Consider Your covenant, for haunts of violence fill the dark places of the land. Sermons
I. THE NATURAL SUMMER. This is what is referred to in our text: the psalmist appeals to it as a plea for God's much-needed help. His infinite power, which had made summer and winter, and had been manifested in so many marvellous ways, was able to help Israel in their great distress, and their trust was that he would. 1. Israel had to maintain stoutly the truth that God made all things. A whole mob of idol gods was put forward and worshipped by the heathen as the authors and creators of the powers of nature. 2. And our missionaries to the heathen have to maintain the same truth of God the Creator of all. It is by no means universally or generally believed even yet. 3. And in our day and in our own land, professedly Christian as it is, we may not slacken our testimony to this truth. It is not that we have to contend with rival gods, as Israel had, and the missionary still has, but the existence of any God at all is either openly questioned or flatly denied. It is not polytheism, but atheism, that confronts and opposes the Christian advocate today and here at home. Natural law is everything; as if a law could do anything without an executive to put it in force. The ancient Greeks were pantheists, but our men of science have, too many of them, sunk down to a lower depth than that. The Greek saw gods everywhere and in all things; we see God nowhere. Shall we give in to this proud yet miserable atheism? God forbid! Let us still maintain with the psalmist, "Thou hast made summer." As we look round on all the rich glories of the season, let us confess, with our great Puritan poet - "These are thy works, Parent of good," etc. II. THE SUMMER OF GOD'S PROVIDENCE. How many are enjoying this! God's daily gifts of life, health, and joy are lavished upon them. They bask in the sunshine of his love. Everything bids them rejoice. But forget not the Giver of your joy - him who made the summer. That holy memory will be to you like the string attached to the child's kite, which is soaring away up in the blue heavens to the child's exuberant delight. But let that string be broken which now steadies and sustains, it, not hindering but aiding it in its upward way through the sunlit air, and then you know that at once it will come tumbling ignominiously to the ground. So if we let ourselves forget our God, and we be in thought and affection separated from him, then our poor joy, like that child's kite, will soon fall to the ground, and our gladness will soon be at an end. It is the remembrance," Thou hast made summer," which does not hinder but help our joy, steadying and sustaining it as did that cord the child's toy. Let us not forget this. And we would bid you remember God, because, else, the summer of God's providence, like the natural summer, is apt to breed many forms of evil life, like those many creeping, noisome, and miserably destructive insects, etc., which the summer sun calls forth, and which in our fields and gardens we are ever seeking to be rid of. How full the Bible is of records of the ill that the summer of God's providence has occasioned to many unwatchful and God-forgetting souls! Remember, too, that such seasons let that live which is not really strong, and which the first frost of winter will speedily kill. So is it easy, when no trial or persecution arises because of Christ, to appear as if we were really his. But when they do arise, what then? III. THE SUMMER OF GOD'S GRACE. 1. This may be in us - is so when the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts. It is very delightful; is independent of every other summer; comes by degrees; is the result of conflict; unlike the natural summer, it never ends, though it may be interrupted. And: 2. It is above us, waiting for us in the future world. There is the "land of pure delight." The lovely scenes of earth are reminders of it. It is the true, real, most blessed, because unending, summer of the soul. - S.C. I. WHAT IS MEANT BY THIS PLEA. 1. Fulfil thy covenant: let it not be a dead letter. 2. Fulfil all its promises. 3. Let nothing hinder or turn them aside. II. WHENCE THIS PLEA DERIVES ITS FORCE. 1. From the veracity of God. 2. His jealousy for His honour. 3. The venerable character of She covenant. 4. Its solemn endorsement, God's Word. 5. Its seal — the blood of Christ. 6. Nothing in it has ever failed. 7. The testimony of God's dying people. III. HOW AND WHEN THIS COVENANT MAY BE PLEADED. 1. Under a sense of sin. 2. Labouring after holiness. 3. When under strong temptation. 4. Or in great distress. IV. PRACTICAL INFERENCES. 1. Have a grateful respect for the covenant to which you pray the Lord to have respect. 2. Have joy in it. 3. Be jealous for it. 4. Practically respect it. ( C. H. Spurgeon.) The dark places of the earth are full of the habitations of cruelty The world wants the Gospel; the Gospel alone meets the world's necessities.I. THE WORLD'S NEED OF GOD. "The dark places," etc. 1. How dark a system is idolatry: see its sin, and misery, and cruelty. II. GOD'S PROVISION FOR THE WORLD. The covenant tells of the Gospel with all its abundant provisions. It brings light; it implants love. Christ is offered as food for the hungry, pardon for the guilty, consolation for the mourner, life for the dead. III. HOW IS THIS REMEDY TO BE APPLIED? 1. God Himself must apply it. But — 2. We must pray for the heathen; pray in public and at home. 3. And we must send messengers to the heathen who shall tell them of Christ. (John Hambleton, M. A.) People Asaph, PsalmistPlaces JerusalemTopics Acts, Attentively, Consider, Covenant, Cruel, Cruelty, Dark, Dwellings, Fill, Full, Habitations, Haunts, Honor, Mind, Places, Pride, Regard, Respect, Undertaking, ViolenceOutline 1. The prophet complains of the desolation of the sanctuary10. He moves God to help in consideration of his power 18. Of his reproachful enemies, or his children and of his covenant. Dictionary of Bible Themes Psalm 74:20Library The MeaningOf the Red Dragon with Seven Heads fighting with Michael about the new-born Child. The first vision of the little book, of which we treated in the eleventh chapter, ran through the whole Apocalyptical course, from the beginning to the end, and that, as we elsewhere observed, to point out its connexion with the seals and trumpets. Now to that vision the remaining prophecies of the same interval, and of the affairs of the Church are to be accommodated, in order to complete the system of the little … Joseph Mede—A Key to the Apocalypse The Prophet of the Highest. How those are to be Admonished who Abstain not from the Sins which they Bewail, and those Who, Abstaining from Them, Bewail them Not. The Wisdom of God Balaam's Prophecy. (Numb. xxiv. 17-19. ) Synagogues: their Origin, Structure and Outward Arrangements Jesus Makes a Preaching Tour through Galilee. The Sun Rising Upon a Dark World The Justice of God Psalms Links Psalm 74:20 NIVPsalm 74:20 NLT Psalm 74:20 ESV Psalm 74:20 NASB Psalm 74:20 KJV Psalm 74:20 Bible Apps Psalm 74:20 Parallel Psalm 74:20 Biblia Paralela Psalm 74:20 Chinese Bible Psalm 74:20 French Bible Psalm 74:20 German Bible Psalm 74:20 Commentaries Bible Hub |