Our Daily Homily
by F B Meyer
Thou man of God! 2 Kings 1:9,11,13
OH that thou and I might so live before God and men, that they should recognise us as men of God, as God's men!
See how these ungodly captains at once recognised this, in the case of Elijah. They fretted and chafed against
his holiness; but they were forced to admit it. They tried to impose their orders, or those of their king; but
they realized that Elijah was the servant of Him whom they set at nought, so far as their own lives were concerned.
If we are really men of God, we shall be the last to assume the title. Notice that Elijah puts an if before the
title with which he was saluted: "If I be a man of God." Paul counted himself the least of all saints.
We must be of God. All our goodness must originate in Him. We can no more boast of goodness than a chamber can
boast of the light which irradiates each corner of its space. The faith that takes his grace, as well as the grace
it takes, is his. We are absolutely his debtors; and happy are they who love to have it so, and lie always at the
Beautiful Gate of God's heart, expecting to receive alms at his hand.
We must be for God. This is the only cure for self consciousness, for that perpetual obtrusion of the self life
which is our bane and curse. Ask that the Holy Spirit may fill you with so absorbing a passion for the glory of
Jesus, that there may be no room to think of your own reputation or emolument.
We must be in God, and God in us. This is possible, when we love perfectly. He that dwelleth in love, dwelleth
in God, and God in him. Oh, sea of light, may we lie spread out in thy translucent waves, as the sponges in southern
sapphire seas, till every fibre of our being be permeated and infilled!
Elisha, tarry here, I pray thee. 2 Kings 2:2,4,6
THRICE Elijah spoke thus to his friend and disciple, to test him. Perseverance, tenacity of purpose, a refusal
to be content with anything short of the best, are indispensable conditions for the attainment of the highest possibilities
of experience and service. And perpetually in our life's discipline these words come back on us, Tarry here! Not
that God desires us to tarry, but because He desires each onward step to be the choice and act of our own will.
Tarry here in Consecration. "You have given so much; is it not time that you refrained from further sacrifices?
Ungird your loins, sit down and rest, forbear from this strenuous following after. Spare thyself; this shall not
come to thee."
Tarry here in the Life of Prayer. "It is waste time to spend so much time at the footstool of God. You have
done more than most, desist from further intercession and supplication."
Tarry here in the attainment of the likeness of Christ. "It will cost you so much, if all that is not Christ
like is to pass away from your life."
Such voices are perpetually speaking to us all. And if we heed them, we are at once shut out of that crossing the
Jordan, that rapturous intercourse with heaven, that reception of the double portion of the Spirit, which await
those who have successfully stood the test. The law of the Christian life is always Advance; always leaving that
which is behind; always reckoning that you have not attained; always following on to know the Lord, growing in
grace and in the knowledge of the blessed Saviour, and saying to the Spirit of God, as Elisha to Elijah, I will
not leave thee.
Ye shall not see wind, neither shall ye see rain; yet that valley shall be filled. 2 Kings 3:17
THIS is God's way of fulfilling the desire of them that fear Him. We like to see the clouds blown forward through
the sky, and hear the moan of the rising wind; in other words, we like to see God's gifts on their way, or to have
the sensible emotion of receiving them. Sometimes we have symptoms and signs that fill us with rapture; at other
times, these are lacking, and we surrender ourselves to despair. Yet when we see neither wind nor rain, God may
be most mightily at work.
It is so in Church work. How often we make our valleys full of ditches! Our machinery is complicated and perfect;
we have spared neither pains nor care. Then we ardently desire the signs of a powerful revival, and break our hearts
if they are not apparent; while, all the time, if we only knew it, the Divine blessing is welling up in the ditches,
doing more than would be the case if our highest wishes were gratified.Here and there tears are failing silently,
hearts are being cleansed, lives are becoming yielded to God.
It is so in Christian experience. We expect to have our Pentecost as the early Church received hers. We desire
to see wind and rain, and to know that God is baptizing us; but this is not granted. There is no footfall of hurrying
clouds, no coronet of flame, no gift of tongues. But, deep down, the ditches are being filled up, yearnings are
being satisfied, the capacity for God within us is being met, though it grows apace. God be praised that the success
of his work is not gauged by outward signs!
A well may be filled as completely by the percolation of water, a drop at a time, as by turning a river into it.
