riven, and the
furnace quenched by
the same hand. All these things they had seen, and yet the moment a
dark cloud appeared
upon their horizon, their confidence gave way, their hearts failed, and
they gave utterance to
their unbelieving murmurings in the following language: Because there
were no graves in
Egypt, hast thou taken us away to die in the wilderness? Wherefore hast
thou dealt thus with
us, to carry us forth out of Egypt! ......It had been better for us to
serve the Egyptians than that
we should die in the wilderness." (Ver. 11, 12) Thus is
"blind unbelief," ever, "sure to err, and
scan God's ways in vain." This unbelief is the same in all ages.
It led David, in an evil hour, to
say, "I shall one day perish by the hand of Saul; there is nothing
better for me than that I
should speedily escape into the land of the Philistines." (1 Sam.
27: 1) And how did it turn
out? Saul fell on Mount Gilboa; and David's throne was established for
ever. Again, it led
Elijah the Tishbite, in a moment of deep depression, to flee for his
life, from the wrathful
threatenings of Jezebel. How did it turn out? Jezebel was dashed to
pieces on the pavement,
and Elijah was taken in a chariot of fire to heaven.
So it was with Israel in their very first moment of trial. They really
thought that the Lord had
taken such pains to deliver them out of Egypt merely to let them die in
the wilderness. They
imagined that they had been preserved by the blood of the paschal lamb,
in order that they
might be buried in the wilderness. Thus it is that unbelief ever
reasons. It leads us to interpret
God in the presence of the difficulty, instead of interpreting the
difficulty in the presence of
God. Faith gets behind the difficulty, and there finds God, in all His
faithfulness, love, and
power. It is the believer's privilege ever to be in the presence of
God. He has been introduced
thither by the blood of the Lord Jesus Christ, and nothing should be
suffered to take him
thence. The place itself he never can lose, inasmuch as his Head and
Representative, Christ,
occupies it on His behalf. But although he cannot lose the thing
itself, he can, very easily, lose
all enjoyment of it, the experience and power of it. Whenever his
difficulties come between
his heart and the Lord, he is, evidently, not enjoying the Lord's
presence, but suffering in the
presence of his difficulties. Just as when a cloud comes between us and
the sun, it robs us, for
the time, of the enjoyment of his beams. It does not prevent him from
shining, it merely
hinders our enjoyment of him. Exactly so is it when we allow trials and
sorrows, difficulties
and perplexities, to hide from our souls the bright beams of our
Father's countenance, which
ever shine, with changeless lustre, in the face of Jesus Christ. There
is no difficulty too great
for our God; yea, the greater the difficulty, the more room there is
for Him to act in His
proper character, as the God of all power and grace. No doubt, Israel's
position, in the opening
of our chapter, was a deeply trying one—to flesh and blood perfectly
overwhelming. But,
then, the Maker of heaven and earth was there, and they had but to use
Him.
Yet, alas! my reader, how speedily we fail when trial arises! These
sentiments sound very
nicely on the ear, and look very well upon paper; and, blessed be God,
they are divinely true
but, then, the thing is to practise them, when opportunity offers. It
is in the practice of them
that their power and blessedness are really proved. "If any man
will do his will, he shall know
of the doctrine, whether it be of God." (John 7: 17)
"And Moses said unto the people, Fear ye not, stand still, and see
the salvation of the Lord,
which he will show to you today; for the Egyptians whom ye have seen
today ye shall see
them again no more for ever. The Lord shall fight for you, and ye shall
hold your peace."
(Ver. 13, 14) Here is the first attitude which faith takes in the
presence of a trial. "Stand still."
This is impossible to flesh and blood. All who know in any measure, the
restlessness of the
human heart, under anticipated trial and difficulty, will be able to
form some conception of
what is involved in standing still. Nature must be doing something. It
will rush hither and
thither. It would fain have some hand in the matter. And although it
may attempt to justify
and sanctify its worthless doings, by bestowing upon them the imposing
and popular title of
"a legitimate use of means," yet are they the plain and
positive fruits of unbelief which always
shuts out God, and sees nought save the dark cloud of its own creation.
Unbelief creates or
magnifies difficulties, and then sets us about removing them by our own
bustling and fruitless
activities, which, in reality, do but raise a dust around us, which
prevents our seeing God's
salvation.
Faith, on the contrary, raises the soul above the difficulty, straight
to God Himself, and
enables one to "stand still." We gain nothing by our restless
and anxious efforts. "We cannot
make one hair white or black," nor "add one cubit to our
stature." What could Israel do at the
Red Sea? Could they dry it up? Could they level the mountains? Could
they annihilate the
hosts of Egypt Impossible. There they were, enclosed within an
impenetrable wall of
difficulties, in view of which nature could but tremble and feel its
own perfect impotency.
But this was just the time
for God to act. When unbelief is driven from the scene, then God
can enter; and, in order to get a proper view of His actings, we must
"stand still." Every
movement of nature is, so far as it goes, a positive hindrance to our
perception and enjoyment
of divine interference on our behalf.
This is true of us in every single stage of our history. It is true of
us as sinners when, under the
uneasy sense of sin upon the conscience, we are tempted to resort to
our own doings, in order
to obtain relief. Then, truly, we must "stand still" in order
to "see the salvation of God." For
what could we do in the matter of making an atonement for sin? Could we
have stood with
the Son of God upon the cross? Could we have accompanied Him down into
the "horrible pit
and the miry clay?" Could we have forced our passage upward to
that eternal rock on which,
in resurrection, He has taken His stand? Every right mind will at once
pronounce the thought
to be a daring blasphemy. God is alone in redemption; and as for us, we
have but to "stand
still and see the salvation of God." The very fact of its being
God's salvation proves that man
has nought to do in it.
The same is true of us, from the moment we have entered upon our
Christian career. In every
fresh difficulty, be it great or small, our wisdom is to stand still—to
cease from our own
works, and find our sweet repose in God's salvation. Nor can we make
any distinction as to
difficulties. We cannot say that there are some trifling difficulties
which we ourselves can
compass; while there are others in which nought save the hand of God
can avail. No; all are
alike beyond us. We are as little able to change the colour of a hair
as to remove a
mountain—to form a blade of grass as to create a world. All are alike
to us, and all are alike
to God. We have only, therefore, in confiding faith, to cast ourselves
on Him who "humbleth
himself (alike) to behold the things that are in heaven and on
earth." We sometimes find
ourselves carried triumphantly through the heaviest trials, while at
other times, we quail,
falter, and break down under the most ordinary dispensations. Why is
this? Because, in the
former, we are constrained to roll our burden over on the Lord;
whereas, in the latter, we
foolishly attempt to carry it ourselves. The Christian is, in himself,
if he only realised it, like
an exhausted receiver, in which a guinea and a feather have equal
moments.
"The Lord shall fight for you, and ye shall hold your peace."
Precious assurance How
eminently calculated to tranquillise the spirit in view of the most
appalling difficulties and
dangers! The Lord not only places Himself between us and our sins, but
also between us and
our circumstances. By doing the former, He gives us peace of
conscience; by doing the latter,
He gives us peace of heart. That the two things are perfectly distinct,
every experienced
Christian knows. Very many have peace of conscience, who have not Peace
of heart. They
have, through grace and by faith, found Christ, in the divine efficacy
of His blood, between
them and all their sins; but they are not able, in the same simple way,
to realise Him as
standing, in His divine wisdom, love, and power, between them and their
circumstances. This
makes a material difference in the practical condition of the soul, as
well as in the character
of one's testimony. Nothing tends more to glorify the name of Jesus
than that quiet repose of
spirit which results from having Him between us and everything that
could be a matter of
anxiety to our hearts. "Thou wilt keep him in perfect peace whose
mind is stayed on thee,
because he trusteth in thee."
But some feel disposed to ask the question, "Are we not to do
anything?" This may be
answered by asking another, namely, what can we do? All who really know
themselves must
answer, nothing. If, therefore, we can do nothing, had we not better
"stand still" If the Lord is
acting for us, had we not better stand back? Shall we run before Him?
Shall we busily intrude
ourselves upon His sphere of action! Shall we come in His way? There
can be no possible use
in two acting, when one is so perfectly competent to do all. No one
would think of bringing a
lighted candle to add brightness to the sun at mid-day: and yet the man
who would do so
might well be accounted wise, in comparison with him who attempts to
assist God by his
bustling officiousness.
However, when God, in His great mercy, opens the way, faith can walk
therein. It only ceases
from man's way in order to walk in God's. "And the Lord said unto
Moses, Wherefore criest
thou unto me? Speak unto the children of Israel that they go
forward." It is only when we have
learnt to "stand still" that we are able effectually to go
forward. To attempt the latter, until we
have learnt the former, is sure to issue in the exposure of our folly
and weakness. It is,
therefore, true wisdom, in all times of difficulty and perplexity, to
"stand still"—to wait only
upon God, and He will, assuredly, open a way for us; and then we can
peacefully we happily
"go forward." There is no uncertainty when God makes a way
for us; but every self-devised
path must prove a path of doubt and hesitation. The unregenerate man
may move along with
great apparent firmness and decision in his own ways; but one of the
most distinct elements,
in the new creation, is self distrust, and the element which answers
thereto is confidence in
God. It is when our eyes have seen God's salvation that we can walk
therein; but this can
never be distinctly seen until we have been brought to the end of our
own poor doings.
There is peculiar force and beauty in the expression, "see the
salvation of God." The very fact
of our being called to "see" God's salvation, proves that the
salvation is a complete one. It
teaches that salvation is a thing wrought out and revealed by God, to
be seen and enjoyed by
us. It is not a thing made up partly of God's doing, and partly of
man's. Were it so, it could not
be called God's salvation. In order to be His, it must be wholly
divested of everything
pertaining to man. The only possible effect of human efforts is to
raise a dust which obscures
the view of God's salvation.
"Speak to the children of Israel that they go forward." Moses
himself seems to have been
brought to a stand, as appears from the Lord's question,
"Wherefore criest thou to me?" Moses
could tell the people to "stand still and see the salvation of
God," while his own spirit was
giving forth its exercises in an earnest cry to God. However, there is
no use in crying when we
ought to be acting; just as there is no use in acting when we ought to
be waiting. Yet such is,
ever, our way. We attempt to move forward when we ought to stand still,
and we stand still
when we ought to move forward. In Israel's case, the question might
spring up in the heart,
"whither are we to go?' To all appearance there is an
insurmountable barrier in the way of any
movement forward. How were they to go through the sea? This was the
point. Nature never
could solve this question. But we may rest assured that God never gives
a command without,
at the same time, communicating the power to obey. The real condition
of the heart may be
tested by the command; but the soul that is, by grace, disposed to
obey, receives power from
above to do so. When Christ commanded the man with the withered hand to
stretch it forth,
the man might naturally have said, "How can I stretch forth an arm
which hangs dead by my
side?" But he did not raise any question whatever, for with the
command, and from the same
source, came the power to obey.
Thus, too, in Israel's case, we see that with the command to go forward
came the provision of
grace. "But lift thou up thy rod, and stretch out thy hand over
the sea, and divide it; and the
children of Israel shall go on dry ground through the midst of the
sea." Here was the path of
faith. The hand of God opens the way for us to take the first step, and
this is all that faith ever
God never gives guidance for two steps at a time. I must take one step,
and then I get light for
the next. This keeps the heart in abiding dependence upon God. "By
faith they Passed through
the Red Sea as by dry Land." It is evident that the sea was not
divided throughout, at once.
Had it been so, it would have been "sight" and not
"faith." It does not require faith to begin a
journey when I can see all the way through; but to begin when I can
merely see the first step,
this is faith. The sea opened as Israel moved forward, so that for
every fresh step, they needed
to be cast upon God. Such was the path along which the redeemed of the
Lord moved, under
His own conducting hand. They passed through the dark waters of death,
and found these very
waters to be "a wall unto them, on their right hand and on their
left."
The Egyptians could not move in such a path as this. They moved on
because they saw the
way open before them: with them it was sight, and not faith—"Which
the Egyptians assaying
to do were drowned." When people assay to do what faith alone can
accomplish, they only
encounter defeat and confusion. The path along which God calls His
people to walk is one
which nature can never tread—"Flesh and blood cannot inherit the
kingdom of God." (1 Cor.
15: 50) Neither can it walk in the ways of God. Faith is the great
characteristic principle of
God's kingdom, and faith alone can enable us to walk in God's ways.
"Without faith it is
impossible to please God." (Heb. 11) It glorifies God exceedingly
when we move on with
Him, as it were, blindfold. It proves that we have more confidence in
His eyesight than in our
own. If I know that God is looking out for me, I may well close my
eyes, and move on in holy
calmness and stability. In human affairs we know that when there is a
sentinel or watchman at
his post, others can sleep quietly. How much more may we rest in
perfect security, when we
know that He who neither slumbers nor sleeps has His eye upon us, and
His everlasting arms
around us!
"And the angel of God which went before the camp of Israel,
removed and went behind them;
and the pillar of the cloud went from before their face, and stood
behind them. And it came
between the camp of the Egyptians and the camp of Israel; and it was a
cloud and darkness to
them, but it gave light by night to these; so that the one came not
near the other all the night."
(Ver. 19, 20) Jehovah placed Himself right between Israel and the
enemy—this was
protection indeed. Before ever Pharaoh could touch a hair of Israel's
head, he should make his
way through the very pavilion of the Almighty—yea, through the Almighty
Himself. Thus it is
that God ever places Himself between His people and every enemy, so
that "no weapon
formed against them can prosper." He has placed Himself between us
and our sins; and it is
our happy privilege to find Him between us and every one and every
thing that could be
against us. This is the true way in which to find both peace of heart
and peace of conscience.
The believer may institute a diligent and anxious search for his sins,
but he cannot find them.
Why? Because God is between him and them. He has cast all our sins
behind His back; while,
at, the same time, He sheds forth upon us the light of His reconciled
countenance.
In the same manner, the believer may look for his difficulties, and not
find them, because God
is between him and them. If, therefore, the eye, instead of resting on
our sins and sorrows,
could rest only upon Christ, it would sweeten many a bitter cup, and
enlighten many a gloomy
hour. But one finds constantly that nine-tenths of our trials and
sorrows are made up of
anticipated or imaginary evils, which only exist in our own disordered,
because unbelieving,
minds. May my reader know the solid peace both of heart and conscience
which results from
having Christ, in all His fullness, between him and all his sins, and
all his sorrows.
It is, at once, most solemn and interesting to note the double aspect
of the "pillar," in this
chapter. "It was a cloud and darkness" to the Egyptians, but
"it gave light by night" to Israel.
How like the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ! Truly that cross has a
double aspect, likewise. It
forms the foundation of the believer's peace; and, at the same time,
seals the condemnation of
a guilty world. The self-same blood which purges the believer's
conscience and gives him
perfect peace, stains this earth and consummates its guilt. The very
mission of the Son of God
which strips the world of its cloak, and leaves it wholly without
excuse, clothes the Church
with a fair mantle of righteousness, and fills her month with ceaseless
praise. The very same
Lamb who will terrify, by His unmitigated wrath, all tribes and classes
of earth, will lead, by
His gentle hand, His blood-bought flock, through the green pastures,
and beside the still
waters for ever. (Compare Rev. 6: 15-17, with Rev. 7: 13-17)
The close of our chapter shows us Israel triumphant on the shore of the
Red Sea, and
Pharaoh's hosts submerged beneath its waves. The fears of the former
and the boastings of the
latter had both alike been proved utterly groundless. Jehovah's
glorious work had annihilated
both the one and the other. The same waters which formed a wall for
God's redeemed, formed
a grave for Pharaoh. Thus it is ever: those who walk by faith, find a
path to walk in, while all
who assay to do so find a grave. This is a solemn truth which is not,
in any wise, weakened by
the fact that Pharaoh was acting in avowed and positive hostility to
God, when he "assayed" to
pass through the Red Sea. It will ever be found true that all who
attempt to imitate faith's
actings will be confounded. Happy are they who are enabled, however
feebly, to walk by
faith. They are moving along a path of unspeakable blessedness—a path
which, though it may
be marked by failure and infirmity, is, nevertheless, "begun,
continued, and ended in God."
Oh! that we may all enter more fully into the divine reality, the calm
elevation, and the holy
independence of this path.
We ought not to turn from this fruitful section of our book without a
reference to 1 Cor. 10 in
which we have an allusion to "the cloud and the sea."
"Moreover, brethren, I would not that
ye should be ignorant, how that all our fathers were under the cloud,
and all passed through
the sea; and were all baptised unto Moses in the cloud and in the
sea." (Ver. 1, 2) There is
much deep and precious instruction for the Christian in this passage.
The apostle goes on to
say, "now these things were our types," thus furnishing us
with a divine warrant for
interpreting Israel's baptism "in the sea and in the cloud,"
in a typical way; and, assuredly,
nothing could be more deeply significant or practical. It was as a
people thus baptised that
they entered upon their wilderness journey, for which provision was
made in "the spiritual
meat" and "spiritual drink," provided by the hand of
love. In other words, they were, typically,
a people dead to Egypt and all pertaining thereto. The cloud and the
sea were to them what
the cross and grave of Christ are to us. The cloud secured them from
their enemies; the sea
separated them from Egypt: the cross, in like manner, shields us from
all that could be against
us, and we stand at heaven's side of the empty tomb of Jesus. Here we
commence our
wilderness journey. Here we begin to taste the heavenly manna and to
drink of the streams
which emanate from "that spiritual Rock," while, as a pilgrim
people, we make our way
onward to that land of rest of the which God has spoken to us.
I would further add here, that my reader should seek to understand the
difference between the
Red Sea and Jordan. They both have their antitype in the death of
Christ. But, in the former,
we see separation from Egypt; in the latter, introduction into the land
of Canaan. The believer
is not merely separated from this present evil world, by the cross of
Christ; but he is
quickened out of the grave of Christ, "raised up together, and
made to sit together with Christ,
in the heavenlies." (Eph. 2: 5, 6) Hence, though surrounded by the
things of Egypt, he is, as to
his actual experience, in the wilderness; while, at the same time, he
is borne upward, by the
energy of faith, to that place where Jesus sits, at the right hand of
God. Thus, the believer is
not merely "forgiven all trespasses;" but actually associated
with a risen Christ in heaven. He
is not merely saved by Christ, but linked with Him, for ever. Nothing
short of this could either
satisfy God's affections or actualise His purposes, in reference to the
Church.
Reader, do we understand these things? Do we believe them? Are we
realising them? Do we
manifest the power of them? Blessed be the grace that has made them
unalterably true with
respect to every member of the body of Christ, whether it be an eye or
an eye-lash, a hand or a
foot. Their truth, therefore, does not depend upon our manifestation,
our realisation, or our
understanding, but upon "THE PRECIOUS BLOOD OF CHRIST," which
has cancelled all
our guilt and laid the foundation of all God's counsels respecting us.
Here is true rest for every
broken heart and every burdened conscience.
EXODUS, Section 2 (Ex.
15-end).
C H Mackintosh
Exodus 15
This chapter opens with Israel's magnificent song of triumph on the
shore of the Red Sea,
when they had seen "that great work which the Lord did upon the
Egyptians." They had seen
God's salvation, and they, therefore, sing His praise and recount His
mighty acts. "Then sang
Moses and the children of Israel this song unto the Lord." Up to
this moment, we have not
heard so much as a single note of praise. We have heard their cry of
deep sorrow, as they
toiled amid the brick-kilns of Egypt; we have hearkened to their cry of
unbelief, when
surrounded by what they deemed insuperable difficulties; but, until
now, we have heard no
song of praise. It was not until, as a saved people, they found
themselves surrounded by the
fruits of God's salvation, that the triumphal hymn burst forth from the
whole redeemed
assembly. It was when they emerged from their significant baptism
"in the cloud and in the
sea," and were able to gaze upon the rich spoils of victory, which
lay scattered around them,
that six hundred thousand voices were heard chanting the song of
victory. The waters of the
Red Sea rolled between them and Egypt, and they stood on the shore as a
fully delivered
people, and, therefore, they were able to praise Jehovah.
In this, as in everything else, they were our types. We, too, must know
ourselves as saved, in
the power of death and resurrection, before ever we can present clear
and intelligent worship.
There will always be reserve and hesitancy in the soul, proceeding, no
doubt, from positive
inability to enter into the accomplished redemption which is in Christ
Jesus. There may be the
acknowledgement of the fact that there is salvation in Christ, and in
none other; but this is a
very different thing from apprehending, by faith, the true character
and ground of that
salvation, and realising it as ours. The Spirit of God reveals, with
unmistakable clearness, in
the Word, that the Church is united to Christ in death and
resurrection; and, moreover, that a
risen Christ, at God's right hand, is the measure and pledge of the
Church's acceptance. When
this is believed, it conducts the soul entirely beyond the region of
doubt and uncertainty. How
can the Christian doubt when he knows that he is continually
represented before the throne of
God by an Advocate, even "Jesus Christ the righteous?" It is
the privilege of the very feeblest
member of the Church of God to know that he was represented by Christ
on the cross; that all
his sins were confessed, borne, judged, and atoned for there. This is a
divine reality, and,
when laid hold of by faith, must give peace. But nothing short of it
ever can give peace. There
may be earnest, anxious, and most sincere desires after God. There may
be the most pious and
devout attendance upon all the ordinances, offices, and forms of
religion. But there is no other
possible way in which to get the sense of sin entirely removed from the
conscience, but seeing
it judged in the Person of Christ, as a sin-offering on the cursed
tree. If it was judged there,
once for all, it is now by the believer to be regarded as a divinely
and, therefore, eternally-
settled question. And that it was so judged is proved by the
resurrection of the Surety. "I know
that whatsoever God doeth it shall be for ever: nothing can be put to
it nor anything taken
from it: and God doeth it that men should fear before him." (Ecc.
3: 14)
However, while it is generally admitted that all this is, true in
reference to the Church
collectively, many find considerable difficulty in making a personal
application thereof. They
are ready to say, with the psalmist, "Truly, God is good to
Israel, even to such as are of a clean
heart. But as for me," &c. (Ps. 73: 1, 2) They are looking at
themselves instead of at Christ, in
death, and Christ, in resurrection. They are occupied rather with their
appropriation of Christ
than with Christ Himself. They are thinking of their capacity rather
than their title. Thus they
are kept in a state of the most distressing uncertainty; and, as a
consequence, they are never
able to take the place of happy, intelligent worshippers. They are
praying for salvation instead
of rejoicing in the conscious possession of it. They are looking at
their imperfect fruits instead
of Christ's perfect atonement.
Now, in looking through the various notes of this song, in Exodus 15,
we do not find a single
note about self, its doings, its sayings, its feelings, or its fruits.
It is all about Jehovah from
beginning to end. It begins with, "I will sing unto the Lord, for
he hath triumphed gloriously:
the horse and his rider hath he thrown into the sea." This is a
specimen of the entire song. It is
a simple record of the attributes and actings of Jehovah. In Ex. 14 the
hearts of the people?
had, as it were, been pent up, by the excessive pressure of their
circumstances: but in Ex. 15
the pressure is removed, and their hearts find full vent in a sweet
song of praise. Self is
forgotten. Circumstances are lost sight of. One object, and but one,
fills their vision, and that
object is the Lord Himself in His character and ways. They were able to
say, "Thou, Lord, hast
made me glad through thy work; I will triumph in the works of thy
hands." (Ps. 92: 4) This is
true worship. It is when poor worthless self, with all its belongings,
is lost sight of, and Christ
alone fills the heart, that we present proper worship. There is no need
for the efforts of a
fleshly pietism to awaken in the soul feelings of devotion. Nor is
there any demand whatever
for the adventitious appliances of religion, so called, to kindle in
the soul the flame of
acceptable worship. Oh! no; let but the heart be occupied with the
Person of Christ, and
"songs of praise" will be the natural result. It is
impossible for the eye to rest on Him and the
spirit not be bowed in holy worship. If we contemplate the worship of
the hosts which
surround the throne of God and the Lamb, we shall find that it is ever
evoked by the
presentation of some special feature of divine excellence or divine
acting. Thus should it be
with the Church on earth; and when it is not so, it is because we allow
things to intrude upon
us which have no place in the regions of unclouded light and unalloyed
blessedness. In all
true worship, God Himself is at once the object of worship, the subject
of worship, and the
power of worship.
Hence Exodus 15 is a fine specimen of a song of praise. It is the
language of a redeemed
people celebrating the worthy praise of Him who had redeemed them.
"The Lord is my
strength and song, and he is become my salvation: He is my God, and I
will prepare him an
habitation; my fathers God, and I will exalt him. The Lord is a man of
war, the Lord is his
name, . . . thy right hand, O Lord is become glorious in power: thy
right hand, O Lord, hath
dashed in pieces the enemy ....who is like unto thee, O Lord, among the
gods? Who is like
thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders? . . . .
Thou, in thy mercy, hast led
forth the people which thou hast redeemed: thou hast guided them in thy
strength unto thy
holy habitation. . . . The Lord shall reign for ever and ever."
How comprehensive is the range
of this song. It begins with redemption and ends with the glory. It
begins with the cross, and
ends with the kingdom. It is like a beauteous rainbow, of which one end
dips in "the
sufferings," and the other in "the glory which should
follow." It is all about Jehovah. It is an
outpouring of soul produced by a view of God and His gracious and
glorious actings.
Moreover, it does not stop short of the actual accomplishment of the
divine purpose; as we
read, "Thou hast guided them in thy strength unto thy holy
habitation." The people were able
to say this, though they had but just planted their foot on the margin
of the desert. It was not
the expression of a vague hope. It was not feeding upon poor blind
chance. Oh! no; when the
soul is wholly occupied with God, it is enabled to launch out into all
the fullness of His grace,
to bask in the sunshine of His countenance, and delight itself in the
rich abundance of His
mercy and loving-kindness. There is not a cloud upon the prospect, when
the believing soul,
taking its stand upon the eternal rock on which redeeming love has set
it in association with a
risen Christ, looks up into the spacious vault of God's infinite plans
and purposes, and dwells
upon the effulgence of that glory which God has prepared for all those
who have washed their
robes and made them white in the blood of the Lamb.
This will account for the peculiarly brilliant, elevated, and
unqualified character of all those
bursts of praise which we find throughout sacred Scripture, The
creature is set aside; God is
the object. He fills the entire sphere of the soul's vision. There is
nothing of man, his feelings,
or his experiences, and, therefore, the stream of praise flows copiously
and uninterruptedly
forth. How different is this from some of the hymns which we so often
hear sung in Christian
assemblies, so full of our failings, our feebleness, our shortcomings.
The fact is, we can never
sing with real, spiritual intelligence and power when we are looking at
ourselves We shall
ever be discovering something within which will act as a drawback to
our worship. Indeed,
with many, it seems to be accounted a Christian grace to be in a
continual state of doubt and
hesitation; and, as a consequence, their hymns are quite in character
with their condition.
Such persons, however sincere and pious, have never yet, in the actual
experience of their
souls, entered upon the proper ground of worship. They have not yet got
done with
themselves. They have not passed through the sea; and, as a spiritually
baptised people, taken
their stand on the shore, in the power of resurrection. They are still,
in some way or another,
occupied with self. They do not regard self as a crucified thing, with
which God is for ever
done.
May the Holy Ghost lead all God's people into fuller, clearer, and
worthier apprehensions of
their place and privilege as those who, being washed from their sins in
the blood of Christ, are
presented before God in all that infinite and unclouded acceptance in
which He stands, as the
risen and glorified Head of His Church. Doubts and fears do not become
them, for their
divine Surety has not left a shadow of a foundation on which to build a
doubt or a fear. Their
place is within the veil. They "have boldness to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus."
(Heb. 10: 19) Are there any doubts or fears in the holiest? Is it not
evident that a doubting
spirit virtually calls in question the perfectness of Christ's work—a
work which has been
attested, in the view of all created intelligence, by the resurrection
of Christ from the dead?
That blessed one could not have left the tomb unless all ground of
doubting and fearing had
been perfectly removed on behalf of His people. Wherefore, it is the
Christians sweet
privilege ever to triumph in a full salvation. The Lord Himself has
become his salvation; and
he has only to enjoy the fruits of that which God has wrought for him,
and to walk to His
praise while waiting for that time, when "Jehovah shall reign for
ever and ever."
But there is one note in this song, to which I shall just invite my
reader's attention. "He is my
God and I will prepare him an habitation." It is worthy of note
that when the heart was full to
overflowing with the joy of redemption, it gives expression to its
devoted purpose in
reference to "a habitation for God." Let the Christian reader
ponder this. God dwelling with
man is a grand thought pervading Scripture from Exodus 15 to
Revelation. Hearken to the
following utterance of a devoted heart: "Surely I will not come
into the tabernacle of my
house nor go up into my bed; I will not give sleep to mine eyes or
slumber to mine eyelids,
until I find out a place for the Lord, an habitation for the mighty God
of Jacob." (Ps. 132: 3-5)
Again, "For the zeal of thine house hath eaten me up." (Ps.
