His officials also contributed willingly to the people and priests and Levites. Hilkiah, Zechariah, and Jehiel, the administrators of the house of God, gave the priests 2,600 Passover offerings and 300 bulls. Sermons
I. THAT RELIGIOUS LIFE INCLUDES A FEW GREAT OCCASIONS. The religious life of Israel included some special occasions, of which this was one. Provision was made in the Law for one event of surpassing solemnity in every year (Leviticus 16.). And the very checkered course the nation ran provided a few extraordinary scenes which were great and sacred opportunities. Thus is it with individual lives. During a life of ordinary length and interest there will occur some few events which are signal, striking, critical. Much may depend on them; much use should be made of them. But, after all, it is not by them that our life will be sustained, and it is not upon them that any wise man will rely. It is the regular worship; it is the daily devotion; it is the habitual recognition of God and appeal to him that determines our spiritual position, that makes us to "live before" him and in him. II. THAT THE SERVICE OF GOD PROVIDES A VERY WIDE OPPORTUNITY. How many men, how many classes or orders of men, contributed to this one service! The king inspired and directed it (vers. 1, 2); the Levites "killed the Passover" (vers. 6-11); the priests "sprinkled the blood" (ver. 11). The heads of the orders, from the king downwards, contributed generously of their flocks to supply the people's need (vers. 7-9). The singers sang (ver. 15); the porters "waited at every gate" (ver. 15). So "all the service of the Lord' was rendered, every one taking his place and doing his best thereat (ver. 16). The Church of Christ is one Body with many members, and all the members have not the same office; very various indeed are the offices which are rendered by the disciples of the one Lord. And as, year by year, Christian life, as well as civilized life, becomes more complex and intricate, it becomes more decisively and imperatively our duty to recognize the fact that, while our own particular function has its importance, it is only one among many others, and that every one of us is beholden to his fellows for valuable services which it is not in his own power to render. And it is well also to mark that, in a state so complicated, with so many posts to be filled, there is the less excuse for any idle member. III. THAT THE SERVICE OF OTHERS SHOULD PRECEDE PROVISION FOR OURSELVES. "Afterward they made ready for themselves" (ver. 14). In the kingdom of Christ we are not to stand upon our official rights; we are to claim the supreme honour of serving others, after the manner of our Divine Leader. He was "among us as one that serveth;" he was here "not to be ministered unto, but to minister;" and we never stand nearer to him than when we abnegate any right we might officially claim, and prefer to wait upon others' wants; to minister to their necessities; to make them glad, or to do them good. Of ourselves we may think and for ourselves we may care, but afterward, not first. IV. THAT WE MAY RENDER AN EXCELLENT SERVICE BY A REVIVAL OF THE FORGOTTEN. It does not follow that old usages, though they once had the sanction of Christian custom, should be revived. Possibly they are better left alone. "The old order changeth," etc. On the other hand, the time may come for their revival, if not in the same form, in a different one. That usage, in some form, deserves to be restored which promotes devotion, humility, charity. - C.