And the oil stayed. 2 Kings 4:6
WHAT a sorrowful confession! There was no reason why it should stay. There was as much oil as ever, and the power
which had made so much could have gone on without limit or exhaustion. The only reason for the ceasing of the oil
was in the failure of the vessels. The widow and her sons had secured only a limited number of vessels, and therefore
there was only a limited supply of the precious oil.
This is why so many of God's promises are unfulfilled in your experience. In former days you kept claiming their
fulfilment; frequently you brought God's promises to Him and said, "Do as Thou hast said." Vessel after
vessel of need was brought empty and taken away full. But of late years you have refrained, you have rested on
your oars, you have ceased to bring the vessels of your need. Hence the dwindling supply.
This is why your life is not so productive of blessing as it might be. You do not bring vessels enough. You think
that God has wrought as much through you as He can or will. You do not expect Him to fill the latter years of your
life as He did the former. You can trust Him for two sermons a week, but not for five or six.
This is why the blessing of a revival stays in its course. As long as the missioner remains with us, we call look
for the continuance of blessing. But after awhile we say, Let the services stop; they have run their course, and
fulfilled their end. And forthwith the blessing stops in mid flow. Let us go on pleading with the unsaved, and
bringing the empty vessels of our poor effort for God to fill them up to the full measure of their capacity.
Like unto the flesh of a little child. 2 Kings 5:14
IS there any fabric woven on the loom of time to be compared in perfect beauty to the flesh of a little child,
on which, as yet, no scar or blemish can be traced? So sweet, so pure, so clean. It was a wonderful combination,
that the strong muscles and make of the mighty man of war should blend with the flesh of a child. But this may
be ours also, if we will let the hand of Jesus pass over our leprous smitten souls. At this moment, if you let
Hin, He will touch you and say, "Be clean," and immediately the leprosy will depart, and you will return
to the days of your youth not forgiven only, but cleansed; not pardoned only, but clad in the beauty of the Lord
your God, which He will put on you.
We do not count a little child to be free from the taint of sin. It is conceived in sin, and inherits the evil
tendencies of our fallen race. Its innocence of evil is not holiness. Jesus gives us more than innocence, He makes
us pure and holy. But there are other childlike qualities which our Saviour gives. The humility of a little child,
who is unconscious of itself, and who is not perpetually looking for admiration. The unselfishness of a little
child, who seeks its companion to share its luxuries and games. The trust of a little child, which so naturally
clings to a strong and loving heart, willing to follow anywhere, to believe in anything. The love of a little child,
who responds to every endearment with sunny laughter and soft caresses.
There is a great difference between childish and childlike. The former is put away, as we grow up into Christ:
the latter we grow into, as we become more like our Lord. The oldest angels are the youngest: the ripest saints
are the most childlike.
Behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha. 2 Kings 6:17
SO it is with each of God's saints. We cannot see, because of the imperfection of mortal vision, the harnessed
squadrons of fire and light; but the Angel of the Lord encampeth round about them that fear Him, and delivereth
them. If our eyes were opened, we should see the angel hosts as an encircling fence of fire; but whether we see
them or not, they are certainly there.
God is between us and temptation. However strong the foe, God is stronger. However swift the descending blow, God
is swifter to catch and ward off. However weak we are, through long habits of yielding, God is greater than our
hearts, and can keep in perfect peace. "Trust ye in the Lord forever; for in the Lord Jehovah is the Rock
of Ages."
God is between us and the hate of man. Dare to believe that there is an invisible wall of protection between you
and all that men devise against you. What though the heathen rage, and the people imagine a vain thing! No weapon
that is formed against you shall prosper, and every tongue that shall rise in judgment shall be condemned.
God is between you and the deluge of care. What thousands are beset with that dark spectre! They have no rest or
peace either day or night, saying, "Where will the next rent, the next meal, come from? " How different
the life of birds, and flowers, of children, of Jesus, and all holy souls. Oh, rest in the Lord, and put Him between
you and black care.
God is between you and the pursuit of your past. He is your reward; and as He intercepted the pursuit of Pharaoh,
so He stands at Calvary between your past and you. The assayer of retribution is arrested by that Divine Victim
what more can we ask!
This day is a day of good tidings. 2 Kings 7:9
IT was indeed. The enemy that bad so long hemmed them in had dispersed, leaving a great spoil behind. The famine
which had driven the people to awful straits was at an end, and there was now plenty of everything. It was inhuman
for these four lepers to be content with eating and drinking, and sharing out the spoil, when hard by a city was
in agony. Common humanity bade them give information of what had happened.
