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Song of
Solomon Chapter Two
Song of Solomon 2
Chapter Contents
The mutual love of Christ and his church. (1-7) The hope
and calling of the church. (8-13) Christ's care of the church, Her faith and
hope. (14-17)
Commentary on Song of Solomon 2:1-7
(Read Song of Solomon 2:1-7)
Believers are beautiful, as clothed in the righteousness
of Christ; and fragrant, as adorned with the graces of his Spirit; and they
thrive under the refreshing beams of the Sun of righteousness. The lily is a
very noble plant in the East; it grows to a considerable height, but has a weak
stem. The church is weak in herself, yet is strong in Him that supports her.
The wicked, the daughters of this world, who have no love to Christ, are as
thorns, worthless and useless, noxious and hurtful. Corruptions are thorns in
the flesh; but the lily now among thorns, shall be transplanted into that
paradise where there is no brier or thorn. The world is a barren tree to the
soul; but Christ is a fruitful one. And when poor souls are parched with
convictions of sin, with the terrors of the law, or the troubles of this world,
weary and heavy laden, they may find rest in Christ. It is not enough to pass
by this shadow, but we must sit down under it. Believers have tasted that the
Lord Jesus is gracious; his fruits are all the precious privileges of the new
covenant, purchased by his blood, and communicated by his Spirit; promises are
sweet to a believer, and precepts also. Pardons are sweet, and peace of
conscience sweet. If our mouths are out of taste for the pleasures of sin,
Divine consolations will be sweet to us. Christ brings the soul to seek and to
find comforts through his ordinances, which are as a banqueting-house where his
saints feast with him. The love of Christ, manifested by his death, and by his
word, is the banner he displays, and believers resort to it. How much better is
it with the soul when sick from love to Christ, than when surfeited with the
love of this world! And though Christ seemed to have withdrawn, yet he was even
then a very present help. All his saints are in his hand, which tenderly holds
their aching heads. Finding Christ thus nigh to her, the soul is in great care
that her communion with him is not interrupted. We easily grieve the Spirit by
wrong tempers. Let those who have comfort, fear sinning it away.
Commentary on Song of Solomon 2:8-13
(Read Song of Solomon 2:8-13)
The church pleases herself with thoughts of further
communion with Christ. None besides can speak to the heart. She sees him come.
This may be applied to the prospect the Old Testament saints had of Christ's
coming in the flesh. He comes as pleased with his own undertaking. He comes
speedily. Even when Christ seems to forsake, it is but for a moment; he will
soon return with everlasting loving-kindness. The saints of old saw him,
appearing through the sacrifices and ceremonial institutions. We see him
through a glass darkly, as he manifests himself through the lattices. Christ
invites the new convert to arise from sloth and despondency, and to leave sin
and worldly vanities, for union and communion with him. The winter may mean
years passed in ignorance and sin, unfruitful and miserable, or storms and
tempests that accompanied his conviction of guilt and danger. Even the unripe
fruits of holiness are pleasant unto Him whose grace has produced them. All
these encouraging tokens and evidences of Divine favour, are motives to the
soul to follow Christ more fully. Arise then, and come away from the world and
the flesh, come into fellowship with Christ. This blessed change is owing
wholly to the approaches and influences of the Sun of righteousness.
Commentary on Song of Solomon 2:14-17
(Read Song of Solomon 2:14-17)
The church is Christ's dove; she returns to him, as her
Noah. Christ is the Rock, in whom alone she can think herself safe, and find
herself easy, as a dove in the hole of a rock, when struck at by the birds of
prey. Christ calls her to come boldly to the throne of grace, having a great
High Priest there, to tell what her request is. Speak freely, fear not a slight
or a repulse. The voice of prayer is sweet and acceptable to God; those who are
sanctified have the best comeliness. The first risings of sinful thoughts and
desires, the beginnings of trifling pursuits which waste the time, trifling
visits, small departures from truth, whatever would admit some conformity to
the world; all these, and many more, are little foxes which must be removed.
This is a charge to believers to mortify their sinful appetites and passions,
which are as little foxes, that destroy their graces and comforts, and crush
good beginnings. Whatever we find a hinderance to us in that which is good, we
must put away. He feedeth among the lilies; this shows Christ's gracious
presence among believers. He is kind to all his people. It becomes them to
believe this, when under desertion and absence, and so to ward off temptations.
The shadows of the Jewish dispensation were dispelled by the dawning of the
gospel day. And a day of comfort will come after a night of desertion. Come
over the mountains of Bether, "the mountains that divide," looking
forward to that day of light and love. Christ will come over every separating
mountain to take us home to himself.
¢w¢w Matthew Henry¡mConcise Commentary on Song of Solomon¡n
Song of Solomon 2
Verse 1
[1] I am
the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys.
I ¡X These are the words
of the bridegroom. He compares himself to the rose and lilly, for fragrancy and
beauty. Sharon, was a very fruitful place, and famous for roses.
Verse 2
[2] As the lily among thorns, so is my love among the daughters.
Among ¡X
Compared with thorns, which it unspeakably exceeds in glory and beauty.
So ¡X So far, doth my
church or people, excel all other assemblies. The title of daughter, is often
given to whole nations. These are Christ's words, to which the spouse makes the
following reply.
Verse 3
[3] As
the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my beloved among the sons. I
sat down under his shadow with great delight, and his fruit was sweet to my
taste.
The apple-tree ¡X
Whose fruit is very pleasant and wholesome.
The trees ¡X
Which are barren.
I sat ¡X I
confidently reposed myself under his protection.
His fruit ¡X
The benefits which I received by him, remission of sins, faith, grace, and
assurance of glory.
Verse 4
[4] He
brought me to the banqueting house, and his banner over me was love.
Banquetting house ¡X
The places in which believers receive the graces and blessings of Christ.
His banner ¡X By
the lifting up whereof I was invited to come to him, and to list myself under
him.
Love ¡X
The love of Christ crucified, which, like a banner, is displayed in the gospel.
Verse 5
[5] Stay me with flagons, comfort me with apples: for I am sick of love.
Stay me ¡X
Or, support me, keep me from fainting. The spouse speaks this to her
bride-maids, the daughters of Jerusalem: or to the bridegroom himself.
Flaggons ¡X
With wine, which is a good cordial.
Apples ¡X
With odoriferous apples, the smell whereof was grateful to persons ready to
faint. By this understand the application of the promises, and the quickening
influences of the Spirit.
Verse 6
[6] His
left hand is under my head, and his right hand doth embrace me.
His hand ¡X No
sooner did I cry out for help, but he was at hand to succour me.
Verse 7
[7] I
charge you, O ye daughters of Jerusalem, by the roes, and by the hinds of the
field, that ye stir not up, nor awake my love, till he please.
I charge you ¡X
This is spoken by the bride.
By the roes ¡X By
the example of those creatures, which are pleasant and loving in their carriage
towards one another.
Nor awake ¡X
That you do not disturb nor offend him.
'Till ¡X
Never, as this word, until, in such phrases, is commonly used. For neither can
sin ever please him, nor can the church bear it that Christ should ever be
offended.
Verse 8
[8] The
voice of my beloved! behold, he cometh leaping upon the mountains, skipping
upon the hills.
The voice ¡X
Christ's voice, the word of grace revealed outwardly in the gospel, and
inwardly by the Spirit of God.
Leaping ¡X He
saith, leaping and skipping, to denote that Christ came readily, and swiftly,
with great desire and pleasure and adds, upon the mountains and hills, to
signify Christ's resolution to come in spite of all difficulties.
Verse 9
[9] My
beloved is like a roe or a young hart: behold, he standeth behind our wall, he
looketh forth at the windows, shewing himself through the lattice.
Like a roe ¡X In
swiftness. He is coming to me with all speed and will not tarry a moment beyond
the proper season.
He standeth behind ¡X
And while he doth for wise reasons forbear to come; he is not far from us. Both
this and the following phrases may denote the obscure manner of Christ's
manifesting himself to his people, under the law, in comparison of his
discoveries in the gospel.
The window ¡X
This phrase, and that through the lattess, intimate that the church does indeed
see Christ, but, as through a glass, darkly, as it is said even of
gospel-revelations, 1 Corinthians 13:12, which was much more true of
legal administrations.
Verse 10
[10] My
beloved spake, and said unto me, Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away.
Spake ¡X
Invited me outwardly by his word, and inwardly by his Spirit.
Rise up ¡X
Shake off sloth, and disentangle thyself more fully from all the snares of this
world.
Come ¡X
Unto me, and with me; follow me fully, serve me perfectly, labour for a nearer
union, and more satisfying communion with me.
Verse 11
[11] For,
lo, the winter is past, the rain is over and gone;
The winter ¡X
Spiritual troubles arising from a deep sense of the guilt of sin, the wrath of
God, the curse of the law; all which made them afraid to come unto God. But, saith
Christ, I have removed these impediments, God is reconciled; therefore cast off
all discouragements, and excuses, and come to me.
Verse 12
[12] The
flowers appear on the earth; the time of the singing of birds is come, and the
voice of the turtle is heard in our land;
The flowers ¡X
The communications of God's grace, the gifts, and graces, and comforts of the
Holy Spirit, are vouchsafed unto, and appear in believers, as buds and blossoms
do in the spring.
The turtle ¡X
This seems particularly to be mentioned because it not only gives notice of the
spring, but aptly represents the Spirit of God, which even the Chaldee
paraphrast understands by this turtle, which appeared in the shape of a dove,
and which worketh a dove-like meekness, and chastity, and faithfulness, in
believers.
Verse 13
[13] The
fig tree putteth forth her green figs, and the vines with the tender grape give
a good smell. Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away.
Her figs ¡X
Which it shoots forth in the spring.
Verse 14
[14] O my
dove, that art in the clefts of the rock, in the secret places of the stairs,
let me see thy countenance, let me hear thy voice; for sweet is thy voice, and
thy countenance is comely.
My dove ¡X So
the church is called, for her dove-like temper, and for her dove-like
condition, because she is weak, and exposed to persecution, and therefore
forced to hide herself in rocks.
The stairs ¡X In
the holes of craggy and broken rocks, which resemble stairs.
Let me see ¡X Be
not afraid to appear before me.
Hear ¡X
Thy prayers and praises.
For ¡X
Thy person and services are amiable in my sight.
Verse 15
[15] Take
us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the vines: for our vines have tender
grapes.
Take us ¡X
The bridegroom gives this charge to his bridemen or friends. By whom he understands
those magistrates and ministers to whom, under Christ, the custody of the
vineyards, the churches, principally belong. These he commands to take the
foxes, to restrain them from doing this mischief.
Foxes ¡X
The disturbers of the vineyard, or the church, seducers or false teachers.
Little foxes ¡X
This he adds for more abundant caution, to teach the church to prevent errors
and heresies in the beginnings.
Spoil vines ¡X
Which foxes do many ways, by gnawing and breaking the little branches and
leaves, by digging holes in the vineyards, and so spoiling the roots.
Tender grapes ¡X
Which are easily spoiled, if great care be not used to prevent it.
Verse 16
[16] My
beloved is mine, and I am his: he feedeth among the lilies.
My beloved ¡X
These are the words of the bride, who having come to him upon his gracious
invitation, now maketh her boast of him.
He feedeth ¡X
Abideth and refresheth himself amongst his faithful people, who are compared to
lillies, verse 2.
Verse 17
[17]
Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my beloved, and be thou
like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of Bether.
Until ¡X
Until the morning of that blessed day of the general resurrection, when all the
shadows, not only of ignorance, and sin, and calamity, but even of outward
administrations, shall cease.
Turn ¡X
Return to me. For although Christ had come to her, and she had gladly received
him, yet he was gone again, as is here implied, and evidently appears from the
following verse. Which sudden change is very agreeable to the state of God's
people in this world, where they are subject to frequent changes.
A roe ¡X In
swiftness; make haste to help me.
Of Bether ¡X A
place in the land of promise, where it seems those creatures were in great
abundance.
¢w¢w John Wesley¡mExplanatory Notes on Song of Solomon¡n
02 Chapter 2
Verses 1-17
Verse 1
I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily of the valleys.
The best of the best
It is a marvellous stoop for Christ, who is ¡§God over all,
blessed for ever,¡¨ and the Light of the universe, to say, ¡§I am a rose; I am a
lily.¡¨ O my blessed Lord, this is a sort of incarnation, as when the Eternal
God did, take upon Himself an infant¡¦s form! So here, the Everlasting God says,
¡§I am¡¨--and what comes next?--¡§a rose and a lily.¡¨ It is an amazing stoop, I
know not how to set it forth to you by human language; it is a sort of verbal
rehearsal of what He did afterwards when, though He counted it not robbery to
be equal with God, ¡§He took upon Himself the form of a servant, and was made in
the likeness of sinful flesh, and became obedient unto death, even the death of
the cross.¡¨ ¡§I am God, yet,¡¨ saith He, ¡§I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily
of the valleys.¡¨
I. The exceeding
delightfulness of our Lord. He compares Himself here, not as in other places to
needful bread and refreshing water, but to lovely flowers, to roses and lilies.
What is the use of roses and lilies? They are of no use at all except for joy
and delight. With their sweet form, their charming colour, and their delicious
fragrance, we are comforted and pleased and delighted; but they are not
necessaries of life. You are to find in Christ roses and lilies, as well as
bread and water; you have not yet seen all His beauties, and you do not yet
know all His excellence.
1. And first, He is in Himself the delight of men. He speaks not of
offices, gifts, works, possessions; but of Himself: ¡§I am.¡¨ Our Lord Jesus is
the best of allbeings; the dearest, sweetest, fairest and most charming of all
beings that we can think of is the Son of God, our Saviour. Eyes need to be
trained to see beauty. No man seeth half or a thousandth part of the beauty
even of this poor, natural world; but the painter s eye--the eye of Turner, for
instance--can see much more than you or I ever saw. ¡§Oh!¡¨ said one, when he
looked on one of Turner¡¦s landscapes, ¡§I have seen that view every day, but I
never saw as much as that in it.¡¨ ¡§No,¡¨ replied Turner, ¡§don¡¦t you wish you
could?¡¨ And, when the Spirit of God trains and tutors the eye, it sees in
Christ what it never saw before. But, even then, as Turner¡¦s eye was not able
to see all the mystery of God¡¦s beauty in nature, so neither is the most
trained and educated Christian able to perceive all the matchless beauty that
there is in Christ.
2. But next, our Lord is exceedingly delightful to the eye of faith.
He not only tells us of what delight is in Himself--¡§I am the rose, and I am
the lily¡¨--but He thereby tells us that there is something to see in Him, for
the rose is very pleasing to look upon. Is there a more beautiful sight than a
rose that is in bud, or even one that is full-blown? And the lily--what a
charming thing it is! It seems to be more a flower of heaven than of earth.
Well now, Christ is delightful to the eye of faith. To you who look at Christ
by faith, a sight of Him brings such peace, such rest, such hope, as no other
sight can ever afford; it so sweetens everything, so entirely takes away the
bitterness of life, and brings us to anticipate the glory of the life that is
to come, that I am sure you say, ¡§Yes, yes; the figure in the text is quite
correct; there is a beauty in Jesus to the eye of faith, He is indeed red as the
rose and white as the lily.¡¨
3. And next, the Lord Jesus Christ is delightful in the savour which
comes from Him to us. There is a spiritual way of perceiving the savour of
Christ; I cannot explain it to you, but there is an ineffable mysterious
sweetness that proceeds from Him which touches the spiritual senses, and
affords supreme delight; and as the body has its nose, and its tender nerves
that can appreciate sweet odours, so the soul has its spiritual nostril by
which, though Christ be at a distance, it yet can perceive the flagrant
emanations that come from Him, and is delighted therewith.
4. Once more, in all that He is, Christ is the choicest of the
choice. You notice the Bridegroom says, ¡§I am the rose.¡¨ Yes, but there were
some particularly beautiful roses that grew in the valley of Sharon; ¡§I am that
rose, said tie. And there were some delightful lilies in Palestine; it is a
land of lilies, there, are so many of them that nobody knows which lily Christ
meant, and it does not at all signify, for almost all lilies are wondrously
beautiful. ¡§But,¡¨ said He, ¡§I am the lily of the valleys,¡¨ the choicest kind of
lily that grew where the soil was fat and damp with the overflow of mountain
streams. ¡§I am the lily of the valleys: that is to say, Christ is not only
good, but He is the best; and He is not only the best, but He is the best of
the best.
II. The sweet
variety of Christ¡¦s delightfulness. He is not only full of joy, and pleasure,
and delight to our hearts, but He is full of all sorts of joy, and all sorts of
pleasure, and all sorts of delights to us. The rose is not enough, you must
have the lily also, and the two together fall far short of the glories of
Christ, the true ¡§Plant of renown.¡¨ ¡§I am the rose.¡¨ That is the emblem of
majesty. The rose is the very queen of flowers; in the judgment of all who know
what to admire it is enthroned above all the rest of the beauties of the
garden. But the lily--what is that? That is the emblem of love. The psalmist
hints at this in the title of the forty-fifth psalm. ¡§Upon Shoshannim, a Song
of love. Shoshannim signifies lilies, so the lily-psalm is the love-song, for
the lilies, with their beauty, their purity, their delicacy, are a very choice
emblem of love. Are you not delighted when you put these two things together,
majesty and love? A King upon a throne of love, a Prince, whose very eyes beam
with love to those who put their trust in Him, a real Head, united by living
bonds of love to all His members--such is our dear Lord and Saviour. The
combination of these sweet flowers also suggests our Lord¡¦s suffering and
purity. Jesus when on earth, could say, ¡§The prince of this world cometh, and
Lath nothing in Me.¡¨ The devil himself could not see a spot or speck in that
lovely lily. Jesus Christ is perfection itself, He is all purity; so you must
put the two together, the rose and the lily, to show Christ¡¦s suffering and
perfection, the infinitely pure and infinitely suffering. In which of the two
do you take the greater delight? Surely, in neither, but in the combination of
both; what would be the value of Christ¡¦s sufferings if He were not perfect?
And of what avail would His perfections be if He had not died, the Just for the
unjust, to bring us to God? But the two together, the rose and the lily,
suffering and purity, fill us with delight. Of both of these there is a great
variety. Jesus possesses every kind of beauty and fragrance. ¡§He is all my
salvation, and all my desire.¡¨ All good things meet in Christ; in Him all the
lines of beauty are focussed. Blessed are they who truly know Him. Further,
Christ is the very essence of the sweetness both of the rose and of the lily.
When He says, ¡§I am the rose,¡¨ He means, not only that He is like the rose, but
that He made all the sweetness there is in the rose, and it is still in Him;
and all the sweetness there is in any creature comes to us from Christ, or else
it is not sweetness such as we ought to love. All good for our soul comes from
Him, whether it be pardon of sin, or justification, or the sanctification that
makes us fit for glory hereafter, Christ is the source of it all; and in the
infinite variety of delights that we get from Him, He is Himself the essence of
it all.
III. The exceeding
freeness of our Lord¡¦s delightfulness. I have been talking about my Master, and
I want to show you that He is accessible, He is meant to be plucked and enjoyed
as roses and lilies are. He says in the text, ¡§I am the rose of Sharon.¡¨ What
was Sharon? It was an open plain where anybody might wander, and where even
cattle roamed at their own sweet will. Jesus is not like a rose in Solomon¡¦s
garden, shut up within high walls, with broken glass all along the top. Oh, no!
He says, ¡§I am the rose of Sharon,¡¨ everybody¡¦s rose, the flower for the common
people to come and gather. ¡§I am the lily.¡¨ What lily? The lily of the palace
of Shushan, enclosed and guarded from all approach? No; but, ¡§I am the lily of
the valleys,¡¨ found in this glen, or the other ravine, growing here, there and
everywhere: ¡§I am the lily of the valleys.¡¨ Then Christ is as abundant as a
common flower. Whatever kind of rose it was, it was a common rose; whatever
kind of lily it was, it was a well-known lily that grew freely in the valleys
of that land. Oh, blessed be my Master¡¦s name, He has brought us a common
salvation, and He is the common people¡¦s Christ I And now, poor soul, if you
would like an apronful of roses, come and have them. If you would like to carry
away a big handful of the lilies of the valleys, come and take them, as many as
you will. May the Lord give you the will! Even to those who do not pluck any,
there is one strange thing that must not be forgotten. A man passes by a
rose-bush, and says, ¡§I cannot stop to think about roses,¡¨ but as he goes along
he exclaims, ¡§Dear, dear, what a delicious perfume!¡¨ A man journeying in the
East goes through a field that is full of lilies; he is in a great hurry, but,
for all that, he cannot help seeing and smelling the lilies as he rushes
through the field. And, do you know, the perfume of Christ has life in it I He is
¡§a savour of life unto life.¡¨ What does that mean but that the smell of Him
will save? (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The best flower
We find flowers of some kind or other growing everywhere. They
spring up in the sandy desert. On the tops of bleak and snow-capped mountains,
where even trees will not grow, the little flowers may be seen. Travellers who
have gone near the North Pole, where ice and snow last all the year, have been
surprised to find in some places red snow. And when they came to examine
it with a microscope, they were still more surprised to find that the colour of
it was owing to an exceedingly small kind of plant, bearing a flower too little
for the naked eye to see. But among all the multitude of flowers which grow on
the earth, there is none like this which Solomon speaks of in the verse before
us. ¡§I am the Rose of Sharon.¡¨ This, we suppose, refers to Jesus. He is the
¡§Rose of Sharon.¡¨ Sharon was the name of a large plain, or level tract of
country in Palestine, famous for the number of flowers which grew there. And if
we consider this ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ as referring to our blessed Saviour, then we
may well say that this Rose is the best flower.
I. Because it will
grow everywhere. This flower does not grow in the ground like other flowers.
You must not look for it in the beds of the garden; nor in the fields, the
valleys or the mountains. The soil in which it grows is the human heart. And
when any person learns to love and serve Jesus, and is made happy by Him, then
we may say that the ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ is growing in that person¡¦s heart. This
flower is sometimes found growing in the hearts of very young people. And the
old as well as the young--the poor as well as the rich, may have it if they
will. It is growing now in the hearts of people in all the different nations of
the earth. John Williams, the martyr-missionary of Erromanga, planted it in the
sunny islands of the South Seas. Robert Moffat planted it far up into the
southern part of Africa; and other missionaries are planting it all along the
western coast. Dr. Livingstone carried it into the very centre of Africa, from
the East. The great wall of separation, which kept the missionaries so long out
of China, has been thrown down, and now all that vast country is waiting to
receive the Gospel. The servants of Jesus are going about over the burning
plains of India, and planting this best flower there. The heat is dreadful
there sometimes, but still it is not too hot a climate for the ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨
to grow and flourish in. The Moravian missionaries have carried it to
Greenland¡¦s ice-bound shores; and that climate, even, is not too cold for it.
For above a hundred years it has been blooming sweetly there. And now, this
very day, it is growing and flourishing equally well in all these different
countries. Oh, what a wonderful flower this is! There is no other like it in
all the earth.
II. Because of its
many uses.
1. It is beautiful to look at. When Jesus was on earth, most people
saw no beauty in Him, that they should desire Him. But those who learn to know
and love Him, find Him to be ¡§the chief among ten thousand, and altogether
lovely.¡¨ The greatest happiness of heaven will be to ¡§see His face.¡¨ There is
nothing in all the world half so beautiful as the sight of Jesus will be in
heaven.
2. It is useful for its fragrance, as well as for its beauty. Every
one knows how sweet it is to smell a beautiful rose. And we read in the Bible,
that the name of Jesus is ¡§as ointment poured forth.¡¨ This means, that it is
just as pleasant to the souls of those who love Jesus to think about Him, as it
is to their bodily senses to smell the sweetest flower, or the most fragrant
ointment.
3. The ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ bears fruit as well as flowers, and its fruit
is wholesome and pleasant. It is made to be eaten, as well as looked at, and
its ¡§fruit is sweet to the taste¡¨ of those who partake of it.
4. The ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ yields pure water to drink, as well as food
to eat. There is a singular plant in the East Indies called ¡§the
pitcher-plant.¡¨ It has leaves, or flowers, in the form of small pitchers. Each
pitcher has a lid to it, and at certain seasons these pitchers are filled with
a sweet, pleasant liquid, which is very good to drink. The ¡§Rose of
Sharon¡¨ is a pitcher-plant. It is full of pitchers. These are not only always
full, but they never can be emptied. The water of salvation flows into them as
fast as it is taken out. And oh, it is delightful water! It is cool, clear and
refreshing.
5. The ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ is good for medicine, as well as for food and
drink. When Jesus, who is this ¡§Rose of Sharon,¡¨ was on earth, He opened the
eyes of the blind; He unstopped the ears of the deaf; He made the lame to walk, and
went about ¡§healing all manner of sickness and disease among the people.¡¨ Then,
He cured all kinds of bodily diseases. Now, He cures all kinds of spiritual
diseases.
6. The ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ is good for clothing. This is a very singular
use to make of a flower. We often hear of people making wreaths of flowers to
ornament or dress the head with. But no one ever heard of an earthly flower
that was good to make clothing off The ¡§Rose of Sharon,¡¨ however, is good for
clothing. We read in the Bible about ¡§garments of salvation¡¨--about ¡§robes
washed and made white in the blood of the Lamb¡¨--about ¡§clothing of wrought
gold--all-glorious within.¡¨ These all refer to that righteousness of Jesus,
which He puts upon all His people as the dress they are to wear in heaven. Oh,
the clothing which is made out of the ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ is very beautiful! It is
so in God¡¦s sight. There never was any like it.
7. And then the ¡§Rose of Sharon¡¨ is good to make people rich.
Nobody ever thinks of feeling rich because he has a rose. Why, you may have a
bunch of roses; yes, a whole garden of roses, and yet not be very rich.
Sometimes we hear of a king making a present of a golden rose to one of his
friends. Yet that would not make him rich. But every one who has the ¡§Rose of
Sharon¡¨ is rich. Nobody can tell how rich Christ makes His people. ¡§They shall
inherit all things.¡¨ What more could they have?
III. Because it
makes people happy when nothing else can. What a dreadful thing it must be on
board a burning ship, far off on the ocean! We all heard about that dreadful
calamity--the burning of the steamer ¡§Austria. She was full of passengers. The
fire spread almost like lightning. Could anything make persons calm and happy
on board that burning vessel? Yes, there were some there who loved Jesus, who
had the ¡§Rose of Sharon with them and that made them happy.
IV. Because it
never fades. Its beauty never decays. Its leaves never fall off. Winter never
comes in heaven. The flowers are blooming all the time there. And chief among
them is this beautiful ¡§Rose of Sharon.¡¨ Ah! my dear children, if you want to
love one who never dies and never changes, then love Jesus. He is the ¡§Rose of
Sharon,¡¨ and this is the best flower, because it never fades.
V. Because its
beauty is always increasing. There never was another flower known of which this
could be said. You take a small rose-bud and look at it. How beautiful it is!
As it grows larger its beauty increases. Every day it swells to a greater size.
You see more and more of its lovely crimson colour- Presently the bud begins to
open. You can almost see its leaves expanding as you stand and gaze upon it.
