Rain Upon the Mown Grass
Psalm 72:6
He shall come down like rain on the mown grass: as showers that water the earth.


The psalm tells of One greater than Solomon — Christ. These words teach that God will see to it that, by some means, Christ shall be made known to all mankind.

I. CHRIST IS OF UNSPEAKABLE VALUE TO MEN. Language is inadequate to set this preciousness forth. Our present estimate is low and feeble, even in our holiest moments. But it is a happy thing when an author illustrates his own book. Now, God has done this. Nature illustrates Grace: that is, God illustrates God; for in nature we have the best resemblances to God's dealings in the kingdom of His Son. As the sleeping, frozen earth needs, in order to make up to beauty and fruitfulness, the sun and the rain, so the soul of man needs Christ. For what is the human spirit without the Saviour? A clod of earth hardened into stone. See the condition of those peoples who know not Christ. And remember, Christ does not merely prevent our dying: He comes with a blessed quickening upon the human spirit. The simile of the text fails, for the rain does not give life, but only quickens seeds already in the earth. But Christ acts upon the latent powers of the mind, wakes up all its faculties, makes the man worthy to be called a child of God. When Christ comes to. us we become conscious of a new life.

II. AND AS THE RAIN COMES SO DOES CHRIST COME. When God gave Christ to man it was a question how He should bring Him home to human hearts. And it is a problem which ought to stir all Christian people, how to make Christ known to men. But here again nature helps us. What a beautiful paradise God has constructed, "watering the hills from His chambers." There is the great ocean I more than three-fourths of the world's surface is water. But in vain would that water lie all round the land and lave its shores. All vegetation would die if the water lay there; and so the great God has set in operation a wonderful mechanism. The sun daily, hourly, every moment, draws that water up into the air by evaporation; currents created by the sun float that vapour thousands of miles inland; and then the alternating strata of warm and cold air effects its condensation, and all over the earth it falls wherever it is needed, and waters the earth. The icy mountain peaks amongst the Alps are continual cloud factories. The invisible vapour rising one side of the mountain is condensed by the cold air of the summit, and formed into a cloud. It is ever producing clouds and sending them away over the land. And how seasonably the rain comes, and silently and freely. So Christ comes to men.

(L. Hebditch.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: He shall come down like rain upon the mown grass: as showers that water the earth.

WEB: He will come down like rain on the mown grass, as showers that water the earth.




Rain on the Mown Grass
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