Let us take care lest some mischief befall us, if we withhold the blessed Gospel from a dying world. We know that
Jesus has died and risen again, and that his unsearchable riches wait for appropriation. We have availed ourselves
of the offer; but let us see to it that so far as we can, we are making known that the wine and milk may be obtained
without money and without price.
Mischief always overtakes a selfish policy; whereas those who dare to share with others what they have received,
not only keep what they have, but find the fragments enough for many days afterwards.
Let us tell men that the Saviour has overcome our foes, and has opened the kingdom of heaven to all who believe.
Let us speak from a full heart of all that He has proved to be. Let us invite men to share with us the grace which
hath neither shore nor bound.
One ounce of testimony is worth a ton weight of argument, and overpowers all objection. The Lord, on whom the king
leaned, derided the possibility of the prophet's prediction; and no doubt had plenty of adherents. But the leper's
report swept all his words to the winds. They had known, tasted, and handled. Let us remember that we are called
to be witnesses of what God hath done for us.
And the Man of God wept. 2 Kings 8:11
ELISHA foresaw all the evil that Hazael would inflict on Israel, and it moved him to tears. Though he was a strong
man, able to move kingdoms by his message and prayer, yet he was of a tender and compassionate disposition. This
was he who one moment upbraided the king of Israel for his crimes, and the next called for a minstrel to calm his
perturbed spirit with strains of music. The men that can move others are themselves very susceptible and easily
moved.
The nearer we live to God, the more we deserve to be known as men and women of God, the more will our tears flow
for the slain of the daughters of our people. Consider the ravages that drink, and impurity, and gambling, are
making among our people; enumerate the homes that are desolate, the young life that is wrecked as it is leaving
the harbour, the awful dishonour done to woman; and surely there must come times when tears well up for very humanity's
sake, to say nothing of the pity which they acquire who look at things from God's standpoint.
Jesus beheld the city and wept over it. Give us this day, 0 Son of Man, thy compassion, thy love, thy tears, that
we may speak of thy grace graciously, of thy love tenderly, and even of thy judgments with brimming, eyes.
"A broken heart, a fount of tears:
Ask, and it shall not be denied.'
Wouldst thou avert such issues; begin with the cradled babes of your homes. Win them for God; teach them how to
curb passion and subdue themselves. Tenderness and wisdom may arrest the making of Ben hadads.
Is it peace, Jehu? And he answered, What peace? 2 Kings 9:22
WE all want peace. Of every telegraph messenger, as he puts the buff coloured envelope into our hands, we ask almost
instinctively, Is it peace? If there is a rumour of war, a depression in trade, a bad harvest, a sudden calamity
in our neighbourhood, we instantly consider the effect it may have on the tranquillity and prosperity of our life.
By peace we too often mean the absence of the disagreeable, the unbroken routine of outward prosperity, the serene
passage of the years: not always eager for anything deeper. And if other and profounder questions intrude themselves,
we instantly stifle or evade them. Like Herod, we shut up the Baptist in the dungeon. Like the Roman general, we
make a desert and call it peace. Men will flee from a Gospel ministry which pursues them into close quarters, and
arouses unwelcome questions that break the peace.
There cannot be true peace so long as we permit the infidelities and charms of some Jezebel of the soul life to
attract and affect us. Jezebel may stand for the painted world, with its wiles and snares, or for the flesh, or
for some unholy association of the past life, like that which clung to Augustine. But there must be no quarter
given to the unhallowed rival of our Lord. Whatever its charms, it must be flung out of the window before we can
be at peace.
"Then, and not till then, we shall see Thee as Thou art;
Then, and not till then, in thy glory bear a part;
Then, and not till then, Thou wilt satisfy each heart."
If you are entirely surrendered to the Lord, "the peace of God, which passeth all understanding, shall guard
your hearts and your thoughts in Christ Jesus."
Jehu took no heed to walk in the law of the Lord God of Israel. 2 Kings 10:31
JEHU was the Cromwell of his time. He swept away the symbols of idolatry with ruthless destruction. Nothing could
withstand his iconoclastic enthusiasm. But he failed to keep his own heart, and therefore his dynasty lasted for
but one generation. It is a deep lesson for us all.
We may keep other people's vineyards, and neglect our own. We may give good advice to our friends, but into the
very faults against which we warn them. We may pose as infallible guides, but fall into the crevasses and precipices
from which we had carefully warned our companions. Jehu avenged the idolatries of Ahab, but he departed not from
Jeroboam's calves.