49: 9; John 2: 17.) I do not attempt
to pursue this subject here; but I would fain awaken such an interest
concerning it in the
breast of my reader, as shall lead him to pursue it, prayerfully, for
himself, from the earliest
notice of it in the Word until he arrives at that soul-stirring
announcement, "Behold the
tabernacle of God is with men, and he will dwell with them, and they
shall be his people, and
God himself shall be with them and be their God. And God shall wipe
away all tears from
their eyes." (Rev. 21: 3, 4)
"So Moses brought Israel from the Red Sea; and they went out into
the wilderness of Shur:
and they went three days in the wilderness and found no water."
(ver. 22) It is when we get
into wilderness experience, that we are put to the test as to the real
measure of our
acquaintance with God and with our own hearts. There is a freshness and
an exuberance of
joy connected with the opening of our Christian career, which very soon
receives a check
from the keen blast of the desert; and then, unless there is a deep
sense of what God is to us,
above and beyond everything else, we are apt to break down, and,
"in our hearts, turn back
again into Egypt." The discipline of the wilderness is needful,
not to furnish us with a title to
Canaan, but to make us acquainted with God and with our own hearts; to
enable us to enter
into the power of our relationship, and to enlarge our capacity for the
enjoyment of Canaan
when we actually get there. (See Deut. 8: 2-5.)
The greenness, freshness, and luxuriance of spring have peculiar
charms, which will pass
away before the scorching heat of summer; but then, with proper care,
that very heat which
removes the fair traces of spring, produces the mellowed and matured
fruits of autumn. Thus
it is also in the Christian life; for there is, as we know, a striking
and deeply instructive
analogy between the principles which obtain in the kingdom of nature
and those which
characterise the kingdom of grace, seeing it is the same God whose
handiwork meets our
view in both.
There are three distinct positions in which we may contemplate Israel,
namely, in Egypt, in
the wilderness, and in the land of Canaan. In all these, they are
"our types;" but we are in all
three together. This may seem paradoxical, but it is true. As a matter
of actual fact, we are in
Egypt, surrounded by natural things, which are entirely adapted to the
natural heart. But,
inasmuch as we have been called by God's grace into fellowship with His
Son Jesus Christ,
we, according to the affections and desires of the new nature,
necessarily find our place
outside of all that which belongs to Egypt,, (i.e., the world in its
natural state),* and this
causes us to taste of wilderness experience, or, in other words, it
places us, as a matter of
experience, in the wilderness. The divine nature earnestly breathes
after a different order of
things—after a purer atmosphere than that with which we find ourselves
surrounded, and thus
it causes us to feel Egypt to be a moral desert.
{*There is a wide moral difference between Egypt and Babylon, which it
is important to
understand. Egypt was that out of which Israel came; Babylon was that
into which they were
afterwards carried. (Comp. Amos 5: 25-27 with Acts 7: 42, 43) Egypt
expresses what man has
made of the world; Babylon expresses what Satan has made, is making, or
will make, of the
professing Church. Hence, we are not only surrounded with the
circumstances of Egypt, but
also by the moral principles of Babylon.
This renders our "days" what the Holy Ghost has termed
"perilous." (calepoi—"difficult".) It
demands a special energy of the Spirit of God, and complete subjection
to the authority of the
Word, to enable one to meet the combined influence of the realities of
Egypt and the spirit
and principles of Babylon. The former meet the natural desires of the
heart; while the latter
connect themselves with, and address themselves to, the religiousness
of nature, which gives
them a peculiar hold upon the heart. Man is a religious being, and
peculiarly susceptible of
the influences which arise from music, sculpture, painting, and pompous
rites and
ceremonies. When these things stand connected with the full supply of
all his natural wants—
yes, with all the ease and luxury of life, nothing but the mighty power
of God's Word and
Spirit can keep one true to Christ.
We should also remark that there is a vast difference between the
destinies of Egypt and those
of Babylon. Isaiah 19 sets before us the blessing that are in store for
Egypt. It concludes thus:
"And the Lord shall smite Egypt; he shall smite and heal it: and
they shall return even unto the
Lord, and he shall be entreated of them, and shall heal them. . . . . .
in that day shall Israel be
the third with Egypt and with Assyria, even a blessing in the midst of
the land, whom the Lord
of Hosts shall bless, saying, Blessed be Egypt my people, and Assyria
the work of my hands,
and Israel mine inheritance."(ver. 22-25)
Very different is the close of Babylon's history, whether viewed as a
literal city or a spiritual
system. "I will also make it a possession for the bittern, and
pools of water; and I will sweep it
with the besom of destruction, saith the Lord of hosts." (Isaiah
14: 23) "It shall never be
inhabited, neither shall it be dwelt in from generation to
generation." (Isaiah 13: 20) So much
for Babylon literally; and looking at it from a mystic or spiritual
point of view, we read its
destiny in Revelation 18. The entire chapter is a description of
Babylon, and it concludes thus:
" A strong angel took up a stone, like a great millstone, and cast
it into the sea, saying, "Thus,
with violence shall that great city Babylon be thrown down, and shall
be found no more at
all." (Verse 21)
With what immense solemnity should those words fall upon the ears of
all who are in any
wise connected with Babylon—that is to say, with the false, professing
church. "Come out of
her, my people, that ye be not partakers of her sins, and that ye
receive not of her plagues!"
(Rev. 18: 5) The "power" of the Holy Ghost will necessarily
produce, or express itself in a
certain " form, and the enemy's aim has ever been to rob the
professing church of the power,
while he leads her to cling to, and perpetuate the form—to stereotype
the form when all the
spirit and life has passed away. Thus he builds the spiritual Babylon.
The stones of which this
city is built are lifeless professors; and the slime or mortar which
binds these stones together
is a, form of godliness without the power."
Oh my beloved reader, let us see to it that we fully, clearly and
influentially understand these
things.}
But then, inasmuch as we are, in God's view, eternally associated with
Him who is passed
right through into the heavenlies, and taken His seat there in triumph
and majesty, it is our
happy privilege to know ourselves, by faith, as "sitting together
with him" there. (Eph. 2) So
that although we are, as to our bodies, in Egypt, we are, as to our
experience, in the
wilderness, while at the same time, faith conducts us, in spirit, into
Canaan, and enables us to
feed upon "the old corn of the land," i.e., upon Christ, not
as One come down to earth merely,
but as One gone back to heaven and seated there in glory.
The concluding verses of this 15th chapter show us Israel in the
wilderness. Up to this point it
seemed to them to be all fair sailing. Heavy judgements poured upon
Egypt, but Israel
perfectly exempt—the army of Egypt dead upon the sea shore, but Israel
in triumph. All this
was well enough; but alas! the aspect of things speedily changed. The
notes of praise were
soon exchanged for the accents of discontent. "When they came to
Marah they could not
drink of the waters of Marah, for they were bitter: therefore the name
of it was called Marah.
And the people murmured against Moses, saying, What shall we
drink?" Again, "the whole
congregation of the children of Israel murmured against Moses and Aaron
in the wilderness:
and the children of Israel said unto them, Would to God we had died by
the hand of the Lord
in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh pots, and when we did
eat bread to the full! for
ye have brought us forth into this wilderness to kill this whole
assembly with hunger."
Here were the trials of the wilderness. What shall we eat?" and
"What shall we drink?" The
waters of Marah tested the heart of Israel and developed their
murmuring spirit; but the Lord
showed them that there was no bitterness which He could not sweeten
with the provision of
His own grace. "And the Lord showed them a tree, which when he had
cast into the waters,
the waters were made sweet; there he made for them a statute and an
ordinance, and there he
proved them." Beauteous figure this of Him who was, in infinite
grace, cast into the bitter
waters of death, in order that those waters might yield nought but
sweetness to us for ever.
We can truly say, "the bitterness of death is past," and
nothing remains for us but the eternal
sweets of resurrection.
Verse 26 sets before us the momentous character of this first stage of
Gods redeemed in the
wilderness. We are in great danger, at this point, of falling into a
fretful, impatient,
murmuring spirit. The only remedy for this is to keep the eye steadily
fixed on Jesus—
"looking unto Jesus." He, blessed be His name, ever unfolds
himself according to the need of
His people; and they, instead of complaining of their circumstances,
should only make their
circumstances an occasion of drawing afresh upon Him. Thus it is that
the wilderness
ministers to our experience of what God is. It is a school in which we
learn His patient grace
and ample resources. "Forty years suffered he their manners in the
wilderness." (Acts 13: 18)
The spiritual mind will ever own that it is worth having bitter waters
for God to sweeten. "We
glory in tribulations also: knowing that tribulation worketh patience;
and patience,
experience; and experience, hope; and hope maketh not ashamed; because
the love of God is
shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Ghost which is given unto
us." (Rom. 5: 3-5)
However, the wilderness has its Elims as well as its Marahs; its wells
and palm trees, as well
as its bitter waters. "And they came to Elim, where were twelve
wells of water, and threescore
and ten palm trees: and they encamped thereby the waters." (Ver.
27) The Lord graciously and
tenderly provides green spots in the desert for His journeying people;
and though they are, at
best, but oases, yet are they refreshing to the spirit and encouraging
to the heart. The sojourn
at Elim was eminently calculated to soothe the hearts of the people,
and hush their
murmurings. The grateful shade of its palm trees, and the refreshing of
its wells, came in,
sweetly and seasonably, after the trial of Marah, and significantly set
forth, in our view, the
precious virtues of that spiritual ministry which God provides for his
people down here. "The
twelve and "the seventy " are numbers intimately associated
with ministry.
But Elim was not Canaan. Its wells and palm trees were but foretastes
of that happy land
which lay beyond the bounds of the sterile desert on which the redeemed
had just entered. It
furnished refreshment, no doubt, but it was wilderness refreshment. It
was but for passing
moment, designed, in grace, to encourage their depressed spirits, and
nerve them for their
onward march to Canaan. Thus it is as we know, with ministry in the
Church. It is a gracious
provision for our need, designed to refresh, strengthen, and encourage
our hearts, "until we all
come to the fullness of the measure of the stature of Christ."
(Eph. 4)
Exodus 16
"And they took their journey from Elim, and all the congregation
of the children of Israel
came unto the wilderness of Sin, which is between Elim and Sinai, on
the fifteenth day of the
second month after their departure out of the land of Egypt."
(Chap. 16: 1) Here we find Israel
in a very marked and interesting position. It is still the wilderness,
no doubt, but it is a most
important and significant stage thereof, namely, "between Elim and
Sinai." The former was
the place where they had so recently experienced the refreshing springs
of divine ministry; the
latter was the place where they entirely got off the ground of free and
sovereign grace, and
placed themselves under a covenant of works. These facts render
"the wilderness of Sin" a
singularly interesting portion of Israel's journey. Its features and
influences are as strongly
marked as those of any point in their whole career. They are here seen
as the subjects of the
same grace which had brought them up out of the land of Egypt, and,
therefore, all their
murmurings are instantly met by divine supplies. When God acts in the
display of His grace,
there is no hindrance. The streams of blessing which emanate from Him,
flow onward without
interruption. It is only when man puts himself under law that he
forfeits everything; for then
God must allow him to prove how much he can claim on the ground of his
own works.
When God visited and redeemed His people, and brought them forth out of
the land of Egypt,
it assuredly was not for the purpose of suffering them to die of hunger
and thirst in the
wilderness. They should have known this. They ought to have trusted
Him, and walked in the
confidence of that love which had so gloriously delivered them from the
horrors of Egyptian
bondage. They should have remembered that it was infinitely better to
be in the desert with
God, than in the brick-kilns with Pharaoh. But no; the human heart
finds it immensely
difficult to give God credit for pure and perfect love. It has far more
confidence in Satan than
God. Look, for a moment, at all the sorrow and suffering, the misery
and degradation which
man has endured by reason of his having hearkened to the voice of
Satan, and yet he never
gives utterance to a word of complaint of his service, or of desire to
escape from under his
hand. He is not discontented with Satan, or weary of serving him. Again
and again, he reaps
bitter fruits in those fields which Satan has thrown open to him; and
yet, again and again, he
may be seen sowing the self-same seed, and undergoing the self-same
labours.
How different it is in reference to God! When we have set out to walk
in His ways, we are
ready, at the earliest appearance of pressure or trial, to murmur and
rebel. Indeed, there is
nothing in which we so signally fail as in the cultivation of a
confiding and thankful spirit.
Ten thousand mercies are forgotten in the presence of one single trying
privation. We have
been frankly forgiven all our sins, "accepted in the
Beloved," made heirs of God and joint-
heirs with Christ, the expectants of eternal glory; and, in addition to
all, our path through the
desert is strewed with countless mercies; and yet let but a cloud, the
size of a man's hand,
appear on the horizon, and we at once forget the rich mercies of the
past in view of this single
cloud, which, after all, may only "break in blessings on our
head." The thought of this should
humble us deeply in the presence of God. How unlike we are in this, as
in every other respect,
to our blessed Exemplar! Look at Him—the true Israel in the
wilderness—surrounded by wild
beasts, and fasting for forty days. How did He carry Himself? Did He
murmur? Did He
complain of His lot? Did He wish Himself in other circumstances? Ah!
no. God was the
portion of His cup and the lot of His inheritance. (Ps. 16) And,
therefore, when the tempter
approached and offered Him the necessaries, the glories, the
distinctions, and the honours of
this life, He refused them all, and tenaciously held fast the position
of absolute dependence
upon God and implicit obedience to His word. He would only take bread
from God and glory
from Him likewise.
Very different was it with Israel after the flesh ! No sooner did they
feel the pressure of
hunger than "they murmured against Moses and Aaron in the
wilderness." They seemed to
have actually lost the sense of having been delivered by the hand of
Jehovah, for they said,
"Ye have brought us forth into this wilderness." And, again,
in Ex. 17, "the people murmured
against Moses and said, Wherefore is this that thou hast brought us up
out of Egypt to kill us,
and our children, and our cattle with thirst?" Thus did they, on
every occasion, evince a
fretful, murmuring spirit, and prove how little they realised the
presence and the hand of their
Almighty and infinitely gracious Deliverer.
Now, nothing is more dishonouring to God than the manifestation of a
complaining spirit on
the part of those that belong to Him. The apostle gives it as a special
mark of Gentile
corruption that, "when they knew God, they glorified him not as
God, neither were thankful."
Then follows the practical result of this unthankful spirit. "They
became vain in their
imaginations, and their foolish heart was darkened." (Rom. 1: 2)
The heart that ceases to
retain a thankful sense of God's goodness will speedily become
"dark." Thus Israel lost the
sense of being in God a hands; and this led, as might be expected, to
still thicker darkness, for
we find them, further on in their history, saying, "Wherefore hath
the Lord brought us into this
land, to fall by the sword, that our wives and our children shall be a
prey?" (Num. 14: 3) Such
is the line along which a soul out of communion will travel. It first
loses the sense of being in
God's hands for good, and, finally, begins to deem itself in His hands
for evil.
Melancholy progress this! However, the people being so far the subjects
of grace, are
provided for; and our chapter furnishes the marvellous account of this
provision. "Then said
the Lord unto Moses, Behold, I will rain bread from heaven for
you." They, when enveloped
in the chilling cloud of their unbelief, had said, "Would to God
we had died by the hand of the
Lord in the land of Egypt, when we sat by the flesh-pots, and when we
did eat bread to the
full." But now the word is, "bread from heaven." Blessed
contrast! How amazing the
difference between the Flesh-pots, the leeks, onions, and garlic of
Egypt, and this heavenly
manna—"angels' food!" The former belonged to earth, the
latter to heaven.
But, then, this heavenly food was, of necessity, a test of Israel's
condition, as we read, "That I
may prove them, whether they will walk in my law or no." It needed
a heart weaned from
Egypt's influences, to be satisfied with, or enjoy "bread from
heaven." In point of fact, we
know that the people were not satisfied with it, but despised it,
pronounced it "light food," and
lusted for flesh. Thus they proved how little their hearts were
delivered from Egypt, or
disposed to walk in God's law. "In their hearts they turned back
again into Egypt." (Acts 7: 39)
But, instead of getting back thither, they were, ultimately, carried
away beyond Babylon.
(Acts 7: 43) This is a solemn and salutary lesson for Christians. If
those who are redeemed
from this present world, do not walk with God in thankfulness of heart,
satisfied with His
provision for the redeemed in the wilderness, they are in danger of
falling into the snare of
Babylonish influence. This is a serious consideration. It demands a
heavenly taste to feed on
bread from heaven. Nature cannot relish such food. It will ever yearn
after Egypt, and,
therefore, it must be kept down. It is our privilege, as those who have
been baptised into
Christ's death, and "risen again through the faith of the
operation of God," to feed upon Christ
as "the bread of life which came down from heaven." This is
our wilderness food—Christ as
ministered by the Holy Ghost, through the written word; while, for our
spiritual refreshment,
the Holy Ghost has come down, as the precious fruit of the smitten
Rock—Christ, as smitten
for us. Such is our rare portion, in this desert world.
Now, it is obvious that, in order to enjoy such a portion as this, our
hearts must be weaned
from everything in this present evil world—from all that would address
itself to us as natural
men—as men alive in the flesh. A worldly heart—a carnal mind, would
neither find Christ in
the Word, nor enjoy Elim if found. The manna was so pure and delicate
that it could not bear
contact with earth. It fell upon the dew, (see Num. 11: 9) and had to
be gathered ere the sun
was up. Each one, therefore, had to rise early and seek his daily
portion. So it is with the
people of God now. The heavenly manna must be gathered fresh every
morning. Yesterdays
manna will not do for today, nor today's for tomorrow. We must feed
upon Christ every day,
with fresh energy of the Spirit, else we shall cease to grow. Moreover,
we must make Christ
our primary object. We must seek Him "early," before
"other things" have had time to take
possession of our poor susceptible hearts. Many of us, alas! fail in
this. We give Christ a
secondary place, and the consequence is, we are left feeble and barren.
The enemy, ever
watchful, takes advantage of our excessive spiritual indolence to rob
us of the blessedness and
strength which flow from feeding upon Christ. The new life in the
believer can only be
nourished and sustained by Christ. "As the living Father hath sent
me, and I live by the Father;
so he that eateth me, even he shall live by me." (John 6: 57)
The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, as the One who came down from
heaven, to be His
people's food is ineffably precious to the renewed soul; but, in order
to enjoy Him thus, we
need to realise ourselves, as in the wilderness, separated to God, in
the power of
accomplished redemption. If I am walking with God through the desert, I
shall be satisfied
with the food which He provides, and that is, Christ as come down from
heaven. "The old
corn of the land of Canaan" has its antitype in Christ ascended up
on high, and seated in the
glory. As such, He is the proper food of those who by faith, know
themselves as raised up
together and seated together with Him in the heavenlies. But the manna,
that is, Christ as
come down from heaven, is for the people of God, in their wilderness
life and experience. As
a people journeying down here, we need a Christ who also journeyed down
here; as a people
seated in spirit up there, we have a Christ who is seated up there.
This may help to explain the
difference between the manna and the old corn of the land. It is not a
question of redemption;
that we have in the blood of the cross, and there alone. It is simply
the provision which God
has made for His people, according to their varied attitudes, whether
as actually toiling in the
desert, or in spirit taking possession of the heavenly inheritance.
What a striking picture is presented by Israel in the wilderness! Egypt
was behind them,
Canaan before them, and the sand of the desert around them; while they
themselves were
called to look up to heaven for their daily supply. The wilderness
afforded not one blade of
grass nor one drop of water for the Israel of God. In Jehovah alone was
their portion. Most
touching illustration of God's pilgrim people in this wilderness world!
They have nothing
here. Their life, being heavenly, can only be sustained by heavenly
things. Though in the
world, they are not of it, for Christ has chosen them out of it. As a
heaven-born people, they
are on their way to their birth-place, and sustained by food sent from
thence. Theirs is an
upward and an onward course. The glory leads only thus. It is utterly
vain to cast the eye
backward in the direction of Egypt; not a ray of the glory can there be
discerned. "They
looked toward the wilderness, and behold the glory of the Lord appeared
in the clouds."
Jehovah's chariot was in the wilderness, and all who desired companionship
with Him should
be there likewise; and, if there, the heavenly manna should be their
food, and that alone.
True, this manna was strange sustenance, such as an Egyptian could
never understand,
appreciate, or live upon; but those who had been "baptised in the
cloud and in the sea," could,
if walking in consistency with that significant baptism, enjoy and be
nourished by it. Thus is it
now in the case of the true believer. The worldling cannot understand
how he lives. Both his
life and that which sustains it lie entirely beyond the range of
nature's keenest vision. Christ is
his life, and on Christ he lives. He feeds, by faith, upon the powerful
attractions of one who,
though being "God over all, blessed for ever," "took
upon him the form of a servant, and was
made in the likeness of men." (Phil. 2: 7) He traces Him from the
bosom of the Father to the
cross, and from the cross to the throne, and finds Him, in every stage
of His journey, and in
every attitude of His life, to be most precious food for his new man.
All around, though, in
fact, Egypt, is morally a waste howling wilderness, affording nothing
for the renewed mind;
and, just in proportion as the Christian finds any material to feed
upon, must his spiritual man
be hindered in his progress. The only provision which God has made is
the heavenly manna,
and on this the true believer should ever feed.
It is truly deplorable to find Christians seeking after the things of
this world. It proves, very
distinctly, that they are "loathing" the heavenly manna, and
esteeming it "light food." They are
ministering to that which they ought to mortify. The activities of the
new life will ever show
themselves in connection with the subjugation of "the old man with
his deeds;" and the more
that is accomplished, the more will we desire to feed upon the
"bread which strengthens man's
heart." As in nature, the more we exercise, the better the
appetite, so in grace, the more our
renewed faculties are called into play, the more we feel the need of
feeding, each day, upon
Christ. It is one thing to know that we have life in Christ, together
with full forgiveness and
acceptance before God, and it is quite another to be in habitual
communion with Him—
feeding upon Him by faith—making Him the exclusive food of our souls.
Very many profess
to have found pardon and peace in Jesus, who, in reality, are feeding
upon a variety of things
which have no connection with Him. They feed their minds with the
newspapers and the
varied frivolous and vapid literature of the day. Will they find Christ
there? Is it by such
instrumentality that the Holy Ghost ministers Christ to the soul? Are
these the pure dew-drops
on which the heavenly manna descends for the sustenance of God's
redeemed in the desert?
Alas! no; they are the gross materials in which the carnal mind
delights. How then can a true
Christian live upon such? We know, by the teaching of God's word, that
he carries about with
him two natures; and it may be asked, Which of the two is it that feeds
upon the world's news
and the world's literature? Is it the old or the new? There can be but
the one reply. Well, then,
which of the two am I desirous of cherishing? Assuredly my conduct will
afford the truest
answer to this enquiry. If I sincerely desire to grow in the divine
Life—if my one grand object
is to be assimilated and devoted to Christ—if I am earnestly breathing
after an extension of
God's kingdom within, I shall, without doubt, seek continually that
character of nourishment
which is designed of God to promote my spiritual growth. This is plain.
A man's acts are
always the truest index of his desires and purposes. Hence, if I find a
professing Christian
neglecting his Bible, yet finding abundance of time—yea, some of his
choicest hours—for the
newspaper, I can be at no loss to decide as to the true condition of
his soul. I am sure he
cannot be spiritual—cannot be feeding upon, living for, or witnessing
to, Christ.
If an Israelite neglected to gather, in the freshness of the morning
hour, his daily portion of
the divinely appointed food, he would speedily have become lacking in
strength for his
journey. Thus is it with us. We must make Christ the paramount object
of our souls' pursuit,
else our spiritual life will inevitably decline. We cannot even feed
upon feelings and
experiences connected with Christ, for they, inasmuch as they are
fluctuating, cannot form
our spiritual nourishment. It was Christ yesterday, and it must be
Christ today, and Christ for
ever. Moreover, it will not do to feed partly on Christ and partly on
other things. As, in the
matter of life, it is Christ alone; so, in the matter of living, it
must be Christ alone. As we
cannot mingle anything with that which imparts life; so neither can we
mingle anything with
that which sustains it.
It is quite true that, in spirit, and by faith, we can, even now, feed
upon a risen and gloried
Christ, ascended up to heaven in virtue of accomplished redemption, as
prefigured by "the old
corn of the land." (See Joshua 5) And not only so, but we know
that when God's redeemed
shall have entered upon those fields of glory, rest, and immortality,
which lie beyond the
Jordan, they shall, in actual fact, be done with wilderness food; but
they will not be done with
Christ. nor with the remembrance of that which constitutes the specific
nourishment of their
desert life.
Israel were never to forget, amid the milk and honey of the land of
Canaan, that which had
sustained them during their forty years' sojourn in the wilderness.
"This is the thing which the
Lord commandeth, Fill an omer of is to be kept for your generations;
that they may see the
bread wherewith I have fed you in the wilderness, when I brought you
forth from the land of
Egypt..... As the Lord commanded Moses, so Aaron laid it up before the
testimony, to be
kept." (Ver. 32) Most precious memorial of the faithfulness of
God! He did not suffer them to
die of hunger, as their foolish hearts had unbelievingly anticipated.
He rained bread from
heaven for them, fed them with angels' food, watched over them with all
the tenderness of a
nurse, bore with them, carried them on eagles' wings; and, had they
only continued on the
proper ground of grace, He would have put them in eternal possession of
all the promises
made to their fathers. The pot of manna, therefore, containing, as it
did, a man's daily portion,
and laid up before the Lord, furnishes a volume of truth. There was no
worm therein nor
ought of taint. It was the record of Jehovah's faithfulness, in
providing for those whom He had
redeemed out of the hand of the enemy.
Not so, however, when man hoarded it up for himself. Then the symptoms
of corruptibility
soon made their appearance. We cannot, if entering into the truth and
reality of our position,
hoard up. It is our privilege, day by day, to enter into the
preciousness of Christ, as the One
who came down from heaven to give life unto the world. But if any, in
forgetfulness of this,
should be found hoarding up for tomorrow, that is, laying up truth
beyond his present need,
instead of turning it to profit in the way of renewing strength it will
surely become corrupt.
This is a salutary lesson for us. It is a deeply solemn thing to learn
truth; for there is not a
principle which we profess to have learnt which we shall not have to
prove practically. God
will not have us theorists. One often trembles to hear persons make
high professions and use
expressions of intense devotedness, whether, in prayer or otherwise,
lest. when the hour of
trial comes, there may not be the needed spiritual power to carry out
what the lips have
uttered.
There is a great danger of the intellect's outstripping the conscience
and the affections. Hence
it is that so many seem, at first, to make such rapid progress up to a
certain point; but there
they stop short and appear to retrograde. Like an Israelite gathering up
more manna than he
required for one day's food. He might appear to be accumulating the
heavenly food far more
diligently than others; yet every particle beyond the day's supply was
not only useless, but far
worse than useless, inasmuch as it "bred worms." Thus is it
with the Christian. He must use
what he gets. He must feed upon Christ as a matter of actual need, and
the need is brought out
in actual service. The character and ways of God, the preciousness and
beauty of Christ, and
the living depths of the Word are only unfolded to faith and need. It
is as we use what we
receive that more will be given. The path of the believer is to be a
practical one; and here it is
that so many of us come short. It will often be found that those who
get on most rapidly in
theory are the slowest in the practical and experimental elements,
because it is word a work
of intellect than of heart and conscience. We should ever remember that
Christianity is not a
set of opinions, a system of dogmas, or a number of views. It is pre-eminently
a living
reality—a personal, practical, powerful thing, telling itself out in
all the scenes and
circumstances of daily life, shedding its hallowed influence over the
entire character and
course, and imparting its heavenly tone to every relationship which one
may be called of God
to fill. In a word, it is that which flows from being associated and
occupied with Christ. This
is Christianity. There may be clear views, correct notions. sound
principles, without any
fellowship with Jesus; but an orthodox creed without Christ will prove
a cold, barren, dead
thing.
Christian reader, see carefully to it that you are not only saved by
Christ, but also living on
Him. Make Him the daily portion of your soul. Seek Him
"early," seek Him "only." When
anything solicits your attention, ask the question, "Will this
bring Christ to my heart! Will it
unfold Him to my affections or draw me near to His Person?" If
not, reject it at once: yes,
reject it, though it present itself under the most specious appearance
and with the most
commanding authority. If your honest purpose be to get on in the divine
life, to progress in
spirituality, to cultivate personal acquaintance with Christ, then
challenge your heart solemnly
and faithfully as to this. Make Christ your habitual food. Go, gather
the manna that falls on
the dew-drops, and feed upon it with an appetite sharpened by a
diligent walk with God
through the desert. May the rich grace of God the Holy Ghost abundantly
Strengthen you in
all this!* {*My reader will find it profitable to turn to John 6, and
prayerfully meditate upon
it, in connection with the subject of the manna. The Passover being
near, Jesus feeds the
multitude, and then takes His departure to a mountain, there to be
alone. From thence He
comes to the relief of His distressed people, tossed upon the troubled
waters. After this He
unfolds the doctrine of His Person and work, God declares how He was to
give His flesh for
the life of the world, and that none could have life save by eating His
flesh and drinking His
blood. Finally, He speaks of Himself as ascending up where He was
before and of the
quickening power of the Holy Ghost. It is, indeed, a rich and copious
chapter, in which the
spiritual reader will find a vast fund of truth for the comfort and
edification of his soul.}
There is one point more in our chapter which we shall notice, namely
the instigation of the
Sabbath, in its connection with the manna and Israel's position, as
here set forth. From
Genesis 2 down to the chapter now before us, we find no mention made of
this institution.
