For You are my rock and my fortress; lead me and guide me for the sake of Your name. Sermons
I. GOD'S SAINTS MAY BE AT TIMES IN EXTREME DISTRESS. The list of troubles here specified is an unusually long one. 1. A net is spread for David (ver. 4). 2. There is a design on his life (ver. 13). 3. Bands of men are conspiring together (ver. 20, Hebrew). 4. His friends forget him (ver. 12). 5. His enemies are guilty of falsehood (ver. 18), reproach (ver. 11), slander (ver. 13). 6. Others unfeelingly flee from him (ver. 11). 7. He is in perplexity (ver. 9). 8. His strength faileth, his bones are consumed, because the consciousness of his own sin adds its bitterness to his woe (ver. 10). 9. His alarm (Hebrew) is so great, that he regards his case as one deserted by God (ver. 22). Here, surely, is a list of woes longer than most men could reckon up. There are few against whom enemies would take so much trouble to plot! But David was in a high position, and therefore he was a mark to be shot at! Note: The higher our position, and the greater our usefulness, the more likely is it that Satan will aim at us with his fiery darts. The more we disturb him, the more he will disturb us. And, for wise and holy reasons, the Lord may allow a messenger of Satan to buffet us. II. EVEN WHEN IN THE LOWEST DEPTHS, THERE IS NO MISTAKING THE SAINT FOR A SINNER, the believer for an alien, the godly one for a godless man. Scarce any one could have a longer list of woes to enumerate than David had, but yet the saint shines through all. 1. He knows where to flee for protection. (Ver. 1, Hebrew.) The way in which he still speaks to God as his God, his strong Rock, etc., is inexpressibly touching. "Be thou my Rock,... because thou art my Rock," is a wonderfully tender appeal to the loving heart of God. Even in the densest darkness the loving child must clasp the Father's hand, and cry, "Father!" Yea, because of the darkness, and the denser it is, the louder and more piercing will be his cry. 2. He knows to whom he flees - even to One who has redeemed him (ver. 5). (For the Scripture usage of this word "redeemed," see Deuteronomy 9:26; Deuteronomy 21:8; 1 Chronicles 17:21; Isaiah 29:22; Jeremiah 31:11; Micah 6:4; Psalm 130:8; Psalm 25:22; Hosea 13:14.) David was one who knew God, not only as a Deliverer from earthly calamity, but as a Redeemer from sin. And he could well put in this as a plea on which to base his petitions. The richest evangelical form of this argument is given in Romans 5:10; Romans 8:32. If God has taught us and drawn us by his Spirit to plead with him, that is the witness of the Spirit to the fact that we are redeemed out of the world. 3. He knows he may tell all his woes to God, just as they are. It has been no small comfort to us in writing these homilies to note, again and again, how the psalmist told God everything, just as he felt it. This we, too, may do, knowing that God will accept the prayer of faith and will bury all its faults. 4. He can absolutely leave all with God, not as one who finds it useless to contend with the inevitable, but as one who can implicitly trust his redeeming God. (1) All his times are in God's hand; the entire ordering of them; nothing will be neglected or overlooked. (2) He trusts his spirit in God's hands (ver. 5); i.e. his inner self, the immortal part of his being, wherein he is made in the image of God. Note: Since we know God as our redeeming God, who has graciously promised to be ours to the end, in our deepest sorrows, we may trust everything with him. III. GOD'S SAINTS CAN SCARCELY END THEIR MOAN ERE THEIR WORDS TURN TO SONG. When the Spirit of God presides at the soul's keyboard, the sounds may at first be in the minor key, but they will not long continue so. The plaint will be a diminuendo, and will be substituted by a crescendo of joyful song. Hence so many of the psalms which begin woefully end joyfully. There are three several mercies here recorded. 1. Deliverance. (Vers. 7, 8.) The narrow straits in which David was hedged up gave way, and he had amplitude of room. And sooner or later, in his own time and way, God will deliver the righteous out of the hands of the wicked. 2. Treasures of goodness laid up. (Ver. 9.) The thought of this evokes a very shout of praise, as well it may. Let the student compare the three expressions in ver. 4, "the net which they have laid privily;" ver. 19, "goodness... laid up secretly;" ver. 20, "Thou shalt keep them secretly." Is not the antithesis beautiful? The wicked have their nets laid in secret. But God's secrecy of love outwits theirs. He hides the saints in the secret place of his "pavilion," and prepares for them in secret "treasures of goodness," to be brought forth in all their richness as occasion requires. Note: God will be bringing forth from his secret treasury of love to all eternity. 3. Marvellous kindness manifested; and this in a beseiged (Hebrews 5:21) city(cf Psalm 23:5). At the very moment foes were encamping round him, God ministered such rich loving-kindness as to bear him up and bring him through. So it will ever be. The moment of man's fiercest plots will be that of God's most vigilant care (Psalm 121:4). And within the walls of the thickest dungeon God can minister richest supplies of heavenly food! IV. SUCH EXPERIENCES WILL LEAD THE SAINTS TO CALL ON THEIR FELLOW-BELIEVERS TO HOPE IN THE LORD, AND TO WAIT FOR HIM. (Vers. 23, 24.) The new experience of God's loving-kindness and care, which is born of such deliverances in answer to prayer, gives believers wondrous vantage-ground in exhorting others to put their whole trust in the Lord. Note: 1. It is an infinite mercy that God's providential care has preserved to us these records of the struggles, the prayers, and the triumphs of his saints. 2. Those who have known the most trouble are those who can afterwards minister most comfort to those who are troubled (2 Corinthians 1:3-5). 3. Let those who have known the depths of sorrow, and who have learnt how God can deliver, make their experience known to others (Psalm 66:16-20). 4. How abundant even now is God's recompense for his people's sorrows, when he thereby gives them such tastes of his love as they could not else have had, and then makes them "sons of consolation"! - C.