How interesting it is to watch it! Gradually it unfolds itself, till all its
many leaves have opened themselves, and now it stands before you a fragrant,
blushing, beautiful, full-blown rose. How sweetly it looks! Can anything in the
world be more delightful? But now it¡¦s all over! You have seen all there is
about the rose worth seeing. Very soon it will wither away, and you won¡¦t care
to look at it any more. But it is very different with the ¡§Rose of Sharon.¡¨
This will be always growing and always blooming. And its flowers will be always
increasing in beauty. I do not mean that some of its flowers will die, and
others, more beautiful, come out upon it. Not one of its flowers will ever die.
But they will all go on increasing in beauty continually. Oh, wonderful plant!
How glorious it will be, if we get to heaven to look on and to watch its
increasing beauty to all eternity! (R. Newton, D. D.)
The rose and the lily
It is our Lord who speaks: ¡§I am the Rose of Sharon.¡¨ How is it
that He utters His own commendation, for it is an old and true adage, that
¡§self-praise is no recommendation¡¨? None but vain creatures ever praise
themselves, and yet Jesus often praises Himself. How, then, shall we solve the
riddle? Is not this the answer, that He is no creature at all, and therefore
comes not beneath the rule? For the creature to praise itself is vanity, but
for the Creator to praise Himself, for the Lord God to manifest and show forth
His own glory is becoming and proper. Our Lord, when He thus praises Himself
doubtless does so for an excellent reason, namely, that no one can possibly
reveal Him to the sons of men but Himself. No lips can tell the love of Christ
to the heart till Jesus Himself shall speak within. Christ must be His own
mirror; as the diamond alone can cut the diamond, so He alone can display
Himself.
I. First, I shall
speak upon the motives of our Lord in thus commending himself. I take it that
He has designs of love in this speech. He would have all His people rich in
high and happy thoughts concerning His blessed person.
1. Doubtless, He commends Himself because high thoughts of Christ
will enable us to act consistently with our relations towards Him. The saved
soul is espoused to Christ. Now, in the marriage estate, it is a great
assistance to happiness if the wife has high ideas of her husband. In the
marriage union between the soul and Christ, this is exceedingly necessary.
2. Moreover, our in aster knows that high thoughts of Him increase
our love. If we are to love Him at all, it must be with the love of admiration;
and the higher that admiration shall rise, the more vehemently will our love
flame forth.
3. A high esteem of Christ, moreover, as He well knoweth, is very
necessary to our comfort. Beloved, when you esteem Christ very highly, the
things of this world become of small account with you, and their loss is not so
heavily felt Get but delightful thoughts of Him, and you will feel like a man
who has lost a pebble but has preserved his diamond; like the man who has seen
a few cast clouts and rotten rags consumed in the flames, but has saved his
children from the conflagration. You will rejoice in your deepest distress
because Christ is yours if you have a high sense of the preciousness of your
Master.
4. Our Lord would have us entertain great thoughts of Himself,
because this will quicken all the powers of our soul. I spoke to you just now
of love receiving force from an esteem of Jesus, I might say the like of faith,
or patience, or humility.
5. High thoughts of Jesus will set us upon high attempts for His honour.
When the grand thought of love to God has gained full possession of the soul,
men have been able to actually accomplish what other men have not even thought
of doing. Love has laughed at impossibilities, and proved that she is not to be
quenched by many waters, nor drowned by floods.
II. Whatever may be
the commendable motive for any statement, yet it must not be made if it be not
accurate, and therefore, in the second place, I come to observe our Lord¡¦s
justification for this commendation, which is abundantly satisfactory to all
who know Him. What our Lord says of Himself is strictly true. It falls short of
the mark, it is no exaggeration. Observe each one of the words. He begins, ¡§I
am.¡¨ Those two little words I would not insist upon, but it is no straining of
language to say that even here we have a great deep, ¡§I am¡¨ hath revealed
Himself unto thee in a more glorious manner than He did unto Moses at the
burning bush, the great ¡§I AM¡¨ in human flesh has become thy Saviour and thy
Lord. ¡§I am the rose.¡¨ We understand from this, that Christ is lovely. He
selects one of the most charming of flowers to set forth Himself. All the
beauties of all the creatures are to be found in Christ in greater perfection
than in the creatures themselves. He is infinitely more beautiful in the garden
of the soul and in the paradise of God than the rose can be in the gardens of
earth, though it be the universally acknowledged queen of flowers. But the
spouse adds, ¡§I am the rose of Sharon.¡¨ This was the best and rarest of roses.
Jesus is not ¡§the rose¡¨ alone, but ¡§the rose of Sharon,¡¨ just as He calls His
righteousness ¡§gold,¡¨ and then adds, ¡§the gold of Ophir¡¨--the best of the best.
Our Lord adds. ¡§I am the lily,¡¨ thus giving Himself a double commendation.
Indeed, Jesus Christ deserves not to be praised doubly, but sevenfold, aye, and
unto seven times seven. Earth¡¦s choicest charms commingled, feebly picture His
abounding preciousness. He is the ¡§lily of the valleys.¡¨ Does He intend by that
to hint to us that He is a lily in His lowliest estate, a lily of the valley?
The carpenter¡¦s son, living in poverty, wearing the common garb of the poor, is
He the lily of the valleys? Yes; He is a lily to you and to me, poor dwellers
in the lowlands. Up yonder He is a lily on the hilltops, where all celestial
eyes admire Him; down here, in these valleys of fears and cares, He is a lily
still as fair as in heaven. The words, having been opened up one by one, teach
us that Christ is lovely to all our spiritual senses. The rose is delightful to
the eye, hut it is also refreshing to the nostril, and the lily the same. So is
Jesus. Go anywhere where Jesus is, and though you do not actually hear His
name, yet the sweet influence which flows from His love will be plainly enough
discernible. Our Lord is so lovely, that even the recollection of His love is
sweet. Take the rose of Sharon, and pull it leaf from leaf, and lay by the
leaves in the jar of memory, and you shall find each leaf most flagrant long
afterwards, filling the house with perfume; and this very day we remember times
of refreshing enjoyed at the Lord¡¦s table still delightful as we reflect upon
them. Jesus is lovely in the bud as well as when full blown. You admire the
rose quite as much when it is but a bud as when it bursts forth into perfect
development: and methinks, Christ to you, my beloved, in the first blush of
your piety, was not one whir less sweet than He is now. Jesus full blown, in
our riper experience, has lost none of His excellence. When we shall see Him
fully blown in the garden of paradise, shall we not count it to be our highest
heaven to gaze upon Him for ever? Christ is so lovely that He needs no
beautifying. Let the roughest tongue speak sincerely of Him in the most broken
but honest accents, and Jesus Himself is such a radiant jewel that the setting
will be of small consequence, He is so glorious that He is ¡§Most adorned when
unadorned the most.¡¨ He is so lovely, again, that He satisfies the highest
taste of the most educated spirit to the very full. The greatest amateur in
perfumes is quite satisfied with the rose, and I should think that no man of
taste will ever be able to criticize the lily, and cavil at its form. Now, when
the soul has arrived at her highest pitch of true taste, she shall still be
content with Christ, nay, she shall be the better able to appreciate Him.
Dwelling for another minute on thin subject, let me remark that our Lord Jesus
Christ deserves all that He has said of Himself. First, in His Divine glory.
The glory of Christ as God, who shall write upon it? Nothing is great, nothing
is excellent but God, and Christ is God. O roses and lilies, where are ye now?
Our Lord deserves these praises, again, in His perfection of manhood. He is
like ourselves, but in Him was no sin. ¡§The prince of this world cometh, but
hath nothing in Me.¡¨ Throughout the whole of His biography, there is not a
faulty line. He deserves this commendation, too, in His mediatorial
qualifications. Since His blood has washed us from all our sins, we talk no
more of the red roses, for what can they do to purify the soul? Since His
righteousness has made us accepted in the Beloved, we will speak no more of
spotless lilies, for what are these? He deserves all this praise, too, in His
reigning glory. He has a glory which His Father has given Him as a reward, in
the power of which He sits down at the right hand of God for ever and ever, and
shall soon come to judge the world in righteousness, and the people with
equity. View the Lord Jesus in any way you please, all that He Himself can say
concerning Himself He richly deserves, and therefore glory be unto His name for
ever and ever, and let the whole earth say, Amen.
III. I shall now
conduct you to a third consideration, namely, the influence of this
commendation upon us. Think of the ruin of this world till Christ came into it!
Methinks I see in vision a howling wilderness, a great and terrible desert,
like to the Sahara. Christ is the rose which has changed the scene. If you
would have great thoughts of Christ think of your own ruin. Yonder I behold you
cast out an infant, unswathed, unwashed, defiled with your own blood, too foul
to be looked upon except by beasts of prey. And what is this that has been cast
into your bosom, and which lying there has suddenly made you fair and lovely? A
rose has been thrown into your bosom by a Divine hand, and for its sake you
have been pitied and cared for by Divine Providence, you are washed and cleaned
from your defilement, you are adopted into Heaven¡¦s family, the fair seal of
love is upon your forehead, and the ring of faithfulness is on your hand--a
prince unto God--though just now you were an orphan, cast away. O prize the
rose, the putting of which into your bosom has made you what you are! Consider
your daily need of this rose. You live in the pestilential air of this earth:
take Christ away, you die. Christ is the daily food of your spirit. Think of
the estimation that Christ is had in beyond the skies, in the land where things
are measured by the right standard, where men are no longer deceived by the
delusions of earth. Think how God esteems the Only Begotten, His unspeakable
gift to us. Consider what the angels think of Him, as they count it their
highest honour to veil their faces at His feet. Consider what the blood-washed
think of Him, as day without night they sing His well-deserved praises with
gladdest voices. Remember how you yourself have sometimes esteemed Him. Have
there not been moments when the chariots of Amminadib seemed but poor dragging
things, compared with the wheels of your soul when Jesus ravished your heart
with His celestial embrace? Estimate Him to-day as you did then, for He is the
same, though you are not.
IV. I shall close
by asking you to make confessions suggested by my text. I am sure you have all
had falls, and slips, and shortcomings, with regard to Him. Well, then, come
humbly to Jesus at once. He will forgive yon readily, for He does not soon take
offence at His spouse. He may sometimes speak sharp words to her, because He
loves her; but His heart is always true, and faithful, and tender. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
The Rose of Sharon, and the Lily of the Valleys
Jesus calls Himself first, ¡§the Rose of Sharon,¡¨ and then, ¡§the
Lily of the Valleys.¡¨ Let us consider what He means.
I. The Rose of
Sharon. Of all the flowers that God has made, the rose, take it all in all, is
the loveliest and the sweetest. It has three things in perfection--shape,
colour, and fragrance. Indeed, we may call it the queen of flowers. Now, it is
in its sweetness especially that the rose reminds me of the Lord Jesus Christ.
His character was marked not only by manliness, but also with what we may call
¡§sweetness,¡¨ for he had all the firmness of a man and all the tenderness of a
woman. I will give you another reason for the comparison of Christ to a rose.
The rose is the most common as well as the most beautiful of all the flowers.
You find it wherever you go,--in all countries and in all places. In fact, it
is the universal flower: it belongs to everybody. And in this respect it
resembles Christ, for Christ is the common property of all--of the peasant as
well as of the prince; of poor as well as of rich; of the child as well as of
the full-grown man. He belongs to all nations, too--to the dwellers in north
and south and east and west; arid there is no one, whatever he may be, or
wherever he lives, who cannot say, ¡§The Lord Jesus Christ is my Saviour, and I
claim Him as my own.¡¨
II. But the Saviour
calls Himself in the text The Lily of the Valleys, and we have now to consider
what this second title is intended to teach us. Supposing that ¡§the Lily of the
Valleys¡¨ is the flower which we know by that name--you all remember how
graceful it is, with pretty little white bells ranged in a row on a tapering
stalk, and how it appears to hide itself modestly under the shade of its broad
green leaves. Now, why is it thus chosen? Partly because the lily is of a
beautiful white colour, and represents purity. And you know how pure the Lord
Jesus Christ was. Never at any time did He think, or say, or do anything that
was wrong. As a child, as a boy, as a man, He was absolutely free from fault.
But the lily of the valley--because it has a drooping head, and retires behind
the shade of its broad green leaves, instead of thrusting itself forward--may
be taken as an emblem of lowliness or humility, and so will serve to remind us
of the Lord Jesus Christ.
III. We will try, in
conclusion, to apply the subject to ourselves, So that we may be the better, by
God¡¦s blessing, for having talked about it and thought about it. We have the
example of the Lord Jesus Christ proposed to us. He is perfect, and we can
never hope to be perfect. But we may become, by the kind help of His Holy
Spirit, more and more like Him every day. (G. Calthrop, M. A.)
.
The rose and the lily
I have taken a text, chiefly because it is generally supposed that
a sermon cannot be preached without a Bible text. But I only want those two
words--Rose, Lily; and I take those two because they may be regarded as the
chief and the representative of the midsummer flowers. But how can we learn
from the rose and the lily concerning God? In this way. Everything a man does
or makes embodies and expresses himself. The Bible tells us that is true even
of children. ¡§Even a child is known by his doings.¡¨ Somehow children and men always
stamp themselves on everything they make and everything they do. And this is
one of the chief ways by which we come to know God. We look at the things He
makes, and when we find out what character they bear we may say, God is like
this, only infinitely better. If He made this, the possibility of making more
and better than this must be in Him. If God made the rose and the lily, what
must He be?
1. Now the first thing that comes to our thought, when we notice the
exquisite form of the rose and the stately grace of the lily, is--How beautiful
God must be. What beautiful thought He must have to have designed such forms,
and what a beautiful touch to mould such forms, and so how beautiful He Himself
must be.
2. Looking again at the rose and the lily we are reminded of their
fragrance, we feel their fragrance--that sweet scent of the rose, that rich and
almost overpowering odour of the lily. Then it strikes us that they are not
merely beautiful to look at, they are scattering blessings continually--pouring
forth their treasures to enrich the air, and to give us pleasure and health,
filling the summer sky with balmy breath, spending themselves to do others
good, to make others glad. And so they tell us what God is. For in God¡¦s
thought they were filled with that fragrance, and in breathing it out
they fain would tell us of Him of whose eternal sweetness they partake. What
must the fragrance of God be who put such fragrance into His flowers? And this
we can feel to be true of God manifested in Christ. The fragrance of Christ¡¦s
life on earth is its greatest charm. It was a life of self-denials,
generosities and charities; crowded with thoughtfulnesses and helpfulnesses,
exemplifying His own words, ¡§It is more blessed to give than receive.¡¨
3. Then, again, we are struck with the colour of the rose and the
lily--that creamy whiteness of the lily, that tinted whiteness of the rose. We
feel purity in colour, more especially in white flowers, but it is the
characteristic of them all. God made these pure white flowers, then what
must His purity be? We are often touched with God¡¦s wonderful and exhaustless
power of making pure things--clear waters, white snows, woolly clouds, new
leaves, blue sky, and the exquisite pale tinting all about the summer sunset.
Moses had a vision of the surroundings of God, and under His feet was a paved
work of a sapphire stone, and, as it were, the body of heaven in His clearness.
This purity is characteristic of God manifest in the flesh. Jesus was clothed
in white all through His life, and on His beautiful garments one stain never
came.
4. So the leaves and petals of rose and lily become leaves of a Bible
to us, from which we may learn of God. The flowers say, ¡§We come to tell you
that God lives, that God loves, and that God wants your love.¡¨ The roses say,
¡§Love and serve the good and beautiful God, who may be served by everything
that is kind and lovely.¡¨ The lilies say, ¡§Love and serve the pure and
righteous God, who may be served by everything that is holy and true.¡¨ And all
the other midsummer hewers, gathering round their king and queen, seem to join
in one great chorus, and to say, ¡§We love and serve the One, the living
God--the Wonderful, the Beautiful, the Pure, the Good--and you should love Him
too.¡¨ (R. Tuck.)
Verse 2
As the lily among thorns, so is My love among the daughters.
The lily among thorns
I. First, I think
my text very beautifully sets forth the relation of the Church and of every individual
to Christ. He styles her, ¡§My love.¡¨ An exquisitely sweet name; as if His love
had all gone forth of Him, and had become embodied in her.
1. The first point, then, of her relation to Christ is that she has
His love. Think of it, and let the blessed truth dwell long and sweetly in your
meditations. Each one of us may rejoice in the title under which our Lord
addresses us--¡§My love.¡¨ This love is distinguishing love, for in its light one
special object shines as a lily, and the rest, ¡§the daughters¡¨ are as thorns.
Observe that this is a love which He openly avows. The Bridegroom speaks and
says before all men, ¡§As a lily among thorns, so is My love among the
daughters.¡¨ He puts it upon record in that Book which is more widely scattered
than any other, for He is not ashamed to have it published on the housetops. He
declares it that His adversaries may know it, that He hat h a people in whom
HIS heart delights, and these He will have and hold as His own when heaven and
earth shall pass away. This love, wherever it has been revealed to its object,
is reciprocated;, If the Lord has really spoken home to your soul and said, ¡§I
have loved thee, your soul has gladly answered, ¡§This is my Beloved, and this
is my Friend; yea, He is altogether lovely.¡¨
2. Next, she bears His likeness. Notice the first verse of the
chapter, wherein the Bridegroom speaks--¡§I am the rose of Sharon, and the lily
of the valleys.¡¨ He is the lily, but His beloved is like Him; for He applies
His own chosen emblem to her--¡§As the lily among thorns, so is My love among
the daughters.¡¨ Notice that He is the lily, she is as the lily, that is to say,
He has the beauty and she reflects it; she is comely in His comeliness, which
He puts upon her. Note, too, that He who gave the beauty is the first to see
it. While they are unknown to the world Jesus knows His own. Love¡¦s eyes are
quick, and her ears are open. Love covers a multitude of faults, but it
discovers a multitude of beauties. Let His condescending discernment have all
honour for this generous appreciation of us. Let us bless and love Him because
He deigns to think so highly of us who owe everything to Him. ¡§Thou art,¡¨ saith
He, ¡§My love, as the lily.¡¨ It is evident that the Lord Jesus takes delight in
this beauty, which tie has put upon His people. He values it at so great a rate
that He counts all rival beauties to be but as thorns.
3. Bringing out still further the relationship between Christ and His
Church, I want you to notice that her position has drawn out His love. ¡§As the
lily,¡¨ saith He, ¡§among thorns, so is My love.¡¨ He spied her out among the
thorns. She was at the first no better than a thorn herself; His grace alone
made her to differ from the briars about her; but as soon as ever lie had put
His life and His grace into her, though she dwelt among the ungodly, she became
as a lily, and He spied her out. The thorn-brake could not hide His beloved.
¡§As the lily among thorns¡¨ wears also another meaning. Dr. Thompson writes of a
certain lily, ¡§It grows among thorns, and I have sadly lacerated my hand in
extricating it from them. Nothing can be in higher contrast than the luxuriant,
velvety softness of this lily and the withered, tangled hedge of thorns about
it. Ah, beloved, you know who it was that in gathering your soul and mine, lacerated
not His hand only, but His feet, and His head, and His side, and His heart,
yea, and His inmost soul.¡¨
4. Yet once more, I think many a child Of God may regard himself as
still being a lily among thorns, because of his afflictions. Certainly the Church
is so, and she is thereby kept for Christ¡¦s own, If thorns made it hard for Him
to reach us for our salvation, there is another kind of thorn which makes it
hard for any enemy to come at us for our hurt. Our trials and tribulations,
which we would fain escape from, often act as a spiritual protection: they
hedge us about and ward off many a devouring foe. Sharp as they are, they serve
as a fence and a defence.
II. Our text is
full of instruction as to the relationship of the Church and each individual believer
to the world--¡§The lily among thorns.¡¨
1. First, then, she has incomparable beauty. As compared and
contrasted with all else she is as the lily to the thorn-brake. The thorns are
worthless, they flourish, and spread, and cumber the ground, but they yield no
fruit, and only grow to be cut down for the oven. Alas, such is man by nature,
at his best. As for the lily, it is a thing of beauty and a joy for ever; it
lives shedding sweet perfume, and when it is gathered its loveliness adorns the
chamber to which it is taken. So does the saint bless his generation while
here, and when he is taken away he is regarded with pleasure even in heaven
above as one of the flowers of God. He will ere long be transplanted from among
the thorns to the garden enclosed beyond the river, where the King delights to
dwell, for such a flower is far too fair to be left for ever amid tangled
briars.
2. In the comparison of the saint to the lily we remark that he has,
like the lily, a surpassing excellence. The thorn is a fruit of the curse: it
springs up because of sin. Not so the lily: it is a fair type of the blessing
which maketh rich without the sorrow of carking care. The thorn is the mark of
wrath and the lily is the symbol of Divine Providence. A true believer is a
blessing, a tree whose leaves heal and whose fruit feeds. A genuine Christian
is a living gospel, and embodiment of goodwill towards men.
3. The last point with regard to our relationship to the world is
that the Church and many individual Christians are called to endure singular
trials, which make them feel ¡§as the lily among thorns.¡¨ That lovely flower
seems out of place in such company, does it not? Christ said, ¡§Behold, I send
you forth as sheep among sheep¡¨--no, no, that is my mistake, ¡§as sheep among
wolves.¡¨ It is a very blessed thing to
be as sheep among sheep: to lie down with them under the shadow of the great
rock, and feed with them in green pastures under the Shepherd¡¦s eye. This is
our privilege, and we ought to value it greatly, and unite with the Church and
frequent its ordinances; but even then we shall, some of us, have to go home to
an ungodly family, or to go out into the world to win our bread, and then we
shall be as sheep among wolves. Grace struggling in loneliness is very choice
in God¡¦s esteem. If man sees thee not, O lonely believer, thou mayest
nevertheless sing. ¡§Thou God seest me.¡¨ The flower which blooms for God alone
has a special honour put upon it, and so hath the saint whose quiet life is all
for Jesus. If you are unappreciated by those around you, do not therefore be
distressed, for you are honourable in the sight of God. But why doth the Lord
put his lilies among thorns? It is because He works transformations, singular
transformations, by their means. He can make a lily grow among thorns till the
thorns grow into lilies. He can set a Christian in a godless family till first
one and then another shall feel the Divine power, and shall say, ¡§We will go
with you, for we perceive that God is with you.¡¨ Be lilies, preach by your
actions, preach by your kindness, and by your love; and I feel quite sure that
your influence will be a power for good. If the Holy Spirit helps all of you to
stand among your associates as lilies among the thorns, the day will come when
thorns will die out, and lilies will spring up on every side: sin will be
banished and grace will abound. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Christ and the believer
I. Inquire what
Christ thinks of the believer.
¡§As the lily among the thorns, so is My love among the daughters.¡¨
1. See what Christ thinks of the unconverted world. It is like a
field full of briars and thorns in His eyes.
2. See what Christ thinks of the believer. ¡§As the lily among thorns,
so is My love among the daughters.¡¨ The believer is like a lovely flower in the
eyes of Christ.
II. Inquire what
the believer thinks of Christ--¡§As the apple tree among the trees of the wood.¡¨
1. Christ is more precious than all other saviours in the eye of the
believer. As a traveller prefers an apple tree to every other tree of the wood,
because lie finds both shelter and nourishing food under it, so the believer
prefers Christ to all other saviours. Oh! there is no rest for the soul except
under that branch which God has made strong. My heart¡¦s desire and prayer for
you is, that you may all find rest there.
2. Why has the believer so high an esteem of Christ?
Verse 3
As the apple tree among the trees of the wood, so is my Beloved
among the sons.
The apple tree in the wood
The point of the metaphor is this. There are many trees of the
forest, and they all have their uses, but when one is hungry, and faint, and
thirsty, the forest trees yield no succour, and we must look elsewhere: they
yield shelter, but not refreshing nutriment. If, however, in the midst of the
wood one discovers an apple tree, he there finds the refreshment which he
needs; his thirst is alleviated, and his hunger removed. Even so the Church
here means to say that there are many things in the world which yield us a kind
of satisfaction--many men, many truths, many institutions, many earthly
comforts, but there are none which yield us the full solace which the soul
requires; none which can give to the heart the spiritual food for which it hungers;
Jesus Christ alone supplies the needs of the sons of men.
I. First, then,
our text speaks of the tree which the fainting soul most desires. Suppose you
appeal to yonder stately tree which is the greatest of them all, the king of
the forest, unequalled in greatness or girth; admire its stupendous limbs, its
gnarled roots, its bossy bark, the vast area beneath its boughs. You look up at
it and think what a puny creature you are, and how brief has been your life
compared with its duration. You try to contemplate the storms which have swept
over it, and the suns which have shone upon it. Great, however, as it is, it
cannot help you: if it were a thousand times higher, and its topmost boughs
swept the stars, yet it could minister no aid to you. This is a fit picture of
the attempt to find consolation in systems of religion which are recommended to
you because they are greatly followed. Suppose that in your wanderings to and
fro you come upon another tree which is said to be the oldest in the forest. We
all of us have a veneration for age. Antiquity has many charms. I scarcely
know, if antiquity and novelty should run a race for popular favour, which
might win. There are some things which are so old as to be rotten, worm-eaten,
and fit only to be put away. Many things called ancient are but clever
counterfeits, or wherein they are true they are but the bones and the carcases
of that which once was good when life filled it with energy and power. It may
be that in the midst of the forest, while you are hungry and thirsty, you come
upon a strangely beautiful tree: its proportions are exact, and as you gaze
upon it from a distance you exclaim, ¡§How wonderful are the works of God!¡¨ and
you begin to think of those trees of the Lord which are full of sap, the cedars
of Lebanon Which He hath planted. But beauty can never satisfy hunger, and when
a man is dying of thirst it is vain to talk to him of symmetry and taste. He
wants food. We will pursue our investigations in the forest, and while we are
doing so we shall, come upon some very wonderful trees. I have seen just lately
instances in which branches are curiously interlaced with one another; the
beech sends forth a long drooping bough, and lest it should not be able to
support itself, another bough strikes up from below to buttress it, or descends
from above and clasps it, and the boughs actually grow into one another.
Strange things may be observed in the undisturbed woods, which are not to be
seen in our hedgerow trees, or discerned in our gardens; trees have odd habits
of their own, and grow marvellously if left to their own sweet wills. I have
stood under them and said, ¡§How can this be? This is singular indeed! How could
they grow like this? What wondrous inter lacings, and intertwinings, and
gnarlings, and knottings!¡¨ Yes, but if a man were hungry and thirsty, he would
not be satisfied with curiosities. You remember when you first came to that
precious tree whereon the Saviour died, and found that your sin was blotted
out, and that you were accepted in the Beloved, and were made to be henceforth
an heir of heaven. Oh, the lusciousness of the fruit which you gathered then!
Oh, the delightful quiet of the shadow under which you sat that day; blessed be
His name! You had searched among the other trees, but you found no fruit there:
you tried to rest in the shadow of other boughs, but you never rested till on
that blood-stained tree of the cross you saw your sin put away and your
salvation secured, and then you rested and were satisfied. But the Lord Jesus
Christ has not only satisfied us as to the past, see what He has done for us as
to the present! Why, I know sick people who are far more happy in their
sickness than worldlings are in their health; and I know poor men who are
infinitely more at peace, and more contented, than rich men who have not the
Saviour. Jesus Christ alone satisfies us for the past and delights us for the
present. And then as to the future. The man who has found Christ looks forward
to it not merely with complacency, not simply without a dread, but with a
joyous expectancy and hope. Those things which make others tremble make us
glad.