This is remarkable. Abel's sacrifice, Enochs walk with God, Noah's
preaching, Abraham's
call, together with the detailed history of Isaac, Jacob, and Joseph,
are all presented; but there
is no allusion to the Sabbath until we find Israel recognised as a
people in relationship and
consequent responsibility to Jehovah. The Sabbath was interrupted in
Eden; and here we find
it again instituted for Israel in the wilderness. But alas! man has no
heart for Gods rest. And it
came to pass that " There went out some of the people on the
seventh day for to gather, and
they found none. And the Lord said unto Moses, How long refuse ye to
keep my
commandments and my laws? See, for that the Lord hath given you the
Sabbath, therefore he
giveth you on the sixth day the bread of two days: abide ye every man
in his place; let no man
go out of his place on the seventh day." (Ver. 27-29) God would
have His people enjoying
sweet repose with Himself. He would give them rest, food, and
refreshment, even in the
wilderness. But man's heart is not disposed to rest with God. The
people could remember and
speak of the time when they "sat by the flesh pots" in Egypt;
but they could not appreciate the
blessedness of sitting in their tents, enjoying with God "the rest
of the holy Sabbath," feeding
upon the heavenly manna.
And, be it remarked, that the Sabbath is here presented as a matter of
gift. "The Lord hath
given you the Sabbath." Further on, in this book, we shall find it
put in the form of a law, with
a curse and a judgement attached to it, in the case of disobedience;
but whether fallen man
gets a privilege or a law, a blessing or a curse, it is all alike. His
nature is bad. He can neither
rest with, nor work for, God, If God works and makes a rest for him, he
will not keep it; and if
God tells him to work, he will not do it. Such is man. He has no heart
for God. He can make
use of the name of the Sabbath as a something to exalt himself, or as
the badge of his own
religiousness; but when we turn to Exodus 16 we find that he cannot
prize God's Sabbath as a
gift; and when we turn to Numbers 15: 32-38, we find he cannot keep it
as a Law.
Now, we know that the Sabbath, as well as the manna, was a type. In
itself, it was a real
blessing-a sweet mercy from the hand of a loving and gracious God, who
would relieve the
toil and travail of a sin stricken earth by the refreshment of one day
of rest out of the seven.
Whatever way we look at the institution of the Sabbath, we must see it
to be pregnant with
richest mercy, whether we view it in reference to man or to the animal
creation. And, albeit,
that Christians observe the first day of the week—the Lord's day, and
attach to it its proper
principles, yet is the gracious providence equally observable, nor
would any mind at all
governed by right feelings, seek, for a moment, to interfere with such
a signal mercy. "The
Sabbath was made for man;" and although man never has kept it,
according to the divine
thought about it, that does not detract from the grace which shines in
the appointment of it,
nor divest it of its deep significancy as a type of that eternal rest
which remains for the people
of God, or as a shadow of that substance which faith now enjoys in the
Person and work of a
risen Christ.
Let not the reader, therefore, suppose that in anything which has been,
or may be, stated, in
these pages, the object is to touch, in the slightest degree, the
merciful provision of one day's
rest for man and the animal creation, much less to interfere with the
distinct place which the
Lord's day occupies in the New Testament. Nothing is further from the
writer's thoughts. As a
man he values the former, and as a Christian he rejoices in the latter,
far too deeply to admit
of his penning or uttering a single syllable which would interfere with
either the one or the
other. He would only ask the reader to weigh, with a dispassionate
mind, in the balance of
Holy Scripture, every line and every statement, and not form any harsh
judgement
beforehand.
This subject will come before us again, in our further meditations, if
the Lord will. May we
learn to value more the rest which our God has provided for us in
Christ, and while enjoying
Him as our rest, may we feed upon Him as the "hidden manna,"
laid up, in the power of
resurrection, in the inner sanctuary—the record of what God has
accomplished, on our behalf,
by coming down into this world, in His infinite grace, in order that we
might be before Him,
according to the perfectness of Christ, and feed on His unsearchable
riches for ever.
Exodus 17
And all the congregation of the children of Israel journeyed from the
wilderness of Sin, after
their journeys, according to the commandment of the Lord, and pitched
in Rephidim: and
there was no water for the people to drink. Wherefore the people did
chide with Moses, and
said, Give us water that we may drink. And Moses said unto them, Why
chide ye with me?
Wherefore do ye tempt the Lord?"(Ex. 17: 1, 2) Did we not know
something of the
humiliating evil of our own hearts, we should be quite at a loss to
account for Israel's
marvellous insensibility to all the Lord's goodness, faithfulness, and
mighty acts. They had
just seen bread descending from heaven to feed six hundred thousand
people in the
wilderness: and now they are " ready to stone" Moses for
bringing them out into the
wilderness to kill them with thirst. Nothing can exceed the desperate
unbelief and wickedness
of the human heart, save the superabounding grace of God. In that grace
alone can any one
find relief under the growing sense of his evil nature which
circumstances tend to make
manifest. Had Israel been transported directly from Egypt to Canaan,
they would not have
made such sad exhibitions of what the human heart is; and, as a
consequence, they would not
have proved such admirable ensamples or types for us; but their forty
years' wandering in the
desert furnishes us with a volume of warning, admonition, and
instruction, fruitful beyond
conception. From it we learn, amongst many other things, the unvarying
tendency of the heart
to distrust God. Anything, in short, for it but God. It would rather
lean upon a cobweb of
human resources than upon the arm of an Omnipotent, all-wise, and
infinitely gracious God;
and the smallest cloud is more than sufficient to hide from its view
the light of His blessed
countenance. Well, therefore, may it be termed "An evil heart of
unbelief" which will ever
show itself ready to "depart from the living God."
It is interesting to note the two great questions raised by unbelief,
in this and the preceding
chapter. They are precisely similar to those which spring up, within
and around us, every day,
namely, "what shall we eat? and what shall we drink?" We do
not find the people raising the
third question in the category, wherewithal shall we be clothed?"
But here are the questions of
the wilderness, "What!" "Where!" "How?"
Faith has a brief but comprehensive answer to all
the three, namely, GOD! Precious, perfect, answer! Oh! that the writer
and the reader were
more thoroughly acquainted with its force and fullness! We assuredly
need to remember,
when placed in a position of trial, that "there hath no temptation
taken us but such as is
common to man: but God is faithful, who will not suffer you to be
tempted above that ye are
able; but will with the temptation also make a way to escape, (or an
"issue" ekbasin,) that ye
may be able to bear it." (1 Cor. 10: 13) Whenever we get into
trial, we may feel confident
that, with the trial, there is an issue, and all we need is a broken
will and a single eye to see it.
"And Moses cried unto the Lord, saying; What shall I do unto this
people? they be almost
ready to stone me. And the Lord said unto Moses, Go on before the
people, and take with thee
of the elders of Israel; and thy rod, wherewith thou smotest the river,
take in thine hand, and
go. Behold, I will stand before thee there upon the rock in Horeb, and
thou shalt smite the
rock, and there shall come water out of it, that the people may drink.
And Moses did so in the
sight of the elders of Israel." (Ver. 4-6.) Thus all is met by the
most perfect grace. Every
murmur brings out a fresh display. Here we have the refreshing stream
gushing from the
smitten rock—beauteous type of the Spirit given as the fruit of
Christ's accomplished
sacrifice. In Ex. 16 we have a type of Christ coming down from heaven
to give life to the
world. In Ex. 17 we have a type of the Holy Ghost "shed
forth," in virtue of Christ's finished
work. "They drank of that spiritual Rock that followed them, and
that, Rock was Christ." (1
Cor. 10: 4) But who could drink till the Rock was smitten? Israel might
have gazed on that
rock and died of thirst while gazing; but, until smitten by the rod of
God, it could yield no
refreshment. This is plain enough. The Lord Jesus Christ was the centre
and foundation of all
God's counsels of love and mercy. Through Him all blessing was to flow
to man. The streams
of grace were designed to gush forth from "the Lamb of God;"
but then it was needful that the
Lamb should be slain—that the work of the cross should be an accomplished
fact, ere any of
these things could be actualised. It was when the Rock of ages was
cleft by the hand of
Jehovah, that the flood-gates of eternal love were thrown wide open,
and perishing sinners
invited by the testimony of the Holy Ghost to "drink
abundantly," drink deeply, drink freely.
"The gift of the Holy Ghost" is the result of the Son's
accomplished work upon the cross. "The
promise of the Father" could not be fulfilled until Christ had
taken His seat at the right hand
of the majesty in the heavens, having wrought out perfect
righteousness, answered all the
claims of holiness, magnified the law and made it honourable, borne the
unmitigated wrath of
God against sin, exhausted the power of death, and deprived the grave
of its victory. He,
having done all this, "ascended up on high, led captivity captive,
and gave gifts unto men.
Now that He ascended, what is it but that he also descended first into
the lower parts of the
earth? He that descended is the same also that ascended up far above
all heavens, that he
might fill all things." (Eph. 4: 8-10.)
This is the true foundation of the Church's peace, blessedness, and
glory, for ever. Until the
rock was smitten, the stream was pent up, and man could do nothing.
What human hand could
bring forth water from a flinty rock? And so, we may ask, what human
righteousness could
afford a warrant for opening the flood-gates of divine love? This is
the true way in which to
test man's competency. He could not, by his doings, his sayings, or his
feelings, furnish a
ground for the mission of the Holy Ghost. Let him be or do what he may,
he could not do this.
But thank God, it is done; Christ has finished the work; the true Rock
has been smitten, and
the refreshing stream has issued forth, so that thirsty souls may
drink. "The water that I shall
give him," says Christ, "shall be in him a well of water,
springing up into everlasting life."
(John 4: 14) Again; "In the last day, that great day of the feast,
Jesus stood and cried, saying,
If any man thirst, let him come unto me and drink. He that believeth on
me, as the scripture
hath said, out of his belly shall flow rivers of living water. But this
spake he of the Spirit
which they that believe on him should receive: for the Holy Ghost was
not yet given, because
that Jesus was not yet glorified. (John 7: 37-39; compare, also, Acts
19: 2)
Thus, as in the manna, we have a type of Christ, so in the stream
gushing from the rock we
have a type of the Holy Ghost. "If thou knewest the gift of God,
(i.e., Christ) . . . . thou
wouldst have asked of him, and he would have given thee living
water,"—i.e., the Spirit.
Such, then, is the teaching conveyed to the spiritual mind by the
smitten rock; but the name of
the place in which this significant type was presented is a standing
memorial of man's
unbelief. "He called the name of the place Massah (i.e.,
temptation,) and Meribah, (i.e.,
chiding,) because of the chiding of the children of Israel, and because
they tempted the Lord,
saying, Is the Lord among us or not?" (Ver. 7) After such repeated
assurances and evidences
of Jehovahs presence, to raise such an enquiry proves the deep-seated
unbelief of the human
heart. It was? in point of fact, tempting Him. Thus did the Jews, in
the day of Christ's
presence amongst them, seek of Him a sign from heaven, tempting Him.
Faith never acts thus;
it believes in, and enjoys, the divine presence, not by a sign, but by
the knowledge of Himself.
It knows He is there to be enjoyed, and it enjoys Him. Lord, grant us a
more artless spirit of
confidence.
The next point suggested by our chapter is one of special interest to
us. "Then came Amalek
and fought with Israel in Rephidim. And Moses said unto Joshua, Choose
us out men, and go
out, fight with Amalek: tomorrow I will stand on the top of the hill,
with the rod of God in
mine hand." (Ver. 8, 9) The gift of the Holy Ghost leads to
conflict. The light rebukes and
conflicts with the darkness. Where all is dark there is no struggle;
but the very feeblest
struggle bespeaks the presence of light. "The flesh lusteth
against the Spirit, and the Spirit
against the flesh; and these are contrary the one to the other, so that
ye should not do the
things that ye would." (Gal. 5: 17) Thus it is in the chapter
before us; we have the rock
smitten and the water flowing forth, and immediately we read,
"then came Amalek and fought
with Israel."
This is the first time that Israel are seen in conflict with an
external foe. Up to this point, the
Lord had fought for them, as we read in Ex. 14. "The Lord shall
fight for you, and ye shall
hold your peace." But now the word is, "choose us out
men." True, God must now fight in
Israel, as, before, He had fought for them. This marks the difference,
as to the type; and as to
the antitype, we know that there is an immense difference between
Christ's battles for us, and
the Holy Ghost's battles in us. The former, blessed be God, are all
over, the victory gained,
and a glorious and an everlasting peace secured. The latter, on the
contrary, are still going on.
Pharaoh and Amalek represent two different powers or influences;
Pharaoh represents the
hindrance to Israel's deliverance from Egypt; Amalek represents the
hindrance to their walk
with God through the wilderness. Pharaoh used the things of Egypt to
keep Israel from
serving the Lord; he, therefore, prefigures Satan, who uses "this
present evil world" against
the people of God. Amalek, on the other hand, stands before us as the
type of the flesh. He
was the grandson of Esau, who preferred a mess of pottage to the
birthright. (See Gen. 36: 12)
He was the first who opposed Israel, after their baptism "in the
cloud and in the sea." These
facts serve to fix his character with great distinctness; and, in
addition to these, we know that
Saul was set aside from the kingdom of Israel, in consequence of his
failing to destroy
Amalek. (1 Sam. 15) And, further, we find that Haman is the last of the
Amalekites of whom
we find any notice in scripture. He was hanged on a gallows, in
consequence of his wicked
attempt against the seed of Israel. (See Esther) No Amalekite could
obtain entrance into the
congregation of the Lord. And, finally. in the chapter now before us,
the Lord declares
perpetual war with Amalek.
All these circumstances may be regarded as furnishing conclusive
evidence of the fact that
Amalek is a type of the flesh. The connection between his conflict with
Israel and the water
flowing out of the rock is most marked and instructive, and in full
keeping with the believer's
conflict with his evil nature, which conflict is, as we know, consequent
upon his having the
new nature, and the Holy Ghost dwelling therein. Israel's conflict
began when they stood in
the full power of redemption, and had tasted "that spiritual meat
and drunk of that spiritual
Rock." Until they met Amalek, they had nothing to do. They did not
cope with Pharaoh. They
did not break the power of Egypt nor snap asunder the chains of its
thraldom. They did not
divide the sea or submerge Pharaoh's hosts beneath its waves. They did
not bring down bread
from heaven, or draw forth water out of the flinty rock. They neither
had done, nor could they
do, any of these things ; but now they are called to fight with Amalek.
All the previous
conflict had been between Jehovah and the enemy. They had but to
"stand still" and gaze
upon the mighty triumphs of Jehovah's outstretched arm and enjoy the
fruits of victory. The
Lord had fought for them; but now He fights in or by them.
Thus is it also with the Church of God. The victories on which her
eternal peace and
blessedness are founded were gained, single-handed, by Christ for her.
He was alone on the
cross, alone in the tomb. The Church had to stand aside, for how could
she be there? How
could she vanquish Satan, endure the wrath of God, or rob death of its
sting? Impossible.
These things lay far beyond the reach of sinners, but not beyond the
reach of Him who came
to save them, and who alone was able to bear upon his shoulder the
ponderous weight of all
their sins, and roll the burden away for ever, by His infinite
sacrifice, so that God the Holy
Ghost, proceeding from God the Father, in virtue of the perfect
atonement of God the Son,
can take up His abode in the Church collectively, and in each member
thereof individually.
Now it is when the Holy Ghost thus takes up His abode in us, consequent
upon Christ's death
and resurrection, that our conflict begins. Christ has fought for us;
the Holy Ghost fights in us.
The very fact of our enjoying this first rich spoil of victory, puts us
into direct conflict with
the foe. But the comfort is that we are victors ere we enter upon the
field of conflict at all.
The believer approaches to the battle singing, "Thanks be to God
which giveth us the victory
through our Lord Jesus Christ." (1 Cor. 15: 57) We do not,
therefore, fight uncertainly or as
those that beat the air, while we seek to keep under the body and bring
it into subjection. (1
Cor. 9: 26, 27) "We are more than conquerors through Him that
loved us. (Rom. 8: 37) The
grace in which we stand renders the flesh utterly void of power to lord
it over us. (See Rom. 6
passim.) If the law is "the strength of sin," grace is the
weakness thereof. The former gives sin
power over us; the latter gives us power over sin.
"And Moses said unto Joshua, Choose us out men, and go out, fight
with Amalek: tomorrow I
will stand on the top of the hill, with the rod of God in mine hand. So
Joshua did as Moses
had said unto him, and fought with Amalek: and Moses, Aaron, and Hur
went up to the top of
the hill. And it came to pass, when Moses held up his hand, that Israel
prevailed: and when he
let down his hand, Amalek prevailed. But Moses' hands were heavy; and
they took a stone and
put it under him, and he sat thereon; and Aaron and Hur stayed up his
hands, the one on the
one side and the other on the other side; and his hands were steady
until the going down of the
sun. And Joshua discomfited Amalek and his people with the edge of the
sword." (Verses 9-
13)
We have, here, two distinct things, namely, conflict and intercession.
Christ is on high for us,
while the Holy Ghost carries on the mighty struggle in us. The two
things go together. It is as
we enter, by faith, into the prevalency of Christ's intercession on our
behalf, that we make
head against our evil nature.
Some there are who seek to overlook the fact of the Christian's
conflict with the flesh. They look upon regeneration as a total change
or renewal of the old
nature. Upon this principle, it would, necessarily, follow that the
believer has nothing to
struggle with. If my nature is renewed, what have I to contend with?
Nothing. There is
nothing within, inasmuch as my old nature is made new; and nothing
without can affect me,
inasmuch as there is no response from within. The world has no charms
for one whose flesh is
entirely changed; and Satan has nothing by or on which to act. To all
who maintain such a
theory, it may be said that they seem to forget the place which Amalek
occupies in the history
of the people of God. Had Israel conceived the idea that, when
Pharaoh's hosts were gone,
their conflict was at an end, they would have been sadly put about when
Amalek came upon
them. The fact is, theirs only then began. Thus it is with the
believer, for "all these things
happened unto Israel for ensamples, and they are written for our
admonition," (1 Cor. 10: 11)
But there could be no "type," no "ensample," no
admonition" in "these things," for one whose
old nature is made new. Indeed, such an one can have but little need of
any of those gracious
provisions which God has made in His kingdom for those who are the subjects
thereof.
We are distinctly taught in the Word that the believer carries about
with him that which
answers to Amalek, that is, "the flesh"—"the old
man"—"the carnal mind." (Rom. 6: 6; Rom.
8: 7; Gal. 5: 17)Now, if the Christian, upon perceiving the stirrings
of his evil nature, begins
to doubt his being a Christian, he will not only render himself
exceedingly unhappy, but also
deprive himself of his vantage ground against the enemy. The flesh
exists in the believer and
will be there to the end of the chapter. The Holy Ghost fully
recognises it as existing, as we
may easily see, from various parts of the New Testament. In Romans 6 we
read, "Let not sin
therefore reign in your mortal bodies." Such a precept would be
entirely uncalled for if the
flesh were not existing in the believer. It would be out of character
to tell us not to let sin
reign, if it were not actually dwelling in us. There is a great
difference between dwelling and
reigning. It dwells in a believer, but it reigns in an unbeliever.
However, though it dwells in us, we have, thank God, a principle of
power over it. "Sin shall
not have dominion over you, for ye are not under the law, but under
grace." The grace which,
by the blood of the cross, has put away sin, insures us the victory,
and gives us present power
over its indwelling principle.
We have died to sin, and hence it has no claim over us. "He that
has died is justified from
sin." "Knowing this, that our old man has been crucified
together, that the body of sin might
be destroyed, that henceforth we should not serve sin." (Rom. 6:
6) "And Joshua discomfited
Amalek and his people with the edge of the sword." All was
victory; and Jehovah's banner
floated over the triumphant host, bearing the sweet and
heart-sustaining inscription, "Jehovah-
nissi" (the Lord my banner). The assurance of victory should be as
complete as the sense of
forgiveness, seeing both alike are founded upon the great fact that
Jesus died and rose again.
It is in the power of this that the believer enjoys a purged conscience
and subdues. indwelling
sin. The death of Christ having answered all the claims of God in
reference to our sins, His
resurrection becomes the spring of power, in all the details of
conflict, afterwards. He died for
us, and now He lives in us. The former gives us peace, the latter gives
us power.
It is edifying to remark the contrast between Moses on the hill and
Christ on the throne. The
hands of our great Intercessor can never hang down. His intercession
never fluctuates. "He
ever liveth to make intercession for us." (Heb. 7) His
intercession is never-ceasing and all-
prevailing. Having taken His place on high, in the power of divine
righteousness, He acts for
us, according to what He is, and according to the infinite perfectness
of what He has done. His
hands can never hang down, nor can He need any one to hold them up. His
perfect advocacy
is founded upon His perfect sacrifice. He presents us before God,
clothed in His own
perfections, so that though we may ever have to keep our faces in the
dust in the sense of
what we are, yet the Spirit can only testify to us of what He is before
God for us, and of what
we are in EIim." "We are not in the flesh but in the
Spirit." (Rom. 8) We are in the body, as to
the fact of our condition; but we are not in the flesh, as to the
principle of our standing.
Moreover, the flesh is in us, though we are dead to it; but we are not
in the flesh, because we
are alive with Christ.
We may further remark, on this chapter, that Moses had the rod of God
with him on the hill—
the rod with which he had smitten the rock. This rod was the expression
or symbol of the
power of God, which is seen alike in atonement and intercession. When
the work of
atonement was accomplished, Christ took His seat in heaven, and sent
down the Holy Ghost
to take up His abode in the Church; so that there is an inseparable
connection between the
work of Christ and the work of the Spirit. There is the application of
the power of God in
each.
Exodus 18
We here arrive at the close of a very marked division of the book of
Exodus. We have seen
God, in the exercise of His perfect grace, visiting and redeeming His
people; bringing them
forth out of the land of Egypt; delivering them, first, from the hand
of Pharaoh and then from
the hand of Amalek. Furthermore, we have seen, in the manna, a type of
Christ come down
from heaven; in the rock, a type of Christ smitten for His people; and
in the gushing stream, a
type of the Spirit given. Then follows, in striking and beautiful
order, a picture of the future
glory, divided into its three grand departments, namely, the Jew, the
Gentile, and the Church
of God.
"During the period of Moses' rejection by his brethren he was
taken apart and presented with
a bride—the companion of his rejection. We were led to see, at the
opening of this book, the
character of Moses' relationship with this bride. He was "a
husband by blood" to her. This is
precisely what Christ is to the Church Her connection with Him is
founded upon death and
resurrection; and she is called to fellowship with His sufferings. It
is, as we know, during the
period of Israel's unbelief, and of Christ's rejection, that the Church
is called out; and when
the Church is complete, according to the divine counsels, when the
"fullness of the Gentiles is
come in," Israel shall again be brought into notice.
Thus it was with Zipporah and Israel of old. Moses had sent her back,
during the period of his
mission to Israel; and when the latter were brought forth as a fully
delivered people, we read
that "Jethro, Moses' father in-law, took Zipporah, Moses' wife,
after he had sent her back, and
her two sons, of which the name of the one was Gershom; for he said, I
have been an alien in
a strange land; and the name of the other was Eliezer; for the God of
my fathers, said he, was
mine help, and delivered me from the sword of Pharaoh. And Jethro,
Moses' father-in-law,
came with his sons and his wife unto Moses into the wilderness, where
he encamped at the
mount of God. And he said unto Moses, I thy father-in-law, Jethro, am
come unto thee, and
thy wife and her two sons with her. And Moses went out to meet his
father-in-law, and did
obeisance, and kissed him; and they asked each other of their welfare;
and they came into the
tent. And Moses told his father. in-law all that the Lord had done unto
Pharaoh, and the
Egyptians, for Israel's sake, and all the travail that had come upon
them by the way, and how
the Lord delivered them. And Jethro rejoiced for all the goodness which
the Lord had done to
Israel, whom he had delivered from the hand of the Egyptians. And
Jethro said, Blessed be
the Lord, who hath delivered you out of the hand of the Egyptians, and
out of the hand of
Pharaoh; who hath delivered the people from under the hand of the
Egyptians. Now I know
that the Lord is greater than all gods; for in the thing wherein they
dealt proudly he was above
them. And Jethro Moses' father-in-law, took a burnt-offering and
sacrifices for God: and
Aaron came, and all. the elders of Israel, to eat bread with Moses'
father-in-law before God."
(Ex. 18: 2-12)
This is a deeply interesting scene. The whole congregation assembled,
in triumph before the
Lord—the Gentile presenting sacrifice—and in addition, to complete the
picture, the bride of
the deliverer, together with the children whom God had given him, are
all introduced. It is, in
short, a singularly striking foreshadowing of the coming kingdom.
"The Lord will give grace
and glory." We have already seen, in what we have travelled over
of this book, very much of
the actings of "grace;" and here we have, From the pencil of
the Holy Ghost, a beauteous
picture of "glory,"—a picture which must be regarded as
peculiarly important, as exhibiting
the varied fields in which that glory shall be manifested.
"The Jew, the Gentile, and the Church of God" are scriptural
distinctions which can never be
overlooked without marring that perfect range of truth which God has
revealed in His holy
Word. They have existed ever since the mystery of the Church was fully
developed by the
ministry of the Apostle Paul, and they shall exist throughout the
millennial age. Hence, every
spiritual student of Scripture will give them their due place in his
mind.
The apostle expressly teaches us, in his Epistle to the Ephesians, that
the mystery of the
Church had not been made known, in other ages, to the sons of men, as
it was revealed to
him. But, though not directly revealed, it had been shadowed forth in
one way or another; as,
for example, in Joseph's marriage with an Egyptian, and in Moses'
marriage with an
Ethiopian. The type or shadow of a truth is a very different thing from
a direct and positive
revelation of it. The great mystery of the Church was not revealed
until Christ, in heavenly
glory, revealed it to Saul of Tarsus. Hence, all who look for the full
unfolding of this mystery
in the law, the prophets, or the psalms, will find themselves engaged
in unintelligent labour.
When, however, they find it distinctly revealed in the Epistle to the
Ephesians, they will be
able, with interest and profit, to trace its foreshadowing in Old
Testament Scripture.
Thus we have, in the opening of our chapter, a millennial scene. All
the fields of glory lie
open in vision before us. "The Jew" stands forth as the great
earthly witness of Jehovah's
faithfulness, His mercy, and His power. This is what the Jew has been
in bygone ages, it is
what he is now, and what he will be, world without end. "The
Gentile" reads, in the book of
God's dealings with the Jew, his deepest lessons. He traces the
marvellous history of that
peculiar and elect people —"a people terrible from their beginning
hitherto." He sees thrones
and empires overturned—nations shaken to their centre-every one and
everything compelled
to give way, in order to establish the supremacy of that people on whom
Jehovah has set His
love. "Now I know," he says, "that the Lord is greater
than all gods: for in the thing wherein
they dealt proudly he was above them." (Ver. 11) Such is the
confession of "the Gentile,"
when the wondrous page of Jewish history lies open before him.
Lastly, "The Church of God collectively, as prefigured by
Zipporah, and the members thereof
individually, as seen in Zipporah's sons, are presented as occupying
the most intimate
relationship with the deliverer. All this is perfect in its way. We may
be asked for our proofs.
The answer is, "I speak as unto wise men; judge ye what I
say." We can never build a doctrine
upon a type; but when a doctrine is revealed a type thereof may be
discerned with accuracy
and studied with profit. In every case, a spiritual mind is essentially
necessary, either to
understand the doctrine or discern the type. "The natural man
receiveth not the things of the
Spirit of God: for they are foolishness unto him: neither can he know
them, because they are
spiritually discerned." (1 Cor. 2: 14)
From verse 13 to the end of our chapter, we have the appointment of
rulers, who were to
assist Moses in the management of the affairs of the congregation. This
was the suggestion of
Jethro, who feared that Moses would "wear away" in
consequence of his labours. In
connection with this, it may be profitable to look at the appointment
of the seventy elders in
Numbers 11. Here we find the spirit of Moses crushed beneath the
ponderous responsibility
which devolved upon him, and he gives utterance to the anguish of his
heart in the following
accents. "And Moses said unto the Lord, Wherefore hast thou
afflicted thy servant? And
wherefore have I not found favour in thy sight, that thou layest the
burden of all this people
upon me? Have I conceived all this people ? have I begotten them that
thou shouldst say unto
me, Carry them in thy bosom, as a nursing father beareth the sucking
child, unto the land
which thou swarest unto their fathers. . . . . I am not able to bear
all this people alone because
it is too heavy for me. And if thou deal thus with me, kill me, I pray
thee, out of hand, if I
have found favour in thy sight; and let me not see my
wretchedness." (Num. 11: 11-15)
In all this we see Moses evidently retiring from a post of honour. If
God were pleased to make
him the sole instrument in managing the assembly, it was only so much
the more dignity and
privilege conferred upon him. True, the responsibility was immense; but
faith would own that
God was amply sufficient for that. Here, however, the heart of Moses
failed him (blessed
servant as he was), and he says, " I am not able to bear all this
people alone, because it is too
heavy for me." But he was not asked to bear them alone; for God
was with him. They were
not too heavy for God. It was He that was bearing them; Moses was but
the instrument. He
might just as well have spoken of his rod as bearing the people; for
what was he but a mere
instrument in God's hand, as the rod was in his? It is here the
servants of Christ constantly
fail; and the failure is all the more dangerous because it wears the
appearance of humility. It
seems like distrust of ones self and deep lowliness of spirit, to
shrink from heavy
responsibility; but all we need to inquire is, has God imposed that
responsibility? If so, He
will assuredly be with me in sustaining it; and having Him with me, I
can sustain anything.