Be of good courage, and He shall strengthen your heart, all ye that hope in the Lord. Many are almost despairing because of their trials and their temptations. But be our circumstances what they may, here is an antidote to them all.I. THE PROMISE — "He shall strengthen your heart." We have duties, many, varied, arduous. Often they are very trying; but this promise is for us. And so in our temptations. These are continually occurring, and we know not how to overcome them. Again this promise is given. But you ask, "How am I to attain this strength? Must I always go on sinning?" No, for — 1. Faith is one grand means of victory over sin. "Walk in the Spirit, and ye shall not fulfil the lusts of the flesh." 2. Watchfulness is another help; taking care to keep away from the occasions and inducements to sin: occupation in what is good and right, storing the mind with God's truth. 3. Prayer. This must by no means be neglected, the more we pray the stronger we are. 4. In mortifying sin be careful to leave no part remaining. Cut down the tree, but not this only, pull up the roots. 5. Guard your thoughts and desires. 6. If sin has gained power over you, at once — delay not a day — in seeking to subdue it. The longer it is left the greater will be the difficulty. "Today, if ye will hear His voice," etc. But in our own strength no one is sufficient for these things; but the grace of God will help us. II. To WHOM THIS PROMISE IS MADE. — "All ye that hope in the Lord." Not the sinless, the perfect, but, etc. They are such as put all their trust and confidence in Christ. (J. Marshall, M. A.) I. WE ADMIRE PHYSICAL COURAGE; but, after all, it is chiefly a constitutional endowment. If a man be full of animal courage, no credit to him; for he has to thank his father and mother for his vigorous body which inspires him to be brave. Physical, or animal courage is not a rare quality. Moral courage is the great thing, that which will inspire you to do right at all costs. It was that which Jesus had and which He helps us to acquire. II. TRUE COURAGE WILL NEVER SWERVE FROM THAT WHICH IT KNOWS IS RIGHT. Margaret Wilson, in the days of Charles II., was tied to a post on the shore at the flow of the tide, but offered her life if she would obey the Church. Higher and higher the water rose, but she would not yield, and she died, crying out with her last breath, "Christ only is my Master." And many such martyrs there have been. That is moral courage. Dare to follow that which your conscience declares to be the truth; and be a Christian all out, though it may run you into risks of limb and life. It is the coward who is afraid to follow his convictions. Do not be a religious or political "turn-coat" against the secret conviction of your mind. "Toe the mark "in every sense in matters of truth and morals, and be brave enough to die rather than do wrong. III. HAVE YOU COURAGE TO SHOW YOURSELF A CHRISTIAN? And how many there are who cannot do this. But wily should you fear. Oh, be brave, not cowards. No doubt it does need moral courage to stand against ridicule, but be not jeered from the right. IV. IF YOU POSSESS TRUE COURAGE, YOU WILL NOT BE ASHAMED OF YOUR HUMBLE BUT HONOURABLE SURROUNDINGS. Don't have any false shame. Your hat may be battered, your shawl may be shabby, your coat may be an everyday one, but come up bravely to the house of God, and fear nobody. If the coat is the best God has given you, thank Him for it, and for all He has done for you. V. LET ME URGE YOU TO HAVE COURAGE TO DECIDE FOR JESUS CHRIST. (W. Birch.) I. WHAT IS REQUIRED IN THE EXHORTATION — "good courage." How this is founded on hope. (Romans 8:24; 1 Thessalonians 5:8). How needful is it — 1. When a man's sins press heavily upon him, and the cares and sorrows of earth weigh him down, how miserable is he if he have not hope. 2. Courage so founded is enduring. 3. And we are made more than conquerors over our spiritual enemies. II. THE PROMISE. "He shall strengthen your heart." 1. We are ignorant of our own hearts, and — 2. We are unwilling to know. 3. Hence we cannot strengthen our hearts; the Gospel only can do this. III. THE PERSONS TO WHOM THIS PROMISE IS MADE, — those who "hope in the Lord." Those also distrusting themselves hope for all in Christ. (G. C. Tomlinson.) I. BELIEVERS MAY HAVE GREAT NEED OF STRENGTH FROM GOD.1. David knew this, and from his own experience declares what God will do for His people. 2. There are many trials which the believer shares in common with the men of this world. 3. There are others peculiar to himself. He may be calumniated and despised; deprived of the fellowship of other Christians; cast down by reason of his departures from God, so that he walk in darkness and hath no light. 4. And there are sorrows which come to him through the sins of others. Those near and dear to him living in sin; the wickedness of the world; the divisions of the Church and her cold-heartedness. II. THE HOPE WHICH THE CHRISTIAN HAS IN GOD. It does not make him neglect means. It is founded on the Lord Jesus Christ, His death and resurrection and intercession. It implies that his life is free from presumption and that he prays for the Divine blessing. III. CONCLUSION. 