II. The spouse
spoke of the tree which she most desired; the wonder was that she found it. It
was an apple tree, but it was not in a garden; a fruit tree, but not in a vineyard;
it was ¡§among the trees of the wood.¡¨ Who would know of so great a rarity as an
apple tree in a wood if he were not first told of it? So Jesus Christ at this
present day is not known to all mankind. Even in our own country you will not
find it a difficult thing to meet with persons who are totally ignorant of
Christ. Where the greatest light is, there the shadows are deepest. Men nearest
to the church are often furthest from God. You cannot easily find an apple tree
in a great forest. If you were put down in the middle of a forest and told
there was an apple tree there, you might wander for many a day before you
discovered it, and often go over your own footsteps, lost in endless mazes, but
you would not find the object of your search; and so, though there be a
Saviour, men have not found the Saviour, and there may even be souls here
present who long for that which Jesus is able to give, and yet have not
discovered Him. You know all about Him in the letter of His Word, but you
cannot find Him spiritually, and I hear you cry, ¡§Oh, that I knew where I might
find Him.¡¨ Now, is it not a strange place for an apple tree to be found in- in
a wood? We seldom hear of such a thing; an apple tree should grow in a garden.
How should it be found in a forest? And is it not a strange thing that a
Saviour should be found for us among men--not among angels? Ye shall search for
a Saviour amongst ¡§the helmed cherubim and sworded seraphim¡¨ as long as you
will, but there is none there. The Saviour is found in a manger at Bethlehem,
in a carpenter¡¦s shop at Nazareth; amongst the poor and needy is He seen while
He sojourns amongst the sons of men. Not among you, O ye cedars, not among you,
O mighty oaks, but amongst the bushes of the desert, amongst the trees accursed
was Jesus found. ¡§He made His grave with the wicked.¡¨ Now, there is some thing
very sweet about this, because a wood is the very place where we most love to
find Christ growing. If I had come the other day upon an apple tree in the
forest, and it had happened to be the time of ripe fruit, I should have felt no
compunction of conscience in taking whatsoever I was able to reach, for a tree
growing in the forest is free to all comers. Should there be a hungry one
beneath its bough, he need not say, ¡§May I?¡¨ when his mouth waters at the
golden fruit, he
need not say, ¡§It would be stealing; I am unfit to take it; I am
unworthy of it.¡¨ Man, if there be an apple tree in the forest, no man can keep
it for himself or deny your right to it, for each wanderer has a right to what
fruit he can gather. Christ has no barriers around Him to keep you from Him. If
there be any they are of your own making. Whoever shall come shall be welcome
to this priceless apple tree. There is some comfort, therefore, in thinking
that He grows among the trees Of the wood.
III. It was little
wonder that when the spouse, all hungry and faint, did come upon this apple
tree in the forest she acted as she did. Straightway she sat down under its
shadow, with great delight, and its fruit was sweet unto her taste. She looked
up at it; that was the first thing she did, and she perceived that it met her
double want. The sun was hot, there was the shadow: she was faint, there was the fruit. Now, see how Jesus
meets all the wants of all who come to Him. Is it not delightful to sit down
beneath the scarlet canopy of the Saviour¡¦s blood, and feel, ¡§God cannot
smite me: He has smitten His Son; payment He cannot demand the second time: if
Jesus suffered in my stead, how can God make me suffer again for sin? Where
were the justice of the Most High to punish an immaculate, Substitute, and then
punish men for whom that Substitute endured His wrath I This is the cool, calm,
holy shadow under which we abide. But then, the spouse also found that she
herself was thirsty, and that the fruit of the tree exactly met her case. Our
inner life wants sustenance and food; now, in the Lord Jesus is life, and the
bread of life. One thing more is to be noted: the spouse, when she had begun to
enjoy the provision and the shade, and had sat down under it as if she intended to
say, ¡§I never mean to leave this place; in this delicious shadow I mean to
repose for ever,¡¨ then she also began to tell of it to others. In the text she
describes Christ as the apple tree, and gives her reason for so calling Him--¡§I
sat down under His shadow with great delight, and His fruit was sweet to my
taste.¡¨ Experience must be the ground upon which we found our descriptions. Now, I beseech you who
have found the Saviour to be telling others what you know about Him, and try to
lead others to look at Him. You cannot make them feed upon Him, but God can,
and if you can lead them to the tree, who knows but God will give them
spiritual hunger, and will lead them to feed as you have fed. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
I sat down under His
shadow with great delight, and His fruit was sweet to my taste.
The Church¡¦s experience
I. what it is to
sit down under the shadow of Christ with great delight.
1. A shadow is not prized by men, till some heat scorch them. The
Church is here represented as faint and parched with heat. Our addresses to
Christ always begin with a sense of our own want and misery. Ease is sweet to
the burdened soul, and none seek rest in Christ to any purpose, but those that
feel the load of their own sins (Matthew 11:28).
2. That which scorcheth poor distressed souls, is a sense of God¡¦s
wrath: observe how fitly God s wrath is set forth by the scorching of the sun.
God¡¦s goodness is exceeding great and large; yet this good God hath His wrath,
which is set forth to us by the notions of a consuming fire (Hebrews 12:29), and a burning oven (Malachi 4:1). The wrath of the living God
is a dreadful thing, which consumeth and drieth up all, without recovery,
unless we get a shelter from it.
3. Scorched souls can find no shelter nor refreshing shadow among the
creatures; but only by coming to the spiritual apple tree, who is the Lord
Jesus Christ.
4. Christ is a complete and comfortable shadow, the only screen
between us and wrath. In Him alone we find refreshing, ease, and comfort.
5. Faith is necessary, that we may have the comfort of our shadow;
for we make use of Christ by faith. There are three acts of faith:
6. They meet not only with coolness, but fruit; as an apple under an
apple tree to one that sits under its shadow in a great heat.
II. What these
fruits are. They are the benefits and privileges which we have by Christ.
1. Here is fruit. Christ received of the Father the fulness of power
and of the Spirit, for the benefit of the redeemed, that He might shower down
the streams of grace
on all that repair to Him for relief and succour. Now, what these fruits are;
in the general, we may tell you, all that is worth the having; we have from
Jesus Christ: all the blessings of this present life, and of the world to come.
More particularly. There are many choice and excellent fruits which believers
receive from Him.
2. His fruits: for a threefold reason: Because purchased by Him: all
these privileges were procured for us by His blood, death, and sufferings.
3. These are sweet unto a believer¡¦s taste. Believers have a taste of
the goodness of Christ. They do experimentally find a great deal of comfort and
sweetness in Him (1 Peter 2:2-3). Christ¡¦s fruits are
very sweet to their taste, because of the suitableness of the fruit to the
prepared appetite: they have a hungry conscience, and so can sooner taste that
sweetness. A Christian hath another spirit than the spirit of this world. A
sanctified soul can taste the sweetness of spiritual things, word, sacraments,
graces, hopes. Yea, the way of obedience is sweet to them (Proverbs 3:17). It is wonderful,
comfortable, and filleth their hearts in a satisfying manner, when they can have
any experience of God¡¦s love in Christ, in the Word, or meditation, or prayer,
or sacraments (Psalms 63:6). Besides the attractive
goodness of the object, there is inclination in their own souls to it.
I. Here is an
invitation to draw us to Christ.
1. As He is a shadow. This notion is like to prevail with none but
those who are scorched with God¡¦s wrath, or loaden with the burden of sin; with
them that are either of a troubled, or of a tender conscience. They long to sit
down under His shadow indeed, and to get a taste of His pleasant fruits. Yet I
must speak to all to begin here. The fruits are neither eaten, nor the
sweetness of them felt, till we come under His shadow, and delightfully sit
under His righteousness.
2. With respect to pleasant fruit (Psalms 34:8). We entertain black thoughts
of the ways of God, as if religion were a sour thing, and there were no pleasure
and delight for those that submit to it. O taste and see I You will find enough
in Christ to spoil the gust and relish of all other pleasures.
II. Do we ever sit
down under His shadow, so as to find His fruit sweet unto our taste? You may
try your state, and discern it by your relish of spiritual things.
III. Direction to us
in our special addresses to God. The practice of the spouse is then in season.
Come and sit down under His shadow, and eat of His fruits. (T. Manton, D. D.)
Suitable improvement of Christ the Apple Tree
I. The way of
relief for poor sinners, under all scorchings to which they are exposed, is to
sit down in, and by faith to repose themselves under Christ¡¦s shadow.
1. Show what need sinners have of a shadow to cover them. The world
is turned a hot country all over to the sons of fallen Adam, witness the
spiritual blackness upon all faces (Amos 9:7). Adam¡¦s fall has changed the
temperature of the air which we breathe. God Himself, the sun of the world,
whose influences were enlightening, cheering, comforting and warming to
innocent men, is become a consuming, fire to the workers of iniquity.
2. Show how Christ became a shadow for poor stoners in this ease.
(a) He received all the scorching beams of wrath on Himself, that so
He might keep them from His people.
(b) He exhausted them. He drank the cup of wrath from the brim to the
bottom.
(c) And now through Him, the comfortable influences of Heaven are
bestowed and conveyed to those under His shadow, through Him as the channel of
conveyance.
3. Show what it is to sit down under Christ¡¦s shadow. It is the soul
fleeing to Jesus Christ for a refuge, coming unto Him on the call of the
Gospel, and receiving Him and uniting with Him by believing on His name. And
this notion of faith bears,
II. Christ¡¦s fruit
relisheth well with those who, by faith, sit down under His shadow.
1. Show some things imported in this doctrine.
2. Show what are Christ¡¦s fruits which are so sweet to the taste of
those that sit under His shadow. These are all the benefits, privileges,
graces, comforts, and fulness of the covenant, making His people happy here and
hereafter.
3. Show why Christ¡¦s fruit relisheth so well with those who by faith
do partake of it.
His fruit was sweet to my
taste.--
The fruitfulness of Christ
The fruit borne by Christ, the Tree of Life, the Living
Vine, ¡§the Apple Tree among the trees of the wood,¡¨ may be regarded under three
aspects, relating to His character, work, influence.
I. Character. The
Lord Jesus possesses excellence in Himself, apart from the relation in which He
stands to us. His own personal nature preceded and qualified Him for His entire
mediatorial work. The manifestation of this excellence shone forth in His earthly
life. Words, acts, miracles were but the outward exhibitions of what He was
within. He was hidden, concealed from earthly gaze, visible only to His Father.
As seen thus, however, He was spotless, and Divine Omniscience declared itself
¡§well pleased¡¨ with Him. The soul of Christ, that human spirit, which, in its
powers and faculties, was like ours, and which became ¡§an offering for sin,¡¨
was most holy. And His life! this was the embodiment of His pure spirit, its
outward working, the channel through which its sympathies flowed out upon the
world around. How perfect this; recollect it was life like ours; in the same
world, subject to the same laws, physical and mental, as our own. It was far
less favour ably circumstanced than ours. It was the first of its kind; there
was no previous example for Christ to imitate, no perfect model to copy. It was
also surrounded by sin. It was without sympathy too. The ¡§loneliness of Christ¡¨
in these respects was most painful, and itself a test of virtue. That virtue had
no external support from custom, habit, friendly countenance. Not only Scribes
and Pharisees sought to ensnare, entangle, and catch Him in His talk, the
prince of the world came. And how He did resist! What conflict in doing this He
had to pass through, how sorely He was tried, what strong ¡§crying and tears¡¨
were wrung from His mighty spirit,--is what none of us can know; but He did
resist all; and spite of all there shone forth a character the most radiant
earth has ever exhibited, and one which now fills heaven with light and lustre
superior to all else which it contains.
II. Work. One of
the names by which prophecy foretold the Messiah was ¡§Emmanuel, God with us.¡¨
One of the expressions by which the apostle declares the purport of His work,
is in the corresponding sentiment, ¡§He was made sin for us.¡¨ What tongue can
express, what imagination conceive, the grandeur of this work I It spans
eternity, past and to come. It rescues humanity, and makes it Godlike. Nothing
nobler, grander, purer, has been devised, even by God Himself. It is His chief
work, His masterpiece, His last and greatest conception; and of it all, Christ
is ¡§the Alpha and Omega, the beginning, the ending, the first and the last.¡¨ It
is His operation, His fruit, that which here we may find most delectable, which
through eternity we shall feast upon and find sweet to our taste.
III. Influence. By
this I mean not so much what the Saviour is in Himself, nor what He is for us,
though there is influence from both, as the power which He exerts upon us. How
vast the influence the Saviour has been ever exerting in our world! Kings,
emperors, dynasties, mighty forms of government, have risen and decayed,
apparently subject only to natural laws of progress and dissolution. The
Saviour has been guiding all. They have been His servants; and although they
thought not so, nor did their hearts mean so, He has by them been working out
His purposes, and using them as His agents. While His general influence has
thus been exerted on the world, its choicest modes of operation have been
reserved for the Church. What streams of Divine influence, like waters from a
fountain, or beams from the sun, have ever been flowing from Christ. As there
is no diminution in the sun¡¦s power though it has been pouring forth its radiance
for six thousand years; as the ocean is to-day as mighty as ever, though it has
been ever diffusing freshness and health, so, and far more certainly, is there
no diminution in Christ. (J. Viney, D. D.)
Verse 4
He brought me to the banqueting house, and His banner over me was
love.
The Christian¡¦s position of privilege
It is a great thing to be a Christian. It is a great thing in view
of the personal change wrought in him who sustains this character. He was once
lost, he now is found. It is a great thing, too, in view of the change which it
brings over a man¡¦s relations to others, as well as that which it produces in
his personal character. Once he lived for time, now he lives for
eternity. Once he served Satan, now he serves God. Once, if his earthly
possessions had been wrested from him he would have exclaimed, ¡§Ye have taken
away my gods, and what is there more?¡¨--now, with St. Paul, he can endure the
loss of all things, and account it a gain, that he may win Christ and be found
in Him. Once the grave bounded all his prospects, and death was dreaded as the
extinguisher of all his hopes; now he can look death calmly in the face, and go
down to the grave with a hope full of immortality.
I. The action, of
which all the Christian¡¦s experience of his privilege is raised. ¡§He brought
me.¡¨ The agent referred to is God our Saviour. Salvation, in all its effectual
influences, be longs to Him. Each truly converted soul, when telling how it was
led to Christ, will feel constrained to look up to God with adoring gratitude
and say, ¡§He brought me.¡¨ ¡§He brought me, by Divine foreknowledge and sovereign
choice, before the foundations of the world were laid. ¡§He brought me¡¨ through
His Spirit, working with me in due season, to make His own call effectual. ¡§He
brought me¡¨ by ordering and controlling all the outward circumstances of my
condition so as to favour this blessed result of His purpose. ¡§He brought me¡¨
by His preventing grace so working in my soul, that I should have a desire to
know and love Him, and then, co-operating with that desire, in such a way as to
bring it to good effect. ¡§He brought me¡¨ by sweetly subduing my stubborn
will,--taking away all the natural enmity of my heart to Him, and sending the
sprat of adoption into my soul whereby I cry Abba Father.
II. The position in
which this experience is realized. ¡§He brought me into the banqueting
house.¡¨ There are two ideas which we seem naturally to associate with the thought
of a monarch¡¦s banqueting house.
1. It is a place where choice delicacies may be expected. It is not
common fare, which the ,guests admitted to such a place look for. The richest
and the rarest things that wealth can purchase, or skill prepare, are provided
for such a banqueting hall. The products of every clime, the luxuries of every
land are put in requisition there. And these are but faint figures of those
spiritual good things with which Jesus regales the souls of His people in the
banquet house of salvation.
2. It is a place where special favours are dispensed, and
confidential communications made; and, on this account too, the language of the
text applies to the believer¡¦s condition of privilege in Christ. The treasury
of heaven is put at the disposal of the believer in Jesus. He is fully assured
that ¡§God will supply all his need from the riches of His grace in Christ.¡¨
III. The
circumstances of the believer in occupying this position. ¡§His banner over me
was love.¡¨
1. When a prince, a governor, or monarch unfurls his banner over a
fortress or citadel, he means thereby to declare his determination to protect
that place. As that flag waves in the breeze, it proclaims significantly, that
all the power and resources of him whom it represents are pledged for the
defence and safeguard of that fortress. And this is what Jesus means when He
unfurls His banner of love over the believing soul. All the resources of
omnipotence--all the perfections of an infinite God are enlisted for the safety
of that soul.
2. The material of a banner, and the mottoes, or emblems upon it, are
expressive of the thoughts and intentions of Him whom the banner represents. A
white banner bespeaks a desire for peace. A red flag shows a determination to
shed blood; a black flag is the signal that no quarter is to be expected. And
then the military nations of the earth, whose lust has been for war and
conquest, have generally adopted emblems expressive of their character. Thus
the eagle was the emblem Imperial Rome bore on her conquering standards. But
the Captain of our salvation has a banner woven out of the precious fabric of
love, and the dove is the symbol which that banner bears. His thoughts towards
His people are thoughts of peace; and love, unspeakable, everlasting, and past
finding out, runs through all His purposes concerning them.
3. The banner of his country is to the true patriot an object of
honourable regard, and of intense affection. And so, while the wise man glories
in his wisdom, the rich man in his riches, and the mighty man in his might, the
language of the Christian is: ¡§God forbid that I should glory, save in the
Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ.¡¨ (R. Newton, D. D.)
Christ¡¦s banqueting house for His spouse
1. Jesus Christ hath from the beginning of the world entertained His
Church with various dispensations of providence, and doth so entertain every
true believing soul.
2. Though all these dispensations be proper means in relation to the
great end of the soul¡¦s salvation, and profitable to the Church and the soul in
reference to that end; yet, some are more sweet and pleasant than others, and
so more fitly compared to Christ¡¦s banquet.
3. The dispensation of the Gospel to the Church in general, and the
enlightening, quickening, strengthening, consolatory influences of the Spirit
of grace to patient souls, may be fitly compared to a banqueting, house or to a
house of wine.
4. As Christ did of old entertain some of His people s souls, under
the darker dispensations of the covenant of grace, with these refreshing dispensations,
which were like a banquet of wine to them; so under the latter and more full
dispensation of the Gospel, He doth still entertain some of His people¡¦s souls
with these gladdening dispensations.
5. It is Christ, and Christ alone, that can bring the soul into the
house of wine. (John Collinges, D. D.)
His banner over me was
love.
How Christ¡¦s banner over a believing soul is love
1. The love of Christ is that which distinguishes the soul of a
believer front another soul, and the Church of God from other companies.
2. The exalting of Christ¡¦s love directs and invites every soul
whither to go (John 3:14-15; John 12:32).
3. The Church of God and the believing soul should move as the love
of God doth guide them. All our actions are of no worth that flow not from this
principle.
4. The love of Christ is that which unites the Churches of God and
particular believers both unto Christ and unto one another.
5. The love of Christ is a sign of His protection to His people.
6. The love of Christ displayed to the world signifies His victory
over His enemies, yea and the Church¡¦s, and every true believing soul¡¦s
victory.
7. The love of Christ to His people is that which should make His
Church and true believers terrible to all His and their enemies. (John
Collinges, D. D.)
Christ¡¦s banner over His Church
1. The use of banners, standards, or ensigns, is to gather and keep persons
together: thus Christ Himself was lifted up on the cross, and is now lifted up
in the Gospel, as an ensign to gather souls unto Him: and so His love, being
displayed in the preaching of the Gospel, has a power and efficacy in it to
draw souls after Him; for as a fruit and effect of everlasting love, ¡§with
loving kindness He draws them: and in the same way and manner Christ here drew
the Church unto Himself and held her fast; and constrained her to keep close to
Him, and follow hard after Him; see 2 Corinthians 5:14.
2. A banner displayed, or a standard set up, is an indication of war;
it is to prepare for it and to animate to it (Jeremiah 51:12; Jeremiah 51:27), the Church of Christ
here on earth is militant, and therefore in Song of Solomon 6:4, is represented as
formidable and terrible as an army with banners: she has many enemies to engage
with, as sin, Satan, and the world, and yet has the greatest encouragement to
fight, for she is bannered under the Lord of hosts.
3. A banner displayed is also a sign of victory; sometimes when a
town, city, or castle is taken, the flag is hung out as an indication of it;
see Jeremiah 50:2. Christ has gotten the
victory over all His and our enemies.
4. A banner is for protection and defence; hence Moses built an
altar, and called it Jehovah nissi, that is, The Lord is my banner; because the
Lord had been on the side of him and the people of Israel, and defended them
from the Amalekites.
5. It is to direct soldiers where to stand, when to march, and whom
to follow; see Numbers 1:52; Numbers 2:2, which may teach us, who are
enlisted in Christ¡¦s service, not to fly from our colours, but adhere closely
to Christ and His Gospel, His cause and interest, His Church and people, and to
follow Him, the Standard-bearer, wherever He goes; and nothing can more
strongly engage us to do so than love, which is the motto of His banner; this
first drew us to Him, this animates us in His service, and keeps us close to
His person and interest.
6. It is to distinguish one band from another (Numbers 2:2). As one band has one motto
upon its banner or ensign, by which it is distinguished from another, so the
motto on Christ¡¦s banner is ¡§love,¡¨ by which His band or company is distinguished
from all others. The allusion may be to the names of generals being inscribed
on the banners of their armies; so Vespasian¡¦s name was inscribed on the
banners throughout his armies. (John Gill, D. D.)
Verse 5
Comfort me with apples.
An apple
The term ¡§apple¡¨ is a conventional one. By the ancients it was
applied indiscriminately to every round fleshy fruit. We require to take into
account this extended application of the term, in order to understand the
metaphorical allusions to the apple in ancient poetry, classical and oriental.
The ¡§apple¡¦ occurs several times in the Bible, but there is abundant reason to
believe that it is in almost every case a mistranslation of a word which should
have been rendered citron, orange, or quince. The East is not the true home of
the apple. It is essentially a Western fruit, the product of the cooler air and
moister skies of the north temperate zone. The wild crab-apple, from which all
the cultivated varieties have sprung, is a native of most of the countries of
Europe; and the development of the fruit has engaged the attention of their
inhabitants as far back as we can trace. The tree does not grow wild in the
East as it does in our hedges and woodlands, and the ancient Jews were
altogether ignorant of apples such as we know them. The apple is appropriately
associated by popular tradition with the paradisiacal condition of man, for it
belongs to an order of plants that was introduced into the world about the
human period. Nature in former epochs had run into rank, luxuriant foliage, but
she blossomed and fruited when man came upon the scene. There is a profound
relation between the efflorescence of the earth and that of the human soul. The
fullest significance of flowers and fruits can only be seen in the life of man,
for the illustration of which they furnish innumerable expressive images and
analogies. The apple belongs not only to the latest, but also to the highest
order of plants. This order is the Rosaceoe, which for beauty of colour,
grace of form, perfection of structure, and great and manifold utility, takes
precedence of all others. Looking at an apple from a morphological point of
view, we find that it is an arrested branch. Instead of going on to develop
more wood and foliage, a branch terminates in an apple; and in this apple the
sap and substance that would have prolonged the branch are concentrated, and
hence its enlarged size and capability of expansion. Looking upon an apple thus
as an arrested branch, the branch giving up its own individual life in order
that the species may he perpetuated by means of blossom, and fruit, and seed,
we behold in it, as in a glass, a very striking natural example of the law of self-sacrifice;
that law which pervades all nature, and upon which the welfare and stability of
nature depend. And it is a most interesting circumstance, that it is in this
self-sacrifice of the plant that all its beauty comes out and culminates. The
blossom and fruit in which it gives its own life for another life that is to
spring from it are the loveliest of all its parts. God crowns this self-denial
and blessing of others with all the glory of colour, and grace of form, and
sweetness of perfume, and richness of flavour. The flesh of the apple, it may
be remarked, has no purpose to serve in the economy of the plant itself. It is
merely an excretion of the plant, produced in large measure by cultivation. And
surely this capability of developing flesh which certain fruits possess in
relation to the wants of man is one of the most interesting subjects of
thought. In this respect man is a fellow-worker with God, in dressing and
keeping the great garden of nature so that there shall be trees in it good for
food and pleasant to the taste. The nature bound fast in fate has been made
fluent by the freedom of the human will; and all the hints and outlines
suggested by her roots, and fruits, and flowers are worked out and filled in by
man in the exercise of this wondrous Divine gift. Passing strange is it that
through this same freedom of will, he should, in the higher moral region,
instead of being a fellow-worker with God, be less true to his proper end and
destiny than the beasts that perish to their several instincts. Why is an apple
round? The circular shape is that in which forces and substances are most
perfectly balanced--in which there is the greatest economy of material, and the
greatest resistance to external circumstances. It is the most stable of all
forms, and therefore, characteristic of bodies in repose. The whole heavens and
the whole earth are continually aiming at the spherical form; and they fall to
reach or retain it because of their want of repose, insisting upon a
shortcoming or departure from the spherical. Thus the apple becomes to us a
very significant object, when we see in its round form a striking illustration
of the same law that is shaping the earth around us, and the heavens above us,
and the heart within us. The skin or rind which hems in the apple, and by
limiting completes and individualizes it, is also a most significant feature.
It varies in thickness, smoothness, quality of texture, and colour in different
varieties of apple; but in all it may be said to pass through the different stages
of leaf and flower like the plant that bears it. Wonderful is the ministry of
the green skin of plants. It changes inorganic into organic matter, and thus
furnishes the starting-point of all life. Nowhere else on the face of
the earth does this most important process take place. Everything else consumes
and destroys; the green skin of plants alone creates and conserves. It is the
mediator between the world of death and the world of life. Hence the
significance of the green colour which appears so vividly in all young growing
plants. We thus see that the little globe of the apple is a microcosm,
representing within its miniature sphere the changes and processes which go on
in the great world. Life and death, growth and decay, fight their battle on its
humble stage. Fermentation and putrefaction, the two great processes under
whose familiarity are hid some of the greatest wonders of the physical world,
take place within it. It exhibits the characteristics of the vegetable, animal,
and mineral kingdoms; it creates organic matter, and it consumes it; and in its
motion within its little orbit, from its formation on the bough in summer to
its fall to the ground in autumn, it illustrates the action of the mighty laws
which bind the universe together. Our greatest philosopher, by his sublime
theory of gravitation, connected it with the stars of heaven; and to avery
thoughtful mind it suggests far-reaching ideas which shed light upon the
mysteries of ore¡¨ own world. (H. Macmillan, D. D.)
By the roes, and by the hinds of the field.