Before you rebuke another, be sure that you are free from the faults that you detect in him. When you hear of the
failings of some erring brother, ask yourself whether you are perfectly free from them. And never attempt to cast
out the mote from your neighbour's eye till you are sure that the beam has been taken from your own.
Take heed to your heart. Its complexion colours all the issues of life. Do not be content to be strong against
evil; be eagerly ambitious of good. It is easier to be vehement against the abominations of others than to judge
and put away your own secret sins. But while we keep our heart with all diligence, we cannot afford to be independent
of the keeping power of God. We must yield ourselves to Him, reserving nothing. The King must have all. The light
of his face must fill every nook and corner of the soul. And every power that opposes itself to his dominion, must
be dragged beyond the barriers and ruthlessly slain.
They made him king, and anointed him. 2 Kings 11:12
THIS dexterous overthrow of Athaliah by the bringing of the youthful king, who had been hidden in the secret chambers
of the Temple, accommodates itself so obviously to a reference to the inner life, that we must be pardoned for
making it.
Is not the spiritual condition of too many children of God represented by the condition of the Temple, during the
early years of the life of Joash? The king was within its precincts, the rightful heir of the crown and defender
of the worship of Jehovah: but, as a matter of fact, the crown was on the head of the usurper Athaliah, who was
exercising a cruel and sanguinary tyranny. The king was limited to a chamber, and the majority of the priests,
with all the people, had not even heard of his existence. So, unless we are reprobates, Jesus is within the spirit,
which has been regenerated by the Holy Ghost; but in too many cases He is limited to a very small corner of our
nature, and exercises but a limited power over our life.
There needs to be an anointing, an enthroning, a determination that He shall exercise his power over the entire
Temple of our Being; the spirit, which stands for the Holy of Holies; the soul, for the Holy Place ; the body,
for the outer court.
Holiness or Sanctification is Dot a quality or attribute which can be attributed to us apart from the indwelling
of the Holy One. If we would be holy, we must be indwelt by Him who is holy. If we would have holiness, we must
be infilled by the Holy One. But there must be no limiting of his power, no barrier to his control, no veiling
or curtaining of his light. The veil, if such there be, must be rent in twain from the top to the bottom.
The money that cometh into any man's heart to bring into the house of the Lord. 2 Kings 12:4
THE margin suggests that the thought of giving for God's house would ascend in a man's heart, till it became the
royal and predominant thought, swaying the whole man to obedience. It is a beautiful conception!
For the reconstruction of the Temple there were two classes of revenue: the tribute money which each Israelite
was bound to give, and the money which a man might feel prompted to give. Surely the latter was the more precious
in the eye of God.
Does it ever come into your heart to bring some money into the house of God? Perhaps the sug gestion comes, but
you put it away, and refuse to consider it. The thought begins to ascend in your heart, but you thrust it down
and back, saying, Why should I part with what has cost me so much to get! Beware of stifling these generous promptings.
To yield to them would bring untold blessing into heart and life. Besides, the money is only yours as a stewardship;
and the thought to give it to God is only the Master's request for his own.
The great mistake with us all is, that we do not hold all our property at God's disposal, seeking his directions
for its administration; and that we forget how freely we have received that we may resemble our Father in heaven,
and freely give. Too many, alas! are anxious to hoard up and keep for themselves that which God has given them,
instead of counting themselves and all they have as purchased property, and using all things as his representatives
and trustees. Let us make a complete surrender to our Lord, and from the heart sing,
"Take my silver and my gold,
Not a mite would I withhold.
He smote thrice and stayed. 2 Kings 13:18
A STRIKING spectacle. The dying prophet, with his thin hands on the muscular hands of the young king, as he shoots
his arrow through the eastern window; the exhortation to smite the remaining arrows on the ground; the bitter chiding
that the king had struck thrice only, instead of five or six times. What lessons are here! The Lord Jesus put his
hands upon ours. Here is the reverse to the incident referred to. Ours are weak, his are strong; ours would miss
the mark, his will direct the arrows, if only we will allow Him, with unerring precision. We shoot, but the Lord
directs the arrow's flight to the heart of his foes.
Our success is commensurate with our faith. If we strike but thrice, we conquer but thrice. If we strike seven
times, we attain a perfect victory over the adversary. Is not this the cause of comparative failure in Gospel effort?