With Him, the weight of a mountain is nothing; without Him, the weight
of a feather is
overwhelming. It is a totally different thing if a man, in the vanity
of his mind, thrust himself
forward and take a burden upon his shoulder which God never intended
him to bear, and,
therefore, never fitted him to bear it; we may then, surely, expect to
see him crushed beneath
the weight; but if God lays it upon him, He will qualify and strengthen
him to carry it.
It is never the fruit of humility to depart from a divinely-appointed
post. On the contrary, the
deepest humility will express itself by remaining there in simple
dependence upon God. It is a
sure evidence of being occupied about self when we shrink from service
on the ground of
inability. God does not call us unto service on the ground of our
ability, but of His own;
hence, unless I am filled with thoughts about myself, or with positive
distrust of Him, I need
not relinquish any position of service or testimony because of the
heavy responsibilities
attaching thereto. all power belongs to God, and it is quite the same
whether that power acts
through one agent or through seventy; the power is still the same: but
if one agent refuse the
dignity, it is only so much the worse for him. God will not force
people to abide in a place of
honour, if they cannot trust Him to sustain them there. The way lies
always open to them to
step down from their dignity, and sink into the place where base
unbelief is sure to put us.
Thus it was with Moses. He complained of the burden, and the burden was
speedily removed;
but with it the high honour of being allowed to carry it. "And the
Lord said unto Moses,
Gather unto me seventy men of the elders of Israel whom thou knowest to
be the elders of the
people, and officers over them; and bring them unto the tabernacle of
the congregation, that
they may stand there with thee. And I will come down and talk with thee
there; and I will take
of the spirit which is upon thee, and will put it upon them; and they
shall bear the burden of
the people with thee, that thou bear it not thyself alone." (Num.
11: 16, 17) There was no
fresh power introduced. It was the same Spirit, whether in one or in
seventy. There was no
more value or virtue in the flesh of seventy men than in the flesh of
one man. "It is the Spirit
that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing." (John 6: 63) There
was nothing, in the way of
power, gained; but a great deal, in the way of dignity, lost by this
movement on the part of
Moses.
In the after part of Numbers 11 we find Moses giving utterance to
accents of unbelief, which
called forth from the Lord a sharp rebuke. "Is the Lord's hand
waxed short? Thou shalt see
now whether my word shall come to pass unto thee or not." If my
reader will compare Num.
11-15 with Num. 21, 22, he will see a marked and solemn connection. The
man who shrinks
from responsibility, on the ground of his own feebleness, is in great
danger of calling in
question the fullness and sufficiency of God's resources. This entire
scene teaches a most
valuable lesson to every servant of Christ who may be tempted to feel
himself alone or
overburdened in his work. Let such an one bear in mind that, where the
Holy Ghost is
working, one instrument is as good and as efficient as seventy; and
where He is not working
seventy are of no more value than one. It all depends upon the energy
of the Holy Ghost. With
Him, one man can do all, endure all, sustain all. Without Him, seventy
men can do nothing.
Let the lonely servant remember, for the comfort and encouragement of
his sinking heart,
that, provided he has the presence and power of the Holy Ghost with
him, he need not
complain of his burden, nor sigh for a division of labour. If God
honour a man by giving him
a great deal of work to do, let him rejoice therein and not murmur; for
if he murmur, he can
very speedily lose his honour. God is at no loss for instruments. He
could, from the stones,
raise up children unto Abraham; and He can raise up, from the same, the
needed agents to
carry on His glorious work.
Oh! for a heart to serve Him! A patient, humble, self-emptied, devoted
heart! A heart ready to
serve in company, ready to serve alone, a heart so filled with love to
Christ that it will find its
joy—its chief joy—in serving Him, let the sphere or character of
service be what it may. This
assuredly is the special need of the day in which out lot is cast. May
the Holy Ghost stir up
our hearts to a deeper sense of the exceeding preciousness of the name
of Jesus, and enable us
to yield a fuller, clearer, more unequivocal response to the changeless
love of His heart!
Exodus 19
We have now arrived at a most momentous point in Israel's history. We
are called to behold
them standing at the foot of "the mount that might be touched, and
that burned with fire." The
fair millennial scene which opened before us in the preceding chapter
has passed away. It was
but a brief moment of sunshine in which a very vivid picture of the
kingdom was afforded;
but the sunshine was speedily followed by the heavy clouds which
gathered around that
"palpable mount," where Israel, in a spirit of dark and
senseless legality, abandoned Jehovah's
covenant of pure grace for man's covenant of works. Disastrous
movement! A movement
fraught with the most dismal results. Hitherto, as we have seen, no
enemy could stand before
Israel—no obstacle was suffered to interrupt their onward and
victorious march. Pharaoh's
hosts were overthrown—Amalek and his people were discomfited with the edge
of the
sword—all was victory, because God was acting on behalf of His people,
in pursuance of His
promise to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.
In the opening verses of the chapter now before us, the Lord
recapitulates His actings toward
Israel in the following touching and beautiful language: " Thus
shalt thou say to the house of
Jacob, and tell. the children of Israel: Ye have seen what I did unto
the Egyptians, and how I
bare you on eagles' wings, and brought you unto myself. Now therefore,
if ye will obey my
voice indeed, and keep my covenant, then ye shall be a peculiar
treasure unto me above all
people: for all the earth is mine. And ye shall be unto me a kingdom of
priests and an holy
nation." (Ver. 3-6) Observe, it is "my voice" and
"my covenant." What was the utterance of
that "voice?" and what did that "covenant" involve?
Had Jehovah's voice made itself heard for
the purpose of laying down the rules and regulations of a severe and
unbending law-giver? By
no means. It had spoken to demand freedom for the captivity provide a
refuge from the sword
of the destroyer—to make a way for the ransomed to pass over—to bring
down bread from
heaven, to draw forth water out of the flinty rock. Such had been the
gracious and intelligible
utterances of Jehovah's "voice," up to the moment at which
" Israel camped before the
mount."
And as to His "covenant," it was one of unmingled grace. It
proposed no condition—it made
no demands—it put no yoke on the neck—no burden on the shoulder. When
"the God of glory
appeared unto Abraham," in Ur of the Chaldees, He certainly did
not address him in such
words as, "thou Shalt do this," and "thou shalt not do
that." Ah! no; such language was not
according to the heart of God. It suits Him far better to place "a
fair mitre" upon a sinner's
head, than to "put a yoke upon his neck." His word to Abraham
was, "I WILL GIVE." The
land of Canaan was not to be purchased by man's doings, but to be given
by God's grace. Thus
it stood; and, in the opening of the book of Exodus, we see God coming
down in grace to
make good His promise to Abrahams seed. The condition in which He found
that seed made
no difference, inasmuch as the blood of the lamb furnished Him with a
perfectly righteous
ground on which to make good His promise. He evidently had not promised
the land of
Canaan to Abraham's seed on the ground of ought that He foresaw in
them, for this would
have totally destroyed the real nature of a promise. It would have made
it a compact and not a
promise; "but God gave it to Abraham by promise," and not by
compact. (Read Gal. 3)
Hence, in the opening of this 19th chapter, the people are reminded of
the grace in which
Jehovah had hitherto dealt with them; and they are also assured of what
they should yet be,
provided they continued to hearken to mercy's heavenly
"voice," and to abide in the
"covenant" of free and absolute grace. "Ye shall be a
peculiar treasure unto me above all
people." How could they be this? Was it by stumbling up the ladder
of self-righteousness and
legalism? Would they be "a peculiar treasure" when blasted by
the curses of a broken law—a
law which they had broken before ever they received it? Surely not. How
then were they to be
this "peculiar treasure?" By standing in that position in
which Jehovah surveyed them when
He compelled the covetous prophet to exclaim, "How goodly are thy
tents, 0 Jacob, and thy
tabernacles, O Israel! As the valleys are they spread forth, as gardens
by the river's side, as the
trees of lign aloes which the Lord hath planted, and as cedar trees
beside the waters. He shall
pour the water out of his buckets, and his seed shall be in many
waters, and his king shall be
higher than Agag, and his kingdom shall be exalted. God brought him
forth out of Egypt; he
hath as it were the strength of an unicorn." (Num. 24: 5-8)
However, Israel was not disposed to occupy this blessed position.
Instead of rejoicing in God's
"holy promise," they undertook to make the most presumptuous
vow that mortal lips could
utter. "All the people answered together, and said, "All that
the Lord hath, spoken we will do."
(Ex. 19: 8) This was bold language. They did not even say, "we
hope to do" or "we will
endeavour to do." This would have expressed a measure of
self-distrust. But no; they took the
most absolute ground. "We will do." Nor was this the language
of a few vain, self-confident
spirits who presumed to single themselves out from the whole
congregation. No; "all the
people answered together." They were unanimous in the abandonment
of the holy promise"—
the "holy covenant."
And now, observe the result. The moment Israel uttered their
"singular vow," the moment
they undertook to "do," there was a total alteration in the
aspect of things. "And the Lord said
unto Moses, Lo, I come unto thee in a thick cloud. . . . . And thou
shalt set bounds unto the
people, round about, saying, Take heed to yourselves, that ye go not up
into the mount, or
touch the border of it: whosoever toucheth the mount, shall be surely
put to death." This was a
very marked change; the One who had just said, "I bare you on
eagles' wings, and brought you
unto myself," now envelopes Himself "in a thick cloud,"
and says, "set bounds unto the people
round about." The sweet accents of grace and mercy are exchanged
for the "thunderings and
lightnings" of the fiery mount. Man had presumed to talk of his
miserable doings in the
presence of God's magnificent grace. Israel had said, "we will
do," and they must be put at a
distance in order that it may be fully seen what they are able to do.
God takes the place of
moral distance; and the people are but too well disposed to have it so,
for they are filled with
fear and trembling; and no marvel, for the sight was
"terrible,"—"so terrible that Moses said, I
exceedingly fear and quake." Who could endure the sight of that
"devouring fire," which was
the apt expression of divine holiness? "The Lord came from Sinai,
and rose up from Seir unto
them; he shined forth from Paran, and he came with ten thousands of
saints; from his right
hand went a fiery law for them." (Deut. 33: 2) The term
"fiery," as applied to the law, is
expressive of its holiness: "Our God is a consuming
fire,"—perfectly intolerant of evil, in
thought, word, and deed.
Thus, then, Israel made a fatal mistake in saying, "we will
do." It was taking upon themselves
a vow which they were not able, even were they willing, to pay; and we
know who has said,
"better that thou shouldest not vow, than that thou shouldest vow
and not pay." It is of the
very essence of a vow that it assumes the competency to fulfil; and
where is man's
competency? As well might a bankrupt draw a cheque on the bank, as a
helpless sinner make
a vow. A man who makes a vow, denies the truth, as to his nature and
condition. He is ruined,
what can he do? He is utterly without strength, and can neither will
nor do anything good. Did
Israel keep their vow Did they do "all that the Lord
commanded?" Witness the golden calf, the
broken tables, the desecrated Sabbath, the despised and neglected
ordinances, the stoned
messengers, the rejected and crucified Christ, the resisted Spirit.
Such are the overwhelming
evidences of mans dishonoured vows. Thus must it ever be when fallen
humanity undertakes
to vow.
Christian reader, do you not rejoice in the fact that your eternal
salvation rests not an your
poor shadowy vows and resolutions, but on "the one offering of
Jesus Christ once?" Oh, yes,
"this is our joy, which never can fail." Christ has taken all
our vows upon Himself, and
gloriously discharged them for ever. His resurrection-life flows
through His members and
produces in them results which legal vows and legal claims never could
effect. He is our life,
and He is our righteousness. May his name be precious to our hearts.
May His cause ever
command our energies. May it be our meat and our drink to spend and be
spent in His dear
service.
I cannot close this chapter without noticing, in connection, a passage
in the Book of
Deuteronomy, which may present a difficulty to some minds. It has
direct reference to the
subject on which we have been dwelling. "And the Lord heard the
voice of your words, when
ye spake unto me; and the Lord said unto me, I have heard the voice of
the words of this
people, which they have spoken unto thee: they have well said all that
they have spoken.
(Deut. 5: 28) From this passage it might seem as though the Lord
approved of their making a
vow; but if my reader will take the trouble of reading the entire
context, from ver. 24-27, he
will see at once that it has nothing whatever to say to the vow, but
that it contains the
expression of their terror at the consequences of their vow. They were
not able to endure that
which was commanded. "If," said they, "we hear the voice
of the Lord our God any more, then
we shall die. For who is there of all flesh that hath heard the voice
of the living God speaking
out of the midst of the fire, as we have, and lived! Go thou near, and
hear all that the Lord our
God shall say; and speak thou unto us all that the Lord our God shall
speak unto thee; and we
will hear it and do it." It was the confession of their own
inability to encounter Jehovah in that
awful aspect which their proud legality had led Him to assume. It is
impossible that the Lord
could ever commend an abandonment of free and changeless grace for a
sandy foundation of
"works of law."
Exodus 20
It is of the utmost importance to understand the true character and
object of the moral law, as
set forth in this chapter. There is a tendency in the mind to confound
the principles of law and
grace, so that neither the one nor the other can be rightly understood.
Law is shorn of its stern
and unbending majesty; and grace is robbed of all its divine
attractions. God's holy claims
remain unanswered, and the sinner's deep and manifold necessities
remain unreached by the
anomalous system framed by those who attempt to mingle law and grace.
In point of fact,
they can never be made to coalesce, for they are as distinct as any two
things can be. Law sets
forth what man ought to be; grace exhibits what God is. How can these
ever be wrought up
into one system ? How can the sinner ever be saved by a system made up
of half law, half
grace? Impossible. It must be either the one or the other.
The law has sometimes been termed "the transcript of the mind of
God." This definition is
entirely defective. Were we to term it a transcript of the mind of God
as to what man ought to
be, we should be nearer the truth. If I am to regard the ten
commandments as the transcript of
the mind of God, then, I ask, is there nothing in the mind of God save
"thou shalt" and "thou
shalt not?" Is there no grace? No mercy? No loving kindness? Is
God not to manifest what He
is? Is He not to tell out the deep secrets of that love which dwells in
His bosom? Is there
nought in the divine character but stern requirement and prohibition?
Were this so, we should
have to say, "God is law " instead of "God is
love." But, blessed be His name, there is more in
His heart than could ever be wrapped up in the " ten words"
uttered on the fiery mount. If I
want to see what God is, I must look at Christ; "for in Him
dwelleth all the fullness of the
godhead bodily." (Col. 2: 9) "The law was given by Moses, but
grace and truth came by Jesus
Christ." (John 1: 17) Assuredly there was a measure of truth in
the law. It contained the truth
as to what man ought to be. Like everything else emanating from God, it
was perfect so far as
it went—perfect for the object for which it was administered; but that
object was not, by any
means, to unfold, in the view of guilty sinners, the nature and
character of God. There was no
grace—no mercy. "He that despised Moses' law died without
mercy." (Heb. 10.28.) "The man
that doeth these things shall live by them." (Lev. 18: 5; Rom. 10:
5) "Cursed is every one that
continueth not in all things that are written in the book of the law to
do them." (Deut. 27: 26;
Gal 3: 10) This was not grace. Indeed, mount Sinai was not the place to
look for any such
thing. There Jehovah revealed Himself in awful majesty, amid blackness,
darkness, tempest,
thunderings, and lightnings. These were not the attendant circumstances
of an economy of
grace and mercy; but they were well suited to one of truth and
righteousness; and the law was
that and nothing else.
In the law God sets forth what a man ought to be, and pronounces a
curse upon him if he is
not that. But then a man finds, when he looks at himself in the light
of the law, that he
actually is the very thing which the law condemns. How then is he to
get life by it? It proposes
life and righteousness as the ends to be attained, by keeping it ; but
it proves, at the very
outset, that we are in a state of death and unrighteousness. We want
the very things at the
beginning which the law proposes to be gained at the end. How,
therefore, are we to gain
them? In order to do what the law requires, I must have life; and in
order to be what the law
requires, I must have righteousness; and if I have not both the one and
the other, I am
"cursed." But the fact is, I have neither. What am I to do?
This is the question. Let those who
"desire to be teachers of the law" furnish an answer. Let
them furnish a satisfactory reply to an
upright conscience, bowed down under the double sense of the
spirituality and inflexibility of
the law and its own hopeless carnality.
The truth is, as the apostle teaches us, "the law entered that the
offence might abound." (Rom.
5: 20) This shows us, very distinctly, the real object of the law. It
came in by the way in order
to set forth the exceeding sinfulness of sin. (1 Cor. 7: 13) It was, in
a certain sense, like a
perfect mirror let down from heaven to reveal to man his moral
derangement. If I present
myself, with deranged hair, before a mirror, it shows me the
derangement, but does not set it
right. If I measure a crooked wall, with a perfect plumb-line, it
reveals the crookedness, but
does not remove it. If I take out a lamp on a dark night, it reveals to
me all the hindrances and
disagreeables in the way, but it does not remove them. Moreover, the
mirror, the plumb-line,
and the lamp, do not create the evils which they severally point out;
they neither create nor
remove, but simply reveal. Thus is it with the law; it does not create
the evil in man's heart,
neither does it remove it; but, with unerring accuracy, it reveals it.
"What shall we say then? Is the law sin ? God forbid. Yea, I had not
known sin but by the law;
for I had not known lust except the law had said, Thou shalt not
covet." (Rom. 7: 7) He does
not say that he would not have had "lust." No; but merely
that "he had not known it." The
"lust" was there; but he was in the dark about it until the
law, as "the candle of the Almighty,"
shone in upon the dark chambers of his heart and revealed the evil that
was there. Like a man
in a dark room, who may be surrounded with dust and confusion, but he
cannot see ought
thereof by reason of the darkness. Let the beams of the sun dart in
upon him, and he quickly
perceives all. Do the sunbeams create the dust? Surely not. The dust is
there, and they only
detect and reveal it. This is a simple illustration of the effect of
the law. It judges man's
character and condition. It proves him to be a sinner and shuts him up
under the curse. It
comes to judge what he is, and curses him if he is not what it tells
him he ought to be.
It is, therefore, a manifest impossibility that any one can get life
and righteousness by that
which can only curse him; and unless the condition of the sinner, and
the character of the law
are totally changed, it can do nought else but curse him. It makes no
allowance for infirmities,
and knows nothing of sincere, though imperfect, obedience. Were it to
do so, it would not be
what it is, "holy, just, and good." It is just because the
law is what it is, that the sinner cannot
get life by it. If he could get life by it, it would not be perfect, or
else he would not be a
sinner. It is impossible that a sinner can get life by a perfect law,
for inasmuch as it is perfect,
it must needs condemn him. Its absolute perfectness makes manifest and
seals man's absolute
ruin and condemnation. " Therefore by deeds of law shall no flesh
living be justified in his
sight; for by the law is the knowledge of sin." (Rom. 3: 20) He
does not say, "by the law is
sin," but only "the knowledge of sin. "For until the
law, sin was in the world; but sin is not
imputed when there is no law." (Rom. 5: 13) Sin was there, and it
only needed law to develop
it in the form of "transgression." It is as if I say to my
child, "you must not touch that knife."
My very prohibition reveals the tendency in his heart to do his own
will. It does not create the
tendency, but only reveals it.
The apostle John says that "sin is lawlessness." (1 John 3:
4) The word "transgression" does
not. develop the true idea of the Spirit in this passage. In order to
have "transgression" I must
have a definite rule or line laid down. Transgression means a passing
across a prohibited line;
such a line I have in the law. I take any one of its prohibitions, such
as, "thou shalt not kill,"
"thou shalt not commit adultery," "thou shalt not
steal." Here, I have a rule or line set before
me; but I find I have within me the very principles against which these
prohibitions are
expressly directed. Yea, the very fact of my being told not to commit
murder, shows that I
have murder in my nature. There would be no necessity to tell me not to
do a thing which I
had no tendency to do; but the exhibition of God's will, as to what I
ought to be, makes
manifest the tendency of my will to be what I ought not. This is plain
enough, and is in full
keeping with the whole of the apostolic reasoning on the point.
Many, however, will admit that we cannot get life by the law; but they
maintain, at the same
time, that the law is our rule of life. Now, the apostle declares that
"as many as are of works
of law are under the curse." (Gal 3: 10) It matters not who they
are, if they occupy the ground
of law, they are, of necessity, under the curse. A man may say, "I
am regenerate, and,
therefore, not exposed to the curse." This will not do. If
regeneration does not take one off the
ground of law, it cannot take him beyond the range of the curse of the
law. If the Christian be
under the former, he is, of necessity, exposed to the latter. But what
has the law to do with
regeneration? Where do we find anything about it in Exodus 20: 8 The
law has but one
question to put to a man—a brief, solemn, pointed question, namely,
"Are you what you ought
to be?" If he answer in the negative, it can but hurl its terrible
anathema at him and slay him.
And who will so readily and emphatically admit that, in himself, he is
anything but what he
ought to be, as the really regenerate man? Wherefore, if he is under
the law, he must,
inevitably, be under the curse. The law cannot possibly lower its
standard: nor yet
amalgamate with grace. Men do constantly seek to lower its standard;
they feel that they
cannot get up to it, and they, therefore, seek to bring it down to
them; but the effort is in vain:
it stands forth in all its purity, majesty, and stern inflexibility,
and will not accept a single
hair's breadth short of perfect obedience; and where is the man,
regenerate or unregenerate,
that can undertake to produce that? It will be said, "We have
perfection in Christ." True; but
that is not by the law, but by grace; and we cannot possibly confound
the two economies.
Scripture largely and distinctly teaches that we are not justified by
the law; nor is the law our
rule of life. That which can only curse can never justify ; and that
which can only kill can
never be a rule of life. As well might a man attempt to make a fortune
by a deed of
bankruptcy filed against him.
If my reader will turn to Acts 15, he will see how the attempt to put
Gentile believers under
the law, as a rule of life, was met by the Holy Ghost. "There rose
up certain of the sect of the
Pharisees which believed, saying, that it was needful to circumcise
them, and to command
them to keep the law of Moses." This was nothing else than the
hiss of the old serpent,
making itself heard in the dark and depressing suggestion of those
early legalists. But let us
see how it was met by the mighty energy of the Holy Ghost, and the
unanimous voice of the
twelve apostles and the whole Church. "And when there had been
much disputing, Peter rose
up, and said unto them, Men and brethren, ye know how that a good while
ago, God made
choice among us, that the Gentiles by my mouth should hear,"—what?
Was it the
requirements and the curses of the law of Moses? No: blessed be God,
these are not what He
would have falling on the ears of helpless sinners. Hear what then?
"SHOULD HEAR THE
WORD OF THE GOSPEL, AND BELIEVE." This was what suited the nature
and character
of God. He never would have troubled men with the dismal accents of
requirement and
prohibition. These Pharisees were not His messengers; far from it. They
were not the bearers
of glad tidings, nor the publishers of peace, and therefore, their
"feet" were ought but
"beautiful" in the eyes of One who only delights in mercy.
"Now, therefore," continues the apostle, "why tempt ye
God, to put a yoke upon the neck of
the disciples, which neither our fathers nor we were able to
bear?" This was strong, earnest
language. God did not want "to put a yoke upon the neck" of
those whose hearts had been set
free by the gospel of peace. He would rather exhort them to stand fast
in the liberty of Christ,
and not be "entangled again with the yoke of bondage." He
would not send those whom He
had received to His bosom of love, to be terrified by the
"blackness, and darkness, and
tempest," of "the mount that might be touched." How
could we ever admit the thought that
those whom God had received in grace He would rule by law? Impossible.
"We believe," says
Peter, "that through the GRACE OF THE LORD JESUS CHRIST we shall
be saved even as
they." Both the Jews, who had received the law, and the Gentiles,
who never had, were now to
be "saved through grace." And not only were they to be
"saved" by grace, but they were to
"stand" in grace, (Rom 5: 2) and to "grow in
grace." (2 Peter 3: 18.) To teach anything else
was to "tempt God." Those Pharisees were subverting the very
foundations of the Christian
faith; and so are all those who seek to put believers under the law.
There is no evil or error
more abominable in the sight of the Lord than legalism. Hearken to the
strong language—the
accents of righteous indignation—which fell from the Holy Ghost, in
reference to those
teachers of the law: "I would they were even cut off which trouble
you." (Gal, 5: 12)
And, let me ask, are the thoughts of the Holy Ghost changed, in
reference to this question?
Has it ceased to be a tempting of God to place the yoke of legality
upon a sinner's neck? Is it
now in accordance with His gracious will that the law should be read
out in the ears of
sinners? Let my reader reply to these enquiries in the light of the
fifteenth of Acts and the
Epistle to the Galatians. These scriptures, were there no other, are
amply sufficient to prove
that God never intended that the "Gentiles should hear the
word" of the law. Had He so
intended, He would, assuredly, have "made choice" of some one
to proclaim it in their ears.
But no; when He sent forth His "fiery law," He spoke only in
one tongue; but when He
proclaimed the glad tidings of salvation, through the blood of the
Lamb, He spoke in the
language "of every nation under heaven." He spoke in such a
way as that "every man in his
own tongue wherein he was Born," might hear the sweet story of
grace. (Acts 2: 1-11)
Further, when He was giving forth, from mount Sinai, the stern
requirements of the covenant
of works, He addressed Himself exclusively to one people. His voice was
only heard within
the narrow enclosures of the Jewish nation; but when, on the plains of
Bethlehem, "the angel
of the Lord" declared "good tidings of great joy," he
added those characteristic words, "which
shall be to all people." And, again, when the risen Christ was
sending forth His heralds of
salvation, His commission ran thus, "Go ye into all the world and
preach the gospel to every
creature." (Mark 16: 15; Luke 2: 10) The mighty tide of grace
which had its source in the
bosom of God, and its channel in the blood of the Lamb, was designed to
rise, in the resistless
energy of the Holy Ghost, far above the narrow enclosures of Israel,
and roll through the
length and breadth of a sin-stained world. "Every creature"
must hear, "in his own tongue,"
the message of peace, the word of the gospel, the record of salvation,
through the blood of the
cross.
Finally, that nothing might be lacking to prove to our poor legal
hearts that mount Sinai was
not, by any means, the spot where the deep secrets of the bosom of God
were told out, the
Holy Ghost has said, both by the mouth of a prophet and an apostle,
"How beautiful are the
feet of them that preach the gospel of peace and bring glad tidings of
good things!" (Isa. 3: 7;
Rom. 10: 15) But of those who sought to be teachers of the law the same
Holy Ghost has said,
"I would they were even cut off that trouble you."
Thus, then, it is obvious that the law is neither the ground of life to
the sinner nor the rule of
life to the Christian. Christ is both the one and the other. He is our
life and He is our rule of
life. The law can only curse and slay. Christ is our life and
righteousness. He became a curse
for us by hanging on a tree. He went down into the place where the
sinner lay—into the place
of death and judgement—and having, by His death, entirely discharged
all that was or could
be against us, He became, in resurrection, the source of life and the
ground of righteousness to
all who believe in His name. Having thus life and righteousness in Him,
we are called to
walk, not merely as the law directs, but to "walk even as he
walked." It will hardly be deemed
needful to assert that it is directly contrary to Christian ethics to
kill, commit adultery, or
steal. But were a Christian to shape his way according to these commands,
or according to the
entire decalogue, would he yield the rare and delicate fruits which the
Epistle to the
Ephesians sets forth? Would the ten commandment ever cause a thief to
give up, stealing, and
go to work that he might have to give? Would they ever transform a
thief into a laborious and
liberal man? Assuredly not. The law says, "thou shalt not
steal;" but does it say, "go and give
to him that needeth"—go feed, clothe, and bless your
enemy"—"go gladden by your
benevolent feelings and your beneficent acts the heart of him who only
and always seeks your
hurt?" By no means; and yet, were I under the law, as a rule, it
could only curse me and slay
me. How is this, when the standard in the New Testament is so much
higher? Because am
weak, and the law gives me no strength and shows me no mercy. The law
demands strength
from one that has none, and curses him if he cannot display it. The
gospel gives strength to
one that has none, and blesses him in the exhibition of it. The law
proposes life as the end of
obedience. The gospel gives life as the only proper ground of
obedience.