The roes and the hinds
The spouse was in the full enjoyment of fellowship with her
Beloved. Her joy was so great as almost to overpower her, and yet, so nearly
does fear tread upon the heels of joy, she was filled with dread lest her bliss
should come to an end. She feared lest others should disturb her Lord, for if
He were grieved she would be grieved also, and if He departed the banquet of her
delight would be over. She was afraid even of her friends, the daughters of
Jerusalem; she knew that the best can interrupt fellowship as well as the
worst, and therefore she adjured even Zion¡¦s daughters not to sin against
Zion¡¦s King. The adjuration which she used is a choice specimen of oriental
poetry: she charges them, not as we should prosaically do, by everything that
is sacred, and true, but ¡§by the roes, and by the hinds of the field.¡¨
I. The toes and
the hinds of the field are creatures of great beauty. Who can gaze upon them as they wander among the
bracken without an inward admiration? Now, since nothing can be more lovely
than communion with Jesus, the spouse exhorts the daughters of Jerusalem by all
the loveliest objects in nature to refrain from disturbing it. A soul in
converse with its God is the admiration of angels. Was ever a lovelier sight
seen than Jesus at the table with the beloved disciple leaning on His bosom? Is
not Mary sitting at the Master¡¦s feet a picture worthy of the choicest art? Do
nothing, then, O ye who joy in things of beauty, to mar the fellowship in which
the rarest beauty dwells. Neither by worldly care,, nor sin, nor trifling make
even the slighest stir which might break the Beloved s repose.
II. The next
thought suggested ¡§by the roes, and by the hinds of the field¡¨ is that of
tender innocence. These gentle creatures are so harmless, so defenceless, so
timid, that he must have a soulless soul who would do them harm or cause them
fright. By all, then, that is tender
the spouse beseeches her friends not to disturb her Beloved. He is so good, so
kind, so holy, harmless, and undefiled, that the most indifferent ought to be
ashamed to molest His rest. In fellowship with Jesus there is a tenderness
which ought to disarm all opposition, and even command respectful deference. A
soul communing with the Son of God challenges no enmity. The world may rise
against proselyting zeal, or defiant controversy, or ostentatious
ceremonialism, for these have prominence and power, and are fair game for
martial spirits: but fellowship is quiet, retiring, unobtrusive, harmless. The
saints who most abound in it are of a tender spirit, fearful to offend,
non-resistant, and patient--surely it would be a superfluity of cruelty to wish
to deprive them of their unselfish happiness, which deprives no heart of a drop
of pleasure, and costs no eye a tear.
III. A third thought
most certainly had place in the mind of the anxious spouse; she meant to adjure
and persuade her friends to silence by everything which sets forth love. The
lilies and the roes have always been sacred to love. If you love, or are loved,
or wish to be loved, have a reverent regard for those who commune with Jesus,
for their souls take their fill of love, and to drive them from their bliss
would be inexcusable barbarity. O ye who have any hearts to feel for others, do
not cause the bitterest of sorrow by depriving a sanctified soul of the
sweetest of delights. Draw not nigh hither with idle tale, or wanton speech, or
empty mirth: the place whereon thou standest is holy ground, for surely God is
in that place where a heart enamoured of the altogether Lovely One delights
itself in the Lord.
IV. Once more, upon
the very surface of the figure lies the idea of delicate sensitiveness. The roes
and the hinds of the field are soon away if anything occurs to disturb them. In
this respect they set forth to the life the speediness with which the Beloved
departs when He is annoyed by sin. The Lord our God is a jealous God. In
proportion to the fire of love is the heat of jealousy, and therefore our Lord
Jesus will not brook a wandering affliction in those greatly beloved ones to
whom He manifests Himself. It needs constant watchfulness to maintain constant
fellowship. If we would be favoured above others we must be more on our guard
than others are. He who becomes ¡§a man greatly beloved¡¨ must needs keep his
heart with sevenfold diligence, for to whom much is given of him much will be
required. (G. H. Spurgeon.)
The voice of my Beloved.
The voice of the Beloved
I. When
Christ is away from the soul of the believer, he sits alone. Whatever he the
mountains of Bether that have come between his soul and Christ--whether he hath
been seduced into his old sins that ¡§his iniquities have separated again
between him and his God, and his sins have hid his face from Him, that He will
not hear ¡§for whether the Saviour hath withdrawn for a season the comfortable
light of His presence for the mere trial of His servant¡¦s faith, to see if,
when he ¡§walketh in darkness and hath no light, he will still trust in the name
of the Lord, and stay himself upon his God¡¨--whatever the mountains of
separation be, it is the sure mark of the believer that he sits desolate and
alone. He cannot laugh away his heavy care, as worldly men can do. He cannot
drown it in the bowl of intemperance, as poor blinded men can do. Even the
innocent intercourse of human friendship brings no balm to his wound--nay, even
fellowship with the children of God is now distasteful to his soul.
II. Christ¡¦s
coming to the desolate believer is often sudden and wonderful. Some text of the
Word, or some word from a Christian friend, or some part of a sermon, again
reveals Jesus in all His fulness--the Saviour of sinners, even the chief. Or it
may be that He makes Himself known to the disconsolate soul in the breaking of
bread, and when He speaks the gentle words--¡§This is My body broken for you;
this cup is the New Testament in My blood shed for the remission of the sins of
many; drink ye all of it¡¨--then he cannot but cry out, ¡§The voice of my
Beloved! behold, He cometh leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the
hills.¡¨
III. Christ¡¦s
coming changes all things to the believer, and His love is more tender than
ever. The world of nature is all changed. Instead of the thorn comes up the fir
tree, and instead of the brier comes up the myrtle tree. Every tree and field
possesses a new beauty to the happy soul. The world of grace is all changed.
The Bible was all dry and meaningless before; now, what a flood of light is
poured over its pages! how full, how fresh, how rich in meaning, how its
simplest phrases touch the heart! The house of prayer was all sad and dreary
before--its services were dry and unsatisfactory; but now, when the believer
sees the Saviour, as he hath seen Him heretofore within His holy place, his cry
is,-¡¨How amiable are Thy tabernacles, O Lord of Hosts, etc.¡¨ The garden of the
Lord was all sad and cheerless before; now tenderness towards the unconverted
springs up afresh, and love to the people of God burns in the bosom--then they
that fear the Lord speak often one to another. The time of singing the praises
of Jesus is come, and the turtle voice of love to Jesus is once more heard in
the land; the Lord¡¦s vine flourishes, and the pomegranate buds, and Christ¡¦s
voice to the soul is, ¡§Arise, My love, My fair one, and come away.¡¨
IV. Observe
the threefold disposition of fear, love, and hope, which this visit of the
Saviour stirs up in the believer¡¦s bosom. These three form, as it were, a cord
in the restored believer¡¦s bosom, and a threefold cord is not easily broken. (R.
M. McCheyne.)
Behold, He
cometh, leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills.
The mountains of Judah
One of the most striking
features of this book of Solomon¡¦s Song is that of liveliness. We find the
Church here represented in the liveliness of her affections to Christ, to God;
we here see the Saviour in the liveliness of His love, and of His activities
towards the Church; and so He is represented as a roe, or as a young hart,
expressive of freedom and activity.
I. The
mountains, the hills of impediment which the saviour overcomes. I will here
take the Saviour leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills, to denote
with what triumph and with what certainty He enables all His people to overcome
all their troubles.
II. Take
the mountains and the hills to denote the eternal truths of the Gospel, as
spoken of in this book,--the mountains of eternity. ¡§The voice of my Beloved!
behold, He cometh leaping upon the mountains, skipping upon the hills,¡¨ of
division. There is God¡¦s everlasting love to Jacob in contradistinction to
Esau; God¡¦s everlasting love to His own, in contradistinction to the others;
and Christ glorified in that mountain of division. There is God¡¦s eternal
election, and Christ gloried in the same, and commands His disciples to rejoice
that their names are written in heaven. There is His eternal achievement by
which He hath redeemed His people, and distinguished them from all others by
that eternal redemption, for none but the redeemed can learn that song that the
redeemed sing. ¡§The mountains of division.¡¨ Then comes regeneration; that
brings His people up to Mount Zion--mountain of division. Then comes
resurrection to life; then comes glorification. Here is a range of mountains
ranging from eternity to eternity. (J. Wells.)
An absent Christ yet
beloved
1. An
absent Christ is yet a beloved Christ to His true Church, and to the truly
believing soul.
2. The
spouse of Christ will know her Beloved¡¦s voice, though He hath a while been
absent.
3. The
spouse of Christ will greatly rejoice to hear her Beloved¡¦s voice, especially
after a time of absenting Himself.
4. Though
Christ may withdraw, and absent Himself from His Church, and from the souls of
His people, yet He will come.
5. When
He comes, He will come skipping upon the mountains and leaping upon the hills,
openly and hastily, and trampling all difficulties and impediments under His
feet.
6. The
Church, and the true members of it, will by the eye of faith discern Christ
coming, skipping upon the mountains. (John Collinges, D. D.)
Christ¡¦s coming to His
spouse to be beheld
Believing souls in the
time of His withdrawing from them may and ought to behold Him again returning
to them.
I. Christ¡¦s
return to His spouse after an absence may be beheld by a believer.
II. A
believer may behold Christ¡¦s coming, in many sure and faithful promises.
III. The
believer sees Him coming in the sure words of prophecy.
IV. His
coming may be beheld in the steps of His providence.
(a) Plenty
of seducers (Matthew
24:4).
(b) Great
commotions in the world, and other judgments of God.
(c) Abounding
of iniquity and decay of religion.
(d) Great
security of sinners.
(e) Alterations
in the course of nature. (John Collinges, D. D.)
Lessons of the Spring
Whatever these words may
or may not mean in any deep, spiritual sense, they may at least be applied to
the Spring-time and the Summer.
I. As we
feel the influences of the growing spring, they suggest to us the idea of
order. By the end of the Winter we are apt to feel as if we had the end of all
inanimate nature. But the first buds of Spring bring to mind the order of
nature more vividly than such frequent changes as the succession of day and
night, which become so familiar that we fail to mark their lessons.
II. Spring
impresses us with the manifestation of power. It returns with a great
manifestation of force. Who can compute the aggregate weight now lifting in the
vegetable creation all over this land, in ten thousand times ten thousand
billions and billions of plants, from the tiny grass-blade to the giant oak?
There is a moral aspect here also. The power which wields this force is on the
side of righteousness. It is the same as that which rules the hearts of men,
and makes their lives and actions to praise God, and bring about His will on
earth.
III. The
incoming spring delights us with its exhibition of progressiveness. I watch a
tree opposite my dwelling with ever-increasing interest. This tree in Winter
seemed dead, until as Spring approached a single bud peeped forth. After
neglecting to look for a few days I was yesterday surprised to see it clothed
in every branch with leaves. Ah, what progressiveness! The kingdom of Spring
¡§cometh not by observation.¡¨ So with the ¡§kingdom of God¡¨--the kingdom of
goodness in the earth. Has Christianity made no advance? Compare to-day with yesterday,
and, as in a tree, we see but little change. But think of the treatment of the
insane, or of prisoners, now, and even so lately as only fifty years ago! Is
there no advance there? Compare the pictures drawn by writers of the former day
with what we now take as a matter of course, and we seem to be living in almost
a new world. The function of Christianity in the world is the bettering of men
in physical, moral, and spiritual progress; and the work, though gradual, is
sure. Therefore learn this lesson: Be patient! You cannot take the bellows of
the sky and blow the heat of heaven into greater intensity, to hasten God¡¦s
work in nature or in grace. Be patient, as God is patient. His policy is
broadly progressive. In means of Gospel privilege God¡¦s kingdom grows as under
glass; but in heathen lands the progress is more slow--yet none the less sure.
God¡¦s will shall triumph in the end. He can afford to wait, and we should
follow His example.
IV. We
learn from the spring the hope of recovery. The Springtime is a recovering. So
with grace. Salvation is a recovering--not only a setting up of something new. There was once a golden
age for the race, but we have descended to an iron age; nay, even to an age of
clay, and broken, clay at that. But there is a good day coming, when the earth
shall be filled with more than its original blessedness. This blessedness is
through Christ, in whom alone trusting you may surely find eternal life. (L.
D. Bevan, D. D.)
Verses 10-13
Rise up, my
love, my fair one, and come away. For, lo, the winter is past, the rain is over
and gone.
A Sermon for Spring
The works of creation are
pictures to the children of God of the secret mysteries of grace. The very
seasons of the year find their parallel in the little world of man within. Each
particular season has its duty. The husbandman finds that there is a time to
plough, a time to sow, a time to reap; there is a season for vintage, and a
period for the pruning of the vine; there is a month for the planting of herbs,
and for the ingathering of seeds. To everything there is a time and a purpose,
and every season has its special labour. It seems from the text, that whenever
it is springtime in our hearts, then Christ¡¦s voice may be heard saying,
¡§Arise, my love, my fair one, and come away.¡¨ Whenever we have been delivered
from a dreary winter of temptation or affliction, or tribulation,--whenever the
fair spring of hope cometh upon us, and our joys begin to multiply, then we
should hear the Master bidding us seek after something higher and better, and
we should go forth in His strength to love Him more, and serve Him more
diligently than aforetime.
I. First,
with regard to the Universal Church of Christ. The history of Christ¡¦s Church
is a varied year of many seasons. She has had her high and noble processions of
victory; she has had her sorrowful congregations of mourners during times of
disaster and apparent defeat. Commencing with the life of Christ, what a
smiling spring it was for the world when the Holy Spirit was poured out in Pentecost.
The bride arose, charmed by the heavenly voice of her spouse, she girt on
her beautiful garments and for some hundred years or more, she did come away;
she came away from her narrowness of spirit, and she preached to the Gentiles the unsearchable
riches of Christ: she came away from her attachment to the State, and she dared
to confess that Christ¡¦s kingdom was not of this world: she came away from her
earthly hopes and comforts, for ¡§they counted not their lives dear unto them
that they might win Christ and be found in Him: ¡§ she came away from all ease
and rest of body, for they laboured more and more abundantly, making themselves
sacrifices for Christ. Alas, alas, that season passed away, the Church grew
dull and sleepy; she left her Lord, she turned aside, she leaned upon an arm of flesh, courting the
endowments of earthly kingdoms, then there came a long and dreary winter, the
dark ages of the world, the darker ages of the Church. At last the time of love
returned, when God again visited His people and raised up for them new apostles, new
martyrs, new confessors. The time of Luther and Calvin, and Melanchthon, and of
Knox was come--heaven¡¦s sunny days when once again the frost should give way to
approaching summer. Then it was that men could say once again, ¡§The winter is
passed,¡¨ priestcraft has lost its power, the rain is over and gone; false
doctrines shall no more be as tempests to the Church; the flowers appear on the
earth--little Churches; plants of God¡¦s right hand planting, are springing up
everywhere. Oh I would to God that the Church could then have heard her
Master¡¦s voice, ¡§Rise up my love, my fair one, and come away.¡¨ And now,
brethren, in these days we have had another season of refreshing. God has been
pleased to pour out His Spirit upon men again. He speaks to each denomination
according to its need, but to the same import, ¡§Rise up and come away; leave
deadness and coldness and wrong-doing and hardness and harshness, and
bitterness of spirit; leave idleness and slothfulness and lukewarmness; rise up
and come away. Come away to preach the Gospel amongst the heathen; come away to
reform the masses of this wicked city; come away from your little heartedness;
from your coldness of spirit, come away: the land is before you; go up and
possess it.¡¨
II. Methinks
the text has a very special voice to us as a Church. We must use the Scripture
widely, but yet personally. While we know its reference to the universal
Church, we must not forget its special application to ourselves. We, too, have
had a season of refreshing from the presence of the Lord. A glad period of
abundant increase in which there has been as many converts as we could receive,
till every officer of the Church has had his hands full in seeing enquirers,
and we have only had time to stop now and then and take breath, and say,. ¡§What
hath God wrought?¡¨ Well, what ought we to do? I hear the Master saying, ¡§Rise
up, my love, my fair one, and come away.¡¨ I hear Jesus speaking to this Church,
and saying, ¡§Where much is given, there much shall be required. Serve not the
Lord as other Churches, but yet more abundantly.¡¨
III. Whey
the time of the bridal of the soul has arrived to each convinced sinner, they
also there are special duties. Young convert, young believer, in the dawn of
thy piety, Jesus says, ¡§Rise up, my love, my fair one, and come away.¡¨ He asks
thee to come out from the world and make a profession of thy faith in Him now:
put it not off; it is the best time to profess thy faith whilst thou art young,
while as yet to thee the days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou
shalt say, ¡§I have no pleasure in them.¡¨ Make haste and delay not to keep His
commandments. Arise, and be baptized, Come ye out from among the world, be ye
separate, and touch not the unclean thing; follow Christ in this perverse
generation, ¡§that you may hear Him say at the last, Of you I am not ashamed,
for you were not ashamed of Me in the day when I was despised and rejected of
men.¡¨ In this your early time, dedicate yourselves to God.
IV. It
may be that you and I have had winters of dark trouble, succeeded by soft
springs of deliverance. How have we our assurance back again; and Christ is
near to us, and we have fellowship with the Father, and with His Son Jesus
Christ. Well, then, what are we to do? Why, the Master says to us, ¡§Rise up,
and come away.¡¨ Now is the time when we should mount up to be nearer to
Himself. Now that the day dawns and the shadows flee away, let us seek our
beloved amid the bed of spices, and by the lilies where he feeds. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Spring
should remind us of--
I. The
introduction of the Gospel dispensation.
1. The
Jewish dispensation may fitly be compared to winter.
2. The
opening of the Gospel dispensation resembled the advent of spring. It was
caused by the rising of the Sun of Righteousness.
II. Times
of refreshing from the presence of the Lord.
1. Seasons
of awakening in the experience of individuals.
2. Seasons
of reformation in the history of the Church.
III. The
glorious resurrection of the saints, and the full realization of the Kingdom of
God and Christ. (Evangelical Preacher.)
A Spring Sermon
I. Some
of the natural characteristics of spring.
1. Life
will be felt to be a predominant feature. The sap is rising, with its
quickening energies, through every plant and tree. The buds are opening with
the elasticity and glow of life. From the nests of birds are issuing the first
quivering strains of the young feathered host whose liquid music shall soon be
heard rippling through all the woods: ¡§the time of the singing of birds is
come.¡¨ But amongst men death is still to be seen in dark contrast. There is
bodily death; the passing hell is tolling through all these spring days. There
is mental death, where ignorance, blind prejudice, and superstition prevail.
And, worst of all, there is spiritual death. Men are ¡§dead in trespasses and
sins.¡¨ To such the cry comes, ¡§Awake, thou that sleepest.¡¨
2. Beauty
shines forth in spring. We see it in unfallen blossoms and opening flowers, in
the many hues of early foliage that soften and relieve each other, in the
cloud-dappled sky and its moving shadows on the earth, and in the fresh clear
landscape that looks as though the rain of winter and the sun of summer had
combined to clothe it with rainbow radiance.
3. Beauty
consists in due proportions being maintained between each part and the perfect
harmonizing of them as a whole. Does your soul present this picture of
spiritual beauty, or is it deformed and distorted by alienation from God?
Spring proffers health and strength. The sick yearn for its balmy breath. It
ministers additional vigour to the robust. But how does it find you--weakly yielding
to besetting sins, victims of vices that will hurry you to the gates of hell,
poor, hapless slaves of Satan, crying out, ¡§Who will deliver me from this body
of death?¡¨ Oh! to you thus groaning in impotence and sin comes a reviving
strength in the beams of the Sun of Righteousness.
4. Joy
and gladness distinguish the spring-time. The winds laugh as they play through
the bowing trees. The leaves rustle as though the feet of fairy dancers were
pattering on them. A chorus of joy rolls up to the clouds from ¡§a thousand
voices full and sweet.¡¨ Is your heart glad too? Accept the offer of mercy that
is made now by Christ, who cries: ¡§Come unto Me, all ye that labour and are
heavy laden, and I will give you rest.
5. We
are impressed at this season with the proofs of riches and wealth that are
manifest around. ¡§Thou crownest the year with Thy goodness, and Thy paths drop
fatness¡¨ But yet with all this external plenty there may be leanness in the
soul. The spirit may be poverty-stricken, starving, because it refuses to be
fed by the hand of God, preferring the husks of this world to the corn that may
be eaten in the Father¡¦s house.
6. Lastly,
we notice youth and promise as characteristics of spring. We look forward to a
further development of what we see. The green blades of wheat shall become
golden stalks of corn. The blushing blossoms shall give place to ripe mellow
fruit. Nature is but young. It has yet to glow with maturity and to droop with
age. The dew must glisten through many mornings and the sun must shine through
many moons ere the moaning winds of autumn sweep the leaves to their graves.
Some of you are in the spring of life. You are hopeful, and afford promise of
great things. But are you beginning life ¡§looking unto Jesus,¡¨ as your Saviour
and example--seeking to grow up into the perfect stature of man in Christ
Jesus? If you are not yours will be an aimless, fruitless life.
II. The
revelation concerning the Divine nature which spring affords.
1. Spring
testifies to the faithfulness of God. Never do the seasons cease to recur at
the appointed times. The snows of winter do not forget to melt. The ice-bound
rivers do not remain for ever held in silent rest. He that never slumbers nor
sleeps rolls the earth on, without any exercise of care or thought on our part,
until the sun¡¦s rays can warm and revive the forms that winter¡¦s cold has
benumbed. Surely the frequent manifestations of His faithfulness in nature
should inspire us with a nobler confidence, and cause us to cry with Job,
¡§Though He slay me yet will I trust Him.¡¨
2. But
not less plainly revealed is the goodness of God. With how many hands do we see
God, in the spring time, promising to supply our coming wants! The lowliest
fruit of the earth proclaims that God is love. And this regard is manifested to
all alike. The sun shines on the evil and on the good. But how do you regard
this goodness when it is revealed in the form of mercy towards you who have
sinned so greatly against God? What think you of the statement--¡§God so loved
the world¡¨?
3. How
many evidences of the wisdom of God we may gather up at this spring time! Take
that leaf, and mark the wonderful system of veins by which nutriment is
supplied to the remotest part; or that flower, and see what wonderful provision
is made for the propagation of the species; or that bird¡¦s feather that lies on
the ground, and see how its cylindrical pen gives it lightness and strength
designing it for flight. In these minute objects that are scattered all around
now we may trace Divine wisdom. But in general results we may see it equally.
It is wisdom that arranges the gradual transition from winter to summer, thus
adapting the change to the human constitution. It is wisdom that provides that
man shall be tasked with ploughing and sowing before the reaping season comes,
for were there not these healthful labours, idleness and sin would soon
enervate and destroy the race. And this wisdom is that in which we invite you
to confide rather than in your own erring judgments. May you learn to discern
the wisdom of God in redemption, and be able with adoring faith to adopt the language
of the apostle, and cry, ¡§O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and
knowledge of God!¡¨
4. Lastly,
we will advert to the resources of God that are made known to us in the spring.
We see them in the provision made for the support of the myriad living
creatures that awaken to life as the spring opens. We find them also in the
arrangements made for maintaining the fertility of the soil. The leaves of last
autumn as they decay render the earth more rich this year. Let us learn then to
trust in Him who invites us by His love, and encourages us by His wisdom and
infinite power, to rely upon Him.
III. The
relation of spring to the doctrine of resurrection. Spring presents the most
appropriate figures whereby to represent resurrection. The forms of animal and
vegetable life that lived through the last slimmer, and which either died or
passed into a torpid condition at the approach of winter, now arise again in
all their wonted beauty and vigour. The insect breaks forth from its chrysalis
state, and spreads its bright gauzy wings in the sunshine. The seed decays, and
from it arises a stately stem to wave with joyous life in the breeze. It is not
without interest that the period of the resurrection of our Lord is coincident,
at least in our country, with the spring-time. Let us rejoice as we read the
record of that wondrous event, which confirms our faith in the Divine character
of the Saviour, which proclaims His sacrifice to have been accepted, and which
celebrates His victory over death and hell. This spring-time points us also to
a more general resurrection of which our Lord¡¦s was the first-fruit, when
through earth¡¦s valleys, and in the caverns of the deep, the trumpet-call of
the angel shall be heard winding, summoning buried millions to the judgment-seat
of Christ. In that resurrection we must take part. To the judgment-seat of
Christ we must come. If you should now begin to live a life of faith in the Son
of God, it will be the brightest spring that has ever blossomed around you. It
will be spring in your soul. All the latent powers you possess of knowing, of
loving, and of having fellowship with God shall awake to life. The lost
likeness of God shall be restored. Your soul shall feel the harmony with
extended nature renewed. The thrill of holy joy, and the glow of Divine life,
shall be felt, with new and spiritual meaning you shall sing, ¡§The winter is
past. (R. S. Harington.)
Spring
I. Spring
an emblem of youth. Winter, of age.
1. Spring
is the season of hope, the dawn of the year. Looking forward. So youth is the
season of bright anticipations.
2. The
season of preparation. Ploughing, sowing, etc. So youth. Laying foundations of
character and success.
3. The
season of activity. So youth.
4. Fleeting.
Youth soon merges into manhood, care and trouble comes.
II. Spring
an emblem of conversion. Winter, of the unconverted state. Cold, dark, dreary.
1. The
season of renewal. ¡§Thou renewest the face of the earth.¡¨ Conversion is
the renewal of the heart. ¡§Renew a right spirit within me.¡¨
2. The
season of joy and gladness. ¡§Time of the singing of birds is come. Conversion
produces joy. Eunuch ¡§went on his way rejoicing.¡¨
III. Spring
an emblem of revival. Winter, of declension. Spiritual barrenness. A revival
needed both in churches and individuals. ¡§O Lord, revive Thy work.¡¨
IV. Spring
an emblem of resurrection. Winter, of death.
1. Resurrection
of Christ. Then the Winter of the world indeed. The race was filled with hope,
joy, gladness.
2. Our
resurrection at the last day.
V. Spring
suggests heaven. ¡§There everlasting Spring abides.¡¨ May the Winter of our
spiritual apathy be past and the Springtide of a new life he ours. (E.
Ashton Jones.)
Spring and Summer
We shall be following the
example of Christ, and shall do well, when we take the words of the royal lover
and apply them as the words of Divine invitation to human souls; making spring
and summer, with their flowers and grass, trees and fruits, and the birds and
beasts, speak on behalf of God and Christ, of Divine love and mercy, of perfect
righteousness and justice, and of human activity and life.
I. Returned
spring and coming summer reprove and condemn our sinful souls. Jesus Christ was
sent into the world to live, and suffer, and die for human salvation; the Holy
Spirit is given to quicken our spiritually dead souls into newness of life; the
Church was established by Christ to preserve, and perpetuate, and extend the
Gospel of salvation; the Sabbath-day and the ministry of the Word, and the
public services of religion, are divinely appointed to bring the truth, and the
power, and the love of God, with living energy from living hearts to cold and
dead souls. This is the spiritual order of God for the regeneration of men. And
this order is as powerful and effective on willing minds and obedient hearts,
as returned spring and coming summer make the flowers to appear on the earth,
the trees to enrobe themselves with foliage, the grain hid in the soil to grow, the
birds of the air to sing, and all animate nature to join in the universal
enjoyment of the world.
II. Returned
spring and coming summer, with their silent processes continually and
unchangeable at work, prove the Divine power and wisdom of God. Divine power
and wisdom were no more visible in Christ creating and multiplying food for the
hungry thousands from a few loaves, than in those slow, silent processes by
which the seed springs up and bears the full corn in the ear during the course
of spring and summer and autumn, and is multiplied some thirty, some sixty, and
some an hundredfold. The power and wisdom of God would no more be seen in a
bare, leafless, flowerless dell or grove instantly clothed with foliage and
blossom of every variety of form and colour, than in the same results gradually
achieved by silent, hidden, but interesting processes extending over weeks or
months. The processes are the same in the first case, though accelerated or
made to act in a moment of time, instead of being spread over weeks. No power other than
the infinite power and Wisdom of the Divine Creator could combine the influences
and forces and agencies necessary to produce in either case such a scene of
beauty and sublimity.