1. Expect trials. 2. Maintain faith. 3. Remember the promises 4. Tell others of Christ. (B. W. Noel.) I. AN APPROVED COMPANY. The text is addressed to —1. Men of hope. They have not yet entered into possession of their full inheritance; they have a hope which is looking out for something better on before; they have a living hope which peers into the future beyond even the dark river of death, a hope with eyes so bright that it seeth things invisible to others, and gazes upon glories which the unaided human eye has never beheld. Have you this good hope? 2. They hope for good things, for this is implied when the psalmist speaks of those that hope in the Lord, for no man hopes for evil things whose hope is in the Lord. 3. If you are the persons spoken of in the text, this hope of yours is rooted, and grounded, and stablished in the Lord: "all ye that hope in the Lord." You have not a hope apart from the ever-blessed Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. 4. Some of them do not get much beyond hope, "All ye that hope in the Lord." This passage picks up the hindermost, it seems to come, like the men with the ambulance, to look after the wounded, and carry them on at the same pace as those who march in the fulness of their strength. II. There is AN OCCASIONAL WEAKNESS apparent in many of those that hope in the Lord. 1. It is a dangerous weakness, for it is a weakness of the heart. They lose their courage, their joy departs from them, and they become timorous and fearful. 2. This weakness occurs on many occasions. (1) (2) (3) 3. If this weakness of the heart should continue, it will be very injurious. (1) (2) (3) III. A SEASONABLE EXHORTATION. I like the way this is put. It is not alone, "Be of good courage"; there is an "and" with it: "and he shall strengthen your heart." At the same time, the exhortation is not omitted. It does not say, "He shall comfort your heart, therefore you need do nothing." They err from the Scriptures who make the grace of God a reason for doing nothing; it is the reason for doing everything. 1. If you want to get out of diffidence, and timidity, and despondency, you must rouse yourselves up. Do not sit still, and rub your eyes, and say, "I cannot help it, I must always be dull like this." You must not be so; in the name of God, you are commanded in the text to "be of good courage." 2. Do you not think that your God deserves to be trusted? What has He ever done that you should doubt Him? 3. If thou art not of good courage, what will happen to thee? I would not have you deserve the coward's doom, and speak of it as "retiring." No, get not into that class; be thou rather like that soldier of Alexander, who was always to the front, and the reason was that he bore about with him what was thought to be an incurable disease, and he suffered so much pain that he did not care whether he lived or died. Alexander took great pains to have him healed, and when he was quite well, he never exposed his precious life to any risk again. Oh, I would rather that you should be stung into courage by excessive pain than that you should be healed into cowardice! Christ ought not to be served by feather-bed soldiers. IV. A CHEERING PROMISE. "He shall strengthen your heart." God alone can do this. 1. Sometimes by gracious providences. 2. By the kindly fellowship of friends. 3. By a precious promise. 4. Beside all that, God the Holy Spirit has a secret way of strengthening the courage of God's people, which none of us can explain. Have you never felt it? You may have gone to your bed, sick at heart, "weary, and worn, and sad," and you wake in the morning ready for anything. Perhaps, in the middle of the night, you awake, and the visitations of God are manifested to you, and you feel as happy as if everything went the way you would like it to go. Nay, you shall be more happy that everything should cross you than that everything should please you, if it be God's sweet will. You feel a sudden strengthening of your spirit, so that you are perfectly resigned, satisfied, prepared, and ready. ( C. H. Spurgeon.). 1205 God, titles of Hid in Light 'Into Thy Hands' 'Lying Vanities' Be for Thou Art' "My Times are in Thy Hand" That it is Sweet to Despise the World and to Serve God An Exhortation to Love God Father, I Know that all My Life His Journey to South Russia. Whether Faith is Required of Necessity in the Minister of a Sacrament? Other Fragments on the Psalms. Ii. My Spirit on Thy Care How God Works in the Hearts of Men. Covenanting Confers Obligation. Appendix xiv. The Law in Messianic Times. There are Some Things of this Sort Even of Our Saviour in the Gospel... The Death of the Righteous How they are to be Admonished who Lament Sins of Deed, and those who Lament Only Sins of Thought. The Nature of Justification "The Truth. " Some Generals Proposed. Jesus, My Rock. The Communion of Saints. Of Faith. The Definition of It. Its Peculiar Properties. |