Souls are not saved because we do not expect them to be saved. A few are saved, because we only believe for a few.
It is one of the most radical laws in the universe of God, and one which our Lord repeatedly emphasized, that our
faith determines the less or more in our own growth, and in the victories we win for Christ. Do not stay, 0 soul
winner, but smite again and yet again in the secret of thy chamber, that thou mayest smite Satan, and compel him
to acknowledge thy might.
Let us not stay, though the energy of earlier days may be ebbing fast. The sanctified spirit waxes only stronger
and more heroic, as Elisha's and Paul's did, amid the decay of mortal power. The Lord will say to us, as He did
to Paul, "My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made perfect in weakness."
Every man shall be put to death for his own sin. 2 Kings 14:6
SO ran the law of Moses. It forbade the imposition of punishment on the relatives of the wrong doer, but it had
no mercy on him. "The soul that sinneth, it shall die," was the succinct and conclusive verdict of the
older law, in this reflecting the spirit and letter of one yet older, which ran, "The day that thou eatest
thereof thou shalt surely die."
First, we were dead in our sins. Eph. ii. 5 puts this beyond all doubt. In the sight of God, all who walk according
to the course of this world, and obey the prince that now worketh in the children of this world, are dead in trespasses
and sins. However much they may be alive as to their souls, they are dead as to their spirits, entirely destitute
of the life of God.
Second, we have died for our sins. 2 Cor. v. 14, 15 (R.V.) establishes this fact, and shows that in Jesus, we who
believe in Him, are reckoned to have died in Him when He bore our sins in his own body on the tree. In God's estimate,
his death is imputed to us; so that we are reckoned as having satisfied, in Jesus, the demands of a broken law.
It has no more to ask.
Third, we must die to our sin. Rom. vi. 11. Reckon that you have died, and whenever sin arises, to menace or allure
you, point back to the grave, and argue that since you died in Christ, you have passed altogether beyond its jurisdiction,
for you have yielded your members as weapons of righteousness unto God. And having been crucified with Christ,
you now no longer live, but Christ liveth in you. Let it become your daily habit to place the grave of Jesus between
yourself and all allurements of the world, the flesh, and the devil.
The sins of Jeroboam, the son of Nebat, who made Israel to sin. 2 Kings 15:9,18,24,28
THIS chapter anticipates the final overthrow of the kingdom of the tribes. It describes the corruption and disorganization
of the people which made them the easy prey of Assyria. One puppet king after another was set upon the throne to
fall after a brief space of rule, and four times over it is said that they followed in the steps of Jeroboam, "who
made Israel to sin." The seed sown two hundred years before had at last come to maturity, issuing in the ruin
of the nation. 'What a comment on the inspired words, "Sin, when it is finished, bridgeth forth death."
Twelve times in the story of the kingdom of Israel we are told that Jeroboam, the son of Nebat, made Israel to
sin. The institution of the calves on his part seemed to be a piece of political wisdom, but it was an infraction
of the Divine law; and what is morally wrong can never be politically right. The house cannot stand unless the
foundation can bear the test of the Divine plummet. The kingdom of Israel fell, to prove to all after time that
the disregard of God's law is a foundation of sand, which can never resist the test of time.
Why is Jeroboam so frequently called "the son of Nebat"? Why should the father be for ever pilloried
with the son, except that he was in some way responsible for, and implicated in, his sins? There was a time when
perhaps Nebat might have restrained the growing boy, or led him to the true worship of God; or perhaps his parental
influence and example were deadly in their effect. How important that parents should leave no stone unturned to
promote the godliness of their children, bringing them up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord.
King Ahaz sent to Urijah the fashion of the alter and the pattern of it. 2 Kings 16:10
THE fashion of this world passeth away like a fleeting dream; or like the panorama of clouds that constitutes a
pavilion of the setting sun, but which, whilst we gaze, tumbles into a mass of red ruin. And yet we are always
so prone to imitate King Ahaz, and visit Damascus with the intention of procuring the latest design, and introducing
it, even into the service of the sanctuary.
Man naturally imitates. He must get the pattern of his work from above, or beneath; from God or the devil: hence,
the repeated injunction to us all, to make all things after the pattern shown on the mount. lf we would be rid
of the influence of worldly fashion, we must conform ourselves to the heavenly and divine. The pattern of the Body
of Christ of the position of each individual believer among its members, and of the work which each should accomplish
was fixed before the worlds were made. The best cure for worldliness is not unworldliness, but other worldliness.