But that I may not weary the reader with arguments, let me ask if the
law be, indeed, the rule
of a believer's life, where are we to find it so presented in the New
Testament? The inspired
apostle evidently had no thought of its being the rule when he penned
the following words:
"For in Christ Jesus neither circumcision availeth anything nor
uncircumcision, but a new
creation. And as many as walk according to this rule, peace be on them,
and mercy, and upon
the Israel of God." (Gal. 6: 15, 16) What "rule?" The
law? No, but the "new creation." Where
shall we find this in Exodus 20? It speaks not a word about "new
creation." On the contrary, it
addresses itself to man as he is, in his natural or old-creation state,
and puts him to the test as
to what he is really able to do. Now if the law were the rule by which
believers are to walk,
why does the apostle pronounce his benediction on those who walk by
another rule
altogether? Why does he not say, "as many as walk according to the
rule of the ten
commandments?" Is it not evident, from this one passage, that the
Church of God has a higher
rule by which to walk? Unquestionably. The ten commandments, though
forming, as all true
Christians admit, a part of the canon of inspiration, could never be
the rule of life to one who
has, through infinite grace, been introduced into the new creation—one
who has received new
life, in Christ.
But some may ask, "Is not the law perfect? And, if perfect, what
more would you have?" The
law is divinely perfect. Yea, it is the very perfection of the law
which causes it to curse and
slay those who are not perfect -if they attempt to stand before it.
"The law is spiritual, but I
am carnal.' It is utterly impossible to form an adequate idea of the
infinite perfectness and
spirituality of the law. But then this perfect law coming in contact
with fallen humanity—this
spiritual law coming In contact with "the carnal mind," could
only "work wrath" and "
enmity." (Rom. 4: 15; Rom. 8: 7) Why? Is it because the law is not
perfect? No, but because it
is, and man is a sinner. If man were perfect, he would carry out the
law in all its spiritual
perfectness; and even in the case of true believers, though they still
carry about with them an
evil nature, the apostle teaches us "that the righteousness of the
law is fulfilled in us who walk
not after the flesh, but after the Spirit." (Rom. 8: 4) "He
that loveth another hath fulfilled the
law"—"love worketh no ill to his neighbour: therefore love is
the fulfilling of the law." (Rom,
13: 8-10) If I love a man, I shall not steal his property—nay, I shall
seek to do him all the
good I can. All this is plain and easily understood by the spiritual
mind; but is leaves entirely
untouched the question of the law, whether as the ground of life to a
sinner or the rule of life
to the believer.
If we look at the law, in its two grand divisions, it tells a man to
love God with all his heart,
and with all his soul, and with all his mind; and to love his neighbour
as himself. This is the
sum of the law. This, and not a tittle less, is what the law demands.
But where has this
demand ever been responded to by any member of Adam's fallen posterity?
Where is the man
who could say he loves God after such a fashion? "The carnal mind
(i.e., the mind which we
have by nature) is enmity against God." Man hates God and His
ways. God came, in the
Person of Christ, and showed Himself to man—showed Himself, not in the
overwhelming
brightness of His majesty, but in all the charm and sweetness of
perfect grace and
condescension. What was the result? Man hated God. "Now have they
both seen and hated
both me and my Father." (John 15: 24.) But, it must be said,
" Man ought to love God." No
doubt, and he deserves death and eternal perdition if he does not. But
can the law produce this
love in man's heart? Was that its design? By no means, "for the
law worketh wrath." The law
finds man in a state of enmity against God; and without ever altering
that state—for that was
not its province—it commands him to love God with all his heart, and
curses him if he does
not. It was not the province of the law to alter or improve man's
nature; nor yet could is
impart any power to carry out its righteous demands. It said
"This do, and thou shalt
live." It
commanded man to love God. It did not reveal what God was to man, even
in his guilt and
ruin; but it told man what he ought to be toward God. This was dismal
work. It was not the
unfolding of the powerful attractions of the divine character,
producing in man true
repentance toward God, melting his icy heart, and elevating his soul in
genuine affection and
worship. No: it was an inflexible command to love God; and, instead of
producing love, it
"worked wrath;" not because God ought not to be loved, but
because man was a sinner.
Again, "Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself." Can
"the natural man" do this? Does he
love his neighbour as himself? Is this the principle which obtains in
the chambers of
commerce, the exchanges, the banks, the marts, the fairs, and the
markets of this world? Alas!
no. Man does not love his neighbour as he loves himself. No doubt he
ought: and if he were
right, he would. But, then, he is all wrong—totally wrong—and unless he
is "born again" of
the word and the Spirit of God, he cannot "see nor enter the
kingdom of God." The law cannot
produce this new birth. It kills "the old man," but does not,
and cannot, create "the new." As
an actual fact we know that the Lord Jesus Christ embodied, in His
glorious Person, both God
and our neighbour, inasmuch as He was, according to the
foundation-truth of the Christian
religion, "God manifest in the flesh." How did man treat Him?
Did he love Him with all his
heart, or as himself? The very reverse. He crucified Him between two thieves,
having
previously preferred a murderer and a robber to that blessed One who
had gone about doing
good—who had come forth from the eternal dwelling-place of light and
love—Himself the
very living personification of that light and love—whose bosom had ever
heaved with purest
sympathy with human need—whose hand had ever been ready to dry the
sinner's tears and
alleviate his sorrows. Thus we stand and gaze upon the cross of Christ,
and behold in it an
unanswerable demonstration of the fact that it is not within the range
of man's nature or
capacity to keep the law.*
{*For further exposition of the law, and also of the doctrine of the
Sabbath, the reader is
referred to a tract, entitled "A Scriptural Inquiry into the True
Nature of the Sabbath, the Law,
and the Christian Ministry.}
It is peculiarly interesting to the spiritual mind, after all that has
passed before us, to observe
the relative position of God and the sinner at the close of this
memorable chapter. "And the
Lord said unto Moses, Thus thou shalt say unto the children of Israel .
. . an altar of earth thou
shalt make unto me, and shalt sacrifice thereon thy burnt-offerings,
and thy peace offerings,
thy sheep and thine oxen: in all places where I record my name, I WILL
COME UNTO
THEE, and I WILL BLESS THEE. And if thou wilt make an altar of stone,
thou shalt not
build it of hewn stone: for if thou lift up thy tool upon it, thou hast
polluted it. Neither shalt
thou go up by steps unto mine altar, that thy nakedness be not
discovered thereon. " (Ver. 22,
26)
Here we find man not in the position of a doer, but of a worshipper;
and this, too, at the close
of Exodus 20. How plainly this teaches us that the atmosphere of Mount
Sinai is not that
which God would have the sinner breathing; that it is not the proper
meeting place between
God and man. "In all places where I record my name, I will come
unto thee, and I will bless
thee." How unlike the terrors of the fiery mount is that spot
where Jehovah records His name,
whither He "comes" to "bless" His worshipping
people!
But, further, God will meet the sinner at an altar without a hewn stone
or a step—a place of
worship which requires no human workmanship to erect, or human effort
to approach. The
former could only pollute, and the latter could only display human
"nakedness." Admirable
type of the meeting-place where God meets the sinner now, even the
Person and work of His
Son, Jesus Christ, where all the claims of law, of justice, and of
conscience, are perfectly
answered! Man has, in every age, and in every clime, been prone, in one
way or another, to
"lift up his tool in the erection of his altar, or to approach
thereto by steps of his own making.
But the issue of all such attempts has been "pollution" and
"nakedness." "We all do fade as a
leaf, and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags?" Who will
presume to approach God clad
in a garment of "filthy rags?" or who will stand to worship
with a revealed "nakedness?" What
can be more preposterous than to think of approaching God in a way
which necessarily
involves either pollution or nakedness? And yet thus it is in every
case in which human effort
is put forth to open the sinner's way to God. Not only is there no need
of such effort, but
defilement and nakedness are stamped upon it. God has come down so very
near to the sinner,
even in the very depths of his ruin, that there is no need for his
lifting up the tool of legality,
or ascending the steps of self-righteousness yea, to do so, is but to
expose his uncleanness and
his nakedness.
Such are the principles with which the Holy Ghost closes this most
remarkable section of
inspiration. May they be indelibly written upon our hearts, that so we
may more clearly and
fully understand the essential difference between LAW and GRACE.
Exodus 21-23
The study of this section of our book is eminently calculated to
impress the heart with a sense
d God's unsearchable wisdom and infinite goodness. It enables one to
form some idea of the
character of a kingdom governed by laws of divine appointment. Here,
too, we may see the
amazing condescension of Him who, though He is the great God of heaven
and earth, can,
nevertheless, stoop to adjudicate between man and man in reference to
the death of an ox, the
loan of a garment, or the loss of a servant's tooth. "Who is like
unto the Lord our God, who
humbleth himself to behold the things that are in heaven and on
earth?" He governs the
universe, and yet He can occupy Himself with the provision of a
covering for one of His
creatures. He guides the angel's flight and takes notice of a crawling
worm. He humbles
Himself to regulate the movements of those countless orbs that roll
through infinite space and
to record the fall of a sparrow.
As to the character of the judgement set forth in the chapters before
us, we may learn a double
lesson. These judgements and ordinances bear a twofold witness: they
convey to the ear a
twofold message, and present to the eye two sides of a picture. They
tell of God and they tell
of man.
In the first place, on God's part, we find Him enacting laws which
exhibit strict, even-handed,
perfect justice. "Eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand,
foot for foot, burning for burning,
wound for wound, stripe for stripe." Such was the character of the
laws, the statutes, and the
judgements by which God governed His earthly kingdom of Israel.
Everything was provided
for, every interest was maintained, and every claim was met. There was
no partiality—no
distinction made between the rich and the poor. The balance in which
each man's claim was
weighed was adjusted with divine accuracy, so that no one could justly
complain of a
decision. The pure robe of justice was not to be tarnished with the
foul stains of bribery,
corruption and partiality. The eye and the hand of a divine Legislator
provided for everything;
and a divine Executive inflexibly dealt with every defaulter. The
stroke of justice fell only on
the head of the guilty, while every obedient soul was protected in the
enjoyment of all his
rights and privileges.
Then, as regards man, it is impossible to read over these laws and not
be struck with the
disclosure which they indirectly, but really, make of his desperate
depravity. The fact of
Jehovah's having to enact laws against certain crimes, proves the
capability, on man's part, of
committing those crimes. Were the capability and the tendency not
there, there would be no
need of the enactments. Now, there are many who, if the gross
Abominations forbidden in
these chapters were named to them, might feel disposed to adopt the
language of Hazael and
say, "Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?"
Such persons have not yet travelled
down into the deep abyss of their own hearts. For albeit there are
crimes here forbidden which
would seem to place man, as regards his habits and tendencies, below
the level of a "dog," yet
do those very statutes prove, beyond all question, that the most
refined and cultivated member
of the human family carries above, in his bosom, the seeds of the very
darkest and most
horrifying abominations. For whom were those statutes enacted? For man.
Were they needful?
Unquestionably. But they would have been quite superfluous if man were
incapable of
committing the sins referred to. But man is capable; and hence we see
that man is sunk to the
very lowest possible level—that his nature is wholly corrupt—that, from
the crown of his
head to the sole of his foot, there is not so much as a speck of moral
soundness.
How can such a being ever stand, without an emotion of fear, in the
full blaze of the throne of
God? How can he stand within the holiest? How can he stand on the sea
of glass? How can he
enter in by the pearly gates and tread the golden streets? The reply to
these inquiries unfolds
the amazing depths of redeeming love and the eternal efficacy of the
blood of the Lamb. Deep
as is man's ruin, the love of God is deeper still. Black as is his
guilt, the blood of Jesus can
wash it all away. Wide as is the chasm separating man from God, the
cross has bridged it.
God has come down to the very lowest point of the sinner's condition,
in order that He might
lift him up into a position of infinite favour, in eternal association
with His own Son. Well
may we exclaim, "Behold what manner of love the Father hath
bestowed on us, that we
should be called the sons of God." (1 John 3: l) Nothing could
fathom man's ruin but God's
love, and nothing could equal man's guilt but the blood of Christ. But
now the very depth of
the ruin only magnifies the love that has fathomed it, and the
intensity of the guilt only
celebrates the efficacy of the blood that can cleanse it. The very
vilest sinner who believes in
Jesus can rejoice in the assurance that God sees him and pronounces him
"clean every whit."
Such, then, is the double character of instruction to be gleaned from
the laws and ordinances
in this section, looked at as a whole; and the more minutely we look at
them, in detail, the
more impressed we shall be with a sense of their fullness and beauty.
Take, for instance, the
very first ordinance that presents itself, namely, that of the Hebrew
Servant.
"Now these are the judgements which thou shalt set before them. If
thou buy an Hebrew
servant, six years he shall serve: and in the seventh he shall go out
free for nothing. If he came
in by himself, he shall go out by himself: if he were married, then his
wife shall go out with
him. If his master have given him a wife, and she have borne him sons
or daughters, the wife
and her children shall he her master's, and he shall go out by himself.
And if the servant shall
plainly say, I love my master, my wife, and my children; I will not go
out free; then his master
shall bring him unto the judges: he shall also bring him to the door,
or unto the door post; and
his master shall bore his ear through with an awl; and he shall serve
him for ever." (Ex. 21: 1-
6) The servant was perfectly free to go out, so far as he was
personally concerned. He had
discharged every claim, and could, therefore, walk abroad in
unquestioned freedom; but
because of his love to his master, his wife, and his children, he
voluntarily bound himself to
perpetual servitude; and not only so, but he was also willing to bear,
in his own person, the
marks of that servitude.
The application of this to the Lord Jesus Christ will be obvious to the
intelligent reader. In
Him we behold the One who dwelt in the bosom of the Father before all
worlds—the object
of His eternal delight—who might have occupied, throughout eternity,
this His personal and
entirely peculiar place, inasmuch as there lay upon Him no obligation
(save that which
ineffable love created and ineffable love incurred) to abandon that
place. Such, however, was
His love to the Father whose counsels were involved, and for the Church
collectively, and
each individual member thereof, whose salvation was involved, that He,
voluntarily, came
down to earth, emptied Himself, and made Himself of no reputation, took
upon Him the form
of a servant and the marks of perpetual service. To these marks we
probably have a striking
allusion in the Psalms. "Mine ears hast thou digged." (Ps.
40: 6, marg.) This psalm is the
expression of Christ's devotedness to God. "Then said I, Lo, I
come: in the volume of the book
it is written of me, I delight to do thy will, O my God: yea thy law is
within my heart." He
came to do the will of God, whatever that will might be. He never once
did His own will, not
even in the reception and salvation of sinners, though surely His
loving heart, with all its
affections, was most fully in that glorious work. Still He receives and
saves only as the
servant of the Father's counsels. "All that the Father giveth me
shall come to me; and him that
cometh to me I will in no wise cast out. For I came down from heaven,
not to do mine own
will, but the will of him that sent me. And this is the Father's will
which hath sent me, that of
all which he hath given me I should lose nothing, but should raise it
up again at the last day."
(John 6: 37-39)
Here we have a most interesting view of the servant character of the
Lord Jesus Christ. He, in
perfect grace, holds Himself responsible to receive all who come within
the range of the
divine counsels; and not only to receive them, but to preserve them
through all the difficulties
and trials of their devious path down here, yea, in the article of
death itself, should it come,
and to raise them all up in the last day. Oh! how secure is the very
feeblest member of the
Church of God! He is the subject of God's eternal counsels, which
counsels the Lord Jesus
Christ is pledged to carry out. Jesus loves the Father, and, in
proportion to the intensity of that
love, is the security of each member of the redeemed family. The
salvation of any sinner who
believes on the name of the Son of God is, in one aspect of it, but the
expression of Christ's
love to the Father. If one such could perish, through any cause whatsoever,
it would argue that
the Lord Jesus Christ was unable to carry out the will of God, which
were nothing short of
positive blasphemy against His sacred name, to whom be all honour and
majesty throughout
the everlasting ages.
Thus we have, in the Hebrew servant, a type of Christ in His pure
devotedness to the Father.
But there is more than this: "I love my wife and my
children." "Christ loved the church and
gave himself for it, that he might sanctify and cleanse it with the
washing of water by the
word, that he might present it to himself a glorious church, not having
spot, or wrinkle, or any
such thing ; but that it should be holy and without blemish."
(Eph. 5: 25-27) There are various
other passages of Scripture presenting Christ as the antitype of the Hebrew
servant, both in
His love for the Church, as a body, and for all believers personally.
In Matthew 13, John 10
and 13, and Hebrews 2, my reader will find special teaching on the
point.
The apprehension of this love of the heart of Jesus cannot fail to
produce a spirit of fervent
devotedness to the One who could exhibit such pure, such perfect, such
disinterested love.
How could the wife and children of the Hebrew servant fail to love one
who had voluntarily
surrendered his liberty in order that he and they might be together?
And what is the love
presented in the type, when compared with that which shines in the
antitype? It is as nothing.
"The love of Christ passeth knowledge." It led Him to think
of us before all worlds—to visit
us in the fullness of time—to walk deliberately to the door post—to
suffer for us on the cross,
in order that He might raise us to companionship with himself, in His
everlasting kingdom
and glory.
Were I to enter into a full exposition of the remaining statutes and
judgements of this portion
of the Book of Exodus, it would carry me much further than I feel, at
present, led to go.* I
will merely observe, in conclusion, that it is impossible to read the
section and not have the
heart drawn out in adoration of the profound wisdom, well-balanced
justice, and yet tender
considerateness which breathe throughout the whole. We rise up from the
study of it with this
conviction deeply wrought into the soul, that the One who speaks here
is "the only true," "the
only wise," and the infinitely gracious God.
{*I would here observe, once for all, that the feasts referred to in
Ex. 23: 14-19 and the
offerings in Ex. 29 being brought out in all their fullness and detail,
in the book of Leviticus, I
shall reserve them until we come to dwell upon the contents of that
singularly rich and
interesting book.}
May all our meditations on His eternal word have the effect of
prostrating our souls in
worship before Him whose perfect ways and glorious attributes shine
there, in all their
blessedness and brightness, for the refreshment, the delight, and the
edification of His blood-
bought people.
Exodus 24
This chapter opens with an expression remarkably characteristic of the
entire Mosaic
economy. "And he said unto Moses, Come up unto the Lord, thou and
Aaron, Nadab, and
Abihu, and seventy of the elders of Israel; and worship ye afar off . .
.. they shall not come
nigh, neither shall the people go up with him." We may search from
end to end of the legal
ritual, and not find those two precious words, "draw nigh."
Ah! no; such words could never be
heard from the top of Sinai, nor from amid the shadows of the law. They
could only be
uttered at heaven's side of the empty tomb of Jesus, where the blood of
the cross has opened a
perfectly cloudless prospect to the vision of faith. The words,
"afar off," are as characteristic
of the law, as "draw nigh" are of the gospel. Under the law,
the work was never done, which
could entitle a sinner to draw nigh. Man had not fulfilled his promised
obedience; and the
"blood of calves and goats" could not atone for the failure,
or give his guilty conscience
peace. Hence, therefore, he had to stand "afar off." Man's
vows were broken and his sin
unpurged; how, then, could he draw nigh The blood of ten thousand
bullocks could not wipe
away one stain from the conscience, or give the peaceful sense of
nearness to God.
However, the "first covenant" is here dedicated with blood.
An altar is erected at the foot of
the hill, with "twelve pillars, according to the twelve tribes of
Israel." "And he sent young men
of the children of Israel, which offered burnt-offerings, and
sacrificed peace offerings of oxen
unto the Lord. And Moses took half of the blood, and put it in basins;
and half of the blood he
sprinkled on the altar .... And Moses took the blood, and sprinkled it
on the people, and said,
Behold the blood of the covenant, which the Lord hath made with you
concerning all these
words although, as the apostle teaches us, it was "impossible that
the blood of bulls and goats
could take away sin," yet did it "sanctify to the purifying
of the flesh," and, as "a shadow of
good things to come," it availed to maintain the people in
relationship with Jehovah.
"Then went up Moses, and Aaron, Nadab, and Abihu, and seventy of
the elders of Israel; and
they saw the God of Israel: and there was under his feet as it were a
paved work of a sapphire
stone, and as it were the body of heaven in clearness. And upon the
nobles of the children of
Israel he laid not his hand: also they saw God and did eat and
drink." This was the
manifestation of "the God of Israel," in light and purity,
majesty and holiness. It was not the
unfolding of the affections of a Father's bosom, or the sweet accents
of a Father's voice,
breathing peace and inspiring confidence into the heart. No; the
"paved work of a sapphire
stone " told out that unapproachable purity and light which could
only tell a sinner to keep off
Still, "they saw God and did eat and drink." Touching proof
of divine forbearance and mercy,
as also of the power of the blood!
Looking at this entire scene as a mere illustration, there is much to
interest the heart. There is
the defiled camp below and the sapphire pavement above; but the altar,
at the foot of the hill,
tells us of that way by which the sinner can make his escape from the
defilement of his own
condition, and mount up to the presence of God, there to feast and
worship in perfect peace.
The blood which flowed around the altar furnished man's only title to
stand in the presence of
that glory which "was like a devouring fire on the top of the
mount in the eyes or the children
of Israel."
"And Moses went into the midst of the cloud, and gat him up into
the mount; and Moses was
in the mount forty days and forty nights." This was truly a high
and holy position for Moses.
He was called away from earth and earthly things. abstracted from
natural influences, he is
shut in with God, to hear from his mouth the deep mysteries of the
Person and work of Christ;
for such, in point of fact, we have unfolded in the tabernacle and all
its significant furniture!'
the patterns of things in the heavens." The blessed One knew full
well what was about to be
the end of man's covenant of works; but He unfolds to Moses, in types
and shadows, His own
precious thoughts of love and counsels of grace, manifested in, and
secured by, Christ.
Blessed, for evermore, be the grace which has not left us under a
covenant of works. Blessed
be He who has "hushed the law's loud thunders and quenched mount
Sinai's flame" by "the
blood of the everlasting covenant," and given us a peace which no
power of earth or hell can
shake. " Unto him that loved us, and washed us from our sins in
his own blood, and hath
made us kings and priests unto God and his Father; to him be glory and
dominion for ever and
ever. Amen.
Exodus 25
This chapter forms the commencement of one of the richest veins in
Inspiration's exhaustless
mine—a vein in which every stroke of the mattock brings to light untold
wealth. We know the
mattock with which alone we can work in such a mine, namely, the
distinct ministry of the
Holy Ghost. Nature can do nothing here. Reason is blind—imagination
utterly vain—the most
gigantic intellect, instead of being able to interpret the sacred
symbols, appears like a bat in
the sunshine, blindly dashing itself against the objects which it is
utterly unable to discern.
We must compel reason and imagination to stand without, while, with a
chastened heart, a
single eye, and a spiritual mind, we enter the hallowed precincts and
gaze upon the deeply
significant furniture. God the Holy Ghost is the only One who can
conduct us through the
courts of the Lord's house, and expound to our souls the true meaning
of all that there meets
our view. To attempt the exposition, by the aid of intellect's
unsanctified powers, would be
infinitely more absurd than to set about the repairs of a watch with a
blacksmith's tongs and
hammer. "The patterns of things in the heavens" cannot be
interpreted by the natural mind, in
its most cultivated form. They must all be read in the light of heaven.
Earth has no light which
could at all develop their beauties. The One who furnished the patterns
can alone explain
what the patterns mean. The One who furnished the beauteous symbols can
alone interpret
them.
To the human eye there would seem to be a desultoriness in the mode in
which the Holy
Ghost has presented the furniture of the tabernacle; but, in reality,
as might be expected, there
is the most perfect order, the most remarkable precision, the most
studious accuracy. From
Ex. 25 to Ex. 30, inclusive, we have a distinct section of the Book of
Exodus. This section is
divided into two parts, the first terminating at Ex. 27: 19, and the
second as the close of Ex.
30. The former begins with the ark of the covenant, inside the vail,
and ends with the brazen
altar and the court in which that altar stood. That is, it gives us, in
the first place, Jehovah's
throne of judgement, whereon He sat as Lord of all the earth; and it
conducts us to that place
where He met the sinner, in the credit and virtue of accomplished
atonement. Then, in the
latter, We have the mode of man's approach to God—the privileges,
dignities, and
responsibilities of those who, as priests, were permitted to draw nigh
to the Divine Presence
and enjoy worship and communion there. Thus the arrangement is perfect
and beautiful. How
could it be otherwise, seeing that it is divine? The ark and the brazen
altar present, as it were,
two extremes. The former was the throne of God established in
"justice and judgement." (Ps.
89: 19) The latter was the place of approach for the sinner where
"mercy and truth" went
before Jehovah's face. Man, in himself, dared not to approach the ark
to meet God, for "the
way into the holiest of all was not yet made manifest." (Heb. 9:
8) But God could approach
the altar of brass, to meet man as a sinner. "Justice and
judgement" could not admit the sinner
in; but "mercy and truth" could bring God out; not, indeed,
in that overwhelming brightness
and majesty in which He was wont to shine forth from between those
mystic supporters of His
throne—"the cherubim of glory"—but in that gracious ministry
which is symbolically
presented to us in the furniture and ordinances of the tabernacle.
All this may well remind us of the path trodden by that blessed One, who
is the antitype of all
these types—the substance of all these shadows. He travelled from the
eternal throne of God
in heaven, down to the depths of Calvary's cross. He came from all the
glory of the former
down into all the shame of the latter, in order that He might conduct
His redeemed, forgiven,
and accepted people back with Himself, and present them faultless
before that very throne
which He had left on their account. The Lord Jesus fills up, in His own
person and work,
every point between the throne of God and the dust of death, and every
point between the dust
of death and the throne of God. In Him God has come down, in perfect
grace, to the sinner; in
Him the sinner is brought up, in perfect righteousness, to God. All the
way, from the ark to
the brazen altar, was marked with the footprints of love; and all the
way from the brazen altar
to the ark of God was sprinkled with the blood of atonement; end as the
ransomed worshipper
passes along that wondrous path, he beholds the name of Jesus stamped
on all that meets his
view. May that name be dearer to our hearts! Let us now proceed to
examine the chapters
consecutively.
It is most interesting to note here, that the first thing which the
Lord communicated to Moses
is His gracious purpose to have a sanctuary or holy dwelling place in
the midst of His
people—a sanctuary composed of materials, which directly point to
Christ, His Person, His
work, and the precious fruit of that work, as seen in the light, the
power, and the varied graces
of the Holy Ghost. Moreover, these materials were the fragrant fruit of
the grace of God—the
voluntary offerings of devoted hearts. Jehovah, whose majesty, "
the heaven of heavens could
not contain," was graciously pleased to dwell in a boarded and
curtained tent, erected for Him
by those who cherished the fond desire to hail His presence amongst
them. This tabernacle
may be viewed in two ways: first, as furnishing "a pattern of
things in the heavens;" and,
secondly, as presenting a deeply significant type of the body of Christ.
The various materials
of which the tabernacle was composed will come before us, as we pass
along; we shall,
therefore, consider the three comprehensive subjects put before us in
this chapter, namely, the
ark; the table; and the candlestick.
The ark of the covenant occupies the leading place in the divine
communications to Moses.
Its position, too, in the tabernacle was most marked. Shut in within
the vail, in the holiest of
all, it formed the base of Jehovah's throne. Its very name conveys to
the mind its import. An
ark, so far as the word instructs us, is designed to preserve intact
whatever is put therein. An
ark carried Noah and his family, together with all the orders of
creation, in safety over the
billows of judgement which covered the earth. An ark, at the opening of
this book, was faith's
vessel for preserving "a proper child" from the waters of
death. When, therefore, we read of
"the ark of the covenant," we are led to believe that it was
designed of God to preserve His
covenant unbroken, in the midst of an erring people. In it, as we know,
the second set of
tables were deposited. As to the first set, they were broken in pieces,
beneath the mount,
showing that man's covenant was wholly abolished—that his work could
never, by any
possibility, form the basis of Jehovah's throne of government.
"Justice and judgement are the
habitation of that throne," whether in its earthly or heavenly
aspect. The ark could not contain
within its hallowed inclosure, broken tables. Man might fail to fulfil
his self-chosen vow; but
God's law must be preserved in its divine integrity and perfectness. If
God was to set up His
throne in the midst of His people, He could only do so in a way worthy
of Himself. His
standard of judgement and government must be perfect.
"And thou shalt make staves of shittim wood, and overlay them with
gold. and thou shalt put
the staves into the rings by the sides of the ark, that the ark may be
borne with them." The ark
of the covenant was to accompany the people in all their wanderings. It
never rested while
they were a travelling or a conflicting host. It moved from place to
place in the wilderness. It
went before them into the midst of Jordan; it was their grand rallying
Point in all the wars of
Canaan; it was the sure and certain earnest of power wherever it went.
No power of the
enemy could stand before that which was the well-known expression of
the divine presence
and power. The ark was to be Israel's companion in travel, in the
desert; and "the staves" and
"the rings" were the apt expression of its travelling
character.