III. Returned
spring and coming summer diffuse a sweet, soothing, and sacred influence. The
fields and dells and hills, the air perfumed with the breath of flowers, the
bursting of buds, the spreading of luxuriant foliage bearing every shade of
green, the light of heaven shining down,--all speak of the perfect goodness and
the sweet loveliness of God. Even the names by which flowers are commonly known
have a language of their own, by which they give utterance to pure thoughts,
kindly feelings, and generous words, and speak of sympathy and affection, truth
and goodness, peace and love. How beautifully, yet how marvellously, has God
revealed Himself in nature; how sweet, how clear, and how lovingly does He
stamp His presence and the attributes of His character upon all things, for He
has made all things for beneficent ends. Even through Nature, the door of the
future world is opened to our view. The forms and colours and substances of
things are perfectly adapted to preserve and promote our earthly comfort and
life; and may we not assume there will be in glory the same natural, pleasing,
and perfect fitness of all things to preserve and promote our glorious life in
the likeness of Jesus Christ? The same God who rules and reigns on earth also
rules and reigns in heaven I
V. Returned
spring and coming summer, in awakening the energies and activities of nature
from their winter¡¦s sleep, call us to arise to active work. It is God that
worketh in us both to will and to do of His good pleasure; and yet we must both
will and do as He works in us by His Word and Spirit. The energies of our
spiritual nature must have opportunities of exercise until they form gradually
in us habits of grace and goodness. We must carefully form and actively
maintain habits of piety, such as prayer, faith, love, self-restraint,
reverence, and decision. We must sustain a conscience void of offence, and
sensitive of evil. We must abhor selfishness, pride, and immorality. We must
cultivate close attachment to Jesus Christ, and love Him as our Saviour for His
love to us. We must live in sympathy with every good work, and with all good
men; and we must give full play to our living activities in doing good. (W.
Simpson.)
The Risen Christ the
Church¡¦s spring
I. A
Syrian spring-time.
1. Winter
past, and rain over. In Syria, winter rains descend in torrents unknown to us,
but at a certain time spring at once succeeds, and for months clouds are never
seen (1 Samuel
12:16-19; Proverbs
26:1).
2. Change
marvellous. Tender grass springs out of earth (2 Samuel
23:4).
Ground enamelled with lovely flowers. Fig-tree puts forth her green fruit, and
vines their fragrant smell.
3. Singing
and voice of the turtle heard. Its presence a sure sign of the return of spring
(Jeremiah
8:7).
II. Christ¡¦s
resurrection a spiritual spring-time.
1. History
of early Church. Contrast apostles as seen in the Gospels and in the
Acts--winter and spring.
2. History
of religious revivals. Churches for a season in wintry state, Scripture
pastures snow-covered, spiritual streams ice-bound. When, however, Christ is
preached, not only as a pattern of life, not only as propitiation for sin, but
as the risen Saviour pleading at God s right hand, then the Spirit works a
wondrous change. Barren winter and dark days no more, the Sun of Righteousness
shines, spring returns, pastures are green, waters flow softly, fruits of
righteousness abound. Converts grow in grace, as willows by watercourses.
3. History
of individual believer. May have felt dark and dead; but when the Spirit
quickens this truth in him then day breaks, shadows flee away. Realizing in
Christ¡¦s Resurrection God¡¦s acceptance of the finished work on his behalf, he
henceforth walks in holy peace and liberty,--each day a Sabbath, a sacrament in
every meal; he loves to break the costly spikenard in the ardour of spiritual
love and joy.
III. Christ¡¦s
return will be a never-ending spring. At His coming all things will be made
new. The winter of sin and sorrow will be past, and there will be no more sin
and no more tears. Then the dew of herbs (Isaiah
26:19).
When, at the voice of the Beloved, the Bride comes forth from her wintry grave,
and enters with
Him the garden of God, then creation itself will be delivered from the bondage
of corruption (Romans
8:21);
then mountains and hills will rejoice, and trees will clap their hands, whilst
the Church serves its Lord with gladness, and comes into His presence with a
song. (Bp. Bardsley.)
Spring
The most obvious analogy
which the spring suggests is--
I. The
resurrection of many forms and kinds of life, which for a period of time were
dead.
1. Spring
represents us with a marvellous example of the sufficiency of means to produce,
in a short time, a great change in the appearance of the earth. The existence
of this power is calculated to remove all doubt from the mind regarding those
agencies which shall be employed to awaken the buried inhabitants of Time from
their wide-spread places of rest.
2. As
spring brings back to us familiar objects, so the resurrection will re-unite us
to those we loved and from whom we had parted on earth, with sorrow. As then,
we visit the resting-places of those clear to us on ¡§God¡¦s acre,¡¨ as the
Germans term the graveyard, and see the violets blooming above their tombs, and
the buds appearing on the trees, the heart is comforted by those emblems of
hope, and feels that those from whom it has parted are not lost, but gone
before, and that they shall meet them on the resurrection morn.
II. The
renewing of the face of the earth is a type of a renewing of the soul. AS the
day comes out of night, or as the spring emerges from winter, so the soul
passes from death into the flesh light of a new life by the power of the Holy
Spirit. ¡§Old things pass away and all things become new.¡¨ And as spring gives a
tone to the sky, the cloud, the air and the fields, so the new life of the
soul, being diffusive, gives a tone and colouring to the thoughts, the feelings, and the
actions of the Christian.
1. This
progress of the soul in the Divine life is, like the progress of the spring,
gradual. Sin does not easily relax its grasp; old habits are not thrown off at
will; so that the virgin joys of the new life of the soul are often chilled by
the cold influences of sin, striving to renew their reign like the winter.
2. This
progress of the soul in the Divine life is, like the progress of spring,
irresistible. Winter must give place to spring. So faith, like a grain of
mustard seed in the soul, will germinate and expand, and progress, and
establish itself in holy desires, fervent affections, and correct thoughts,
under the life-giving influence of the Sun of Righteousness.
3. This
progress of the soul in the Divine life is, like the progress of spring,
pleasing. As spring introduces us to new pleasures; the renewing of the soul
leads us to fresh delights.
III. Spring
is illustrative of youthful life. Spring is a period of importance to the
husbandman; so is youth. (Homilist.)
¡§I will arise--I who have
resisted so long--and go to my Father.¡¨ It may be so with them there; but here
there is but little chance for them. ¡§The moth shall eat them up like a
garment, and the worm shall devour them like wool.¡¨ (Stopford Brooke, M. A.)
Spring
No wonder is so wonderful
as the birth of spring. Music, painting, and poetry, all art and every artist
has felt its power to quicken life and warm emotion, and has striven to express
its charm and thrill of joy. Every year we are moved by its coming, morally and
physically. No one who heard the warm west wind of this April flowing through
the trees and felt the secret stirring that was made in blood and brain, but
knew the influence of spring upon the body. As the sap ran upwards through the
flowers, so the blood went swifter through the veins, and the physical emotion
sent its message to that immaterial life of thought and feeling which we call
the spirit. And the spirit receiving the impressions, took and moulded them
into ideas by the imagination and sent the ideas forth to give motives to the
will. The first thought that occurs is the abounding life of Spring. Through
all, there ran, as the first mark of life, the sense and power of love. All
things that lived seemed to sacrifice their best in colour, beauty, and life
for one another; I could not think of any one leaf or plant without thinking of
the rest, so deep was the impression of the brotherhood of all, so strong was
the feeling of ceaseless intercommunion that came to me from the universe of
spring, and told me that love was its spirit. And not only love lived there,
but joy that was intense. The face of every flower was like that of a radiant
child. The air shook with the joyful thoughts of the birds, the dance of insect
life had begun, and the airy ravishment of the butterfly born too soon, was the
expression of the life that trembled with delight through every animal. Life,
love, joy, what are these in their tale to the spirit, as spring sends them
flowing into our hearts? They are a revelation of the Being of God. Its first
attribute is infinite life. Decay, death, sorrow, dulness, the wearing out of
feeling, they are only the accidents of our trial time, and in themselves part
of life and not of death. Let them touch us as they will, they cannot last for
ever; for they are weaker than life, when life is God. Again, this life is
Love-love in God, the same as goodness. What else can it be but love, for it is
creative? That there is such a thing as creation; that life and joy come out of
death and pain; that the wonder of the spring is born out of the travail of the
winter, is proof enough to those who feel how impossible creation is to evil,
that it is goodness--goodness that stream forth as love, love that is lifo in
all things, that is the spirit of the universe. And, again, if life and love be
one in the being of God, that being must also be joy, infinite, self-exultant,
varying through every phase of quiet and of rapture. Words would fail to paint
one moment of its triumphant fulness; joy is the glory of God. True, it is dear
to us who need sympathy in pain, who know so much of pain, to feel, through
Christ, that God can be touched with sorrow for us, that it pitieth Him to see
us in the dust, but that is not of the absolute in His Being. The essence of
His Being is, on the contrary, joy, intense, overflowing, streaming in
rapturous life through universes of life, material and immaterial. These, then,
are the three thoughts of God¡¦s Being that we bind up with the woods and fields
and streams of spring. We take the same thoughts now and bring them to touch on
our own life. Spring is the image of our youth, and the lesson we learn from it
is--that our youth should be Life, and Love, and Joy, and that these are its
natural companions. Life lives with youth, and its first rush is wonderful.
Thoughts break out into leaf, feelings into blossoms; a single day in that time
of sun and rain may make the whole heart like a woodland; when the foliage of
sweet thoughts first appears the grass is not seen for flowers. The first touch
of love, the touch of a new aspiration, the winning of one new knowledge, may
loosen the bonds of a thousand seeds of thought, and set them shooting upwards
into growth and life. We are often born in a day; life then begins, and I hold
it our duty in youth to put our whole force into living. There is yet another
lesson. Along with the leaves is born the cup of the flower, and with the
flowers are involved the seeds. In all true life future life is hidden;
provision is made for that production which is the first mark of life, for
continuance of life and for its flower. Think of that truth as the spring moves
your blood. Is there the element of continuance in anything you do? In your
life are there seeds which, when decay comes, will insure a new outburst of
life? Have you some certainty that you nave life enough to flower? Is the true
flower of a beautiful or useful life already formed in you? Are you showing
forth already the beauty and sweetness and charm which tell that the flower is
coming? If these things be so, then you are living the fullest and the quickest
life, the life of which spring is the image, of which God is the reality. But
you cannot have in youth the life of spring without also having its love. Make
the brotherhood of the flowers, their intercommunion of good, their joyous
sacrifice of all they have in order to give joy, the example and impulse of
your youth; make your springtide the reflection of the spring in love. Pour
forth all the odour, colour, charm and happiness you have to all your friends,
to your home, to your daily society, to the poor and sorrowful, the joyous and
prosperous. Charm the world by love. Brighten darkened lives, soften the rude,
make a sunshine of peace in stormy places, cover the faults and follies of men
with the flowers of love, And, finally, this will be joy. Not the wild,
self-exhausting joy of wild persons wildly wrought, but something which, though
quieter, is even more intense, only it is not over tense. The strings of life
are in tune, not stretched almost to breaking; and music comes, not discord;
music in which others rejoice, in which we ourselves rejoice. Life led by love
has as its child the radiancy of joy. It is a joy none can take away, because
it has its roots in the joy which we make in others, because it has its deepest
root in the joy which life and love make in the being of God. (Stopford
Brooke, M. A.)
Spring-time in nature and
in experience
Nature teaches that to
every season of trouble and overthrow there comes resurrection. In the deepest
January of the year there is a nerve that runs forward to June. Life is never
extinguished. That which seems to be death reaches forward and touches that
which is vital.
I. Nations
seem to have their periods like the year. Neither in civilization nor in
Christian elements do they seem to mount up with steady growth. They move,
rather, as it were in spirals. They often return as if falling back, and yet
their progress, on the whole, is onward.
II. Deep
convulsions and embarrassments of all industrial pursuits are wont to go along
with national trials. So it has been with us. To all those whose wheels of
enterprise are blocked; to all those whose past growths are withering; to all
whose roots are locked in the icy soil; to all whose leaves are touched by the
frost of disappointment--to them I say, the winter is past; the time of the
singing of birds has come. Wait a little; some more snows may fall, and there
may be some more frosts; but the time of the singing of birds has come, and the
voice of the turtle is heard in our affairs.
III. There
are the same experiences in families as in nations and industrial communities.
There are some families that seem compelled to go to the promised land, as the
Israelites did, through a desert. There are many that, having experienced long
years of toil and suffering, come out only at last. But there are many that,
having been prospered and happy, lapse into a state of want and trouble. The
streams that swelled with prosperity, swell no more; the birds that sang of
prosperity sing no more. They come from wealth and comfort into distress and
poverty. But are there no spring-like days that come upon the winter of
troubles in the household? Is it all blast, all blight, all burying? Is there
nothing but pale, white, enwrapping snow? Are there no birds that ever fly
athwart the sky of the bereaved family? Is there an utter absence of everything
like comfort and cheer? Blessed be God, even though trouble may abide, joy
comes too.
IV. The
same is eminently true of individuals. They know not why things have gone
against them. If you were to hear some men¡¦s experience, you would think that
they grow as the white pine grows, with straight grain, and easily split--for I
notice that all that grow easy split easy. But there are some that grow as the
mahogany grows, with veneering knots, and all quirls and contortions of grain.
That is the best timber of the forest which has the most knots. Everybody seeks
it, because, being hard to grow, it is hard to wear out. And when knots have
been sawn and polished, how beautiful they are! There are those who have fought
the fight of great trouble in sickness. Not all the soldiers of God are in the
battle-field. There are those there who are strong-backed, whose muscles are
like brawn, whose bones are like flint, and whose faces, for zeal, are like the
face of January, and for enthusiasm are like the face of July. But these are
not God s only soldiers, nor his strongest soldiers. Some of God¡¦s most heroic
soldiers are the bedridden. If sickness be God¡¦s will, even so. His will be
done, not mine. The time of the singing of birds has come to such a heart. To
such a heart spring has come, and summer is not far off.
V. There
are applications innumerable to spiritual conditions. Many of you have cast
your leaves. You have seen November, and gone wading through the cold winter of
backsliding. But March has come round to you. A little bird began to sing right
in your family. Before you thought of such a thing, you heard the singing of
birds. It was your daughter that sung; or, it was the little child of your
next-door neighbour. There is beginning to be a warmth in your heart. You are
beginning to think of your declining days. You are beginning to yearn for the
old love. You are beginning to say, ¡§Is it not time for the winter to be gone,
and for the spring to have come in my heart?¡¨ The time, oh! backsliding
Christians; oh, wandering professor of religion; oh! child of God, beloved of
Him, and yet forgetful of your Father and your Saviour--the time of the singing
of birds has come to you. Rise up and rejoice!
VI. We
are all of us going through life as a kind of winter. We are as we go towards
age, dropping our hair, and losing, one by one, our senses. We are drifting
towards autumn. Then come the vacuous days of the winter of seeming
uselessness--declines which men dread. How many hate age! This is the winter of
human life, to be sure: but just beyond is the rising of that bright immortal
spring where the birds of heaven sing, and which, when it has once begun, shall
never be followed by winter, and shall never be visited by storms. We are all
of us drawing near to the sweet spring of resurrection. (H. W. Beecher.)
The joy of spring
Spring is the season of
resurrection, the period of renewed hope and quickened sensibilities, when the
gloom of winter is forgotten in the anticipation of growing brightness and life
The spring is a season that awakens hope, that revives deadened sensibilities,
that gives a man a new sense of life, and makes him feel young again. Milton
tells us that the muses always came back to him in spring. He could not sing
very much as a rule, in winter, but when spring came back the muses came. He
caught the youthfulness and hopefulness of spring: he looked round, and saw
life springing triumphantly out of the grave of winter: he saw the feeblest
growths rejoice in a new life and beauty. Then, too, his own intellect, under
the blessing and inspiration of his God, just as the flower under the blessing
and inspiration of a spring sky, began to blossom anew. Spring, therefore, is a
season that comes to all sensitive men with special freshness and inspiration.
It is something to feel that after all death is not the mightiest thing even in
this physical world. When the spring comes, life in its tenderest, loveliest,
and most delicate forms springs out of the cold and lately frozen earth. Look
at the little bud as it opens. What so delicate as the flower? Take it up and
carry it in your hand; you have to guard against withering it by the warmth of
your hand. And yet there it is--it has sprung up, almost before you knew it,
out of the cold and bare earth. The sun came in the brightness of his rising,
and, under the genial effects of his warmth that little flower sprang up out of
the clammy soil. Is not that a message for us? Can a life so exquisitely tender
and so beautiful spring out of the desolate earth? Then I have learnt once more
that all along the line, even in the physical world, life is triumphant. That
even in the revolving year death only reigns for a brief season, and even then
to answer the higher purposes of life in its rich and varied developments and
outgrowths; so that when the proper season comes, life asserts itself anew, in
new forms of beauty, that surprise the eye, and delight, the heart.
1. The
spring delights the eye--¡§The flowers appear on the earth.¡¨ What are the uses
of flowers? Surely one is the joy they give to life. It is as if God said to
Nature, ¡§I am about to give thee reviving power: see to it that the first
things thou bringest forth shall be things of beauty, a joy to the child¡¦s eye,
a solace to the heart of the invalid in the sick room, and a delight to the
bedimmed vision of the aged ere the realities of another world dawn upon them.
See to it that thou puttest on thy loveliest garb--not the useful for the
moment so much as the delightful, which, however, shall be the promise of the
useful by and by.¡¨ Nature responds and sends forth its lovely flowers--¡§flowers
appear on the earth.¡¨ But God has also higher motives than that. It is His will
that the flowers should take their humble and doubtless secondary part, but a
very important one, in our and in our children¡¦s education. He has not merely
intended that we should be hard at work from morning to night, and see the
buildings which our hands and other hands have erected, without seeing a field
or becoming rapturous over an opening flower. No, He bids us go forth to the
fields, as opportunity offers, and see how happy God would have His children
be, ¡§for the flowers appear in the earth.¡¨
2. But
not only is the eye appealed to by the beauty of Nature, but also the ear by
its music--¡§The time of the singing of birds is come.¡¨ Out of the fulness of
the heart the bird pours out its harmonies. This is the safety valve, or the
bird would die of compression. It sends out the music because it cannot keep it
in. This is the instinct that God has put in the heart of the bird, bidding him
¡§tell out the joy that is in him.¡¨ This is a blessed privilege. And as it is
true of the bird, it ought to be true of the Christian. The Christian must sing
out his joy like the bird, not for the sake of effect, but for the joy and
relief that the very act gives. Wendell Holmes tells us that there are some men
and women who ¡§die with all their music in them.¡¨ This is spoken of as
one of the saddest possibilities of life. There are circumstances in life which
have so oppressed them that they grow sullen, hopeless, and despairing. There
is nothing more sad than such a sight. The Christian surely should be beyond
that. O man, touch the strings of thy lyre, and out of those finger tips shall
go forth harmonies into every string thou touchest. Do not sit down in the
dust; lift up thy voice withal, to and for God. Speak for Christ, and sing of
His love; and out of thy soul, even in trial and in affliction, shall inspiring
harmonies go forth.
3. Not
only does the spring gratify the eye and the ear, but also the smell. This is
the third gate of which Bunyan speaks. Here we have a perfect picture of a
peaceful home in the East. We have already read of the eye being gratified, and
the ear charmed, and now we read of the tender grape giving a sweet smell. And
so God speaks to us through the avenues of even our physical senses. It is His
wish that we should all be happy on this bright spring day, and that, like the
flowers and the birds, and sweet smelling blossoms, we should be full of praise
to His name. (D. Davies.)
The spring and its voles
Spring has a great deal to
say to us that may be worthy of our attention. She speaks to various
characters.
1. We
will, in the first place, listen to what spring has to say to the aged
Christian. It is pregnant with hope, joy, and immortality, because God has put
these precious things into his heart.
2. The
spring has also something to say to the young Christian. The spring to you is
pregnant with promise, full of hope. And when you look around on this
wide-spread-picture of Divine benevolence, and remember that all these things
have come into existence at the voice of God, and reflect upon the fact that
the God, who has again covered Nature with beauty and glory, is the God you
serve and the Saviour that redeemed your spirit, spring may well teach you the
importance of a strong and vigorous hope. What cannot He do for your spirit who
can thus adorn Nature? But spring also teaches you that in connection with your
religion there should be toil. How concerned the husbandman is to get in the
seed on which their hopes of a crop depend. So it must be with you. Now is the
time to grow in the knowledge of your Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ. These
bright and fair opportunities may never return. Remember, moreover, that you
are bound, as Christians, to ¡§contend earnestly for the faith once delivered to
the saints¡¨; but, in order that you may do so, you must understand what that
faith is. You must love the Word of God, and ponder often and deeply over the
precious Gospels, and study, also, the writings of good men. Get into your
minds a goodly store of precious truth--a kind of bread-house to which you
shall repair in other days, and get that spiritual nutriment which you will
need.
3. The
spring also speaks to the afflicted Christian. There may be some one here
greatly tempted in soul. It may be there is winter within. Thou art ready to
come to the conclusion that God hath forsaken thee; that there is death and
destruction in this winter. But it is not so. Winter precedes the harvest-home;
and so this spiritual winter is not intended to destroy, but to do a necessary
work, as in Nature. God frequently brings winter into the hearts of His people
that He may teach them His will. This winter may have come upon thee in love.
It may be that roots of spiritual pride and presumption require to be rooted
up, which have stifled the meekness and tenderness of thy love towards Christ.
It may be that He has brought this winter upon thee to teach thee the vanity of
the creature, and that without Christ there is no enjoyment, but that with the
presence of Christ, even winter can be a joy to thee; while summer itself
without Him, without Christ, would be a miserable desert--a winter of
desolation.
4. Spring
also speaks to the slothful Christian. And what is the voice of spring to him?
Awake, thou sluggard. Every green leaf which surrounds thee, all the various
forms of life which encompass thy path, the very birds of the air reprove thee;
all Nature speaks, and calls upon thee to arise from the dust, and shake
thyself. Has not thy soil been waste long enough?
5. Spring
also speaks to the backslider. All Nature is coming back to her original beauty
and glory--coming out of the womb of winter. Does it not speak to thee,
backslider? Thou hast wandered from the Lord, and it is now winter with thee.
Thy soul is miserable. The smile of God is not upon thy spirit. But does not
spring speak to thee, and say, come back again? By the remembrance of the past,
by the patience of thy Lord whom thou hast pierced and wounded, return again.
He says to thee, ¡§Return, oh, backsliding children!¡¨
6. Spring
also speaks to the sinner--to the man who has been altogether unconcerned about
the state of his soul. Dream not of heaven you who treat the Gospel as a fable
and bring forth no fruits of contrition, of faith, hope, love, and meekness.
Unless men have their Springtide here, they will not have it in the paradise
above. (W. P. Balfern.)
The Springtime call
Each succeeding season comes
to the world with a new and peculiar influence. Spring has a different language
from winter. She stirs different forces within the human frame. She evokes
different feelings within the human heart. She hath a gladsome voice, and her
step is altogether light and joyous. And men change under her influence; then
they will come to bear the impress of summer¡¦s hand, and then again grow sad
and contemplative with autumn. And the Christian lives in this world and under
these varying influences; and they, like all the multiform forces which he
feels, should prove religious,--favouring breezes to swell the sails of his
Christian life; drawing powers to draw towards happiness and peace, and purity
and God. Hence Christ¡¦s exhortation to His Church in the text.
I. He
calls unto her through the beauty of the spring-time. His exhortation hath for
its emphasis, or one of its most beautiful settings, the blossoming flowers.
¡§Arise, come away, for the flowers appear on the earth.¡¨ Scattered throughout
the earth; blooming now upon mountain top, and now in deepest gorge; now
lifting up its tiny form from out the crevasses of the ice-fields, and now
painting itself in gorgeous hues beneath a tropical sun; now blooming in lonely
desert, where no eye save that of God may note its beauty, and now upon the
beaten thoroughfare lifting up its spiritual face beneath the rude gaze of the
passers-by; now, in rich profusion, heaped upon the casket of death until its
ghastliness is well-nigh abolished, and, now, in wreaths of orange and snow,
lending the last charm and grace to animated beauty,--the flower, wherever it
blooms, is a smile of God lingering upon the earth; the most delicate earthly
blossoming of that spirit of beauty which God has breathed into all the works
of His hand. And spring is full of flowers. She stretches forth her wand over
the earth, and forthwith they start up in innumerable ranks of loveliness. She
calls with her voice, and they come trooping in beautiful array to her side.
She cries out that the winter is gone, and assured of safety, as an angel
ambuscade, they lift up their smiling faces over all the earth. She breathes
with the breath of the south wind over field and garden, and at once they rise
up from their wintry graves, their spirits of life laden with ten thousand
odours. And so God calls unto men through the voice of the spring; for this is
the voice of flowers and of beauty. With the beauty which is external He would
call unto that which belongs to the soul, and which is the beauty of holiness.
As, then, during the coming days, and amid the opening glories of the
spring-time, your Nature shall feel the softening influence, and flow out in
warmer and swifter currents towards the lovely, the beautiful, and the good,
know that all this is the voice of your Saviour speaking unto you, and saying,
¡§Arise, come away.¡¨ Open your heart to the gentle and purifying influences
which, at this season of the year, fill the air; for they will do you good and
not evil. They will have for you a voice from God speaking of the beauty which
is unfading,--the beauty of holiness, which blossoms perennially in the world
above.
II. The
call of the Saviour is through the joy of the springtime. There is joy in the
vernal season as well as beauty; and this joy is made the organ of the
Saviour¡¦s call: ¡§The time of the singing of birds is come. Arise, my love, and
come away.¡¨ As the Creator of all things, He is the Author of all the joy which
fills the world, and which meets in a royal crown upon the head of spring.
Birds sing because He, the Good One, has created them so full of joy that they
cannot help but sing. The waters laugh in the sunshine, and join in merry music
as they flow, because lie has made the sun so bright and water so clear.
Children disport themselves in the streets, and fill the air with their merry
voices, because children are fresh from God,--freshly filled with joy at an
infinite fountain. God is the joy of this world. Forget not the joy-fountain,
while you bathe yourself in the joy-streams! While gladness streams into your
heart, let grateful love flow out from it and upward. And, oh! if perchance you
are a dissonant, jarring being within this world of joy and gladness; if the
waves of the spring-time joy, as
they roll over this world, reach not your dry and thirsty and
unhappy heart,--still is the voice of the Saviour unto you through all this
unshared flood, which, Tantalus like, you reach after, but may not drink.
Listen to His words, ¡§Arise, come away.¡¨ God has the joy which you need
also,--enough for all your cravings, and to fill you too. Pray Him that by His
renewing Spirit He would create spring-time within your soul, and fill you with
this joy of His which rolls and flows throughout His Being and throughout His
realm.