The best way of resisting the trend of people around us is to cultivate the speech, thought, and behaviour of that
celestial world to which we are bound by the most sacred ties, and whither we are travelling at every heart throb.
This introduction of the altar of a heathen shrine into the holy temple of Jerusalem, reminds us of the many rites
in modern religious observances which have been borrowed from paganism, and warns us that the Church has no right
to go to the world for its methods and principles. Let the world do as it may in its discussions about truth, its
efforts to attract attention, and its organizations; our course is clear not to build altars after its fashion,
nor model our life on its maxims.
These nations feared the Lord, and served their graven images. 2 Kings 17:41
IT was a curious mixture. These people had come from Babylon, Hamath, and Sepharvaim, and were settled in the land
from which Israel was deported. In their desire to propitiate the God of the country, they added his worship to
that of their own gods (ver. 32), though they did not really fear Him (ver. 34). There was an outward recognition
of the God of Israel, which was worse than useless. Are you sure this is not a true description of your own position?
You pay an outward deference to God by attending his house, and acknowledging his day, whilst you are really prostrating
yourself before other shrines. The one originates in a superstitious fear, a desire to stand well with your fellows;
but it is in the direction of the other that your heart really goes. You come as his people come, sit as his people
sit, kneel as his people kneel; but your heart is far apart, and you only do as you do that you may follow your
own evil ways with less fear of discovery.
With all of us there is too much of this double worship; but let it be clearly understood that it is only apparent,
not real. No man ever really serves two masters, or worships two gods. Whatever conflicts with God in heart or
life is our chosen god. Whatever appears to share our heart with God really holds our heart. God will never be
in competition with another. He must either be all or none.
The soul that endeavours to divide its service between Jehovah on the first day, and its graven images all the
other days of the week, might as well discontinue its religious observances, for they count for nothing: except
to blind it to its true condition.
Now on whom dost thou trust? 2 Kings 18:20
IT was no small thing for Hezekiah to rebel against the proud king of Assyria. Hamath and Arpad, Samaria and Sepharvaim,
Hena and Ivah, reduced to heaps of stones, were sufficient proofs of the might of his ruthless soldiers. How could
Jerusalem hope to withstand? Rabshakeh could not comprehend the secret source of Hezekiah's confidence. It was
of no use for him to turn to Egypt. Pharaoh was a bruised reed. And as for Jehovah! Was there any likelihood that
He could do for Israel more, than the gods of the other nations had done for them? Not infrequently does the puzzled
world ask the Church, "In whom dost thou trust? "
Our life must to a large extent be a mystery, our peace pass understanding, and our motives be hidden. The sources
of our supply, the ground of our confidence, the reasons for our actions, must evade the most searching scrutiny
of those who stand outside the charmed circle of the face of God; as it is written, "Eye hath not seen, nor
ear heard what God hath prepared."
We all ought to have the secrets which the world cannot penetrate. Doubt your religion if it all lies on the surface,
and if men are able to calculate to a nicety the considerations by which you are actuated. We must be prepared
to be misunderstood and criticised, because our behaviour is determined by facts which the princes of this world
know not. We do not look up to the hills, because we look beyond them to God; we do not trust in silver or gold,
or human resource, because God is our confidence. We cannot but seem eccentric to this world, because we have found
another centre, and are concentric with the Eternal Throne.
And Hezekiah spread it before the Lord. 2 Kings 19:14
AMID the panic that reigned in Jerusalem, the king and the prophet alone kept level heads, for they alone had quiet,
trustful hearts. We hardly realize the crisis unless we compare it with the march of 200,000 Kurds or Turkish soldiers
upon some peaceful Armenian community. Israel had no earthly allies. Her only reinforcements could reach her from
heaven, and it was the care of these two saintly men to implicate their cause with that of the living God (ver.
4). This is the faith that overcomes the world, which realizes that God lives here and now in our home and life
and circumstances. His cause is implicated in our deliverance; his name will be disgraced if we are overwhelmed,
and honoured, if preserved. He is our Judge, Lawgiver, and King, and is therefore bound by the most solemn obligations
to save us, or his name will be tarnished.