His servants therefore took him out of that chariot. I. THE NATURE AND QUALITY OF THE LAMENTATION.1. Extensively. All Judah and Jerusalem. 2. Intensively. Bitter lamentation. 3. Protensively. Of long duration, "an ordinance in Israel." II. THE CAUSE AND GROUND OF IT. The loss of a good leader whose life had been useful. III. DOCTRINE. That faithful, active, and public-spirited men in the Church of God should not be laid in their graves without great lamentations. In replication I will show — 1. Negatively. On what account the death of good men is not to be lamented. 2. Positively. The true grounds and causes of such lamentation.(1) Because so much of the Spirit of God as dwelt in them, when amongst us, is now recalled and gathered up from this lower world. As it is a real loss to a company when any merchant withdraws a great stock he had running in trade, out of the bank; so certainly it is a great loss to the Church of God, when the precious gifts and graces of the Spirit, dwelling in the saints, are drawn out by death.(2) Because thereby a breach is made to let in the judgments of God upon the remnant that is left.(3) The beauty and ornaments of the places they lived in are defaced and removed by their death.(4) Because the propagation of religion is obstructed in the places from whence they are removed.(5) The consideration of the time in which good men die aggravates the loss, if it falls out, — (a) (b) (c) 1. The worst of men, such as secretly rejoice at the removal of such men. 2. The insensibleness of good men, who are apt too slightly to pass over such tremendous strokes of. God (Isaiah 57:1). 3. The very best of men, who though they do bewail and lament the loss of such men, yet they do not lament it in the due manner. ( John Flavel..) 2. The danger of undertaking any work without asking counsel of the Lord. 3. How universal is the reign of death. 4. That we should be cautious how we attribute sudden and violent death to the vengeance of the Most High. 5. That it is not wrong to mourn for the dead. (J. S. Wilkins, B.A.) 1. There was a general mourning for him. 2. The prophet Jeremiah made a particular office for it. 3. This office was used among others upon the day of lamentation. 4. This use was established by a law upon Israel, which was observed till the end of the Babylonian Captivity. II. THE REASONS OF THEIR DOING IT. 1. Because it was caused by their sins. 2. Because it was a punishment for their sins. (Bishop W. Lloyd.) Homilist. Why does the Jewish nation now weep over Josiah? The reasons are:I. THE GREAT NATIONAL LOSS WHICH THE EVENT INVOLVED. Josiah was a prince — 1. Of a reflective nature. His mind was in the quest of the highest truth. 2. Of a tender spirit. 3. Of reformative disposition. II. THE SAD MEMORY OF THE MORAL CAUSE OF THE CALAMITY. III. THE TERRIBLY DISTRESSING MYSTERY ASSOCIATED WITH THE DISPENSATION. Josiah was the most useful man of his age; yet he dies at thirty-nine. Mystery though it be, it teaches us — 1. That Heaven's government is no respecter of persons. 2. The irresistibility of death. 3. That there is nothing on this fleeting earth on which we should set our hearts. 4. That there must be an after life. (Homilist.). People Aaron, Asaph, Charchemish, Conaniah, David, Hashabiah, Heman, Hilkiah, Jeduthun, Jehiel, Jeiel, Jeremiah, Josiah, Jozabad, Levites, Necho, Nethaneel, Samuel, Shemaiah, SolomonPlaces Carchemish, Egypt, Euphrates River, Holy Place, Jerusalem, MegiddoTopics Administrators, 300, 600, Captains, Cattle, Chief, Contributed, Flocks, Freely, Freewill, Freewill-offering, God's, Heads, Heave-offering, Hilkiah, Hilki'ah, Hilkijah, Hundred, Jehiel, Jehi'el, Kids, Lambs, Leaders, Levites, Lifted, Livestock, Offering, Offerings, Officers, Officials, Oxen, Passover, Passover-offerings, Priests, Princes, Rulers, Six, Temple, Thousand, Twenty-six, Voluntarily, Voluntary, Willingly, Willing-offering, Zechariah, Zechari'ahOutline 1. Josiah keeps a most solemn Passover20. He provoking Pharaoh Neco, is slain at Megiddo 25. Lamentations for Josiah Dictionary of Bible Themes 2 Chronicles 35:1-19 7245 Judah, kingdom of Library Cheer Up, My Comrades!The first thing is to get every man into his proper place; the next thing is for every man to have a good spirit in his present place, so as to occupy it worthily. I will suppose, dear friends, that in the providence of God you are in your place, and that by the direction of God's Spirit you have also sought and found the precise form of usefulness in which you ought to exercise yourself. To-night it shall not be my business to arrange you; but assuming that it is well for you to keep where you are, … Charles Haddon Spurgeon—Spurgeon's Sermons Volume 26: 1880 The New Temple and Its Worship Importance in Luke's History of the Story of the Birth of Christ Josiah, a Pattern for the Ignorant. 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