III. The
call of the text is unto men through the fruitful life of the spring. The
winter has been the night of Nature, and with spring comes the morning, in
which, as in a gradually awakening city, begins the hum of life, swelling
louder and louder into the full activity of midday. Spring is life from the
dead; resurrection, reanimation, restoration. And God speaks through it as
such, proclaiming Himself as the Life-giver, and through it He also calls for
life within His followers. Some of you, it may be, have been hibernating in the
Church: you have not been dead, but torpid; hoping little, feeling little,
doing little. Come away; leave your winter-quarters; throw off their
imprisonment, their constraint, their dull routine. Forth into the field where
your Saviour calls; go, to ramble with Him through the flowery fields and
beside the still waters. Drink of the fulness of a spiritual spring-time. Dare
to hope more, to attempt more, to enjoy more. Let all the fulness of your being
flow out towards the Saviour, who loves you with an everlasting love. (S. S.
Mitchell, D. D.)
The flowers
appear on the earth.--
Flowers
What object do
flowers serve in the Economy in Nature and in the purposes of God? Every one
admits that the flowers are beautiful--strikingly and prominently beautiful,
even among the choicest beauties of God¡¦s most perfect works. Now, philosophers
tell us that the useful is the beautiful--that things are beautiful in
proportion to their usefulness in supplying the material wants of men.
According to this theory, an ear of corn ought to be more beautiful than a rose
or a lily, and yet there is probably not a sound-minded man in the whole world
who would not consider the useless rose more beautiful than the useful ear of
corn. In fact, the flowers that men have always agreed to regard as the most
beautiful are in most cases absolutely useless for man, from a utilitarian
point of view. This proves, then, that beauty is something very different from
mere usefulness. In reality the great characteristic of beauty is to lift up
our minds from mere worldly usefulness to the contemplation of the perfect and
the Divine: to lift our hearts and minds to God. For example, we might speak of
beautiful conduct, and what is it that constitutes beauty of conduct? Conduct
is beautiful in proportion as it approaches the conduct of Christ. Again, what
is it that constitutes beauty in literature? Literature is beautiful in
proportion as it reveals by means of suitable language the soul of man in its
Godward aspirations. In everything, then, which we call beautiful, we find that
this principle holds good, and the more powerful to lift up our hearts unto
God, the more beautiful. Beauty is the manifestation of God in His works. Why,
then, do we regard the flowers as beautiful? We regard the flowers as beautiful
because they direct our thoughts to God. God is the natural destiny of man. God
is the one thing that every man either consciously or unconsciously longs for.
Whatever helps to satisfy your longing is pleasurable, and when the longing is
of an elevating nature--when it is Godward--the pleasurable is also the
beautiful. Art is elevating and ennobling only when its votary has learned to
cultivate the beautiful as a means of approach to God. This was the spirit in
which the greatest architects, the greatest sculptors, the greatest painters
and the greatest poets did their work, and so no atheist, however great his
natural talent, has ever yet produced a master work, either in art or in
literature. The first condition of true art is to recognize the beautiful as an
expression of the Divine. To the sound and healthy and pure mind everything
beautiful in man or in the world around him points towards God. And so the
flowers are beautiful, not because they are useful, but because they lift up
our hearts to God. There are many
ways in which they do this, many lessons which they teach us in their silent
eloquence with more force and more clearness than the words of our greatest and
our wisest teachers. Our Lord Himself taught some of His most important lessons
from such ordinary things as the lilies of the field, and the grass, and each
one of those lessons had for its aim the lifting up of our hearts to God.
Christ made use of the humble beauty of the flowers to attain that end. One of
the first conditions of realizing the presence of God is to learn the lesson of
humility. This is taught by the flowers. Most men are vain of
something--appearance, attainments, position, and so on--but Jesus rebukes such
vanity by telling us to ¡§consider the lilies of the field.¡¨ I say unto you that
even Solomon, in all his glory, was not arrayed like one of these. Christ makes
use of the flowers to teach us the lesson of faith--also one of the conditions
of any real knowledge of God or communion with Him. The flowers prove that God
is just as careful of small things as He is of large things. Again, the flowers
teach us the shortness and the uncertainty of human life. Out of the
dull-looking stem springs forth mysteriously and silently, the flagrant blossom
of loveliest hue. It spreads itself out in smiling gladness, to the light and
warmth of the sun. It gladdens the eye of the beholder with its beauteous
presence, but no sooner does it attain its highest perfection than it fades
away in a breath of wind and vanishes quite as mysteriously as it came. And so
the earthly life of man passeth away as mysteriously as it came, and the place that
knew him shall know him no more. And once more, do not the flowers teach the
great and comforting lesson of the resurrection from the dead and the
immortality of the soul? Complete indeed is the withering of a flower. The
beauty, the colour, the fragrance, the delight of it vanish away, leaving no
trace or vestige behind, even as the life of man does. But, in spite of the
cold and frost of winter, the dead stump will awake to life after many days.
The summer sun will shine upon it. The bud will appear, the flower will bloom
once more in its pristine beauty, a perfect and a never-failing emblem of the
resurrection and the life. (A. Macrae, B. A.)
The teaching of the
flowers
¡§The flowers appear on the
earth not accidentally, but for gracious ends and purposes.
I. To
testify of their maker¡¦s wisdom and skill. Take the best human imitation, and
how far short it falls of the Divine original I Different shades, and delicate
blendings of colour, the perfect structure and reviving scent defy reproduction
by man. No two blades of grass are exactly alike, nor two flowers, even of the
same species. Why? A profound mystery, enough to awe and humble us.
II. To
proclaim the goodness of God. We may see His compassion for His children in
every flower that bends to the breeze. A believer on the verge of starvation,
or in temptation, or oppressed by spiritual chill and lethargy might argue a
fortiori: ¡§If God so clothe the grass of the field . . . ?¡¨ ¡§If God
provides even flowers with means of protection and recovery . . . ?¡¨ ¡§If the
flowers praise the Lord, shall I be silent?¡¨
III. As a
protest against human discontent. Flowers are content to bloom where they are
planted. ¡§Godliness with contentment is great gain.¡¨ Still, we must not be the
slaves of our environment. Submission may be servile and ruinous to our
manhood; e.g. to continue in a business that compels dishonesty or
injury to others. But where we are earning an honest livelihood, and Providence
does not point the way to some other sphere, it is our duty, and certainly our
interest, to be quiet, cheerful, and contented.
IV. As a
symbol of our mortality. Mazzini preferred the pale blossoms of the syringe to
the rose because their acrid perfume suggested hidden stings in all pleasures,
and so were a better type of life. And it is not a morbid religiousness that sees in every
frail flower an emblem of our fragile and fleeting life. Let us face the fact
bravely. As we see the flower of our existence fading let us dispense fragrance
while we may. And let those whose earthly leaf is withered anticipate the
completer life beyond. (John Wright.)
1. Note
the infinite variety of flowers, and how they thrive in all sorts of places.
High up on the mountains, at the very edge of the snow, is found the purple
soldanella, the white crocus, and the blue hepatica. Down in the sultry plain
blooms the red poppy, the white dog-daisy, and the blue corn-flower; in the
cold, raw winds of March, the dearly-loved snowdrop shakes its pure bell.
Everywhere, in all sorts of situations, in all sorts of climates, out of all
sorts of soils, spring up the flowers God has made. Everywhere, in all sorts of
situations, in all ranks of life, in all conditions of life, out of every
social deposit, the saints of God arise. Everywhere the grace of God shines and
matures the seed of eternal life, and causes the flowers of a Christian life to
unfold. And as each flower is specially suited to the soil in which it grows, and
to the climate which surrounds it, so it is with the Christian graces. There
are special graces, special virtues, according to class, and place, and
circumstances.
2. At
certain times you may be discouraged, and think that you cannot serve God in
the place where you are, you have so many difficulties to contend against,
those around you are so wicked. But do not fear. God¡¦s flowers will grow
everywhere. What can be fouler than the filth in which the water-lily has her
roots, the slime in which the newt and the worm wriggle, and yet, what more
stainless or sunlike than the flower? I have known lads in mechanical
workshops, surrounded by men blaspheming, cursing, doing all in their power to
degrade and brutalize the boys associated with them. And yet some of these ]ads
have maintained a really heroic Christian faith and walk before God.
3. The
first growth of the seed or root is hidden. The process is unseen. I dare say
you know the rule to be observed with hyacinth bulbs grown in glasses. They
have to be put away in the dark till they are rooted. So must it be with the
spiritual growth of the soul, its first processes must be hidden. There must be
no display of religion, no talking about it, no demonstrative piety; all that
sort of show leads to poor flowering. The rooting and germinating must be
hidden deep down in the soft soil of the inner heart. It is afterwards that the
flower of a Christian life expands. Now for another lesson. Have you ever
observed a flower in its growth from a seed? The seed leaves unfurl,--two
little leaves, quite unlike those the plant will eventually bear. These open,
and are extended like little hands towards heaven. They are very sensitive. On
them depends the life of the plant. If those little appealing hands be
destroyed, the plant will cast up no more. It will rot away underground, and
die. Like the seed leaves of the plant are children¡¦s prayers. These are the
first manifestations of the soul¡¦s life. The little hands are lifted up to God
appealingly, often ignorantly, but trustfully and lovingly. Most essential to
the spiritual life are children¡¦s spiritual beginnings. They must be carefully
guarded. Beware, children, how you suffer your early prayers to cease, to die.
On them depends the life and health of your soul in after life. (S. Baring
Gould, M. A.)
For a flower service
Nothing that we can
conceive of is prettier than flowers. People who teach or learn drawing speak
sometimes of ¡§the line of beauty,¡¨ and they bestow vast pains in order to be
able to draw it. Did you ever observe a flower which was without a line of
beauty? No;--flowers are always, when their growth is not interfered with, as
perfect in form as can be, and all the lines of beauty which ever were drawn or
designed by man must, I think, have been copied, in the first instance, from
leaves and flowers. Of this you may have plenty of proofs by noticing beautiful
pillars in buildings, beautiful patterns on vases, beautiful pictures,
beautiful forms of man¡¦s devising anywhere; in most, or many, of them you will
find that the beauty consists in curves copied from flowers and leaves. Ah!
there is a lesson for you here, to be learned from the beauty and perfect form
of flowers; it is this:--If you wish your lives to be as beautiful and perfect
as they can be, you must fashion them after a God-given example. Nobody can
make a plant or flower. It must grow in God¡¦s appointed way and no other.
Having grown, it lends itself to the architect, the painter, the poet, the
potter, to anybody having need thereof, to make the copy he desires. So also
there is one perfect life, one perfect character, of God¡¦s appointment, given
to mankind, from which to copy. In so far as you make Christ¡¦s life your
pattern and example, your life and character shall be full of grace, beauty,
and sweetness. Linnaeus, the great Swedish botanist, used to observe the
beautiful order which reigns among certain flowers, and so was led to suggest
the telling of time by what he called ¡§a floral clock.¡¨ It was to be composed
of plants which open and close their blossoms at particular hours; as, for
instance, the dandelion, which opens its petals at six in the morning, the
hawkweed at seven, the succory at eight, the celandine at nine, and so on; the
closing of the flowers being marked with equal regularity, so as to indicate
the progress of afternoon and evening. What a lovely thing it would be thus to
bedeck every passing hour of life with grace and obedience, as the flowers do.
Shall they be punctual in all that concerns the purpose for which they are made,
and boys and girls, who have reason and intelligence to guide them, be
unpunctual? Nay,--but let the flowers which open early in the morning remind
you of the call to prayer; those which open later, of the call to work and
duty; those that close in afternoon or evening may lead you to reflect on the
way in which you have spent your day, and teach you to commit yourselves to
God¡¦s care and keeping during the darkness of the coming night. In this way you
will, with undeviating regularity, learn to obey the influence of the Sun of
Righteousness, and give each following hour its proper due, just as the flowers
accommodate themselves to the influence of the natural sun. Has it ever
occurred to you that the common names of flowers often tell us of the way in which
they were regarded by the people who first named them? Pansy was originally a
French word, meaning thought. The pansy, then, was the thought-flower. It is
very fitting, therefore, that it should be found everywhere. The whole world is
governed by thought. But, we must remember that thought may be either evil or
good. Now the pansy ought never to suggest evil thought. How should it? It is,
in itself, so beautiful and perfect that only an ill-disposed and perverted
mind could be persuaded to evil by it. People bent on evil deeds do not seek
for inspiration how to accomplish them by thinking of pretty flowers. They are
not led by the beauty of pansies or other blossoms to be ill-tempered, or
spiteful, or disobedient, or untruthful, or to commit thefts, or fall into
other crimes. The thought suggested by the pansy, then, is good thought,
thought beautiful like its emblem. ¡§The best thoughts are those which a man
conceives when on his knees before his God.¡¨ Thus we should think what God is:
a loving, merciful Father; what the Lord Jesus Christ is: a tender, atoning
Saviour; what God the Holy Spirit is: a Sanctifier who will dwell in us and
make us holy. Again, we should think what we ourselves are: weak and sinful by
nature, who need God¡¦s help to make us better. Thirdly, we should think of
others, and of what we can do to benefit them. Thus our thoughts should really
be concerned with what is set before us in the Church Catechism as, ¡§Our duty
to God and our duty to our neighbour.¡¨ I may tell you that the pansy, the
thought-flower, has another common name which bears strangely on this subject:
It is heart¡¦s-ease. A good deal of our duty to our neighbour consists in
giving, where we can, heart¡¦s-ease, peace of mind. An old ordained minister of
the Church, who lived many years ago, used to say: ¡§I see in this world two
heaps, one of human misery, and the other of human happiness. Now if I take but
the smallest bit from one heap and add it to the other, I carry a point; I feel
I have done something.¡¨ And is this all I am to say? Oh! no. By and by, when
you are blessed with means such as are not expected in the case of children,
you will dedicate something more than flowers to God s service. In former days
there lived a princess Eugenie, sister of the king of Sweden. She set her mind
on finishing a hospital which had been begun, and, to do so, sold her diamonds.
When visiting this hospital, after its completion, a suffering inmate wept
tears of gratitude as she stood by his side ¡§Ah!¡¨ exclaimed the princess, ¡§now
I see my diamonds again.¡¨ Do you understand her meaning? She meant that in
those grateful tears she beheld what was to her more beautiful and valuable
than the diamonds with which they had been purchased. One thing more: you will
dedicate something else to God besides your means, namely, yourselves, your
lives, your thoughts, your words, your acts. (George Litting, M. A.)
The world¡¦s need of
flowers
We are not told why God
causes the flowers to appear on the earth. Nothing is said of His purpose in
calling this hidden world of beauty into the light. The silence is explained by
the fact that the end is obvious and patent to every observer. The soil needs
the work of their roots, and the chemicals of their tiny structures. The
atmosphere needs the fragrance and the gases they exude. The world of mixed
life which hums all day in their petals needs the food they provide. The man
needs the sight of them to train his eye and culture the love of the beautiful.
And dimpled childhood needs them, and many a sick home. God¡¦s end in their
creation is not only adornment, but ministry, the serving and the satisfying of
the needs of other created things. That is why God seeks to call the beauties
out of man, because they are needed. Man wants the sight of a splendid faith to
make it possible for him to believe. Man wants self-sacrifice, for he will die
of his wounds if there is no self-forgetful soul to help him. Man wants love,
for his lot is hard, and he will perish of heartbreak and loneliness without
its gentle ministry. Man wants purity, that, amid the sensuality and
immoralities of the age, he may see it is possible to master the flesh. Man
wants hope, for his sky is often starless, and he needs the beacon of another¡¦s
hope to guide him through the storm. The world needs these flowers of the soul;
needs their fragrance, their colours, their help, their hints, their
inspiration. (C. E. Stone.)
The time of the
singing of birds is come.--
The vernal concert
I. Learn
first the goodness of God. Do you realize the mercy of the Lord in the dominant
colour of the spring-time--the green in which is so kindly and lovingly mingled
the mercy and the goodness of God? Is our voice silent?
II. This
season suggests the wisdom of God. Oh, the wisdom of God in the structure of a
bird¡¦s wing and voice l Where is the harp that gave the warble to the lark, the
sweet call to the robin, the carol to the canary, the chirp to the grasshopper?
He who pairs the birds in the spring-time gave us our companions. He who shows
the chaffinch how to take care of her brood will protect our children. He who
gathers the down for the pheasant¡¦s breast will give us apparel.
III. The
season of the year suggests the wisdom of right building of the home nests.
Birds build always in reference to safety. Sometimes the nest is built in
rocks, eaves, trees, but always in reference to safety. The only safe place for
man to build a nest is the tree of the cross, and the only safe rock is the
Rock of Ages.
IV. This
season of the year suggests the infinite glories of heaven. If this world,
blasted with sin and swept with storms, is still so beautiful, what must be the
attraction of the sinless world toward which we travel!
V. This
season of the bird-anthem suggests to me the importance of learning how to
sing. In a little while there will be no pause in the melody of the song.
Whether it be a warble, or a chant, or a carol, or a chirp, or a croak, God
will be praised by it. Shall not we, more intelligent appreciators, sing? Let
the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom, teaching and admonishing
one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your
heart unto the Lord. (T. De Witt Talmage.)
Verse 13
The vines with the tender
grape give a good smell
The tender grapes
The vine is of all trees
the most useless unless it bears fruit.
You cannot make hardly anything of it; you would scarcely be able to cut enough
wood out of a vine to hang a pot upon; you cannot turn it into furniture, and
barely could you use it in the least degree for building purposes. It must
either bear fruit, or else it must be consumed in the fire. You all know that
there is no possibility of bringing forth any fruit except we are in Christ,
and except we abide in Christ. We must bear fruit, or we shall certainly
perish; and we cannot have fruit unless we be knit to Christ, vitally one with
him, just as a branch is really, after a living fashion, one with the stem. It
would be no use to tie a branch to the stem of the vine; that would not cause
it to bring forth fruit. It must be joined to it in a living union, so must you
and I be livingly joined to Christ. I think I hear some one say, ¡§I hope I have
begun to bring forth some fruit, but it is very little in quantity, and it is
of very poor quality; and I do not suppose that the Lord Jesus will hardly
stoop to notice it.¡¨ Well, now, listen to what the text says; It is the
heavenly Bride-groom, it is Christ Himself, who, in this Song, speaks to His
spouse, and bids her come into the vineyard, and look about her. For, saith He,
¡§The vines with the tender grape give a good smell.¡¨ So, you see, there was
some fruit, though it could only be spoken of as ¡§the tender grape.¡¨
Some read the passage, ¡§The vines in blossom give forth fragrance¡¨; others
think it refers to the grape just as it begins to form. It was a poor little
thing, but the Lord of the vineyard was the first to spy it out; and if there
is any little fruit unto God upon any one, our Lord Jesus Christ can see it.
Though the berry be scarcely formed, though it be only like a flower which has
just begun to knit, He can see the fruit, and He delights in that fruit.
I. First,
then, what are these tender grapes? What are these first fruits of the Spirit
of God?
1. One
of the first tender grapes that we spy out on living branches of the true Vine
is, a secret mourning for sin, and very often, an open mourning, too. The man
is no longer the jovial, light-headed, dare-devil sort of fellow that he was.
He has found out that his life has not been right in the sight of God; he has
become conscious that he has done much that is altogether wrong, and that he
has left undone a thousand things which he ought to have done, and he feels
heavy of heart, and sad in spirit. Whenever he sees his sin, it grieves him;
and be is grieved because he does not grieve more than he does. This is a crop
that will ripen and sweeten before long. Surely, never was there a truly
gracious soul who did not put forth this as one of the firstfruits of the
Spirit, a secret mourning for sin.
2. Another
tender grape is, a humble faith in Jesus Christ. That little trembling faith is
one of the tender grapes. It will grow, it will come to perfection in due time,
for the least true faith has everlasting life in it.
3. Then
there comes another tender grape, and that is, a genuine change of life. The
man has evidently turned right about; he is not looking the way he used to
look, and he is not living as he used to live. At first he fails, and perhaps
fails a good many times, like a child who is learning to walk, and has many a
tumble; but it will never walk if it does not tumble a bit. So, when men begin
to live the new life, they have many slips. They thought that ugly temper of
theirs would never rise again, hut it does, and it grieves them very much; and
some old habit, from which they thought they had clean escaped, entangles them
unawares, and they say. ¡§Surely I cannot be a child of God if I do these things
again; and there is great brokenness of spirit, and soul-humbling. Well, that
very soul-humbling is a tender grape. That effort to do better--not in your own
strength, because you have none, and you are sure to fail utterly if you
attempt such a task alone; but the effort to do better in the strength of God, yet
with the full consciousness of your own weakness,--all that indicates a real
change.
4. Another
very blessed fruit of spiritual life in the soul is, secret devotion. The man
never prayed before; he went sometimes to a place of worship, but he did not
care much about it. Now, you see that he tries to get alone for private prayer
as often as he can. ¡§Behold, he prayeth,¡¨ is an indication that God has renewed
his heart.
5. Another
of these tender grapes is an eager desire for more grace, a longing for more of
the good things of the covenant.
6. There
is also, in such persons, another very precious sign of grace, and that is, a
simple love to Jesus. The heart knows little, but it loves much; the
understanding is not yet fully enlightened, but the affections are all on fire.
II. What
is the Lord¡¦s estimate of these tender grapes?
1. Well,
first, He thinks so much of it that He calls His Church to come and look at it
(Song
of Solomon 2:10-13). We
do not usually call our friends to look at things which we do not ourselves
admire; so here the Bridegroom calls His spouse to share in His joy in these
tokens of the heavenly life of the Church of God. Be always on the look-out for
the tender grapes. ¡§Ah!¡¨ says one, ¡§that young man does not know much.¡¨ Does he
know that one thing, whereas he was blind, now he can see? Then, be thankful
that he knows as much as that. ¡§Oh!¡¨ you exclaim, ¡§but he has not much
prudence.¡¨ No; do you suppose that this young man is to have as much prudence
as you have at your age, and you are perhaps sixty or seventy? I might possibly
say with truth that you have not quite so much zeal as you might have to go
with your prudence. ¡§Oh, but!¡¨ you say, ¡§we want the young man to be more
mature.¡¨ Give him time, and he will get as mature as you are; but while the
grapes are still tender, your Master and his calls you to look at them, and to
thank Him for them, for there is something very cheering in the sight of the
first weak, faint tokens of the working of the Holy Spirit in the soul of a
young believer.
2. What
is Christ¡¦s estimate of these tender grapes? Why, next, He calls them tender,
tie might have called them sour, but He does not; He calls them ¡§tender. He
likes to use a sweet word, you see, the softest and best word that He can use;
so when you describe a young convert, my dear brother, do not at once point out
his immaturity, but call him ¡§tender.¡¨
3. Then
He says something more: ¡§The vines with the tender grape give a good smell.¡¨ Of
what do they smell?
III. What
is the danger to these tender grapes? (See Song
of Solomon 2:15). In
the spiritual vineyard there are ¡§foxes¡¨ of many kinds.
1. There
is, first, the hard censurer. He will spoil the vines, if he can, and
especially the vines that have the tender grapes. He finds fault with
everything that he can see in you who are but young believers. May God deliver
you from these cruel foxes! He will often do so by enabling you not to mind
them. After all, this is only the way in which all Christians have been tried,
there is nothing strange in your experience from these censurers; and they are
not your judges, you will not be condemned because they condemn you. Go and do
your best in the service of your Lord; trust in Christ, and do not mind what
they say; and you will be delivered from that kind of fox.
2. A
worse fox even than that one, however, is the flatterer. He comes to you smiling
and smirking, and he begins to express his approval of your religion, and very
likely tells you what a fine fellow you are. Indeed, you are so good that he
thinks you are rather too precise, you have gone a little over the line! Get
away from that fox at once. The man who tells you that you are too precise
ought to be precisely told that you do not want company. There never lived a
man yet who was too holy, and there never will live a man who will imitate
Christ too closely, or avoid sin too rigidly.
3. Then
there comes another foul fox, Mr. Worldly-wiseman. He says, ¡§You are a
Christian, but do not be a fool. Carry your religion as far as you can make it
pay; but if it comes to losing anything by it, well then, don¡¦t you do it. You
see, this practice is the custom of the trade; it is not right, I know, but
still, other people do it, and you ought to do it. If you do not, you will
never get on in business.¡¨ I know that there are many young people who, unless
they are watchful and careful at the very beginning of their spiritual life,
will get lamed, and never walk as they ought to do, because this fox has bitten
them.
4. There
is another ugly fox about, and that is, a doubting fox. He comes and says, ¡§You
seem very happy, and very joyful; but is it true? You appear to have become
quite a different person from what you used to be; but is there, after all,
such a thing as conversion?¡¨
5. There
are some foxes of evil doctrine, and they generally try to spoil our young
people. Do not any of you young people be carried away with the notion that all
the learned men are heretics; it is very largely the reverse, and it is your
sham, shallow philosopher who goes running after heresy. Get out of the way of
that fox, or else he will do much mischief to the tender grapes. (C. H.
Spurgeon.)
Verse 14
O my dove, that art in the
clefts of the rock, in the secret places of the stairs, let me see thy
countenance, let me hear thy voice.
A sermon for Lent
My text contains a
parable. The parable is one easy for us to realize. There rises somewhere in
the Jewish land a mountain of rock, and it rises precipitously. Looked at from
beneath it would seem as if its peak were inaccessible. Yet to the cragsmen of
the district it is an oft-trodden path. They rise from ledge to ledge of the
rock as by a natural staircase, and they pause and rest in its grottoes and
caverns, and find refreshment in the ascent. To one at least this is a well-known
spot. Again and again he climbs its height, and he has entered into familiar
intercourse with one of those making their homes in the cleft of the rock.
There dwells a dove that he has tamed, one who knows his voice, one who in his
sight is unequalled in comeliness, one the sound of whose note is as the
sweetest music to his ear. And as he climbs the mountain ascending to where the
dove dwells, he cries, ¡§O my dove, that art in the clefts of the rock, in the
secret places of the stairs, let me see thy countenance, let me hear thy voice:
for sweet is thy voice, and thy countenance is comely.¡¨ Such is the parable.
What is its interpretation?--at least to Christian men? To us the Song of
Solomon comes as a beautiful poem, revealing to us the conditions of Christian
life as lived in the love of Jesus Christ our Lord. He is the cragsman typified
of old! He draws nigh to His Church, as at this Lenten season; He speaks to His
dove, His undefiled one, in the words we are considering now. And this is His
cry--God grant that it may be answered by you, my brothers, at this Lenten
Season, ¡§Let me see thy countenance, let me hear thy voice: for sweet is thy
voice, and thy countenance is comely.¡¨ A dove is a type of innocence, I know,
but not a type of sinless innocence. It is a type of innocency recovered by
contrition. Ezekiel is our teacher here. Be sees Israel escaped from bondage
and restored to her fatherland, and thus describes her dwelling there. He shall
be like the dove on the mountains, all of them mourning, every one for his
iniquity. There is no sound so peaceful and so plaintive as the note of the
dove. Peaceful, for contrition is a state of peace. Yet, after all, mouruful is
his plaintive note, because in the contrite, true sorrow co-exists with peace
and joy. And this is the call of Jesus Christ at this time--that we will lift
to Him the countenance that is marked with tears of penitence; that we will lay
at His feet in the consecrated songs of the Church our misereres for
forgiven sin. Always in the Church¡¦s worship, in the worship of the individual
creature, blended with the voice of loud thanksgiving must be the wailing note
of the dove. It is this truth, I am sure, that we need to recognise--that
contrition is of necessity a feature of Christian life, because that Christian
life is lived by those who are not wholly free from sin, As we go on our way
day by day we are conscious of shortcomings. Nay, nay, happy is he who is not
conscious from time to time of deliberate deviation from the law of
righteousness. And even beyond that, whatever is wrought out in us by the great
crisis of conversion, it does not break that link of personality which links us
to our sin-stained past. We who live in the Divine peace and love and obedience
now are they who sinned in the sin-stained past. We cannot, if we are wise or
true, act as though there were no link linking us to that past. Our life,
therefore, of necessity, must be a life of contrition for sin, and all the more
intense just because that sin is forgiven. How, then, is this contrition to be
ours? God gives the answer in this season of Lent. Lent is one of the seasons
of our Divine education. Christ has created by His Spirit this season of Lent
in the Catholic Church, in order that He may teach us how to live a contrite life.