When therefore letters come to you, anonymous or otherwise, full of bitter reproach; when unkind and malignant
stories are set on foot with respect to you; when all hope from man has perished, then take your complaint the
letter, the article, the speech, the rumour and lay it before God. Let your requests be made known unto Him. Tell
Him how absolutely you trust. Then malice and fear will pass from your heart, whilst peace and love will take their
place: and presently there will come a swift message of comfort, like that which Isaiah, the son of Amoz, sent
to Hezekiah, saying on the behalf of God, "That which thou hast prayed to Me, I have heard."
God knew the contents of the missive before you did; but He likes to read it again in the company of his child.
Let the shadow return backward ten degrees. 2 Kings 20:10
IT is impossible for us to understand how this could be. The shadow of the declining day waxes ever longer, and
only a miracle could change its appearance on the dial. It may suggest some significant thoughts about shadows
that may still go back.
The shadow of a wasted life. Of course, there is a sense in which the wasted years will never come again; they
have passed beyond recall. But the shadow may go back on the dial of our life when we truly repent, and turn again
to God, for He hath promised: "I will never leave thee, neither forsake thee." And "I will give
back the years that the canker worm and caterpillar have eaten."
The shadow of happier days. These seem to have gone. For long you have noticed the growing twilight, and it has
seemed impossible ever again to have the lightsomeness and spring of one or two decades back. But be of good cheer,
for when a man comes into that fellowship with God which sorrow and temptation teach, when with growing years he
attains added grace, we are told that he shall return to the days of his youth.
The shadow of early affection. Have you lost loved ones, so that your life is like a house the windows of which,
one after another, have become shuttered and dark? But love is not forfeited for ever. Those who forsake all for
Christ's sake shall get all back again in Him. His love comprehends all human love. The relationships of his kingdom
surpass in tenderness and tenacity those of the warmest earthly ties. Thy brother shall rise again, and thou shalt
hear him call thy name, and shalt sit with him in the Home of Life.
And his mother's name was Hephzi bah. 2 Kings 21:1
HEPHZI BAH means, "My delight is in her" (Isa. Ixii. 4). How strange, supposing that her name was any
indication of her character, that such a woman should have borne such a son; for "Manasseh did wickedly above
all the Amorites did which were before him." A godly ancestry, however, does not guarantee a holy seed. Hezekiahs
and Hephzi bahs may be the parents of manassehs. That this may not be so:
Let us guard against the inconsistencies of our private life. The child of religious parents becomes habituated
to their use of expressions in public which betoken the highest degree of holiness, and is therefore quicker to
notice any inconsistency in temper or walk. Is there not a subtle temptation also for those who work much for God
in public to feel that a certain laxity is permissible in the home? Will not late after meetings at night compensate
for indolence in the morning; and will not protracted services be the equivalent for private prayer? May not irritability
to servants or children be accounted for by the overstrain of our great work? Hence, inconsistency and failure
to realize our lofty aims, which are quickly noticed, beget distaste for our religion.
Let us guard against absorption in public religious duty to the neglect of the home. Does it never happen that
the children of religious parents are put to bed by nurses who are heedless of their prayers, because their mothers
have undertaken a mission? Do not boys sometimes grow up without the correcting influence of the father's character,
because he, good man, is so taken up with committees?
Let us guard against an austerity of manner, which prevents us being the companions, play fellows, and associates
of our children.
Thou shalt be gathered into thy grave in peace. 2 Kings 22:20
AS a matter of fact, Josiah's death was not a peaceful one. He persisted in going into conflict with Pharaoh necho,
king of Egypt, against the latter's earnest remonstrance (see 2 Chron. xxxv. 20 22); and, in consequence of his
hardihood, met his death. His servants carried him in a chariot dead from Megiddo (ch. xxiii. 30). Is there, then,
any real contradiction between the prophet's prediction and this sad event?
Certainly not! The one tells us what God was prepared to do for his servant; the other what he brought on himself
by his own folly. There are many instances of this change of purpose in the Word of God. One of them is known as
"his breach of promise," or "altering of purpose " (Num. xiv. 34, marg.). He would have saved
his people from the forty years' wandering in the wilderness, but they made Him to serve with their sins, and wearied
Him with their iniquities. He would have gathered Jerusalem as a hen gathers her brood, but she would not.
Let us beware lest, a promise being left us, we should seem to come short of it; lest there be in any of us an
evil heart of unbelief in departing from the living God, and frustrating some blessed purpose of his heart. "Eye
hath not seen, nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the things which God hath prepared for
them that love Him "; but we may limit the Holy One of Israel, and so restrain Him by our unbelief as to stay
the mighty works which are in his plan for us. He may desire for us a prosperous life and a peaceful death; but
we may close our dying eyes amid disaster and defeat, because we wilfully chose our own way.