However, it was not always to be a traveller. "The afflictions of
David," as well as the wars of
Israel, were to have an end. The prayer was yet to be breathed and
answered, "Arise, O Lord,
into thy rest: thou and the Ark of thy strength." (Ps. 132: 8)
This most sublime petition had its
partial accomplishment in the palmy days of Solomon, when "the
priests brought in the ark of
the covenant of the Lord unto his place, into the oracle of the house,
to the most holy place,
even under the wings of the cherubims. For the cherubims spread forth
their two wings over
the place of the ark, and the cherubims covered the ark, and the staves
thereof above. And
they drew out the staves, that the ends of the staves were seen out in
the holy place before the
oracle, and they were not seen without: and there they are unto this
day." (1 Kings 8:6-8) The
sand of the desert was to be exchanged for the golden floor of the
temple. (1 Kings 6: 30) The
wanderings of the ark were to have an end; there was "neither
enemy nor evil occurrent," and
therefore, "the staves were drawn out."
Nor was this the only difference between the ark in the tabernacle and
in the temple. The
apostle, speaking of the ark in its wilderness habitation, describes it
as "the ark of the
covenant, overlaid round about with gold, wherein was the golden pot
that had manna, and
Aaron's rod that budded, and the tables of the covenant." (Heb. 9:
4) Such were the contents
of the ark in its wilderness journeyings-the pot of manna, the record
of Jehovah's faithfulness,
in providing for His redeemed in the desert, and Aaron's rod, "a
token against the rebels," to
"take away their murmurings.'' (Compare Ex. 16: 32-39; and Num.
17: 10) But when the
moment arrived in which "the staves" were to be "drawn
out," when the wanderings and wars
of Israel were over, the "exceeding magnifical" house was
completed, when the sun of Israels
glory had reached, in type, its meridian, as marked by the wealth and
splendour of Solomon's
reign, then the records of wilderness need and wilderness failure were
unnoticed, and nothing
remained save that which constituted the eternal foundation of the
throne of the God of Israel,
and of all the earth. "There was nothing in the ark, save the two
tables of stone, which Moses
put there at Horeb." (1 Kings 8: 9)
But all this brightness was soon to be overcast by the heavy clouds of
human failure and
divine displeasure. The rude foot of the uncircumcised was yet to walk
across the ruins of that
beautiful house, and as faded light and departed glory were yet to
elicit the contemptuous
"hiss" of the stranger. This would not be the place to follow
out these things in detail; I shall
only refer my reader to the last notice which the Word of God affords
us of "the ark of the
covenant,"—a notice which carries us forward to a time when human
folly and sin shall no
more disturb the resting-place of that ark, and when neither a
curtained tent, nor yet a temple
made with hands, shall contain it. "And the seventh angel sounded;
and there were great
voices in heaven, saying, The kingdoms of this world are become the
kingdoms of our Lord,
and of his Christ: and he shall reign for ever and ever. And the four
and twenty elders, which
sat before God on their seats, fell upon their faces, and worshipped
God, saying, We give thee
thanks, 0 Lord God almighty, which art, and wast, and art to come;
because thou has taken to
thee thy great power and hast reigned. And the nations were angry, and
thy wrath is come, and
the time of the dead, that they should be judged, and that thou
shouldest give reward unto thy
servants the prophets, and to the saints, and them that fear thy name,
small and great; and
shouldst destroy them which destroy the earth. And the temple of God
was opened in heaven,
and there was seen in his temple the ark of His covenant: and there
were lightnings, and
voices, and thunderings, and an earthquake, and great hail." (Rev.
11: 15-19)
The mercy-seat comes next in order. "And thou shalt make a
mercy-seat of pure gold; two
cubits and a half shall be the length thereof, and a cubit and a half
the breadth thereof. And
thou shalt make two cherubims of gold, of beaten work shalt thou make
them, in the two ends
of the mercy-seat. And make one cherub on the one end, and the other
cherub on the other
end; even of the mercy-seat shall ye make the cherubims on the two ends
thereof. And the
cherubims shall stretch forth their wings on high, covering the
mercy-seat with their wings,
and their faces shall look one to another; toward the mercy-seat shall
the faces of the
cherubims be. And thou shalt put the mercy seat above upon the ark; and
in the ark shalt thou
put the testimony that I shall give thee. And there I will meet with
thee, and I will commune
with thee from above the mercy-seat, from between the two cherubims
which are upon the ark
of the testimony, of all things which I will give thee in commandment
unto the children of
Israel."
Here Jehovah gives utterance to His gracious intention of coming down
from the fiery mount
to take His place upon the mercy seat. This He could do, inasmuch as
the tables of testimony
were preserved unbroken beneath, and the symbols of his power, whether
in creation or
providence, rose on the right hand and on the left—the inseparable
adjuncts of that throne on
which Jehovah had seated himself—a throne of grace founded upon divine
righteousness and
supported by justice and judgement. Here the glory of the God of Israel
shone forth. From
hence He issued His commands, softened and sweetened by the gracious source
from whence
they emanated, and the medium through which they came—like the beams of
the mid-day
sun, passing through a cloud, we can enjoy their genial and enlivening
influence without
being dazzled by their brightness. "His commandments are not grievous,"
when received from
off the mercy-seat, because they come in connection with grace, which
gives the ears to hear
and the power to obey.
Looking at the ark and mercy-seat together, we may see in them a
striking figure of Christ, in
His Person and work. He having, in His life, magnified the law and made
it honourable,
became, through death, a propitiation or mercy-seat. for every one that
believeth. God's mercy
could only repose on a pedestal of perfect righteousness. "Grace
reigns through righteousness
unto eternal life by Jesus Christ our Lord." (Rom. 5: 21) The only
proper meeting place
between God and man is the point where grace and righteousness meet and
perfectly
harmonise. Nothing but perfect righteousness could suit God; and
nothing but perfect grace
could suit the sinner. But where could these attributes meet in one
point? Only in the cross.
There it is that "mercy and truth are met together; righteousness
and peace have kissed each
other." (Ps. 85: 10) Thus it is that the soul of the believing sinner
finds peace. He sees that
God's righteousness and his justification rest upon precisely the same
basis, namely, Christ's
accomplished work. When man, under the powerful action of the truth of
God, takes his place
as a sinner, God can, in the exercise of Grace, take His place as a
Saviour, and then every
question is settled, for the cross having answered all the claims of
divine justice, mercy's
copious streams can flow unhindered. When a righteous God and a ruined
sinner meet, on a
blood-sprinkled platform, all is settled for ever—settled in such a way
as perfectly glorifies
God, and eternally saves the sinner. God must be true, though every man
he proved a liar; and
when man is so thoroughly brought down to the lowest point of his own
moral condition
before God as to be willing to take the place which God's truth assigns
him, he then learns
that God has revealed Himself as the righteous Justifier of such an
one. This must give settled
peace to the conscience; and not only so, but impart a capacity to commune
with God, and
hearken to His holy precepts in the intelligence of that relationship
into which divine grace
has introduced us.
Hence, therefore, "the holiest of all" unfolds a truly
wondrous scene. The ark, the mercy seat,
the cherubim, the glory! What a sight for the high-priest of Israel to
behold as, once a year, he
went in within the vail! May the Spirit of God open the eyes of our
understandings, that we
may understand more fully the deep meaning of those precious types.
Moses is next instructed about "the table of showbread," or
bread of presentation. On this
table stood the food of the priests of God. For seven days those twelve
loaves of "fine flour
with frankincense" were presented before the Lord, after which,
being replaced by others,
they became the food of the priests who fed upon them in the holy
place. (See Lev. 24: 5-9) It
is needless to say that those twelve loaves typify "the man Christ
Jesus." The "fine flour," of
which they were composed, mark His perfect manhood, while the
"frankincense'' points out
the entire devotion of that manhood to God. If God has His priests
ministering in the holy
place, He will assuredly have a table for them, and a well-furnished
table too. Christ is the
table and Christ is the bread thereon. The pure table and the twelve
loaves shadow forth
Christ, as presented before God unceasingly, in all the excellency of
His spotless humanity,
and administered as food to the priestly family. The "seven
days" set forth the perfection of
the divine enjoyment of Christ ; and the "twelve loaves" the
administration of that enjoyment
in and by man. There is also, I should venture to suggest, the idea, of
Christ's connection with
the twelve tribes of Israel, and the twelve apostles of the Lamb.
The candlestick of pure gold comes next in order, for God's priests
need light as well as food:
and they have both the one and the other in Christ. In this candlestick
there is no mention of
anything but pure gold. "All of it shall be one beaten work of
pure gold." "The seven lamps"
which "gave light over against the candlestick," express the
perfection of the light and energy
of the Spirit, founded upon and connected with the perfect efficacy of
the work of Christ. The
work of the Holy Ghost can never be separated from the work of Christ.
This is set forth, in a
double way, in this beautiful figure of the golden candle stick.
"The seven lamps" being
connected with "the shaft" of "beaten gold," points
us to Christ's finished work as the sole
basis of the manifestation of the Spirit in the Church. The Holy Ghost
was not given until
Jesus was glorified. (Comp. John 7: 39 with Acts 19: 2-6) In Revelation
3, Christ is presented
to the Church of Sardis as "having the seven spirits." It was
as "exalted to the right hand of
God" that the Lord Jesus "shed forth" the Holy Ghost
upon His church, in order that she might
shine according to the power and perfection of her position, in the
holy place, her proper
sphere of being, of action, and of worship.
Then, again, we find it was one of Aaron's specific functions to light
and trim those seven
lamps. "And the Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Command the
children of Israel that they
bring unto thee pure oil olive, beaten for the light, to cause the
lamps to burn continually.
Without the vail of the testimony, in the tabernacle of the
congregation, shall Aaron order it,
from the evening unto the morning, before the Lord continually: it
shall be a statute for ever
in your generations. He shall order the lamps upon the pure candlestick
before the Lord
continually." (Lev. 24: 1-4) Thus we may see how the work of the
Holy Ghost in the Church is
linked with Christ's work on earth and His work in heaven. "The
seven lamps" were there, no
doubt; hut priestly energy and diligence were needed in order to keep
them trimmed and
lighted. The priest would continually need "the tongs and
snuff-dishes" for the purpose of
removing ought that would not be a fit vehicle for the "pure
beaten oil." Those tongs and
snuff-dishes were of "beaten gold" likewise, for the whole
matter was the direct result of
divine operation. If the Church shine, it is only by the energy of the
Spirit, and that energy is
founded upon Christ, who, in pursuance of God's eternal counsel, became
in His sacrifice and
Priesthood, the spring and power of everything to His Church. All is of
God. Whether we look
within that mysterious vail, and behold the ark with its cover, and the
two significant figures
attached thereto; or if we gaze on that which lay without the vail, the
pure table and the pure
candlestick, with their distinctive vessels and instruments—all speak
to us of God, whether as
revealed to us in connection with the Son or the Holy Ghost.
Christian reader, your high calling places you in the very midst of all
these precious realities.
Your place is not merely amid "the patterns of things in the
heavens," but amid "the heavenly
things themselves." You have "boldness to enter into the
holiest by the blood of Jesus." You
are a Priest unto God. "The showbread" is yours. Your place
is at "the pure table," to feed on
the priestly food, in the light of the Holy Ghost. Nothing can ever
deprive you of those divine
privileges. They are yours for ever. Let it be your care to watch
against everything that might
rob you of the enjoyment of them. Beware of all unhallowed tempers,
lusts, feelings, and
imaginations. Keep nature down—keep the world out keep Satan off. May
the Holy Ghost fill
your whole soul with Christ. Then you will be practically holy and
abidingly happy. You will
bear fruit, and the Father will be glorified, and your joy shall be
full.
Exodus 26
The section of our book which now opens before us contains the
instructive description of the
curtains and coverings of the tabernacle, wherein the spiritual eye
discerns the shadows of the
various features and phases of Christ's manifested character.
"Moreover, thou shalt make the
tabernacle with ten curtains of fine twined linen, and blue, and
purple, and scarlet : with
cherubims of cunning work shalt thou make them." Here we have the
different aspects of "the
man Christ Jesus." The "fine twined linen" prefigures
the spotless purity of His walk and
character; while the "blue, the purple, and the scarlet"
present Him to us as "the Lord from
heaven," who is to reign according to the divine counsels, but
whose royalty is to be the result
of His sufferings. Thus we have a spotless man, a heavenly man, a royal
man, a suffering man.
These materials were not confined to the " curtains" of the
tabernacle, but were also used in
making "the vail," (ver. 31,) "the hanging for the door
of the tent," (ver. 36,) "the hanging for
the gate of the court," (Ex. 27: 16,) "the cloths of service
and the holy garments of Aaron."
(Ex. 39: 1.) In a word, it was Christ everywhere, Christ in all, Christ
alone.*
{*The expression, "white and clean," gives peculiar force and
beauty to the type which the
Holy Ghost has presented in the "fine twined linen." Indeed,
there could not be a more
appropriate emblem of spotless manhood.}
"The fine twined linen," as expressive of Christ's spotless
manhood, opens a most precious
and copious spring of thought to the spiritual mind; it furnishes a
theme on which we cannot
meditate too profoundly. The truth respecting Christ's humanity must be
received with
scriptural accuracy, held with spiritual energy, guarded with holy
jealousy, and confessed
with heavenly power. If we are wrong as to this, we cannot be right as
to anything. It is a
grand, vital, fundamental truth, and if it be not received, held,
guarded, and confessed, as God
has revealed it in His holy word, the entire superstructure must be
unsound. Nothing can be
more deplorable than the looseness of thought and expression which
seems to prevail in
reference to this all-important doctrine. Were there more reverence for
the word of God, there
would be more accurate acquaintance with it; and, in this way, we
should happily avoid all
those erroneous and unguarded statements which surely must grieve the
Holy Spirit of God,
whose province it is to testify of Jesus.
When the angel had announced to Mary the glad tidings of the Saviour's
birth, she said unto
him, "How shall this be, seeing I know not a man?" Her feeble
mind was utterly incompetent
to enter into, much less to fathom, the stupendous mystery of "God
manifest in the flesh." But
mark carefully the angelic reply—a reply, not to a sceptic mind, but to
a pious, though
ignorant, heart. "The Holy Ghost shall come upon thee, and the
power of the Highest shall
overshadow thee; wherefore, also, that holy thing which shall be born
of thee shall be called
the Son of God." (Luke 1: 39, 35) Mary, doubtless, imagined that
this birth was to be
according to the principles of ordinary generation. But the angel
corrects her mistake, and, in
correcting it, enunciates one of the grandest truths of revelation. He
declares to her that divine
power was about to form A REAL MAN—"the second man the Lord from
heaven"—one
whose nature was divinely pure, utterly incapable of receiving or
communicating any taint.
This Holy One was made "in, the likeness of sinful flesh,"
without sin in the flesh. He partook
of real bona fide flesh and blood without a particle or shadow of the
evil thereto attaching.
This is a cardinal truth which cannot be too accurately laid hold of or
too tenaciously held.
The incarnation of the Son—His mysterious entrance into pure and
spotless flesh, formed, by
the power of the Highest, in the virgin's womb, is the foundation of
the "great mystery of
godliness" of which the topstone is a glorified God-man in heaven,
the Head, Representative,
and Model of the redeemed Church of God. The essential purity of His
manhood perfectly
met the claims of God; the reality thereof met the necessities of man.
He was a man, for none
else would do to meet man's ruin. But He was such a man as could
satisfy all the claims of the
throne of God. He was a spotless, real man, in whom God could perfectly
delight, and on
whom man could unreservedly lean.
I need not remind the enlightened reader that all this, if taken apart
from death and
resurrection, is perfectly unavailable to us. He needed not only an
incarnate, but a crucified
and risen Christ. True, He should be incarnate to be crucified; but it
is death and resurrection
which render incarnation available to us. It is nothing short of a
deadly error to suppose that,
in incarnation, Christ was taking man into union with Himself. This
could not be. He Himself
expressly teaches the contrary. "Verily, verily, I say unto you,
except a corn of wheat fall into
the ground and die, it abideth alone: but if it die, it bringeth forth
much fruit." (John 12: 24)
There could be no union between sinful and holy flesh, pure and impure,
corruptible and
incorruptible, mortal and immortal. Accomplished death is the only base
of a unity between
Christ and His elect members. It is in beautiful connection with the
words, "Rise, let us go
hence," that He says, "I am the vine, ye are the
branches." "We have been planted together in
the likeness of his death." "Our old man is crucified with
him, that the body of sin might be
destroyed." "In whom also are ye circumcised with the
circumcision made without hands, in
putting off the body of the sins of the flesh, by the circumcision of
Christ; buried with him in
baptism, wherein also ye are risen with him through the faith of the
operation of God, who
hath raised him from the dead." I would refer my reader to Romans
6 and Colossians 2 as a
full and comprehensive statement of the truth on this important
subject. It was only as dead
and risen that Christ and His people could become one. The true corn of
wheat had to fall into
the ground and die ere a full ear could spring up and be gathered into
the heavenly garner.
But while this is a plainly revealed truth of Scripture, it is equally
plain that incarnation
formed, as it were, the first layer of the glorious superstructure; and
the curtains of "fine
twined Linen" prefigure the moral purity of "the man Christ
Jesus." We have already seen the
manner of His conception; and, as we pass along the current of His life
here below, we meet
with instance after instance of the same spotless purity. He was forty
days in the wilderness,
tempted of the devil, but there was no response in His pure nature to
the tempter's foul
suggestions. He could touch the leper and receive no taint. He could
touch the bier and not
contract the smell of death. He could pass unscathed through the most
polluted atmosphere.
He was, as to His manhood, like a sunbeam emanating from the fountain
of light, which can
pass, without a soil, through the most defiling medium. He was
perfectly unique in nature,
constitution, and character. None but He could say, "Thou wilt not
suffer thine holy One to
see corruption." This was in reference to His humanity, which, as
being perfectly holy and
perfectly pure, was capable of being a sin-bearer. "His own self
bare our sins in his own body
on the tree." Not to the tree, as some would teach us; but
"on the tree." It was on the cross that
Christ was our sin-bearer, and only there. "He hath made him to be
sin for us who knew no
sin, that we might be made the righteousness of God in him." (2
Cor. 5: 21)
"Blue " is the ethereal colour, and marks the heavenly
character of Christ, who, though He had
come down into all the circumstances of actual and true humanity—sin
excepted—yet was
He "the Lord from heaven." Though He was "very
man," yet He ever walked in the
uninterrupted consciousness of His proper dignity, as a heavenly
stranger. He never once
forgot whence He had come, where He was, or whither He was going. The
spring of all His
joys was on high. Earth could neither make Him richer nor poorer. He
found this world to be
"a dry and thirsty land, where no water is;" and, hence, His
spirit could only find its
refreshment above. It was entirely heavenly. "No man hath ascended
up to heaven, but he that
came down from heaven, even the son of man who is in heaven."
(John 3: 13)
"Purple" denotes royalty, and points us to Him who "Was
born King of the Jews;" who
offered Himself as such to the Jewish nation, and was rejected; who
before Pontius Pilate
witnessed a good confession, avowing Himself a king, when, to mortal
vision, there was not
so much as a single trace of royalty. "Thou sayest that I am a
king." And "hereafter ye shall
see the Son of man sitting at the right hand of power, and coming in
the clouds of heaven."
And, finally, the inscription upon His cross, "in letters of
Hebrew, and Greek, and Latin"—the
language of religion, of science, and of government declared Him, to
the whole known world,
to be "Jesus of Nazareth, the King of the Jews." Earth
disowned His claims—so much the
worse for it but not so heaven; there His claim was fully recognised.
He was received as a
conqueror into the eternal mansions of light, crowned with glory and
honour, and seated,
amid the acclamations of angelic hosts, on the throne of the majesty in
the heavens, there to
wait until His enemies be made His footstool. "Why do the heathen
rage, and the people
imagine a vain thing? The kings of the earth set themselves, and the
rulers take counsel
together, against the Lord and against his anointed, saying, Let us
break their bands asunder,
and cast away their cords from us. He that sitteth in the heavens shall
laugh; the Lord shall
have them in derision. Then shall he speak unto them in his wrath, and
vex them in his sore
displeasure. Yet have I set my king upon my holy hill of Zion. I will
declare the decree: the
Lord hath said unto me, Thou art my Son; this day have I begotten thee.
Ask of me, and I shall
give thee the heathen for thine inheritance, and the uttermost parts of
the earth for thy
possession. Thou shalt break them with a rod of iron; thou shalt dash
them in pieces like a
potter's vessel. Be wise, now, therefore, O ye kings; be instructed, ye
judges of the earth.
Serve the Lord with fear, and rejoice with trembling. Kiss the Son,
lest he be angry, and ye
perish from the way, when his wrath is kindled but a little. BLESSED
ARE ALL THEY
THAT PUT THEIR TRUST IN HIM." (Ps. 2)
"Scarlet," when genuine, is produced by death; and this makes
its application to a suffering
Christ safe and appropriate. "Christ hath suffered for us in the
flesh." Without death, all
would have been unavailing. We can admire "the blue" and
"the purple" but without "the
scarlet" the tabernacle would have lacked an all-important
feature. It was by death that Christ
destroyed him that had the power of death. The Holy Ghost, in setting
before us a striking
figure of Christ—the true tabernacle-could not possibly omit that phase
of His character
which constituted the groundwork of His connection with His body the
Church, of His claim
to the throne of David, and the headship of all creation. In a word, He
not only unfolds the
Lord Jesus to our view, in these significant curtains, as a spotless
man, a royal man, but also a
suffering man; one who, by death, should make good His claims to all
that to which, as man,
He was entitled, in the divine counsels.
But we have much more in the curtains of the tabernacle than the varied
and perfect phases of
the character of Christ. We have also the unity and consistency of that
character. Each phase
is displayed in its own proper perfectness; and one never interferes
with, or mars the exquisite
beauty of, another. All was in perfect harmony beneath the eye of God,
and was so displayed
in "the pattern which was showed to Moses on the mount," and
in the copy which was
exhibited below. "Every one of the curtains shall have one
measure. The five curtains shall be
coupled together one to another; and other five curtains shall be
coupled one to another."
Such was the fair proportion and consistency in all the ways of Christ,
as a perfect man,
walking on the earth, in whatever aspect or relationship we view Him.
When acting in one
character, we never find ought that is, in the very least degree,
inconsistent with the divine
integrity of another. He was, at all times, in all places, under all
circumstances, the perfect
man. There was nothing out of that fair and lovely proportion which
belonged to Him, in all
His ways. "Every one of the curtains shall have one measure."
The two sets of five curtains each may symbolise the two grand aspects
of Christ's character,
as acting toward God and toward man. We have the same two aspects in
the law, namely,
what was due to God, and what was due to man; so that, as to Christ, if
we look in, we find
"thy law is within my heart;" and if we look at His outward
character and walk, we see those
two elements adjusted with perfect accuracy, and not only adjusted, but
inseparably linked
together by the heavenly grace and divine energy which dwelt in His
most glorious Person.
"And thou shalt make loops of blue upon the edge of the one
curtain, from the selvedge in the
coupling; and likewise. shalt thou make in the uttermost edge of
another curtain, in the
coupling of the second.... And thou shalt make fifty taches of gold,
and couple the curtains
together with the taches; and it shall be one tabernacle." We have
here displayed to us, in the
"loops of blue," and "taches of gold," that
heavenly grace and divine energy in Christ which
enabled Him to combine and perfectly adjust the claims of God and man;
so that in
responding to both the one and the other, He never, for a moment,
marred the unity of His
character. When crafty and hypocritical men tempted Him with the
enquiry, "Is it lawful to
give tribute to Caesar or not?" His wise reply was, "Render
to Caesar the things that are
Caesar's, and to God the things that are God's."
Nor was it merely Caesar, but man in every relation that had all his
claims perfectly met in
Christ. As He united in His perfect Person the nature of God and man,
so He met in His,
perfect ways the claims of God and man. Most interesting would it be to
trace, through the
gospel narrative, the exemplification of the principle suggested by the
"loops of blue," and
"taches of gold;" but I must leave my reader to pursue this
study under the immediate
guidance of the Holy Ghost, who delights to expatiate upon every
feature and every phase of
that perfect One whom it is His unvarying purpose and undivided object
to exalt.
The curtains on which we have been dwelling were covered with other
"curtains of goats'
hair;" (Ver. 7-14) Their beauty was hidden from those without by
that which bespoke
roughness and severity. This latter did not meet the view of those
within. To all who were
privileged to enter the hallowed enclosure nothing was visible save
"the blue, the purple, the
scarlet, and fine twined linen," the varied yet combined
exhibition of the virtues and
excellencies of that divine Tabernacle in which God dwelt within the
vail—that is, of Christ,
through whose flesh, the antitype of all these, the beams of the divine
nature shone so
delicately, that the sinner could behold without being overwhelmed by
their dazzling
brightness.
As the Lord Jesus passed along this earth, how few really knew Him! How
few had eyes
anointed with heavenly eyesalve to penetrate and appreciate the deep
mystery of His
character! How few saw "the blue, the purple, the scarlet, and the
twined linen!" It was only
when faith brought man into His presence that He ever allowed the
brightness of what He was
to shine forth—ever allowed the glory to break through the cloud. To
nature's eye there would
seem to have been a reserve and a severity about Him which were aptly
prefigured by the
"covering of goats' hair." All this was the result of His
profound separation and estrangement,
not from sinners personally, but from the thoughts and maxims of men.
He had nothing in
common with man as such, nor was it within the compass of mere nature
to comprehend or
enjoy Him. "No man," said He, "can come to me, except
the Father which hath sent me draw
him;" and when one of those "drawn" ones confessed His
name, He declared that "flesh and
blood hath not revealed it unto thee, but my Father which is in
heaven." (Comp. John 6: 44;
Matt. 6: 17) He was "a root out of a dry ground," having
neither "form nor comeliness" to
attract the eye or gratify the heart of man. The popular current could
never flow in the
direction of One who, as he passed rapidly across the stage of this
vain world, wrapped
Himself up in a "covering of goats' hair." Jesus was not
popular. The multitude might follow
Him for a moment, because His ministry stood connected, in their
judgement, with "the
loaves and fishes" which met their need; but they were just as
ready to cry, "Away with him!"
as "Hosanna to the Son of David!" Oh! let Christians remember
this! Let the servants of Christ
remember it! Let all preachers of the gospel remember it! Let one and
all of us ever seek to
bear in mind the "covering of goats' hair!"
But if the goats' skins expressed the severity of Christ's separation
from earth, "the rams' skins
dyed red" exhibit His intense consecration and devotedness to God,
which was carried out
even unto death. He was the only perfect Servant that ever stood in
God's vineyard. He had
one object which He pursued, with an undeviating course, from the
manger to the cross, and
that was to glorify the Father and finish His work. "Wist ye not
that I must be about my
Father's business" was the language of His youth, and the accomplishment
of that "business"
was the design of His life. "His meat was to do the will of him
that sent him and to finish his
work." "The rams' skins dyed red" formed as distinct a
part of His ordinary habit as the "goats'
hair." His perfect devotion to God separated Him from the habits
of men.
"The badgers' skins" may exhibit to us the holy vigilance
with which the Lord Jesus guarded
against the approach of everything hostile to the purpose which
engrossed His whole soul. He
took up His position for God, and held it with a tenacity which no
influence of men or devils,
earth or hell, could overcome. The covering of badgers' skins was
"above," (ver. 14,) teaching
us that the most prominent feature in the character of "the man
Christ Jesus" was an
invincible determination to stand as a witness for God on the earth. He
was the true Naboth,
who gave up His life rather than surrender the truth of God, or give up
that for which He had
taken His place in this world.
The goat, the ram, and the badger, must be regarded as exhibiting
certain natural features, and
also as symbolising certain moral qualities; and we must take both into
account in our
application of these figures to the character of Christ. The human eye
could only discern the
former. It could see none of the moral grace, beauty, and dignity,
which lay beneath the
outward form of the despised and humble Jesus of Nazareth. When the
treasures of heavenly
wisdom flowed from His lips, the inquiry was, "Is not this the
carpenter?" or "How knoweth
this man letters, having never learned?" When He asserted His
eternal Sonship and Godhead,
the word was, "Thou art not yet fifty years old," or
"They took up stones to cast at him." In
short, the acknowledgement of the Pharisees, in John 9, was true in
reference to men in
general. "as for this fellow, we know not from whence he is."
It would be utterly impossible, in the compass of a volume like this,
to trace the unfoldings of
those precious features of Christ's character through the gospel
narratives. Sufficient has been
said to open up springs of spiritual thought to my reader, and to
furnish some faint idea of the
rich treasures which are wrapped up in the curtains and coverings of
the tabernacle. Christ's
hidden being, secret springs and inherent excellencies—His outward and
unattractive form—
what He was in Himself, what He was to Godward, and what He was to
manward—what he
was in the judgement of faith, and what in the judgement of nature—all
is sweetly and
impressively told out to the circumcised ear, in the " curtains of
blue, purple, scarlet, and the
twined `linen:' and the "coverings of skins."