Well, how? In varied ways. Sometimes this contrition is awakened or deepened
within us by a revelation of the reality of God, as it was to Isaiah. Sometimes
by strange Divine interpositions in the ordinary course of life, as it was to
Simon Peter by the lake. Sometimes in the course of deep, engrossing study, as
it was with the Magi. Sometimes by a Divine call meeting us in the path of our
duty, as it was when Matthew was called from the receipt of custom. Yet,
mainly, Jesus educates us into contrition by the revelation of Himself as the
crucified Lord. It was thus when the 3,000 were brought to contrition. And so
it has been all down through the ages, as the testimony of the history of the
Church bears witness. And so it is to-day, as every evangelist will bear
testimony. Generally men are brought to contrition, generally men are
maintained in contrition, generally men advance in contrition through the
revelation of Jesus to the sinner as the crucified, by the power of the Holy
Ghost. Nor is it difficult to see why this is. Contrition depends upon
conviction of sin. It begins in our conviction of sin; it grows with the
deepening of conviction of sin; and this conviction of sin is ours through the
revelation of the Cross of Christ. As we recognize the connection between man¡¦s
sins and the Redeemer¡¦s sorrows, and see what sin is in its exceeding
sinfulness; our eyes are opened to judge of sin aright, and our judgment
expresses itself in self-condemnation. Again, contrition implies not only
conviction of sin, but the knowledge of God¡¦s love. A knowledge of sin¡¦s
exceeding sinfulness, unless it is followed by a revelation of Divine love,
would result in despair and death. But God, who sees our position of danger
when we are convicted of sin, reveals unto us Jesus Christ crucified, as being
the unveiling of Himself as the God of Love. He bids us see in the eyes of love
which look down upon the world from the cross, eyes that are lit up with the
very love of God Himself. And yet once more. If in the vision of the cross
there is given to us a revelation of the greatness of sin, and then of the
greatness of the love of God speaking to the sinner in his sorrow, and giving
to him the kiss of reconciliation, there comes to us a revelation of what a
sinner¡¦s life should be as lived under this conviction of sin and in this
vision of the love of God. It is to be a life of humility as the sinner kneels
at the loving Father¡¦s feet and breathes out in acts of devotion his own sorrow
for sin. It is to be a life of zeal, as he rises to show this sorrow for a
wasted past by devotion to the service of God in the living present. It is to
be a life of patient conformity to the Divine discipline, as he recognizes in
the sorrows of life God¡¦s blessed living purgatory in which His own children
are purified and educated according to His will. So, then, if you would go
forth and really live with God during this season of Lent; if you would have
your Lent life a reality and not a mere ecclesiastical sham, let it be a Lent
spent at the feet of Jesus Christ, your crucified, your enthroned Redeemer;
give yourselves up to Him in whole abandonment, and in the spirit of prayer.
Call upon Him in the power of His Spirit, to give you deeper conviction of sin,
a grasp of Divine love, a stronger purpose to live a life of firmer humility,
of zeal, and patience. Above all, remember this--there is no living the life of
contrition unless it is lived in the Divine peace. How wisely we learn this
from the order of the Church¡¦s seasons. Shrove Tuesday is not in Holy Week, nor
is its teaching assigned to Easter Eve. It is not first Lent, and then
forgiveness; it is first forgiveness and then Lent. Through Shrove Tuesday we
pass by the door of Ash Wednesday into the Lent of contrition. And so it is,
believe me, in our Christian life. If we would really mourn before God for sin
with a generous and unselfish mourning; if we would sing the song that he longs
to hear, we must sing it in the clefts of rock. It is only as we surrender
ourselves to Christ for forgiveness of the past; only as we cling to Him in
love and faith and hope for acceptance in the living present; only as we
entrust ourselves to Him for the future that awaits us; in a word, it is only
as we live in realized union with Him as our Redeemer, that we can ever offer
Him the contrition that He craves. (Canon Body.)
Verse
15
Take us the foxes, the little foxes, that spoil the vines: for our
vines have tender grapes.
The little foxes
The fox in the vineyard is exceedingly destructive. The
food of that animal is not merely flesh, but honey and fruits, particularly
grapes; and the young foxes not merely devour the fruit, but by their
sportiveness, and by the action of their teeth on the bark of the vine, destroy
as much us they devour. The habits of the fox increase the mischief. Instead of
roaming, as some animals, without any certain place of rest, he fixes the
bounds of his habitation, choosing a cave or den at a convenient distance from
those places which will furnish most substance for plunder; and from this
hiding-place and watch-tower united, he exercises his acuteness, ingenuity,
prudence, and circumspection, in the capture of whatever is fitted to be his prey.
The well-known voraciousness of the fox gives breadth to the mischief, and his
cunning renders the application of means of defence almost impossible. So that
the husbandman of the vineyard regards the fox as one of his greatest enemies.
We will consider the text--
I. As addressed to the
individual.
1. The evils, the capture of which is here urged, are such as the
following:--Ostentation--the spirit that leads men to give alms that may be
seen of men; to pray, that it may be said, ¡§Behold, he prays;¡¨ and to be very
particular that their circumspection may become the talk of a street or of a
town. Concealment--the temper that prompts men to try to prevent their light
shining by placing it under a bushel. The easily-offended and unforgiving
spirit--by which allied hearts are moved to a distance from each other, and
kept separate. Fear of man and men-pleasing--by which the soul is snared into
neglect of duty, and into the occupation of wrong positions. Anxiety--by which
the mind is distracted and the heart robbed of peace. A longing for treasure
upon earth--by which the religious sight is confused and the spirit darkened.
That judging of others--by which our beams are made motes and others motes made
beams. That finding our life and burying our dead, and bidding them farewell
who are at our house--which involves a looking back and an unfitness for the
kingdom of God. All such plausible errors in doctrine and specious deviations
from truth as affect principle and conduct; injustice in the things that are
least; trifling omissions of duty; all pleasures and indulgences producing
moral uneasiness, and especially all doubtful actions and courses, those deeds
and paths about which the conscience is uneasy and the spirit timid, about
which the mind is not made up, and in the performance or pursuit of which there
is, at least, a suspicion of the divine displeasure and frown.
2. The good which may be marred is of this kind. The subjects of
Christ¡¦s kingdom are born from above: we may expect in them
heavenly-mindedness. They are born of God: and we may look to them for
godliness. They are created anew by Christ Jesus: and we may expect to see
Christ-likeness.
3. This good may be thus marred:--The pursuit of religious
information may be checked. The attainment of divine knowledge by experience
may be hindered. The judgment may be perverted or corrupted. The memory may be
burdened with remembrance of sin. The conscience may be blunted or defiled. The
affections may be corrupted or divided. Godly action maybe impeded. The energy
of holy principle may be impaired. The bloom of spiritual peace and rest may be
removed. The enamel of character may be broken. The lustre of reputation may be
dimmed.
4. Such mischief ought to be prevented or cured. Take the foxes. Pray
in secret, and give in secret. Let your light shine. Forgive a brother his
trespasses. Fear not them that kill the body. Cast all your care on Him who
careth for you. Lay not up for yourselves treasure upon earth. Judge not Let
the dead bury their dead. Hold the faith and a good conscience. Do nothing by
which others are offended and made weak. Defy the persecutor. Withdraw from the
backslider. Take the foxes. Make impending evil captive, and, if possible,
destroy it.
II. As addressed to the
Churches of Christ.
1. The foxes in any congregation of believing men are such evils as
these:--Ill-humour, whether arising from the body, or from circumstances, or
from any dominant evil passion--that mood which makes a jaundiced eye and an
itching ear, and which will not see good, but is determined to discover evil.
Suspicion--the opposite temper to the charity that thinketh no evil, the spirit
that sees nothing but whited sepulchres, and platters clean but on the outside.
Distrust--the spirit that has no friend or counsellor, but saith deliberately,
¡§All men are liars.¡¨ Self-importance--the thinking too highly of
oneself, and too meanly of others, instead of estimating others and oneself
soberly. Carelessness and disorder--by which the sweetest ointment is spoiled, dead flies
being allowed to abide in it, and by which the most magnificent music is
marred, through the performance being slovenly in the execution.
2. So far as these evils have influence, they check the life of God
in the soul of the man, and thereby damage the fellowship. As a congregation
consists of individuals, so the character of a church is created by the moral
and spiritual attributes of persons. Whatever injures the individual, mars the
communion.
3. To prevent this spoliation, take the foxes. This is one with
Christ¡¦s precept (Matthew 5:29-30), ¡§cast it from thee.¡¨ (Romans 16:17; Romans 16:20; 2 Thessalonians 3:14; 1 Timothy 4:7; 1 Timothy 6:20; 2 Timothy 2:16; 2 Timothy 2:23; Titus 3:9; 2 John 1:9-10; 1 Corinthians 5:11.) Paul¡¦s directions and
John¡¦s are in harmony with the text. We remark,
Little Foxes
The St. Gotham Alp is a great mountain pass dividing Switzerland
from Italy. On the Swiss side the country is bleak and sombre, with great
mountains like white-coated sentinels keeping watch over the valleys. On the
Italian side the sky is bluer and nature is clad in gentler hues. The sloping
hillsides are covered with lovely vineyards. The sun is so warm that grapes
will grow in the open air, and the green vines are trained over frames and
posts, making the uplands look like a vast garden. The vine-dressers have to
use great care in order to preserve the fruit-bearing branches. The grapes have
many enemies. Tiny parasites abound which are very destructive. When the grapes
are young and tender the little foxes steal into the vineyards, and snatching
the bunches pull the branches down and spoil the grapes. Hence arose this
vineyard-keepers¡¦ song. There are little foxes that spoil the character of boys
and girls.
I. selfishness. Jesus teaches
us to think more of others than we do of ourselves. He pleased not Himself. His
life was one long act of service. Unselfishness is one of the tender fruits of
a Christlike character. A little fox steals in and prowls around trying to
spoil the grapes. His name is Self. He tries to make a boy think of none but
himself.
II. temper. This fox is nearly
always found in company with Self. When Self finds his way into the vineyard,
Temper generally follows, and eats what few grapes are left. This little fox of
Temper has a variable face.
1. Sometimes it is passionate. In the last summer months you have
seen the sun sailing in a clear blue sky and flooding the earth with life and
beauty. Suddenly thick black clouds gather and blot out the sun and smiling sky
till the earth is covered with a dark canopy. Great drops of rain splash on the
pavement, the lightning flashes and the thunder roars. The storm comes near,
passes over our head, dies away as quickly as it came. Then the sun shines out
till the raindrops glisten like diamonds, and the birds sing sweetly, and the
perfume of the flowers fills the air. So suddenly came these bursts of dark,
passionate temper.
2. Sometimes this fox is net passionate, but sulky. Then his victims
are like a dull, depressing day, when the mists are unrelieved by a solitary
ray of sunlight. The boy pouts and sulks. His anger is sullen, and if he is not
very watchful that fox will eat every bit of fruit clustering on the vine.
III. Deceit. None of you, I
hope, would ever stoop to wilful falsehoods. Rather die than be false to truth.
Deceit is an acted lie. When a girl breaks a jug and hides the pieces in the
cellar without saying anything to mother, that is deceit. I knew a boy who was
not very quick at sums, but was good at grammar. So he helped a boy at grammar,
and that boy did his sums in return. The boy took his sums on the slate to
school next day, and they were all correct. The master thought he was
improving, and expressed his pleasure to the boy. Tom knew he did not deserve the
praise, and felt very guilty. He thought he would tell the master; but just
then this little fox called Deceit came along and said: ¡§You are a silly boy if
you do. The master will never know unless you tell him.¡¨ But Tom was
straightforward, and told the truth, and kept out the little fox. We must be
like the vine-dressers, ever upon the watch. Little foxes grow big, and bad
habits grow strong. Passion grows in force and intensity. The boy who deceives
at school will do so at his work. Deceiving others ends in deceiving self. Keep
out the little foxes, and when the Master of the vineyard comes at the time of
vintage, He will find the rich and perfect fruit of the Spirit growing in our
lives to the glory of God. (E. Clowes Chorley.)
Little foxes
I. What the little foxes
are--what we are to understand as represented by them.
1. A little lie. Not a great, black, ugly lie, enough to make
conscience cry out, and to startle yourself and everybody that knows of it, but
a little untruth that does not hurt and need not frighten anybody.
2. A little theft. It was only a penny or halfpenny or farthing--only
a bit of pencil or a bit of ribbon--only a sweetmeat or a pin. It was only some
little unfairness in the class or in the game, that got you a place or credit
that did not belong to you.
3. A little outburst of temper. You were provoked, and flew into a
passion, and you looked or spoke or acted your anger.
4. A little act of disobedience, refusing to do, or putting off
doing, or not doing pleasantly and cheerfully, what a parent asked you to do.
You say you must do something else first.
5. A little oath, or slang expression, or low bad word.
6. A little act of selfishness.
7. A little yielding to indolence, laziness.
8. A little breaking of the Sabbath.
9. A little omission of prayer. 10. A little yielding to envy or
jealousy.
II. The harm the little foxes
do.
1. Little sins are real sins. A little fox is a real fox. A little
tiger is a real tiger. A little serpent is a real serpent. The smallness of it
does not alter its nature.
2. Little sins are apt to be little thought of. That is one great
part of their danger. You say ¡§it is only a little fault. Who would think
anything of that? It is only a little fox, what harm can it do?¡¨ The little sin
does not ruffle your conscience, or make you unhappy, or make other people
think much the worse of you for it. That is the worst of the whole case. That
is one of the strongest reasons why you should be afraid of it.
3. Little sins prepare the way for big ones, and form habits of sin.
I never heard of a boy becoming a drunkard, or a thief, or a swearer, or a
liar, or a profligate, or a criminal, all at once. It was gradually--by little
and little, that he became such.
III. How to catch them and kill
them. ¡§Take us the foxes, the little foxes.¡¨ Have you ever seen a party setting
out for a day¡¦s fox-hunting? How eager all are--men, horses, and dogs. They are
prepared to run any distance, to cross rivers, to leap over walls and hedges,
each more in earnest than the other to catch the fox. Their first concern is to
discover where he is, and then they set out after him with a will. And so your
first concern should be to discover what and where the little foxes are, that
are spoiling your vines. And having learned that, your next business is to
catch them and kill them. There are two hands with which you must seek to catch
them. Neither will do alone. Both must go together. These hands are prayer and
pains. The most important is prayer, for that calls in Divine help. But then it
is said, ¡§God helps them that help themselves,¡¨ and it is in helping
yourselves--watching, striving, resisting--that He helps you. You must keep
your eye ever open. You must never be off your guard. (J. H. Wilson, D. D.)
Words to the little ones
We read in the New Testament of Christ being the Vine, and so our
hearts joined to him are the vines, or, as they are called, branches. Now, we
know that grapes grow upon vines, so the tender grapes that grow upon our vines
are all the good thoughts, and words, and deeds that come forth from your young
hearts. We are told that little foxes spoil the vines which have tender grapes.
Why do you suppose that it is the little foxes against which we are warned?
Because the little foxes are often far more dangerous than the big ones. I
remember one day passing through one of our London squares. I saw two cruel
dogs chasing a eat--indeed, it was only a kitten. The poor little thing ran for
its life, and the two dogs after it, a big fellow foremost, and a smaller one
coming on as fast as it could behind. The kitten got safe to the railings of
the square, and it jumped in through them; and when the big dog, almost
touching it as it went through, tried to follow, he couldn¡¦t get in after
it--the railings were too close together, and so the little kitten thought
itself safe. But up came the little dog, and he was able to get through when
the big fellow couldn¡¦t; but I¡¦m glad to say a gardener, who was working
inside, drove it back again, and so the little kitten was rescued. Do you see
what I mean by that story? It shows us how small things are often more
dangerous than big things, for they can get in through small openings. Now that
is just the way it is with your young hearts. There are tender grapes growing
in them, and while you couldn¡¦t let a big fox in, perhaps many a little one
creeps in and destroys them, and takes all the sweetness out of them. You often
could not let a great big sin come into your heart, but a little one creeps in
almost without your knowing it. And the worst of it is these little fellows
come into the vineyard of your heart, and stay there, and grow big there. A
little untruth, so innocent-looking that we don¡¦t think it can do harm, gets in
first, and it grows and grows so gradually, that we don¡¦t notice it, and at last
it is a big lie! Ah! be on your guard against the small things--the small
unkindness, the first bad word, the first untruth, the first disobedience. Take
care of the little foxes, or they¡¦ll get in and destroy the tender grapes.
Don¡¦t be taken in by their looks. One time, when our soldiers were fighting
against Indians in America, a sentry at a very important point was found one
morning dead at his post. The guard had heard no sound, and they could not
imagine how any one could have come so close to the sentry as to kill him. They
thought he must have fallen asleep at his post. Another man was put in his
place, and next morning he, too, was found dead there. They were greatly
surprised, for he was a very steady man, and had been warned to be on the look-out.
So the officer selected another soldier, and said to him, ¡§Now, let nothing
escape you; if it¡¦s only a dog tries to get near you, shoot him.¡¨ The man
promised his officer to obey him. Well, an hour passed, and not a sound reached
the sentry. He thought then that lie heard a very little noise, as of something
walking on the dead leaves. He called out, ¡§Who goes there?¡¨ and there was no
answer. So he looked, and listened; and he saw a slight movement of a branch
some few yards off. ¡§If you don¡¦t answer, I¡¦ll fire,¡¨ said he, and raised his
rifle to his shoulder. He was just going to pull the trigger, when he saw a
small bear passing away from him beside a bush. So he lowered his gun, saying
to himself, ¡§What a fool I should have looked to have startled all the camp by
shooting that poor animal!¡¨ Still, he remembered his promise to his officer
that he¡¦d shoot even a dog; so saying to himself, ¡§I know they¡¦ll all laugh at
me, but I¡¦ll keep my word like a good soldier,¡¨ he fired. The bear fell, and
out rushed the guard at the sound of the shot. They ran over to where the bear
lay dead, and they found it was only a bear¡¦s skin and an Indian dead inside
it! The Indian had night after night approached the sentry, walking on hands
and feet, and concealed in the skin of a bear, and when he got close to the
soldier he had killed him. So, boys and girls, be on your guard. No matter how
innocent, no matter how small the untruth, the unkindness, the deceit, the
dishonesty may look, don¡¦t let them pass in that way. They are enemies, after
all: they¡¦ll kill you, if yon don¡¦t kill them. Beware of the foxes that spoil
the tender grapes. (T. T. Shore, M. A.)
Little sins
A famous ruby was once offered for sale in England, and the
crown jeweller reported that it was the finest he had ever seen, with a single
slight defect in one of the cuttings of the face. This almost invisible flaw
reduced its value by thousands of pounds, and the ruby was not purchased for
the regalia of the kingdom. It is only man¡¦s littleness which discovers no
importance in trifles. Trifles make perfection, and perfection is no trifle.
The most deplorable failures in Christian consistency and uprightness may,
generally, be traced back to a very small departure from duty. Give the ¡§little
foxes¡¨ an opportunity to break through the enclosure which surrounds the
vineyard, and the prospect of grapes will be small. What, then, are some of
these little sins, which mar our happiness or hinder our usefulness?
I. At the head of the list
may be placed a sour and crabbed temper.
II. Another little sin to be
watched against is the giving way to ease and self-indulgence. There is too
much of what may be called ¡§summer religion¡¨; a readiness to enjoy the
agreeable parts of it, without its restraints and sacrifices.
III. Dishonesty in our ordinary
dealings may be named as another example of little sins.
IV. Another little sin, as the
world looks at it, is jealousy. (J. N. Norton, D. D.)
Verse 16
My Beloved is mine, and I
am His.
The interest of Christ and
His people in each other
The Church says concerning
her Lord, ¡§My beloved is mine and I am His.¡¨ No ¡§ifs,¡¨ no ¡§buts.¡¨
The two sentences are solemn assertions. Not ¡§I hope, I trust, I think;¡¨ but,
my Beloved is mine, and I am His.¡¨ ¡§Yes,¡¨ but you will say, ¡§the
Church must then have been gazing upon her Husband¡¦s face; it must have been a
season of peculiar enjoyment with Him, when she could speak thus.¡¨ Nay, nay;
the Church, when she thus spake, was in darkness; for in the very next verse
she cries--¡§Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my beloved,
and be thou like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains of Bather.¡¨
I. I am my
beloved¡¦s, and my beloved is therefore mine.
1. ¡§I am my Beloved¡¦s.¡¨ Glorious assertion! I am His by the Father¡¦s
gift. But I am my Beloved¡¦s, if I be a believer, because of Jesus Christ¡¦s
purchase of me. But more than this, ¡§I am my Beloved¡¦s,¡¨ for I am His by
conquest. He fought for me, and He won me, let Him possess me. Besides this,
every true believer can add, ¡§I am my Beloved¡¦s¡¨ by a gracious surrender. ¡§With
full consent I give myself to Thee.¡¨ We have seen how we came to be our
Beloved¡¦s, let us inquire in what sense we are so now. We are his, first of all, by a near
affinity that never can be sundered. Christ is the head; we are His members.
Further than this; we, are our Beloved¡¦s by a most affectionate relationship.
He is the husband, believers are the spouse. ¡§I am my Beloved¡¦s¡¨ by an indissoluble
connection, just as a child is the property of his father.
2. The second sentence in order of time is, ¡§My Beloved is mine.¡¨ Ah!
you very poor men and women, you who could not call one foot of land your own!
If you can say, ¡§My Beloved is mine,¡¨ you have greater wealth than Croesus ever
knew, or than a miser ever dreamed. But how is my Beloved mine? He is mine,
because He gave Himself to me of old. But besides that, our Beloved is not only
ours by His own gift, which is the bottom of all, but He is ours by a
graciously completed union. ¡§I in them, and Thou in Me;¡¨ for thus the union
stands. Again: Christ is ours personally. We sometimes speak of severally and
jointly. Well, then, Christ is ours jointly; but He is ours severally too.
Christ is as much yours, however mean you may be, as though He did not belong
to another man living. He is all mine, all yours; personally mine, personally
yours. Oh that we could realize this fact! And, then again, Christ is always
ours. He is never more ours at one time, and less ours at another. The moment
we believe in Him we may know our perfect and invariable right to Christ--a
right which depends not upon the changes of the hour, or upon the temperature
of our frames and feelings, but upon those two immutable things wherein it is
impossible for God to lie.
II. I shall now
take the text in the order in which it is given to us, which is the order of
our experience. Do you not see, that to a man¡¦s experience God¡¦s order is
reversed? We begin thus: ¡§My Beloved is mine.¡¨ I go to Him, take Him up in the
arms of my faith, as Simeon took up the little Child in the temple, and
pressing Him to my heart, I say: ¡§Jesus, Thou art mine. All unholy and unclean,
I nevertheless obey Thy command; I believe Thee; I take Thee at Thy word; I
trust my soul wholly with Thee; Thou art mine, and my soul can never part with
Thee.¡¨ What next? Why, then the soul afterwards says: ¡§Now I am Thine,
tell me what Thou wouldst have me do. Jesus, let me abide with Thee. Lord, I
would follow Thee whithersoever Thou goest; put me on any service; dictate to
me any commandment; tell me what Thou wouldst have me to do to glorify Thee?¡¨
Christ is mine--this is faith. I am His--this is good works. Christ is mine:
that is the simple way in which the soul is saved. I am Christ¡¦s: that is the
equally simple method by which salvation displays itself in its practical
fruits. God¡¦s commands require obedience, and it is essential that every
servant be found faithful. Whatever Jesus bids us do, if it save us not from
anything else, at any rate the fulfilment of it will save us from the sin of
being disobedient to Him. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
The reciprocal interest of
Christ and His people
I. Every real
Christian may say, ¡§Christ is mine.¡¨
1. There are five different ways in which anything may become ours.
2. Among all these ways, there is only one in which Christ can become
ours.
II. Christ is the
property of all true Christians, so, all Christians are his.
1. They are His by creation; for by Him and for Him they were created.
2. They are His by inheritance; for we are told that the Father hath
appointed Him heir of all things.
3. They are His by purchase; for He has bought them, bought them with
His own blood.
4. Christians are the property of Christ by right of conquest.
5. They become His by gift.
Conclusion:
1. From this subject you may learn something of the worth and
interest of the Christian¡¦s portion.
2. We may learn from our subject to whom this incomparable gift
belongs; who it is that without presumption may say, ¡§Christ is mine.¡¨ Every
man may say this who can with truth repeat the other part of our text, who can
truly say, ¡§Christ is my beloved, and I am His property.¡¨
3. From this subject you may learn the extent of your duty. ¡§I am
Christ¡¦s¡¨ are words easily said, but the engagements which they imply are not
so easily fulfilled. If we are His, we are no longer our own. If we are His,
then everything that we possess is His--our time, our possessions, our
strength, our influence, our powers of body and faculties of mind, all are His,
and must be consecrated to His service and glory; and if we love Him supremely,
they will he so, for the whole man ever follows the heart.
4. How great are the privileges which result from an ability to say,
¡§Christ is mine.¡¨ If Christ is yours, then all that He possesses is yours. Its
power is yours to defend you, His wisdom and knowledge are yours to guide you,
His righteousness is yours to justify you, His Spirit and grace are yours to
sanctify you, His heaven is yours to receive you.
5. From this subject you may learn what is the nature of the
ordinance which you are about to celebrate, and what you are about to do at the
Lord¡¦s table. In this ordinance we give ourselves to Christ, and He gives
Himself to us. (E. Payson, D. D.)
My Beloved is mine
What I have to do is to
mention a few things which may help some timid one to say, ¡§My Beloved is
mine,¡¨ and then to do the same with regard to the second sentence in the text,
¡§I am his.¡¨ Thou askest, perhaps, ¡§May I say, My Beloved is mine?¡¨ You know who
that Beloved is; I have no need to tell you that. He is the chief among ten
thousand, and the altogether lovely. First, hast thou taken hold of Christ by
faith? Faith is the hand with which we grasp the Lord Jesus Christ. Hast thou
believed that Jesus is the Christ, and that God hath raised Him from the dead?