Like unto Josiah was there no king before him. 2 Kings 23:25
THIS chapter is a marvellous record of cleansing and purging. We are led from one item to another of drastic reform.
Nothing was spared that savoured of idolatry. Priests and altars, buildings and groves, came under the searching
scrutiny of this true hearted monarch; and, as the result, it was possible to keep such a Passover as had not been
observed during the days of the judges or the kings (ver. 22).
How much our enjoyment of the solemn feast depends upon our previous efforts to put away from our lives all that
is inconsistent with the law of God. We hardly realize how insidiously evils creep in. Before we are aware, we
have fallen beneath God's ideal, and adopted the customs of our neighbours, or of those with whom we come into
daily contact. All such declension hinders our joy in keeping the Passover. It is needful, therefore, that there
should be times when we turn to God with fresh devotion, and in the light of his holy truth pass the various departments
of our life under review, testing everything by the Book of the Law. In Josiah's case, the sacred volume was recovered
from long neglect; in our case it needs to be re read in the light of higher resolves. This would be like a new
discovery. Our ultimate rule must always be the will of God, appreciated with growing clearness, and used as a
standard by which to judge the habits and tenets of our life. We read the Bible for purposes of a truer knowledge
of God and his ways, and for spiritual quickening; but let us also use it more frequently as the bath of the spirit.
Let us bathe in it. Let us revel in it as the grimy children of the slums in the laughing wavelets of river and
sea.
He carried out thence all the treasures of the House of the Lord. 2 Kings 24:13
AMONGST these deported treasures must have been much of the sacred furniture of the Temple, and the holy vessels;
because, in the days of Belshazzar, find them brought out to grace the royal banquet. BeIshazzar drank wine from
them with his lords, wives, and concubines, whilst they praised the gods of Babylon, who had given them victory
over their foes. Amongst the rest was the golden candlestick, whose flame afterwards illuminated the inscription
of doom, written by God's hand upon the palace wall. By the command of Cyrus these precious vessels were finally
restored (Ezra v. 14), and carried back to Jerusalem, by a faithful band of priests (viii. 33).
The whole story of the captivity is full of solemn lessons. The Church of God must make her choice between one
of two courses: either she must keep from all entangling alliances, and from vieing for temporal power; or she
must face the liability of being brought under the power with which she would fain assimilate. Israel wanted to
be as the other nations around her, imitating their organization, and allying herself now with one, and then with
another; in consequence she was swept into captivity to the very nation whose fashions she most affected (Isa.
xxxviii.).
Have we never tasted the bitters of captivity? Borne away from our happy early homes to live among strangers, set
to repugnant tasks, removed from all that made life worth living, we have known the exile's lot. Alas! if it be
so; yet, even in our captivity, where the Lord's song is silenced, and our harps hang from the willows, if we repent,
and put away our sins, and turn again to the Lord, He will not only have mercy, but abundantly pardon, and bring
us again that we may be as we were in times past.
Every day a portion, all the days of his life 2 Kings 25:30
IS it to be supposed that the king of Babylon took more care of Jehoiachin than God will take of us? Jehoiachin
had resisted his suzerain, and cost him a great expenditure of men and treasure; but nothing which had transpired
in the past hindered this provision of a daily supply. Will God do less for you, his child? Would it not come as
a relief if you were to be told that, from this moment till you die, you could always have a sufficient provision
of all the necessaries of life? But if you are a child of God, that promise has already been made! Do not be anxious.
but believe that God's word is at least as sure and as efficient as man's.
The allowance was continual. It did not begin with plenty, and gradually dwindle to scraps. The supply was maintained
year after year. Will God drop off your supplies, think you, because He forgets, or because his power is exhausted?
You know that each supposition is alike untenable. What He has done, He will do. The storehouses of nature open
to his key. His are the cattle on a thousand hills.
Every day a portion. Jehoiachin had not the provisions of a year or a month put down at his door; but as each day
broke he was sure of the day's portion. It may be that God is dealing thus with you. Only manna for the day: daily
strength for daily need.
All the days of his life. Jesus is with us "all the days"; and He is the Bread of God, in whom is every
property necessary for life. All the days are included in God's care for us, of birth and death, of sunshine and
shadow. Surely goodness and mercy shall follow you all the days of your life, and you shall dwell in the House
of the Lord for ever.
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