"The boards for the tabernacle" were made of the same wood as
was used in constructing "the
ark of the covenant." Moreover, they were upheld by the sockets of
silver formed out of the
atonement; their hooks and chapiters being of the same. (Compare
attentively Ex. 30: 11-16,
with Ex. 38: 25-28) The whole framework of the tent of the tabernacle
was based on that
which spoke of atonement or ransom, while the "hooks and chapiters"
at the top set forth the
same. The sockets were buried in the sand, and the hooks and chapiters
were above. It matters
not how deep you penetrate, or how high you rise, that glorious and
eternal truth is
emblazoned before you, "I HAVE FOUND A RANSOM." Blessed be
God, "we are not
redeemed with corruptible things, as silver and gold,......But with the
precious blood of Christ,
as of a lamb without blemish and without spot."
The tabernacle was divided into three distinct parts, namely, "the
holy of holies," "the holy
place," and the court of the tabernacle. The entrance into each of
these was of the same
materials, "blue, purple, scarlet, and fine twined linen."
(Compare Ex. 24: 31, 36; Ex. 27: 16.)
The interpretation of which is simply this: Christ forms the only
doorway into the varied
fields of glory which are yet to be displayed, whether on earth, in
heaven, or in the heaven of
heavens. "Every family, in heaven and earth," will be ranged
under His headship, as all will
be brought into everlasting felicity and glory, on the ground of His
accomplished atonement.
This is plain enough, and needs, no stretch of the imagination to grasp
it. We know it to be
true: and when we know the truth which is shadowed forth, the shadow Is
easily understood.
If only our hearts be filled with Christ, we shall not go far astray in
our interpretations of the
tabernacle and its furniture. It is not a head full of learned
criticism that will avail us much
here, but a heart full of affection for Jesus, and a conscience at rest
in the blood of His cross.
May the Spirit of God enable us to study these things with more
interest and intelligence! May
He "open our eyes that we may behold wondrous things out of his
law."
Exodus 27
We have now arrived at the brazen altar which stood at the door of the
tabernacle; and I
would call my reader's most particular attention to the order of the
Holy Ghost in this portion
of our book. We have already remarked that from Ex. 25 to Ex. 27: 19,
forms a distinct
division, in which we are furnished with a description of the ark and
mercy-seat, the table and
candlestick, the curtains and the vail; and, lastly, the brazen altar
and the court in which that
altar stood. If my reader will turn to Ex. 35: 15; Ex. 37: 25; Ex. 40:
26, he will remark that the
golden altar of incense is noticed, in each of the three instances,
between the candlestick and
the brazen altar. Whereas, when Jehovah is giving directions to Moses,
the brazen altar is
introduced immediately after the candlestick and the curtains of the
tabernacle. Now,
inasmuch as there must be a divine reason for this difference, it is
the privilege of every
diligent and intelligent student of the word to inquire what that
reason is.
Why, then, does the Lord, when giving directions about the furniture of
the "holy place," omit
the altar of incense and pass out to the brazen altar which stood at
the door of the tabernacle?
The reason, I believe, is simply this. He first describes the mode in
which He would manifest
Himself to man : and then He describes the mode of man's approach to
Him. He took His seat
upon the throne, as " the Lord of all the earth." The beams
of His glory were hidden behind
the vail—type of Christ's flesh (Heb. 10: 20); but there was the
manifestation of Himself, in
connection with man, as in "the pure table," and by the light
and power of the Holy Ghost, as
in the candlestick. Then we have the manifested character of Christ as
a man down here on
this earth, as seen in the curtains and coverings of the tabernacle.
And, finally, we have the
brazen altar as the grand exhibition of the meeting-place between a
holy God and a sinner.
This conducts us, as it were, to the extreme point, from which we
return, in company with
Aaron and his sons, back to the holy place, the ordinary priestly position,
where stood the
golden altar of incense. Thus the order is strikingly beautiful. The
golden altar is not spoken
of until there is a priest to burn incense thereon, for Jehovah showed
Moses the patterns of
things in the heavens according to the order in which these things are
to be apprehended by
faith. On the other hand, when Moses gives directions to the
congregations (Ex. 35), when he
records the labours of "Bezaleel and Aholiab," (Ex. 37 and
Ex. 38),and when he sets up the
tabernacle (Ex. 40), he follows the simple order in which the furniture
was placed.
The prayerful investigation of this interesting subject, and a
comparison of the passages above
referred to, will amply repay my reader. We shall now examine the
brazen altar.
This altar was the place where the sinner approached God, in the power
and efficacy of the
blood of atonement. It stood "at the door of the tabernacle of the
tent of the congregation,"
and on it all the blood was shed. It was composed of "shittim wood
and brass." The wood was
the same as that of the golden altar of incense; but the metal was
different, and the reason of
this difference is obvious. The altar of brass was the place where sin
was dealt with according
to the divine judgement concerning it. The altar of gold was the place
from whence the
precious fragrance of Christ's acceptableness ascended to the throne of
God. The shittim
Wood" as the figure of Christ's humanity, must be the same in each
case; but in the brazen
altar we see Christ meeting the fire of divine justice; in the golden
altar, we behold Him
feeding the divine affections. At the former, the fire of divine wrath
was quenched, at the
latter, the fire of priestly worship, is kindled. The soul delights to
find Christ in both; but the
altar of brass is what meets the need of a guilty conscience. It is the
very first thing for a poor,
helpless, needy, convicted sinner. There cannot be settled peace, in
reference to the question
of sin, until the eye of faith rests on Christ as the antitype of the
brazen altar. I must see my
sin reduced to ashes in the pan of the altar, ere I can enjoy rest of
conscience in the presence
of God. It is when I know, by faith in the record of God, that He
Himself has dealt with my sin
in the Person of Christ, at the brazen altar—that He has satisfied all
His own righteous
claims—that He has put away my sin out of His holy presence, so that it
can never come back
again—it is then, but not until then, that I can enjoy divine and
everlasting peace.
I would here offer a remark as to the real meaning of the
"gold" and "brass" in the furniture of
the tabernacle. " Gold" is the symbol of divine
righteousness, or the divine nature in "the man
Christ Jesus." "Brass" is the symbol of righteousness,
demanding judgement of sin, as in the
brazen altar; or the judgement of uncleanness, as in the brazen laver.
This will account for the
fact that inside the tent of the tabernacle, all was gold—the ark, the
mercy-seat, the table, the
candlestick, the altar of incense. All these were the symbols of the
divine nature—the
inherent personal excellence of the Lord Jesus Christ, On the other
hand, outside the tent of
the tabernacle,—all was brass—the brazen altar and its vessels, the
laver and its foot.
The claims of righteousness, as to sin and uncleanness, must be
divinely met ere there can be
any enjoyment of the precious mysteries of Christ's Person, as unfolded
in the inner sanctuary
of God. It is when I see all sin and all uncleanness perfectly judged
and washed away, that I
can, as a priest, draw nigh and worship in the holy place, and enjoy
the full display of all the
beauty and excellency of the God-man, Christ Jesus.
The reader can, with much profit, follow out the application of this
thought in detail, not
merely in the study of the tabernacle and the temple, but also in
various passages of the word;
for example, in the first chapter of Revelation, Christ is seen
"girt about the paps with a
golden girdle," and having "his feet like unto fine brass, as
if they burned in a furnace." "The
golden girdle" is the symbol of His intrinsic righteousness. The
"feet like unto the brass,"
express the unmitigated judgement of evil—He cannot tolerate evil, but
must crush it beneath
His feet.
Such is the Christ with whom we have to do. He judges sin, but He saves
the sinner. Faith
sees sin reduced to ashes at the brazen altar; it sees all uncleanness
washed away at the brazen
laver: and, finally, is enjoys Christ, as He is unfolded, in the secret
of the divine presence, by
the light and power of the Holy Ghost. It finds Him at the golden
altar, in all the value of His
intercession. It feeds on Him at the pure table. It recognises Him in
the ark and mercy-seat as
the One who answers all the claims of justice, and, at the same time,
meets all human need. It
beholds Him in the vail, with all its mystic figures. It reads His
precious name on everything.
Oh! for a heart to prize and praise this matchless, glorious Christ!
Nothing can be of more vital importance than a clear understanding of
the doctrine of the
brazen altar; that is to say, of the doctrine taught there. It is from
the want of clearness as to
this, that so many souls go mourning all their days. They have never
had a clean, thorough
settlement of the whole matter of their guilt at the brazen altar. They
have never really beheld,
by faith, God Himself settling on the cross, the entire question of
their sins. They are seeking
peace for their uneasy consciences in regeneration and its
evidences,—the fruits of the Spirit,
frames, feelings, experiences,—things quite right and most valuable in
themselves, but they
are not the ground of peace. What fills the soul with perfect peace is
the knowledge of what
God hath wrought at the brazen altar. The ashes in yonder pan tell me
the peace-giving story
that ALL IS DONE The believer's sins were all put away by God's own
hand of redeeming
love. "He hath made Christ to be sin for us, who knew no sin, that
we might be made the
righteousness of God in him." (2 Cor. 5) All sin must be judged:
but the believer's sins have
been already judged in the cross ; hence, he is perfectly justified. To
suppose that there could
be anything against the very feeblest believer, is to deny the entire
work of the cross. His sins
and iniquities have been all put away by God Himself, and therefore
they must needs be
perfectly put away. They all went with the outpoured life of the Lamb
of God.
Dear Christian reader, see that your heart is thoroughly established in
the peace which Jesus
has made "by the blood of His cross."
The priesthood being instituted, as in the two preceding chapters, we
are here introduced to
the position of true priestly worship and communion. The order is
marked and instructive;
and, moreover, precisely corresponds with the order of the believer's
experience At the brazen
altar, he sees the ashes of his sins; he then sees himself linked with
One who, though
personally pure and spotless, so that He could be anointed without
blood, has, nevertheless,
associated us with Himself in life, righteousness, and favour; and,
finally, he beholds, in the
golden altar, the preciousness of Christ, as the material on which the
divine affections feed.
Thus it is ever; there must be a brazen altar and a priest before there
can be a golden altar and
incense. Very many of the children of God have never passed the brazen
altar. They have
never yet, in spirit, entered into the power and reality of true
priestly worship. They do not
rejoice in a full, clear, divine sense of pardon and righteousness;
they have never reached the
golden altar. They hope to reach it when they die; but it is their
privilege to be at it now. The
work of the cross has removed out of the way everything which could act
as a barrier to their
free and intelligent worship. The present position of all true
believers is at the golden altar of
incense.
This altar typifies a position of wondrous blessedness. There we enjoy
the reality and efficacy
of Christ's intercession. For ever done with self and all pertaining
thereto, so far as any
expectation of good is concerned, we are to be occupied with what He is
before God. We
shall find nothing in self but defilement. Every exhibition of it is
defiling; it has been
condemned and set aside in the judgement of God, and not a shred or
particle thereof is to be
found in the pure incense and pure fire, on the altar of pure gold: it
could not be. We have
been introduced, "by the blood of Jesus," into the
sanctuary—a sanctuary of priestly service
and worship, in which there is not so much as a trace of sin. We see
the pure table, the pure
candlestick, and the pure altar; but there is nothing to remind us of
self and its wretchedness.
Were it possible for ought of that to meet our view, it could but prove
the death knell of our
worship, mar our priestly food, and dim our light. Nature can have no
place in the sanctuary
of God. It, together with all its belongings, has been consumed to
ashes; and we are now to
have before our souls the fragrant odour of Christ, ascending in
grateful incense to God: this
is what God delights in. Everything that presents Christ in His own
proper excellence, is
sweet and acceptable to God. Even the feeblest expression or exhibition
of Him, in the life or
worship of a saint, is an odour of a sweet smell, in which God is well
pleased.
Too often, alas! we have to be occupied with our failures and
infirmities. If ever the workings
of indwelling sin be suffered to rise to the surface, we must deal with
our God about them, for
He cannot go on with sin. He can forgive it, and cleanse us from it; He
can restore our souls
by the gracious ministry of our great High Priest; but He cannot go on
in company with a
single sinful thought. a light or foolish thought as well as an unclean
or covetous one, is
amply sufficient to mar a Christian's communion, and interrupt his
worship. Should any such
thought spring up, it must be judged and confessed, ere the elevated
joys of the sanctuary can
be known afresh. A heart in which lust is working, is not enjoying the
proper occupations of
the sanctuary. When we are in our proper priestly condition, nature is
as though it had no
existence; then we can feed upon Christ. We can taste the divine luxury
of being wholly at
leisure from ourselves, and wholly engrossed with Christ.
All this can only be produced by the power of the Spirit. There is no
need of seeking to work
up nature's devotional feelings, by the various appliances of
systematic religion. There must
be pure fire as well as pure incense. (Compare Lev. 10: 1, with Lev.
16: 12) All efforts at
worshipping God, by the unhallowed powers of nature, come under the
head of "strange fire."
God is the object of worship; Christ the ground and the material of
worship; and the Holy
Ghost the power of worship.
Properly speaking, then, as in the brazen altar, we have Christ in the
value of His sacrifice, so
in the golden altar, we have Christ in the value of His intercession.
This will furnish my
reader with a still clearer sense of the reason why the priestly office
is introduced between the
two altars. There is, as might be expected, an intimate connection
between the two, for
Christ's intercession is founded upon His sacrifice. "And Aaron
shall make an atonement upon
the horns of it, once in a year, with the blood of the sin-offering of
atonement: once in the
year shall he make atonement upon it throughout your generations: it is
most holy unto the
Lord." All rests upon the immovable foundation of SHED BLOOD.
"Almost all things are by
the law purged with blood; and without shedding of blood is no
remission. It was therefore
necessary that the pattern of things in the heavens should be purified
with these; but the
heavenly things themselves with better sacrifices than these. For
Christ is not entered into the
holy places made with hands, which are the figures of the true; but
into heaven itself, now to
appear in the presence of God for us." (Heb. 9: 22-24)
From verse 11-16 we have the atonement money for the congregation. All
were to pay alike.
"The rich shall not give more, and the poor shall not give less
than half a shekel, when they
give an offering unto the Lord, to make an atonement for your
souls." In the matter of
atonement, all must stand on one common platform. There may be a vast
difference in
knowledge, in experience, in capacity, in attainment, in zeal, in
devotedness, but the ground
of atonement is alike to all. The great apostle of the Gentiles, and
the feeblest lamb in all the
flock of Christ, stand on the same level, as regards atonement. This is
a very simple and a
very blessed truth. All may not be alike devoted and fruitful; but
"the precious blood of
Christ," and not devotedness or fruitfulness, is the solid and
everlasting ground of the
believer's rest. The more we enter into the truth and power of this,
the more fruitful shall we
be.
In Leviticus 27, we find another kind of valuation. When any one made
"a singular vow,"
Moses valued him according to his age. In other words, when any one
ventured to assume the
ground of capacity, Moses, as the representative of the claims of God,
estimated him "after
the shekel of the sanctuary" If he were "poorer" than
Moses' estimation, then he was to
"present himself before the priest," the representative of
the grace of God, who was to value
him "according to his ability that vowed."
Blessed be God, we know that all His claims have been answered, and all
our vows
discharged by One who was at once the Representative of His claims and
the Exponent of His
grace, who finished the work of atonement upon the cross, and is now at
the right hand of
God. Here is sweet rest for the heart and conscience. Atonement is the
first thing we get hold
of, and we shall never lose sight of it. Let our range of intelligence
be ever so wide, our fund
of experience ever so rich, our tone of devotion ever so elevated, we
shall always have to fall
back upon the one simple, divine, unalterable, soul-sustaining doctrine
of THE BLOOD. Thus
it has ever been in the history of God's people, Thus it is, and thus
it ever will be. The most
deeply-taught and gifted servants of Christ have always rejoiced to
come back to "that one
well-spring of delight," at which their thirsty spirits drank when
first they knew the Lord; and
the eternal song of the Church in glory will be, "Unto Him that;
loved us and washed us from
our sins in His own blood." The courts of heaven will for ever
resound with the glorious
doctrine of the blood.
From ver. 17-21 we are presented with "the brazen laver and its
foot"—the vessel of washing
and the basis thereof. These two are always presented together. (See
Ex. 30: 28; Ex. 38: 8; Ex.
40: 11) In this laver the priests washed their hands and feet, and thus
maintained that purity
which was essential to the proper discharge of their priestly
functions. It was not, by any
means, a question of a fresh presentation of blood; but simply that
action by which they were
preserved in fitness for priestly service and worship. "When they
go into the tabernacle of the
congregation, they shall wash with water that they die not; or when
they come near to the
altar to minister, to burn offering made by fire unto the Lord: so they
shall wash their hands
and their feet that they die not."
There can be no true communion with God, save as personal holiness is
diligently maintained.
"If we say that we have fellowship with Him and walk in darkness,
we lie, and do not the
truth." (1 John 1: 6) This personal holiness can only flow from
the action of the word of God
on our works and ways. "By the words of thy lips I have kept me
from the paths of the
destroyer." Our constant failure in priestly ministry may be
accounted for by our neglecting
the due use of the laver. If our ways are not submitted to the
purgative action of the word—if
we continue in the pursuit or practice of that which, according to the
testimony of our own
consciences, the word distinctly condemns, the energy of our priestly
character will,
assuredly, be lacking. Deliberate continuance in evil and true priestly
worship are wholly
incompatible. "Sanctify them through thy truth, thy word is
truth." If we have any uncleanness
upon us, we cannot enjoy the presence of God. The effect of His
presence would then be to
convict us by its holy light. But when we are enabled, through grace,
to cleanse our way, by
taking heed thereto according to God's word, we are then morally
capacitated for the
enjoyment of His presence.
My reader will at once perceive what a vast field of practical truth is
here laid open to him,
and also how largely the doctrine of the brazen laver is brought out in
the New Testament.
Oh! that all those who are privileged to tread the courts of the
sanctuary, in priestly robes, and
to approach the altar of God, in priestly worship, may keep their hands
and feet clean by the
use of the true laver.
It may be interesting to note that the laver, with its foot, was made
"of the looking-glasses of
the women assembling, which assembled at the door of the tabernacle of
the congregation."
(See Ex. 38: 8) This fact is full of meaning. We are ever prone to be
"like a man beholding his
natural face in a glass; for he beholdeth himself and goeth away, and
straightway forgetteth
what manner of man he was." Nature's looking-glass can never
furnish a clear and permanent
view of our true condition. "But whoso looketh into the perfect
law of liberty, and continueth
therein, he being not a forgetful hearer but a doer of the word, this
man shall be blessed in his
deed." (James 1: 23-25) The man who has constant recourse to the
word of God, and who
allows that word to tell upon his heart and conscience, will be
maintained in the holy
activities of the divine life.
Intimately connected with the searching and cleaning action of the word
is the efficacy of the
priestly ministry of Christ. "For the word of God is quick and
powerful, (i.e., living and
energetic,) and sharper than any two-edged sword, piercing even to the
dividing asunder of
soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of
the thoughts and intents of
the heart; neither is there any creature that is not manifest in his
sight; but all things are naked
and open to the eyes of him with whom we have to do." Then the
inspired apostle
immediately adds, "Seeing then that we have a great High Priest,
that is passed through the
heavens, Jesus the Son of God, let us hold fast our profession. For we
have not an high priest
which cannot be touched with a feeling of our infirmities; but was in
all points tempted like
as we are, yet without sin. Let us therefore come boldly unto the
throne of grace, that we may
obtain mercy and find Grace to help in time of need." (Heb. 4:
12-16)
The more keenly we feel the edge of the word, the more we shall prize
the merciful and
gracious ministry of our High Priest. The two things go together. They
are the inseparable
companions of the Christian's path. The High Priest sympathises with
the infirmities which
the word detects and exposes. He is "a faithful" as well as
"a merciful High Priest." Hence, it
is only as I am making use of the laver that I can approach the altar.
Worship must ever be
presented in the power of holiness. We must lose sight of nature, as
reflected in a looking-
glass, and be wholly occupied with Christ, as presented in the word. In
this way only shall the
"hands and feet," the works and ways be cleansed, according
to the purification of the
sanctuary.
Prom ver. 22—23 we have the "holy anointing oil," with which
the priests, together with all
the furniture of the tabernacle, were anointed. In this we discern a
type of the varied graces of
the Holy Ghost, which were found, in all their divine fullness, in
Christ. "All thy garments
smell of myrrh, and aloes, and cassia, out of the ivory palaces,
whereby they have made thee
glad." (Ps. 45: 8) "God anointed Jesus of Nazareth with the
Holy Ghost and with power."
(Acts 10: 38) All the graces of the Spirit, in their perfect fragrance,
centred in Christ; and it is
from Him alone they can flow. He, as to His humanity, was conceived of
the Holy Ghost; and,
ere He entered upon His public ministry, He was anointed with the Holy
Ghost; and, finally,
when He had taken His seat on high, in token of an accomplished
redemption, He shed forth
upon His body, the Church, the precious gift of the Holy Ghost. (See
Matt. 1: 20; Matt. 3: 16,
17; Luke 4: 18, 19; Acts 2: 33; Acts 10: 45, 46; Eph. 4: 8-13)
It is as those who are associated with this ever blessed and
highly-exalted Christ that believers
are partakers of the gifts and graces of the Holy Ghost; and, moreover,
it is as they walk in
habitual nearness to Him, that they either enjoy or emit the fragrance
thereof. The unrenewed
man knows nothing of this. " [Upon man's flesh it shall not be
poured." The graces of the
Spirit can never be connected with man's flesh, for the Holy Ghost
cannot own nature. Not
one of the fruits of the Spirit was ever yet produced "in nature's
barren soil." "We must, be
born again." It is only as connected with the new man, as being
part of "the new creation,"
that we can know anything of the fruits of the Holy Ghost. It is of no
possible value to seek to
imitate those fruits and grace's. The fairest fruits that ever grew in
nature's fields, in their
highest state of cultivation—the most amiable traits which nature can
exhibit, must be utterly
disowned in the sanctuary of God. "Upon man's flesh shall it not
be poured; neither shall ye
make any other like it, after the composition of it: it is holy, and it
shall be holy unto you.
Whosoever compoundeth any like it, or whosoever putteth any of it upon
a stranger, shall
even be cut off from his people." There must be no counterfeit of
the Spirit's work; all must
be of the Spirit—wholly, really of the Spirit. Moreover, that which is
of the Spirit must not be
attributed to man. "The natural man receiveth not the things of
the Spirit of God; for they are
foolishness unto him: neither can he know them, because they are
spiritually discerned." (1
Cor. 2: 14)
There is a very beautiful allusion to this "holy anointing
oil" in one of the "songs of degrees."
"Behold," says the Psalmist, "how good and how pleasant
it is for brethren to dwell together
in unity! It is like the precious ointment upon the head, that ran down
upon the beard, even
Aaron's beard; that went down to the skirts of his garments." (Ps.
133: 1, 2.) The head of the
priestly house being anointed with the holy oil, the very "skirts
of his garments" must exhibit
the precious effects. May my reader experience the power of this
anointing! May he know the
value of having "an unction from the Holy One," and of being
" sealed with that Holy Spirit of
promise!" Nothing is of any value, in the divine estimation, save
that which connects itself
immediately with Christ, and whatever is so connected can receive the
holy anointing.
In the concluding paragraph of this most comprehensive chapter, we have
the "sweet spices
tempered together, pure and holy." This surpassingly precious
perfume presents to us the
unmeasured and Immeasurable perfections of Christ. There was no special
quantity of each
ingredient prescribed, because the graces that dwell in Christ, the
beauties and excellencies
that are concentrated in His adorable Person, are without limit. Nought
save the infinite mind
of Deity could scan the infinite perfections of Him in whom all the
fullness of Deity dwelleth;
and as eternity rolls along its course of everlasting ages, those
glorious perfections will ever
be unfolding themselves in the view of worshipping saints and angels.
Ever and anon, as some
fresh beams of light shall burst forth from that central Sun of divine
glory, the courts of
heaven above, and the wide fields of creation beneath, shall resound
with thrilling Alleluias to
Him who was, who is, and who ever shall be the object of praise to all
the ranks of created
intelligence.
But not only was there no prescribed quantity of the ingredients; we
also read, "of each there
shall be a like weight." Every feature of moral excellence found
its due place and proper
proportion in Christ. No one quality ever displaced or interfered with
another; all was
"tempered together, pure and holy," and emitted an odour so
fragrant that none but God could
appreciate it.
"And thou shalt beat some of it very small, and put of it before
the testimony in the tabernacle
of the congregation, where I will meet with thee: it shall be unto you
most holy." There is
uncommon depth and power in the expression "very small It teaches
us that every little
movement in the life of Christ, every minute circumstance, every act,
every word, every look,
every feature, every trait, every lineament, emits an odour produced by
an equal proportion—
"a like weight" of all the divine graces that compose His
character. The smaller the perfume
was beaten, the more its rare and exquisite temper was manifested.
"And as for the perfume which thou shalt make, ye shall not make
to yourselves according to
the composition thereof: it shall be unto thee holy for the Lord.
Whosoever shall make like
unto that, to smell thereto, shall even be cut off from his
people." This fragrant perfume was
designed, exclusively, for Jehovah. Its place was "before the
testimony." There is that in Jesus
which only God could appreciate. True, every believing heart can draw
nigh to His matchless
Person, and more than satisfy its deepest and most intense longings;
still, after all God's
redeemed have drunk, to the utmost of their capacity; after angels have
gazed on the peerless
glories of the man Christ Jesus, as earnestly as their vision is
capable of; after all, there will
be that in Him which God alone can fathom and enjoy. No human or
angelic eye could duly
trace the exquisitely minute parts of that holy perfume "beaten
very small." Nor could earth
afford a proper sphere in which to emit its divine and heavenly odour.
Thus, then, we have, in our rapid sketch, reached the close of a
clearly marked division of our
book. We began at "the ark of the covenant," and travelled
out to "the altar of brass;" we
returned from "the altar or brass," and have come to the
"holy perfume;" and, oh! what a
journey is this, if only it be travelled, not in company with the false
and flickering light of
human imagination, but by the infallible lamp of the Holy Ghost! What a
journey if only it be
travelled, not amid the shadows of a bygone dispensation, but amid the
personal glories and
powerful attractions of the Son, which are there portrayed! If my
reader has so travelled it, he
will find his affections more drawn to Christ than ever; he will have a
loftier conception of
His glory, His beauty, His preciousness, His excellency, His ability to
heal a wounded
conscience, and satisfy a longing heart; he will have his eyes more
thoroughly closed to all
earth's attractions, and his ears closed to all earth's pretensions and
promises. In one word, he
will be prepared to utter a deeper and more fervent amen to the words
of the inspired apostle,
when he says, "IF ANY MAN LOVE NOT THE LORD JESUS CHRIST, LET HIM:
BE
ANATHEMA, MARANATHA."* (1 Cor. 16: 22)
{*It is interesting to note the position of this most Solemn and
startling denunciation. It
occurs at the close of a long epistle, in the progress of which the
apostle had to rebuke some
of the grossest practical evils and doctrinal errors. How solemn,
therefore, how full of
meaning the fact, that when he comes to pronounce his anathema, it is
not hurled at those
who had introduced those errors and evils, but at the man who loves not
the Lord Jesus Christ.
Why is this? Is it because the Spirit of God makes little of errors and
evils? Surely not; the
entire epistle unfolds His thoughts as to these. But the truth is, when
the heart is filled with
love to the Lord Jesus Christ, there is an effectual safeguard against
all manner of false
doctrine and malpractice. If a man does not love Christ, there is no
accounting for the notions
he may adopt, or the course he may pursue Hence the form and the
position of the apostolic
anathema.}
Exodus 31
The opening of this brief chapter records the divine call and the
divine qualification of
"Bezaleel and Aholiab" to do the work of the tabernacle of
the congregation. "And the Lord
spake unto Moses, saying, See, I have called by name Bezaleel the son
of Uri, the son of Hur,
of the tribe of Judah: and I have "filled him with the Spirit of
God, in wisdom, and in
understanding, and in knowledge, and in all manner of workmanship.....
And I, behold, I have
given with him Aholiab the son of Ahisamach, of the tribe of Dan: and
in the hearts of all that
are wise-hearted I have put wisdom, that they may make all that I have
commanded." Whether
for "the work of the tabernacle" of old, or "the work of
the ministry" now, there should be the
divine selection, the divine call, the divine qualification, the divine
appointment; and all must
be done according to the divine commandment. Man could not select,
call, qualify, or appoint
to do the work of the tabernacle; neither can he, to do the work of the
ministry. Furthermore,
no man could presume to appoint himself to do the work of the
tabernacle; neither can he to
do the work of the ministry. It was, it is, it must be, wholly and
absolutely divine. Men may
run as sent of their fellow, or men may run of themselves; but let it
be remembered that all
who run, without being sent of God, shall, one day or other, be covered
with shame and
confusion of face. Such is the plain and wholesome doctrine suggested
by the words, "I have
called" "I have filled," "I have given,"
"I have put," "I have commanded." The words of the
Baptist must ever hold good, "a man can receive nothing except it
be given him from heaven."