Dost thou trust thyself wholly to Him? Let me ask thee another helpful
question. Is He truly thy Beloved, the Beloved of thy soul? I remember well a
dear Christian woman, who frequently said to me, ¡§I do love Jesus, I know I do;
but does He love me?¡¨ Her question used to make me smile. ¡§Well,¡¨ I said, ¡§that
is a question that I never did put to myself,--¡¥If I love Him, does He love
me?¡¦ No, the question that used to puzzle me was, ¡¥Do I love Him?¡¦ When I could
once settle that point, I was never again the victim of your form of doubt.¡¨ If
thou lovest Christ, Christ loves thee for certain, for thy love to Christ is
nothing more nor less than a beam out of the Went sun of His love; and the grace
that has created that love in thy heart towards Him, if thou dost indeed love
Him, proves that He loves thee. Next, I would help thee with a third question.
Is Jesus dear to thee above all thy possessions? I hope that many of you can
say, ¡§O sir, we would give all that we have, we would suffer all that might be
suffered, we would part with the Very light and our eyes, too, if we could but
be sure that we might each one truly say, ¡¥My Beloved is mine.¡¦¡§ Well, if thou
lovest Christ beyond all earthly things, rest assured that He is thine.
Further, dost thou love Him beyond all earthly companions? Couldst thou part
with your dearest ones for His sake? Say, art thou sure of this? Oh, then, He
is assuredly thine! Dost thou love Him beyond all earthly objects? Aye, beyond
the desire of learning, or honour, or position, or comfort,--wouldst thou let
all go for His dear sake? Canst thou go that length? If thou canst, then surely
He is thine. Let me further help thee by another question. Is Jesus so fully
thy hope and thy trust that thou hast no other? O poor heart, if thou art clean
divorced from every confidence but Christ, then I believe that thou art married
unto Christ, notwithstanding that thou tremblest sometimes, and askest whether
it be so or not. Let that thought also help thee. I would further help you in
this way. If Christ is yours, your thoughts go after Him. You cannot say that
you love a person if you never think of him. He to whom Christ belongs often
thinks of Him. Again, do you do more than this? Do you long for Christ¡¦s
company? If ¡§my Beloved¡¨ is indeed mine, I shall want to see Him; I shall want
to speak with Him; I shall want Him to abide with me. How is it with you? And,
once more, if thy Beloved is thine, thou wilt own it to be so. Holy Bernard was
wont to say, and I believe that he could say it truly, ¡§O my Jesus, I never
went from Thee without Thee!¡¨ He meant that he never left his knees, and left
Christ behind him; he never went out of the house of God, and left Christ
behind him; but he went through the outward act of devotion with a
consciousness of the presence of Christ. Now, i f this be your habit to keep up
or to labour to keep up continued communion with Christ, and if you are longing
for more and more of that communion, then, dear friends, you are His, and He is
yours. Further, let me help you with a still closer question. Have you ever
enjoyed that communion with Christ? Didst thou ever speak with Him? Hast thou
ever heard His voice? If thou knowest anything experimentally about this
matter, then thou mayest conclude that thy Beloved is indeed thine. But
supposing that thou art not enjoying Christ¡¦s presence, I am going to put
another question to thee. Art thou cast down when He is away? If thou hast
grieved His Spirit, art thou grieved? If Christ be gone, dost thou feel as if
the sun itself had ceased to shine, and the candle of thy existence had been
snuffed out in utter dark ness? Oh, then, He is thine! If thou canst not bear
His absence, He is thine. Stretch out the hand, of faith, and take Him, and
then say without hesitation, ¡§My Beloved is mine.¡¨ ¡§Yes, weighing everything
the preacher has said and judging myself as severely as I can, yet I dare take
Christ to be mine, and to say, ¡¥My Beloved is mine.¡¦¡§ If that is your case, dear
friend, then you shall get confirmatory evidence of this fact by the witness of
the Spirit within your soul, which will very likely come to you in the form of
perfect contentment of spirit, perfect rest of heart. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
He feedeth among the lilies.
A song among the lilies
This passage describes a
high state of grace, and it is worthy of note that the description is full of
Christ. This is instructive, for this is not an exceptional case, it is only
one fulfilment of a general rule. Our estimate of Christ is the best gauge of
our spiritual condition; as the thermometer rises in proportion to the
increased warmth of the air, so does our estimate of Jesus rise as our
spiritual life increases in vigour and fervency. Tell me what you think of
Jesus and I will tell you what to think of yourself. Christ is all to us, ¡§yea,
more than all when we are thoroughly sanctified and filled with the Holy Ghost.
I. First, here is
a delighting to have Christ. ¡§My Beloved is mine.¡¨ The spouse makes this the
first of her joy notes, the corner-stone of her peace, the fountain of her
bliss, the crown of her glory. Observe here that where such an expression is
truthfully used the existence of the Beloved is matter of fact. Scepticism and
questioning have no place with those who thus sing. Love cannot, will not
doubt; it casts away the crutches of argument and flies on the wings of
conscious enjoyment, singing her nuptial hymn, ¡§My Beloved is mine, and I
am His.¡¨ In the case before us the love of the heavenly-minded one is perceived
and acknowledged by herself. ¡§My Beloved,¡¨ saith she; it is no latent
affection, she knows that she loves Him, and solemnly avows it. She does not
whisper, ¡§I hope I love the peerless One,¡¨ but she sings, ¡§My Beloved.¡¨
There is no doubt in her soul about her passion for the altogether lovely One.
But the pith of the text lies here, our possession of Him is proven, we know
it, and we know it on good evidence--¡§My Beloved is mine.¡¨ Jesus is ours by the
promise, the covenant,, and oath of God; a thousand assurances and pledges,
bonds and seals, secure Him to us as our portion and everlasting heritage. This
precious possession becomes to the believer his sole treasure. ¡§My Beloved is
mine,¡¨ saith he, and in that sentence he has summed up all his wealth. Oh, what
would all the treasures of the covenant be to us if it were possible to have
them without Christ? Their very sap and sweetness would be gone. Having our
Beloved to be ours, we have all things in Him, and therefore our main treasure,
yea, our sole treasure, is our Beloved. O ye saints of God, was there ever
possession like this?
II. The second
portion of the text deals with delighting to belong to Christ. ¡§I am
His.¡¨ This is as sweet as the former sentence. Christ is mine, but if I
were not His it would be a sorry case, and if I were His and He were not mine
it would be a wretched business. These two things are joined together with
diamond rivets--¡§My Beloved is mine, and I am His.¡¨ Put the two together, and
you have reached the summit of delight. That we are His is a fact that may be
proven--yea, it should need no proving, but be manifest to all that ¡§I am His.¡¨
Certainly we are His by creation: He who made us should have us. We are His
because His Father gave us to Him, and we are His because He chose us.
Creation, donation, election are His triple hold upon us. Now this puts very
great honour upon us. I have known the time when I could say ¡§My Beloved is
mine¡¨ in a very humble trembling manner, but I did not dare to add ¡§I am His¡¨
because I did not think I was worth His having. I dared not hope that ¡§I am
His¡¨ would ever be written in the same book side by side with ¡§My Beloved is
mine.¡¨ Poor sinner, first lay hold on Jesus, and then you will discover that
Jesus values you. This second part of the text is true as absolutely as the
first. ¡§I am His¡¨--not my goods only, nor my time, nor my talents, nor what I
can spare, but ¡§I am His.¡¨ The believer feels that he belongs to Jesus
absolutely; let the Lord employ him as he may, or try him as he pleases; let
him take away all earthly friends from him or surround him with comforts.
Blessed be God, this is true evermore--¡§I am His¡¨; His to-day, in the house of
worship, and His to-morrow in the house of business. This belonging to the
Well-beloved is a matter of fact and practice, not a thing to be talked about
only, but really to be acted on. If you are His He will provide for you. A good
husband careth for his spouse, and even thus the Lord Jesus Christ cares for
those who are betrothed unto Him. You will be perfected too, for whatever
Christ has He will make worthy of Himself and bring it to glory.
III. To conclude:
the saint feels delight in the very thought of Christ. ¡§He feedeth among the
lilies.¡¨ When we love any persons, and we are away from home, we delight to
think of them, and to remember what they are doing. Now, where is Jesus? What are these lilies?
Do not these lilies represent the pure in heart, with whom Jesus dwells? Where,
then, is my Lord to-day? He is up and away, among the lilies of Paradise. In
imagination I see those stately rows of milk-white lilies growing no longer
among thorns: lilies which are never soiled with the dust of earth, which for
ever glisten with the eternal dews of fellowship, while their roots drink in
unfading life from the river of the water of life which waters the garden of
the Lord. There is Jesus! But what is He doing among the lilies? It is said,
¡§He feedeth among the lilies.¡¨ He is feeding Himself, not on the lilies, but
among them. Our Lord finds solace among His people. His delights are with the
sons of men; He joys to see the graces of His people, to receive their love,
and to discern His own image in their faces. Then what shall I do? Well, I will
abide among the lilies. His saints shall be my companions. Where they flourish
I will try to grow. I will be often in their assemblies. Aye, and I will be a
lily too. By faith I will neither toil nor spin in a legal fashion, but I will
live by faith upon the Son of God, rooted in Him. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Verse 17
Until the day break, and the shadows flee away.
Darkness before the dawn
The spouse sings, ¡§Until the day break, and the shadows flee
away,¡¨ so that
the beloved of the Lord may be in the dark. A child of God, who is a child of
light, may be for a while in darkness; first, darkness comparatively, as
compared with the light he has sometimes enjoyed, for days are not always
equally bright. Yes, and he may be in positive darkness. It may be very black
with him, and he may be obliged to cry, ¡§I see no signs of returning day,¡¨
Sometimes, neither sun nor moon appears for a long season to cheer the believer
in the dark. This may arise partly through sickness of body. But yet it can be
only temporary darkness. The same text which suggests night promises dawn:
¡§Until the day break,¡¨ etc.
I. First of all,
let us consider our prospect. Our prospect is, that the day will break, and
that the shadows will flee away. We may read this passage ill many ways, and
apply it to different cases. Think, first, of the child of God wire is full of
doubt. He is afraid that, after all, his supposed conversion was not a true
one, and that he has proved it to be false by his own misbehaviour. He is afraid,
I scarcely know of what, for so many fears crowd in upon him. His eyes are
looking toward the cross, and somehow he has a hope, if not quite a persuasion,
that he will find light in Christ, where so many others have found it. I would
encourage that hone till it becomes a firm conviction and a full expectation.
The day will break for you, dear mourner, the shadows will yet flee away. This
expression is equally applicable when we come into some personal sorrow not
exactly of a spiritual kind. I know that God¡¦s children are not long without
tribulation. As long as the wheat is on the threshing-floor, it must expect to
feel the flail. Perhaps you have had a bereavement, or you may have had losses
in business, or crosses in your family, or you have been sorely afflicted in
your own body, and now you are crying to God for deliverance out of your
temporal trouble. That deliverance will surely come. Yes, in the darkest of all
human sorrows there is the glad prospect that the day will break, and the
shadows will flee away. This is the case again, I believe on a grander scale,
with reference to the depression of religion at the present time. We want--I
cannot say how much we want--a revival of pure and undefiled religion in this
our day. Will it come? Why should it not come? If we long for it, if we pray
for it, if we believe for it, if we work for it, and prepare for it, it will
certainly come. The day will break, and the shadows will flee away. I believe
that this is to be the case also in this whole world. It is still the time of
darkness, it is still the hour of shadows. I am no prophet, nor the son of a
prophet, and I cannot foretell what is yet to happen in the earth; it may be
that the darkness will deepen still more, and that the shadows will multiply
and increase; but the Lord will come. That glorious advent shall end our weary
waiting days, it shall end our conflicts with infidelity and priestcraft, it
shall put an end to all our futile endeavours; and when the great Shepherd
shall appear in His glory, then shall every faithful under-shepherd and all his
flock appear with him, and then shall the day break, and the shadows flee away.
II. Now consider
our posture, ¡§until the day break, and the shadows flee away.¡¨ We are here,
like soldiers on guard, waiting for the dawn. It is night, and the night is
deepening; how shall we occupy ourselves until the day break, and the shadows
flee away? Well, first, we will wait in the darkness with patient endurance as
long as God appoints it. Whatever of shadow is yet to come, whatever of cold
damp air and dews of the night is yet to fall upon us, we will bear it. What
next are we to do until the day break? Why, let there be hopeful watching. Keep
your eyes towards the East, and look for the first grey sign of the coming
morning. Then, further, while we maintain patient endurance and hopeful
watching, let us give each other mutual encouragement. What further should we
do in the dark? Well, one of the best things to do in the dark is to stand
still and keep our place. We are not going to plunge on in a reckless manner,
we mean to look before we leap; and as it is too dark to look, we will not
leap, but will just abide here hard by the cross, battling with every adversary
of the truth as long as we have a right hand to move in the name of the
Almighty God, ¡§until the day break, and the shadows flee away. What else ought
we to do. Keep up a careful separateness from the works of darkness that are
going on all around us. If it seems dark to you, gather up your skirts, and
gird up your loins. The more sin abounds in the world, the more ought the
Church of God to seek after the strictest holiness.
III. Now notice our
petition: ¡§Until the day break, and the shadows flee away, turn, my Beloved,¡¨
etc. I am not going to preach about that part of our text, but only just to
urge you to turn it into prayer. ¡§Turn to me, O my Beloved, for Thou hast
turned away from me, or from Thy Church, Turn again, I beseech Thee, Pardon my
lukewarmness, forgive my indifference. Turn to me again, my Beloved. O Thou
Husband of my soul, if I have grieved Thee, and Thou hast hidden Thy face from
me, turn again unto me! Smile Thou, for then shall the day break, and the
shadows flee away. Come to me, my Lord, visit me once again.¡¨ Put up that
prayer, beloved. The prayer of the spouse is in this poetic form: ¡§Come over
the mountains of division.¡¨ As we look out into the darkness, what little light
there is appears to reveal to us Alp upon Alp, mountain upon mountain, and our
Beloved seems divided from us by all these hills. Now our prayer is, that He
would come over the top of them; we cannot go over the top of them to Him, but
He can come over the top of them to us, if He think fit to do so. Like the
hinds¡¦ feet, this blessed Hind of the morning can come skipping over the hills
with utmost speed to visit and to deliver us. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Things to be awaited
We can speak confidently of such things only as we now know
in part, beginnings that here have no completion, germs that come to leaf and
bud, but not to fruit, in the soil of this world; processes that have promise
of great results but are cut short of them, desires and aspirations that now
have no full satisfaction.
I. We wait for
rest. If the question were raised: Is man made for toil or for rest? the answer
would be a mixed and qualified one. He is appointed to toil, he is destined to
rest; one is his condition, the other is his end. If man is made in God¡¦s
image, he is made to share in God¡¦s condition; and both Christian revelation
and heathen conjecture unite in conceiving of Deity as in repose, eternally
acting yet in eternal rest. If it be said that man can never attain this repose
because he can never reach the eternal perfection and power, it may be answered
that it does not depend upon the proportions of the being, but upon the harmony
of his powers and upon his adjustment to his external condition. One whose
nature has been reduced to perfect harmony may have perfect peace within, and
also without, if also he is in a world entirely adapted to him. But we have not
this rest at present except in some foretaste of it in our spirit. Unceasing
toil is the largest feature of human life. It is divinely appointed, but it is
painful; it is a blessing, but also a suffering; an evil thing, but with a soul
of goodness in it. It is wise, for, if remitted, vice creeps in, but it is no
less a bond that chafes, a burden that weighs down, a trial that wearies the
spirit. Some morning, this shadow will flee away. In the church of St. Nazaro
in Florence is an epitaph upon the tomb of a soldier, as fit for the whole
toiling race as for his own restless life: ¡§Johannes Divultius, who never
rested, rests,--hush!¡¨ We say of our dead, ¡§they rest from their labours.¡¨
Whatever the future world may be to us or require of us, it is not clothed in
the guise of toil, but offers seats of eternal rest; it is the contrast of
earth, the other side of mortal existence as spirit is the other side of
matter.
II. We wait for the
renewal of lost powers. However we answer the question, if life is a process of
loss or gain, it cannot be denied that real or apparent loss is one of its
largest features, even when life is at its best. Is this loss absolute, or do
we regain that which seems to pass? Shall I never,--so we are forced to ask
ourselves,--shall I never have again the buoyancy of youth, the zest, the
innocence, the unquestioning faith, the ardent desire and unconquerable will,
the bounding vigour of body and mind, with which I began life? We do not get
halt: way through our allotted years before these riches are gone from us. If
they are gone for ever, one half of life, at least, is spent under an
ever-deepening shadow. It is difficult to believe that existence is so ordered;
that God¡¦s increated gifts are annihilated; that the impress of His hands, the
similitudes of Himself, are blotted out for ever. St. Paul speaks of the
redemption of the body as something that is waited for. He means no narrow
doctrine of a physical resurrection, but a renewal of existence,--a restoration
of lost powers. It changes the whole colour of life, and its character also, if
we take the one view or the other,--if we regard existence as a dying-out
process, or as passing into temporary eclipse, to emerge with all its past
glories when the shadows of death flee away.
III. We wait for the
full perfecting of character. I do not mean, of course, that we are to wait in
the sense of relaxing effort after perfection--such waiting may end in an
eternal failure of character, but rather that the effort that now only
partially succeeds will finally reach success. There is nothing that weighs
more heavily upon a right-minded man than the slow progress he makes in
overcoming his faults. There is nothing a right-minded man desires so much as
entire right-mindedness. Will it never come? Yes--but it must be awaited.
Entireness is nowhere a feature of present existence, else it could not be a
world of hope and promise. On no thing can we lay our hand and say, Here is
finality and perfection. The adamant is crumbling to dust; the orderly heavens
oscillate towards final dissolution, and foretell ¡§new heavens¡¨; in every soul
is weakness and fault. We are keyed not to attainment, but to the hope of it by
struggle towards it. And it is this struggle, and not the attainment, that
measures character and foreshadows destiny. Character is not determined by
faults and weaknesses, and periodic phases of life, nor by the limitations and
accidents of present existence, but by the central purpose, the inmost desire
of the heart. If that be turned towards God and His righteousness, it must at
last bring us thither.
IV. We await the
renewal of sundered love. When love loses its object its charm is interrupted,
for love is oneness and cannot brook separation. It is impossible to believe
that God has organized into life an incurable sorrow; that He has made love,
which is the best conceivable thing--being the substance of Himself,--the
necessary condition of the greatest misery. Love may suffer an eclipse, but it
is not sent wailing into eternal shadows. It is as sure as God Himself that
human love shall again claim its own. But this eternal union must be awaited.
It begins here, springing out of mysterious oneness; it grows up amidst
unspeakable tenderness, rising from an instinctive thing to an intellectual and
moral union, losing nothing, and weaving into itself every strand of human
sympathy till it stands for the whole substance of life, and so vanishes from
the scene. If this prime reality is an illusion, then all else is. If it does
not outlast death, then all may go. But love is not a vain thing, and God does
not mock Himself and us when tie makes us partakers of His nature.
V. We wait for
the mystery to be taken off from life. The crucial test of a thoughtful mind is
a sense of the mystery of life in this world. This highest order of mind is not
antagonistic to faith; it is simply conscious of the incomprehensible range of
truth. None but an inferior mind has a plan of the universe; it is to the
thoughtless that all things are plain. What is life? What is matter! What is
the relation between them? What is creation? Granting evolution, what started
the evolving process? Assuming God, what is the relation of creation to Him?
What the relation of man? What is this that thinks and wills and loves--this I?
And then, what is it all for? Is there a final purpose and an order tending to
it, or is it but the whirl of molecules, the dust of the universe circling for
a moment in space, of which we are but some atoms? Is there a bridge between
consciousness and the external world, or a gulf that cannot be spanned or
fathomed? Is life a reality, or is it a dream from which we may awake in some
world of reality to find that this world was but the vision of a night? It is
useless to deny that this mystery carries with it a sense of pain. It is alien
to mind, a condition foreign to our nature. And the more thoroughly mind is
true to itself, the more painfully does it feel the darkness. When Goethe,
dying, said, ¡§Let the light enter,¡¨ he uttered, not the highest and best hope of
the heart, but the dearest satisfaction of the intellect. He felt that lie was
going where the shadows that hang over this world would flee away, and he could
find some answer to the questions that had vexed him here. So, too, those
commoner questions, Why does evil exist? Why do the innocent suffer? Why does
one suffer on account of another? Why does life end untimely? Why is man so
subject to nature? Why is the experience of life so long in ripening the fruit
of wisdom? Why are the chances so against man that he spends his days in sorrow
and evil? Why is there not more help from God? Why does life gradually assume
the appearance of a doom, spent in vanity and ending in death? We get no full
answer to these questions in this life. Shall these questions never be
answered? It is not easy to believe that mind will for ever be harassed by an
alien element; it may always require something other than itself to stand upon,
or as a toil like that which the jewel-merchant puts under precious stones to
reflect their colour, but it will not for ever wear this other as a clog
and burden. The mystery of the present life is due to the fact that it is so
heavily conditioned by its material environment; matter contends against
spirit. But as existence goes on, if it is normal, it throws off these
conditions and presses towards absolute action and full freedom. This is the
eternal state, and this action is eternal life, and the world where it is
achieved is the eternal world.
VI. We wait for
full restoration to the presence of god. There are hours when the whole world,
and all it contains, shrivels to nothingness, and God alone fills the mind;
hours of human desolation, seasons of strange, mysterious exaltation, times of
earthly despair, or of joy; the height and excess of any emotion bears us away
into a region where God Himself dwells. But even if we have taught ourselves to
make the impression of these hours constant, there is still an unsatisfied
element in the knowledge. We long for more, for nearness, for sight or something
that stands for sight, for the Father at hand, and the home of the soul. I know
that in many and many of God¡¦s children there is a longing for God that is not
satisfied, because they are children and are away from the Father¡¦s house. And
I know still better that the unrest of this weary world is its unvoiced cry
after God. This full, satisfying presence of God, must be awaited. It is
contended against by sense, by the world of things, by the limits that shut out
the infinite, and by our own slow and hesitating departure from the evil and
the sensual--a muddy vesture of decay doth grossly close us in; hut when this
falls off, and these earthly shadows flee away, we shall see face to face, and
know as we are known. (T. T. Munger, D. D.)
The saint¡¦s might and day
I. A soul once
truly married to Christ, will from thenceforth look on the lifetime in this
world as a night-time, a shadowy one, as indeed it is.
II. To those that
are truly married to Christ, the day will break in the other world, and the
shadows flee away; and they should live in the comfortable expectation of it.
Consider the day¡¦s breaking, and the shadows fleeing away thereupon. I am to
speak of the day¡¦s breaking in the other world to those that are married to
Christ. And here I shall show what a day will break to them there. A clear and
bright day (Isaiah 60:1-2). A fair day and calm.
There are no storms nor tempests, no blustering winds nor rains in Immanuel¡¦s
land (Revelation 21:4). A glad and joyful day (Psalms 126:5). An eternal day. Let us
next see how this day will break there to those who are married to Christ. As
coming near their night-journey¡¦s end, they enter the passage betwixt the two
worlds, the darkness and shadowiness of the night will come to a pitch. For as
the darkest hour ordinarily goes before daybreak, so is it here, the hour of
death is so in a signal manner, ¡§the valley of the shadow of death¡¨ (Psalms 23:4). As soon as they are got
over to the other side, immediately the day breaks, and it is fair daylight to
them. I proceed to consider the shadows, upon this breaking of the day, fleeing
away. What is that fleeing away of the shadows? The utter removal of everything
interposing betwixt God and them, and intercepting the light of His countenance
(Revelation 21:3). The removal of all
dark, gloomy, and melancholy things out of their condition (Matthew 25:23). The removal of all
imperfection of light, and whatsoever gives but a faint and shadowy
representation of Christ and the glories of the other world (1 Corinthians 13:12; Revelation 22:4). What are the shadows
that will flee away when that day breaks? The shadow of this world will then
flee away (1 Corinthians 7:31). The shadow of
sin (Hebrews 12:23). The shadow of temptations
(Romans 16:20). The shadow of outward
troubles will flee away, of troubles on your bodies, relations, names, affairs,
etc. (Job 3:17). The shadow of inward spiritual
troubles, through desertions, and hidings of the Lord¡¦s face. The shadow of
ordinances will flee away (Revelation 21:23). The shadow of all
manner of imperfections (1 Corinthians 13:12). I shall now
confirm this point, That the day will break, and the shadows flee away, as to
those who are married to Christ. It was so with their Head and Husband, and the
procedure with them must be conformable to that with Him (Hebrews 12:2). The nature of God¡¦s work
of grace in them; it cannot be left unperfected (Psalms 138:1-8.). The bounty and goodness
of God to His people. God is essentially good, and He is good to them in Christ
His Son. It is inconsistent with the goodness of His nature to keep them always
in the darkness of the night, and horror of shadows. The nature of the
covenant, which is everlasting, and cannot be broken. Consider believers living
in the comfortable expectation of the day¡¦s breaking to them in the other world
and the shadows fleeing away. It implies these following things:
III. It will be the
great concern of those married to Christ during their night-journey in this
world, that he may turn and come to them, till the day breaking and the shadows
fleeing away, they get to him in the other world.
1. I am to show what is Christ¡¦s turning and coming to those married
to Him, that will be their great concern to have.
(a) His seen or sensible presence with them, of the want of which Job
complains (Job 23:8-9), and in the enjoyment of
which the Psalmist triumphs (Psalms 23:4).
(b) His operative or efficacious presence in them (Philippians 3:8; Philippians 3:10).
2. The import of this concern of those married to Christ, that He may
turn and come to them, till the day¡¦s breaking and the shadows¡¦ fleeing away,
they get to Him in the other world.
3. The reasons of this concern in those married to Christ, that He
may turn and come to them.
(a) The sense of their liableness to mistake their way, that they need
Him for their direction and guidance (Jeremiah 10:23).
(b) The sense of their weakness for the journey, that they need to go
leaning on Him, as a weak woman on her husband (Song of Solomon 8:5).
(c) The sense of the great opposition and difficulty to be met with in
the way (Ephesians 6:12-13).
4. We shall now confirm this point, That it will be the great concern
of those married to Christ, during their night-journey in this world, that He
may turn and come to them till the day breaking and the shadows fleeing away,
they get to Him in the other world.
In the shadow
To all the light is very dear, and more so perhaps because this
life is a twilight season to all of us, we are all in the shadow. It is
not all dark, neither is it all light, but it is full of shadows, shadows of
sin, shadows of sorrow, shadows of sickness, of want, of disappointment, of death.
The brightest life cannot be all sunshine, over rich and poor alike the shadows
fall. The brightest eyes must be dim with tears sometimes, the gayest voices
must turn to mourning sometimes, the merriest Church bell must toll sometimes.
1. The Church on earth has ever been in the shadow of trouble, its
holiest members have had to suffer many things. In the Jewish Church there was
the shadow of idolatry and unbelief, the shadow of self-will and bad
government, ending in the darker shadow of captivity and exile. In the Christian
Church there have been shadows of persecution, of division, of false doctrine,
of lukewarmness, of tyranny.
2. So with ourselves, the individual members of the Church, we are
all more or less in the shadow.
3. We cannot make the darkness light, or scatter the shadows, or
hasten the daybreak, Jesus alone can do that. He who once said ¡§Let there be
light,¡¨ will say so again in answer to our prayers. (H. J. Wilmot-Buxton, M.
A.)
¢w¢w¡mThe Biblical Illustrator¡n