Gihon and the River of Life
Psalm 46:4-7
There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the most High.…


The allusion in the text is probably to Gihon, a copious fountain, whose streams were so abundant that they were like a river. It made the hearts of the people glad; and if we lived under the same climate as they, and had as great a scarcity of water as Jerusalem naturally had, we should have been glad too. But oh! how does it lead us up to something higher than this! How does it lead us up to the "River of life," "the Gospel of the grace of God," which has gladdened the Church of God in all ages, which gladdens it now, and which will gladden it to all eternity!

I. THE CONTRAST.

1. In the certainty of supplies. Gihon might have been dried up; in times of great heat, the most abundant fountains in that country are often dried up; even Jordan, their greatest river — their only great river — is sometimes brought so low as to be reduced almost to a small stream. But when does the river of grace ever become dry?

2. Gihon's waters were but shallow. But who can fathom the depth of this river, the love from which it springs?

3. The course of Gihon might have been diverted, might have been turned into a new channel. When Jerusalem was besieged, it is not told us whether Titus turned the current of Gihon; yet it-might have been so. But who can turn the current of God's grace? Who can dam up that stream?

4. There is a contrast in the quality of the waters. No doubt the inhabitants of Jerusalem drank of this river, and were glad. They drank and were refreshed, and thanked God. Yet it only slaked their thirst; it did not go above that. But what is there not in the pardon of my sin? what is there not in the acceptance of my person? what is there not in the clear witness of the Spirit with my spirit that I am a child of God? If you enjoy that it shall be something more than slaking the thirst of the body.

II. THE RESEMBLANCE.

1. The waters of this Gihon were brought to Jerusalem by an aqueduct, and carried by conduits through the streets into the temple. It went through one of the high hills of Jerusalem. Hezekiah, therefore, must have had great difficulty. And the whole current of the Gospel must run through difficulties — what to the natural sense would appear impossibilities.

2. There is another strong line of resemblance, which is, that the Lord employs human agency. God was at no loss about Gihon; had He a mind, it would have bubbled up in the midst of Jerusalem; He wanted not the hands of men; it might have sprung forth at the base of that hill on which the temple was built. But Hezekiah's zeal must be called forth — his loss of money, his loss of time, his patience in the midst of disappointments. The water was brought into Jerusalem, and it was brought by human agency. God delights in human agency. When that agency is laid in the dust, laid low at the foot of the Cross, He delights to make use of it. It is His glory to work by human instrumentality.

(J. H. Evans, M. A.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: There is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the city of God, the holy place of the tabernacles of the most High.

WEB: There is a river, the streams of which make the city of God glad, the holy place of the tents of the Most High.




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