(John 3: 27) He can, therefore, have but little room to boast of
himself; and just as little to be
jealous of his fellow.
There is a profitable lesson to be learnt from a comparison of this
chapter with Genesis 6.
"Tubal-cain was an instructor of every artificer in brass and
iron." The descendants of Cain
were endowed with unhallowed skill to make a cursed and groaning earth
a delectable spot,
without the presence of God. "Bezaleel and Aholiab," on the
contrary, were endowed with
divine skill to beautify a sanctuary which was to be hallowed and
blessed by the presence and
glory of the God of Israel.
Reader, let me ask you just to pause and put this solemn question to
your conscience,
"Whether am I devoting whatever of skill or energy I possess to
the interests of the Church,
which is God's dwelling place, or to beautify an ungodly, Christless
world?" Say not, in thine
heart, "I am not divinely called or divinely qualified for the
work of the ministry." Remember
that though all Israel were not Bezaleels or Aholiabs, yet all could
serve the interests of the
sanctuary. There was an open door for all to communicate. Thus it is
now. Each one has a
place to occupy, a ministry to fulfil, a responsibility to discharge;
and you and I are, at this
moment, either promoting the interests of the house of God—the body of
Christ—the Church,
or helping on the godless schemes of a world, yet stained with the
blood of Christ and the
blood of all His martyred saints. Oh! let us deeply ponder this, as in
the presence of the great
Searcher of hearts, whom none can deceive—to whom all are known.
Our chapter closes with a special reference to the institution of the
Sabbath. It was referred to
in Ex. 16 in connection with the manna; it was distinctly enjoined in
Ex. 20, when the people
were formally put under law; and here we have it again in connection
with the setting up of
the tabernacle. Whenever the nation of Israel is presented in some
special position, or
recognised as a people in special responsibility, then the Sabbath is
introduced. And let my
reader carefully note both the day and the mode in which it was to be
observed, and also the
object for which it was instituted in Israel. "Ye shall keep the
Sabbath, therefore, for it is holy
unto you: every one that defileth it shall surely be put to death: for
whosoever doeth any work
therein, that soul shall be cut off from among his people. Six days may
work be done; but in
the seventh is the Sabbath of rest, holy to the Lord: whosoever doeth
any work in the Sabbath
day, he shall surely be put to death." This is as explicit and
absolute as anything can be. It
fixes "the seventh day" and none other; and it positively
forbids, on pain of death, all manner
of work. There can be no avoiding the plain sense of this. And, be it
remembered, that there is
not so much as a single line of Scripture to prove that the Sabbath has
been changed, or the
strict principles of its observance, in the smallest degree, relaxed.
If there be any Scripture
proof, let my reader look it out for his own satisfaction.
Now, let us inquire if indeed professing Christians do keep God's
Sabbath on the day and after
the manner which He commanded. It were idle to lose time in proving
that they do not. Well,
what are the consequences of a single breach of the Sabbath? "Cut
off"—"Put to death."
But, it will be said, "we are not under law, but under
grace." Blessed be God for the sweet
assurance! Were we under law, there is not one throughout the wide
range of Christendom
who should not, long since, have fallen beneath the stone of judgement,
even upon the one
solitary point of the Sabbath. But, if we are under grace, what is the
day which belongs to us?
Assuredly, "the first day of the week," "the Lord's
day." This is the Church's day, the
resurrection day of Jesus, who, having spent the Sabbath in the tomb,
rose triumphant over all
the powers of darkness, thus leading His people out of the old
creation, and all that pertains
thereto, into the new creation, of which He is the Head, and of which
the first day of the week
is the apt expression.
This distinction is worthy of the serious attention of the reader. Let
him examine it prayerfully
in the light of Scripture. There may be nothing and there may be a
great deal in a mere name.
In the present instance, there is a great deal more involved in the
distinction between "the
Sabbath" and " the Lord's day " than many Christians
seem to be aware of. It is very evident
that the first day of the week gets a place, in the Word of God, which
no other day gets. No
other day is ever called by that majestic and elevated title, "the
Lord's day." Some, I am
aware, deny that Rev. 1: 10 refers to the first day of the week; but I
feel most fully assured
that sound criticism and sound exegesis do both warrant, yea, demand
the application of that
passage, not to the day of Christ's advent in glory, but to the day of
his resurrection from the
dead.
But, most assuredly, the Lord's day is never once called the Sabbath.
So far from this, the two
days are, again and again, spoken of in their proper distinctness.
Hence, therefore, my reader
will have to keep clear of two extremes. In the first place, he will
have to avoid the legalism
which one finds so much linked with the term "Sabbath;" and,
in the second place, he will
need to bear a very decided testimony against every attempt to
dishonour the Lord's day, or
lower it to the level of an ordinary day. The believer is delivered,
most completely, from the
observance of "days and months, and times and years."
Association with a risen Christ has
taken him clean out of all such superstitious observances. But, while
this is most blessedly
true, we see that "the first day of the week " has a place
assigned to it in the New Testament
which no other has. Let the Christian give it that place. It is a sweet
and happy privilege, not a
grievous yoke.
Space forbids my further entrance upon this interesting subject. It has
been gone into,
elsewhere, as already intimated, in the earlier pages of this volume. I
shall close these
remarks by pointing out, in one or two particulars, the contrast
between "the Sabbath" and
"the Lord's day."
1. The Sabbath was the
seventh day; the Lord's day is the First.
2. The Sabbath was a test
of Israel's condition; the Lord's day is the proof of the Church's
acceptance, on wholly unconditional grounds.
3. The Sabbath belonged to
the old creation; the Lords day belongs to the new.
4. The Sabbath was a day of
bodily rest for the Jew; the Lord's day is a day of spiritual rest
for the Christian.
5. If the Jew worked on the
Sabbath, he was to be put to death : if the Christian does not
work on the Lord's day, he gives little proof of life. That is to say,
if he does not work for the
benefit of the souls of men, the extension of Christ's glory, and the
spread of His truth. In
point of fact, the devoted Christian, who possesses any gift, is
generally more fatigued on the
evening of the Lord's day than on any other in the week, for how can he
rest while souls are
perishing around him ?
6. The Jew was commanded by
the law to abide in his tent; the Christian is led by the spirit of
the gospel to go forth, whether it be to attend the public assembly, or
to minister to the souls
of perishing sinners. The Lord enable us, beloved reader, to rest more
artlessly in, and labour
more vigorously for, the name of the Lord Jesus Christ! We should rest
in the spirit of a
Child; and labour with the energy of a man.
Exodus 32
We have now to contemplate something very different from that Which has
hitherto engaged
our attention. " The pattern of things in the heavens," has
been before us—Christ in His
glorious Person, gracious offices, and perfect work, as set forth in
the tabernacle and all its
mystic furniture. We have been, in spirit, on the mount, hearkening to
God's own words—the
sweet utterances of Heaven's thoughts, affections, and counsels, of
which Jesus is "the Alpha
and Omega, the beginning and the ending, the first and the last."
Now, however, we are called down to earth, to behold the melancholy
wreck which man
makes of everything to which he puts his hand. "And when the
people saw that Moses delayed
to come down out of the mount, the people gathered themselves together
unto Aaron and said
unto him, Up, make us gods which shall go before us; for as for this
Moses, the man that
brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we wot not what is become of
him." What degradation
is here! Make us gods! They were abandoning Jehovah, and placing
themselves under the
conduct of manufactured gods—gods of man's making. Dark clouds and
heavy mists had
gathered round the mount. They grew weary of waiting for the absent
one, and of hanging on
an unseen but real arm. They imagined that a god formed by
"graving tool" was better than
Jehovah; that a calf which they could see was better than the
invisible, yet everywhere
present, God; a visible counterfeit, than an invisible reality.
Alas! alas! it has ever been thus in man's history. The human heart
loves something that can
be seen; it loves that which meets and gratifies the senses. It is only
faith that can "endure, as
seeing him who is invisible." Hence, in every age, men have been
forward to set up and lean
upon human imitations of divine realities. Thus it is we see the
counterfeits of corrupt religion
multiplied before our eyes. Those things which we know, upon the
authority of God's Word,
to be divine and heavenly realities, the professing Church has
transformed into human and
earthly imitations. Having become weary of hanging upon an invisible
arm, of trusting in an
invisible sacrifice, of having recourse to an invisible priest, of
committing herself to the
guidance of an invisible head, she has set about "making"
these things; and thus, from age to
age, she has been busily at work, with "graving tool" in
hand, graving and fashioning one
thing after another, until we can, at length, recognise as little
similarity between much that we
see around us, and what we read in the word, as between " a molten
calf" and the God of
Israel.
"Make us gods!" What a thought! Man called upon to make gods,
and people willing to put
their trust in such! My reader, let us look within, and look around,
and see if we cannot detect
something of all this. We read, in 1 Cor. 10, in reference to Israel's
history, that "all these
things happened unto them for ensamples, (or types,) and they are
written for our admonition,
upon whom the ends of the world are come." (ver. 11) Let us, then,
seek to profit by the
"admonition." Let us remember that, although we may not just
form and bow down before a
molten calf" yet, that Israel's sin is a "type" of
something into which we are in danger of
falling. Whenever we turn away in heart from leaning exclusively upon
God Himself, whether
in the matter of salvation or the necessities of the path, we are, in
principle, saying, "up, make
us gods." It is needless to say we are not, in ourselves, a whit
better than Aaron or the children
of Israel; and if they acknowledge a calf instead of Jehovah, we are in
danger of acting on the
same principle, and manifesting the same spirit. Our only safeguard is
to be much in the
presence of God. Moses knew that the "molten calf was not Jehovah,
and therefore he did not
acknowledge it. But when we get out of the divine presence, there is no
accounting for the
gross errors and evils into which we may be betrayed.
We are called to live by faith; we can see nothing with the eye of
sense. Jesus is gone up on
high, and we are told to wait patiently for His appearing. God's word
carried home to the
heart, in the energy of the Holy Ghost, is the ground of confidence in
all things, temporal and
spiritual, present and future. He tells us of Christ's completed
sacrifice; we, by grace, believe,
and commit our souls to the efficacy thereof, and know we shall never
be confounded. He
tells us of a great High Priest, passed into the heavens, Jesus, the
Son of God, whose
intercession is all-prevailing; we, by grace, believe, and lean
confidingly upon His ability, and
know we shall be saved to the uttermost. He tells us of the living Head
to whom we are
linked, in the power of the Holy Ghost, and from whom we can never be
severed by any
influence, angelic, human, or diabolical; we, by grace, believe, and
cling to that blessed Head,
in simple faith, and know we shall never perish. He tells us of the
glorious appearing of the
Son from heaven; we, through grace, believe, and seek to prove the
purifying and elevating
power of "that blessed hope," and know we shall not be
disappointed. He tells us of "an
inheritance, incorruptible, undefiled, and that fadeth not away,
reserved in heaven for us, who
are kept by the power of God," for entrance thereinto in due time;
we, through grace, believe
and know we shall never be confounded. He tells us the hairs of our
head are all numbered,
and that we shall never want any good thing; we, through grace,
believe, and enjoy a sweetly
tranquillised heart.
Thus it is, or, as least, thus our God would have it. But then the
enemy is ever active in
seeking to make us cast away these divine realities, take up the
"graving tool" of unbelief, and
" make gods " for ourselves. Let us watch against him, pray
against him, believe against him,
testify against him, act against him: thus he shall be confounded, God
glorified, and we
ourselves abundantly blessed.
As to Israel, in the chapter before us, their rejection of God was most
complete. "And Aaron
said unto them, Break off the golden earrings, which are in the ears of
your wives, of your
sons, and of your daughters, and bring them unto me..... And he
received them at their hand,
and fashioned it with a graving tool, after he had made it a molten
calf: and they said, These
be thy Gods, O Israel, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.
And when Aaron saw
it, he built an altar before it; and Aaron made proclamation, and said,
Tomorrow is a feast
unto the Lord." This was entirely setting aside God, and putting a
calf in His stead. When they
could say that a calf had brought them up out of Egypt, they had,
evidently, abandoned all
idea of the presence and character of the true God. How
"quickly" they must "have turned
aside out of the Way," to have made such a gross and terrible
mistake! And Aaron, the brother
and yoke-fellow of Moses, led them on in this; and, with a calf before
him, he could say,
"Tomorrow is a feast unto Jehovah!" How sad! how deeply
humbling! God was displaced by
an idol. A thing, "graven by art and man's device," was set
in the place of "the Lord of all the
earth."
All this involved, on Israel's part, a deliberate abandonment of their
connection with Jehovah.
They had given Him up; and, accordingly, we find Him, as it were,
taking them on their own
ground. "And the Lord said unto Moses, Go, get thee down; for thy
people, which thou
broughtest out of the land of Egypt, have corrupted themselves; they have
turned aside
quickly out of the way which I commanded them.... I have seen this
people, it is a stiff-necked
people: now therefore let me alone, that my wrath may wax hot against
them, and that I may
consume them; and I will make of thee a greater nation." Here was
an open door for Moses;
and here he displays uncommon grace and similarity of spirit to that
Prophet whom the Lord
was to raise up like unto him. He refuses to be or to have anything
without the people. He
pleads with God on the ground of His own glory, and puts the people
back upon Him in these
touching words, "Lord, why doth thy wrath wax hot against thy
people which thou hast
brought up out of the land of Egypt with great power and a mighty hand?
Wherefore should
the Egyptians speak and say, For mischief did he bring them out, to
slay them in the
mountains, and to consume them from the face of the earth. Turn from
thy fierce wrath and
repent of this evil against thy people. Remember Abraham, Isaac, and
Israel, thy servants, to
whom thou swearest by thine own self, and saidst unto them, I will
multiply your seed as the
stars of heaven; and all this land that I have spoken of will I give
unto your seed, and they
shall inherit it for ever." This was powerful pleading. The glory
of God, the vindication of His
holy name. the accomplishment of His oath. These are the grounds on
which Moses entreats
the Lord to turn from His fierce wrath. He could not find, in Israel's
conduct or character, any
plea or ground to go upon. He found it all in God Himself.
The Lord had said unto Moses, "Thy people which thou broughtest
up;" but Moses replies to
the Lord, "Thy people which thou hast brought up." They were
the Lord's people
notwithstanding all; and His name, His glory, His oath were all
involved in their destiny. The
moment the Lord links Himself with a people, His character is involved,
and faith will ever
look at Him upon this solid ground. Moses loses sight of himself
entirely. His whole soul is
engrossed with thoughts of the Lord's glory and the Lord's people.
Blessed servant! How few
like him! And yet when we contemplate him in all this scene, we
perceive how infinitely he is
below the blessed Master. He came down from the mount, and when he saw
the calf and the
dancing, "his anger waxed hot, and he cast the tables out of his
hands and brake them beneath
the mount." The covenant was broken and the memorials thereof
shattered to pieces; and
then, having executed judgement in righteous indignation, "he said
unto the people, Ye have
sinned a great sin: and now I will go up unto the Lord; peradventure I
shall make an
atonement for your sin."
How different is this from what we see in Christ! He came down from the
bosom of the
Father, not with the tables in His hands, but with the law in his
heart. He came down, not to
be made acquainted with the condition of the people, but with a perfect
knowledge of what
that condition was. Moreover, instead of destroying the memorials of
the covenant and
executing judgement, He magnified the law and made it honourable, and bore
the judgement
of His people, in His own blessed Person, on the cross; and, having
done all, He went back to
heaven, not with a "peradventure I shall make an atonement for
your sin," but to lay upon the
throne of the Majesty in the highest, the imperishable memorials of an
atonement already
accomplished. This makes a vast and truly glorious difference. Thank
God, we need not
anxiously gaze after our Mediator to know if haply He shall accomplish
redemption for us,
and reconcile offended Justice. No, He has done it all. His presence on
high declares that the
whole work is finished. He could stand upon the confines of this world,
ready to take His
departure, and, in all the calmness of a conscious victor—though He had
yet to encounter the
darkest scene of all—say, "I have glorified thee on earth: I have
finished the work which thou
gravest me to do." (John 17) Blessed Saviour! we may well adore
thee, and well exalt in the
place of dignity and glory in which eternal justice has set thee. The
highest place in heaven
belongs to thee; and thy saints only wait for the time when "every
knee shall bow and every
tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the
Father." May that time
speedily arrive!
At the close of this chapter Jehovah asserts His rights, in moral
government, in the following
words: "Whosoever hath sinned against me, him will I blot out of
my book. Therefore, now
go, lead the people unto the place of which I have spoken unto thee:
behold, mine angel shall
go before thee: nevertheless, in the day when I visit I will visit
their sin upon them." This is
God in government, not God in the gospel. Here He speaks of blotting
out the sinner; in the
gospel He is seen blotting out sin. a wide difference!
The people are to be sent forward, under the mediatorship of Moses, by
the hand of an angel.
This was very unlike the condition of things which obtained from Egypt
to Sinai. They had
forfeited all claim on the ground of law, and hence it only remained
for God to fallback upon
His own sovereignty and say, "I will be gracious to whom I will be
gracious, and will show
mercy on whom I will show mercy."
Exodus 33-34
Jehovah refuses to accompany Israel to the land of promise. "I
will not go up in the midst of
thee; for thou art a stiff-necked people; lest I consume thee in the
way." At the opening of this
book, when the people were in the furnace of Egypt, the Lord could say,
"I have surely seen
the affliction of my people which are in Egypt, and have heard their
cry by reason of their
taskmasters; for I know their sorrows." But now He has to say,
"I have seen this people, and,
behold, it is a stiff-necked people." An afflicted people is an
object of grace; but a stiff-
necked people must be humbled. The cry of oppressed Israel had been
answered by the
exhibition of grace ; but the song of idolatrous Israel must be
answered by the voice of stern
rebuke.
"Ye are a stiff-necked people: I will come up into the midst of
thee in a moment and consume
thee: therefore now put off thy ornaments from thee that I may know
what to do unto thee," It
is only when we are really stripped of all nature's ornaments that God
can deal with us. A
naked sinner can be clothed; but a sinner decked in ornaments must be
stripped. This is
always true. We must be stripped of all that pertains to self, ere we
can be clothed with that
which pertains to God.
"And the children of Israel stripped themselves of their ornaments
by the mount Horeb."
There they stood beneath that memorable mount, their feasting and
singing changed into
bitter lamentations, their ornaments gone, the tables of testimony in
fragments. Such was their
condition, and Moses as once proceeds to act according to it. He could
no longer own the
people in their corporate character. The assembly had become entirely
defiled, having set up
an idol of their own making, in the place of God—a calf instead of
Jehovah. "And Moses took
the tabernacle and pitched it without the camp, afar off from the camp,
and called it the
tabernacle of the congregation." Thus the camp was disowned as the
place of the divine
presence. God was not—could not—he there. He had been displaced by a
human invention. a
new gathering point was, therefore, set up. "And it came to pass
that every one which sought
the Lord went out unto the tabernacle of the congregation, which was
without the camp."
There is here a fine principle of truth, which the spiritual mind will
readily apprehend. The
place which Christ now occupies is "without the camp," and we
are called upon to "go forth
unto him." It demands much subjection to the word to be able, with
accuracy, to know what
"the camp" really is, and much spiritual power to be able to
go forth from it; and still more to
be able, while "far off from it," to act towards those in it,
in the combined power of holiness
and grace—holiness, which separates from the defilement of the camp;
grace, which enables
us to act toward those who are involved therein.
"And the Lord spake unto Moses face to face, as a man speaketh
unto his friend. And he
turned again into the camp: but his servant Joshua, the son of Nun, a
young man, departed not
out of the tabernacle. Moses exhibits a higher degree of spiritual
energy than his servant
Joshua. It is much easier to assume a position of separation from the
camp, than to act aright
towards those within.
"And Moses said unto the Lord, See, thou sayest unto me, Bring up
this people: and thou hast
not let me know whom thou wilt send with me: yet thou hast said, I know
thee by name, and
thou hast also found grace in my sight." Moses entreats the
accompanying presence of
Jehovah as a proof of their having found grace in His sight. Were it a
question of mere
justice, He could only consume them by coming in their midst, because
they were "a stiff-
necked people." But directly He speaks of grace, in connection
with the mediator, the very
stiff-neckedness of the people is made a plea for demanding His
presence. "If now I have
found grace in thy sight, O Lord, let my Lord, I pray thee, go among
us; for it is a stiff-necked
people; and pardon our iniquity and our sin, and take us for thine
inheritance." This is
touchingly beautiful. a "stiff-necked people demanded the
boundless grace and exhaustless
patience of God. None but He could bear with them.
"And He said, My presence shall go with thee, and I will give thee
rest." Precious portion!
Precious hope! The presence of God with us, all the desert through, and
everlasting rest at the
end! Grace to meet our present need, and glory as our future portion!
Well may our satisfied
hearts exclaim, "It is enough, my precious Lord."
In Ex. 34 the second set of tables is given, not to be broken, like the
first, but to be hidden in
the ark, above which, as already noticed, Jehovah was to take His
place, as the Lord of all the
earth, in moral government. "And he hewed two tables of stone,
like unto the first: and Moses
rose up early in the morning and went up unto mount Sinai, as the Lord
had commanded him,
and took in his hand the two tables of stone. And the Lord descended in
the cloud, and stood
with them there, and proclaimed the name of the Lord. And the Lord
passed by before him,
and proclaimed the Lord, the Lord God, merciful and gracious,
long-suffering, and abundant
in goodness and truth, keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity,
and transgression, and
sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity
of the fathers upon the
children, and upon the children's children, unto the third, and to the
fourth generation." This,
be it remembered, is God, as seen in His moral government of the world,
and not as He is
seen in the cross—not as' He shines in the face of Jesus Christ—not as
He is proclaimed in
the gospel of His grace. The following is an exhibition of God in the
gospel: "And all things
are of God, who hath reconciled us to himself, by Jesus Christ, and
hath given to us the
ministry of reconciliation; to wit, that God was in Christ, reconciling
the world unto Himself;
NOT IMPUTING their trespasses unto them, and hath committed unto us the
word of
reconciliation." (2 Cor. 5: 18, 19) "Not clearing" and
"not imputing" present two totally
different ideas of God. "Visiting iniquities" and cancelling
them are not the same thing. The
former is God in government, the latter is God in the gospel. In 2 Cor.
3 the apostle contrasts
the "ministration" recorded in Exodus 34 with "the
ministration" of the gospel. My reader
would do well to study that chapter with care. From it he will learn
that any one who regards
the view of God's character given to Moses, on Mount Horeb, as
unfolding the gospel, must
have a very defective apprehension, indeed, of what the gospel is.
Neither in creation, nor yet
in moral government, do I, or can I, read the deep secrets of the
Father's bosom. Could the
prodigal have found his place in the arms of the One revealed on Mount
Sinai? Could John
have leaned his head on the bosom of that One? Surely not. But God has
revealed Himself in
the face of Jesus Christ. He has told out, in divine harmony, all His
attributes in the work of
the cross. There "mercy and truth have met together, righteousness
and peace have kissed
each other." Sin is perfectly put away, and the believing sinner
perfectly justified "BY THE
BLOOD OF THE CROSS." When we get a view of God, as thus unfolded,
we have only, like
Moses, to bow our head toward the earth and worship,"—suited
attitude for a pardoned and
accepted sinner in the presence of God!
Exodus 35-40
These chapters contain a recapitulation of the various parts of the
tabernacle and its furniture;
and inasmuch as, I have already given what I believe to be the import
of the more prominent
parts, it were needless to add more. There are, however, two things in
this section from which
we may deduce most profitable instruction, and these are, first, the
voluntary devotedness;
and, secondly, the implicit obedience of the people with respect to the
work of the tabernacle
of the congregation. And
first, as to their voluntary devotedness, we read, "And all the
consecration of the children of Israel departed from the presence of
Moses. And they came,
every one whose heart stirred him up, and every one whom his spirit
made willing, and they
brought the Lord's offering to the work of the tabernacle of the
congregation, and for all his
service, and for the holy garments. And they came, both men and women,
as many as were
willing-hearted, and brought bracelets and earrings, and rings, and
tablets, all jewels of gold :
and every man that offered offered an offering of gold unto the Lord.
And every man with
whom was found blue, and purple, and scarlet, and fine linen, and
goats' hair, and red skins of
rams, and badgers' skins, brought them. Every one that did offer an
offering of silver and
brass, brought the Lord's offering: and every man with whom was found
shittim wood? for
any work of the service, brought it. And all the women that were
wise-hearted did spin with
their hands, and brought that which they had spun, both of blue, and of
purple, and of scarlet,
and of fine linen. And all the women whose heart stirred them up in
wisdom spun goats' hair.
And the rulers brought onyx stones, and stones to be set for the ephod,
and for the breastplate:
and spice and oil for the light, and for the anointing oil, and for the
sweet incense. The
children of Israel brought a willing offering unto the Lord every man
and woman, whose heart
made them willing to bring, for all manner of work which the Lord had
commanded to be
made by the hand of Moses." (Ex. 35: 20-29.) And, again, we read,
"And all the wise men
that; wrought all the work of the sanctuary, came every man from his
work which they made;
and they spake unto Moses, saying, The people bring much more than
enough for the service
of the work, which the Lord commanded to make, . . . . for the stuff
they had was sufficient
for all the work to make it, and too much." (Ver. 4-7.)
A lovely picture this of devotedness to the work of the sanctuary! It
needed no effort to move
the hearts of the people to give, no earnest appeals, no impressive
arguments. Oh! no; their
"hearts stirred them up." This was the true way. The streams
of voluntary devotedness flowed
from within. "Rulers," "men," "women"—all
felt it to he their sweet privilege to give to the
Lord, not with a narrow heart or niggard hand, but after such a
princely fashion that they had
"enough and too much."
Then, as to their implicit obedience, we read, "according to all
that the Lord commanded
Moses, so the children of Israel made all the work. And Moses did look
upon all the work,
and, behold, they had done it as the Lord had commanded, even so had
they done it: and
Moses blessed them." (Ex. 39: 42, 43) The Lord had given the most
minute instructions
concerning the entire work of the tabernacle. Every pin, every socket,
every loop, every tach,
was accurately set forth. There was no room left for man's expediency, his
reason, or his
common sense. Jehovah did not give a great outline and leave man to
fill it up He left no
margin whatever in which man might enter his regulations. By no means.
"See, saith he, that
thou make all things according to the pattern showed to thee in the
mount. (Ex. 25: 40; Ex.
26: 30; Heb. 8: 5) This left no room for human device. If man had been
allowed to make a
single pin, that pin would, most assuredly, have been out of place in
the judgement of God.
We can see what man's "graving tool" produces in Ex. 32.
Thank God, it had no place in the
tabernacle. They did, in this matter, just what they were told—nothing
more—nothing less.
Salutary lesson this for the professing church! There are many things
in the history of Israel
which we should earnestly seek to avoid—their impatient murmurings,
their legal vows, and
their idolatry; but in those two things may we imitate them. May our
devotedness be more
whole hearted, and our obedience more implicit. We may safely assert,
that if all had not been
done "according to the pattern showed in the mount," we
should not have to read, "then a
cloud covered the tent of the congregation, and the glory of the Lord
filled the tabernacle.
And Moses was not able to enter into the tent of the congregation,
because the cloud abode
thereon, and the glory of the Lord filled the tabernacle." (Ex.
40: 34, 35) The tabernacle was,
in all respects, according to the divine pattern, and, therefore, it
could be filled with the divine
glory. There is a volume of instruction in this. We are too prone to
regard the Word of God as
insufficient for the most minute details connected with His worship,
and service. This is a
great mistake, a mistake which has proved the fruitful source of evils
and errors, in the
professing Church. The word of God is amply sufficient for everything,
whether as regards
personal salvation and walk, or the order and rule of the assembly. All
scripture is given by
inspiration of God, and is profitable for doctrine, for reproof, for
correction, for instruction in
righteousness, that the man of God may be perfect, thoroughly furnished
unto all good works.
(2 Tim. 3: 16, 17) This settles the question. If the Word of God
furnishes a man thoroughly
unto "all good works," it follows, as a, necessary
consequence, that whatever I find not in its
pages, cannot possibly be a good work. and, further, be it remembered,
that the divine glory
cannot connect itself with ought that is not according to the divine
pattern.
———————
Beloved reader, we have now travelled together through this most
precious book. We have, I
fondly hope, reaped some profit from our study. I trust we have
gathered up some refreshing
thoughts of Jesus and His sacrifice as we passed along. Feeble, indeed,
must be our most
vigorous thoughts, and shallow our deepest apprehensions, as to the
mind of God in all that
this Book contains. It is happy to remember that through grace, we are
on our way to that
glory where we shall know, even as we are known; and where we shall
bask in the sunshine of
His countenance who is the beginning and ending of all the ways of God,
whether in creation,
in providence, or redemption. To Him I do most affectionately commend
you, in body, soul,
and spirit. May you know the deep blessedness of having your portion in
Christ, and be kept
in patient waiting for His glorious advent. Amen.
C. H. M.