■.-•- v-,,:'',,: ism :?>*». ;/r«*J%?j ry, .^r. * -* \ 1:5 1:> I/O T ' TNTimDUCTOKY NOTE. TiiKSK studies of tlu' Old Testainont were originally l>ul>lislii'd in one of our most widely-cireulatetl reli^j^ious pi^pers. So many persons have expresKetl a wish for (luin in a more permanent form, that they are now s with the Plans of Men 215 XIX. The Ktngdoms that dle, and the Kingdom that lfves 230 TCX. PLOTLESS CoimCTIONS OF SrN .... 244 5 6 CONTENTS. PAOK XXI. The Mrs in the Fire 'J«;i XXII. The Man in tue Lions' Den "JT? XXIII. Tue Fitlfilmi:nt ov Prophecy in the Caheeu OF Cyrus 2^ XXIV. Christ the Centre of I3iblic.\x Thouout . . ."14 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. THK rKoriir.T of tiih iujokkn- tikaut. Oh that my homl were wat«TS, ninl niine eye* a fountain «»f t*'urs, that I lui^jht woop day unci night fur the sluiu of tho daughter of my iveopli-! — Jeu. ix. 1. ''pili: 'Weeping Prophet" is the title often -'- given to Jeremiah. lie is not a p(tjiuhir prophet. Unhappy men are not eommonly jxipu- hir men. Yet this one liail ami)le rea.^on lor the depression under whieli he lived, and the minor key whieh runs through the strain of his writings. He was verv far from being a morose man. He did not mourn over disajijjointed and)itions of his youth. He was not sound at the world's injustiee. He wasted no melodrama over the "cold, cold world." H<' was the last man living to be a mis- ant hroi)i'. It may help us to appreciate two of the most afl'ecting and sul)lime books of the Bible, to in- (piire. What was it that made this very able and godl}- man so miserable ? Why should he, more 7 8 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. than other men, be given over to lifelong sorrow ? Why should he, more than other men, leave us a book of "Lamentations" as the most signifieaut record of his life? Why should his name have coined a Mitruld give them a i)leasanter dis- course. People who are living in sin, and who know it, are sometimes very fond of "beautiful sermons." They will bear any thing better than the simple truth. Beauty is more pojjular than truth. Besides, this unpopular preacher stood alone. Not another one of the prophetic order stood by liini. The only friend he had was one Baruch. an obscure scribe ; and even he got sadly fi-ightened at the plain talk t)f his outspoken friend. The priests, too, hated liim as a renegade. All classes — some for one reason, and some for another — agreed in theii' spite against this solitary truth- teller. Like Bunyan and many another unpala- tiible preacher, he got liimself into prison for his 10 STUDIES OF TirE OLD TEST^UIENT. fidelity. For forty years it was his business to deliver his warnings and rebukes and threaten- ings, word for word, as God bade him, to nobles and priests and i)eople who were bent on destruc- tion, and determined not to be saved by God or man. To liim belongs the distinction of first suffering the burning of the word of God by the enraged king who would not listen to liis reproofs. Many times after his day, faitliful preachers and reform- ers saw the Bible burneJ in tlie markef-place by royal and papal decree. But the iirst in the h)ng line of such honored men was this desj)ondent prophet of Juda'a. On him Satan first wreaked that form of impotent revenge. As if a truth could be burned with a fiaming scroll ! A singular fact also is it, that this solitary preacher, the butt of a nation's ridicule, does not seem to have been made for such work. Usually God fits the man to his life's work. If he is to have stern work to do, he is made of stern stuff. Luther, with much that was lovable in his nature, was, on the whole, a rough, stout man. That square face and tliick neck, and those compact lips of his, indicate a man of will, who could bear rougher handling than other men. He was to contend with devils ; and God gave him a nature which deAils feared. Nobody ever called Luther the " weeping prophet." If he shed tears, it was on his knees before God only. He shed no tears Tin: PROPFIET OF THE BROKEN HEART. 11 before the Diet of Worms. He was in no lacliry- mose mood when he had tlie pope's l)nll to deal with, outside the Elster Gate of Wittenberg. The mourning i)rophet of Judaea does not seem to liave been of tliat stern make. lie liad a deli- cate and retiring nature, (ielitle and unseliish was he, like a loving woman. When the sombre truth fii-st dawns upon his early manhood, and he sees the work he has to lack- ness of it, and tin- funeral dir<;e of it, beeome intolerable, he heaps eurses on the day of his birth. True to his Oriental instinets, he curses the very messenger who bore tiie glad news to liis father that a boy was born to bear liis nam*'. Yes, lie is the Prophet of the Broken Heart. Tiiu sins of his people are a lifelong grief to him. His own work, as their spiritual teaeher, overwhelms him. The mystery of his life i.s, why he, of all men living, should have been* ealled to sueli a mission, auiong such a j)e«>ple, on the eve of their destruction, too late to do them any good ; wlien all that he can do is t<) proclaim to tiiem the jutlg- ments with whieh they are .soon to l>o overtaken. When the late Uev. Charles Kingsley was in his last sickness, and verv near his end, thou;;h he did not knt)w it, but was wailing in anguish for the daily expected death of his wife, he said one day, as his bi(»grapher tells u.s "It must l)e right; for it is so strange and yet so painful," The very mysteriousness of inexplicable trial is a token •)f the divine wisdom from whieh it comes. No other mind could contrive trial so profound. It mu.-t come from God, and " must be right." Such was the forlorn consolation of the stricken prophet, when overwhebned, as he often was, by the lot which it had pleased God to send him. Even THE PKoriiFrr of the iiuoken heakt. 13 God's veracity he (juestions: '• < > I.onl, tlmu hast (h'ceived me, and I was deceivetl. Iiu|neealions How IVoiii his lips like htmselmld words. 'I'm his own times and people he Wiis the prophet of do(»m. So far as they were eoneerned, his work endetl there. Not so in the ftire-reaehinj^ desijj^n of God. .leremiah "Imilded hetter than he knew." He did an uneonsi'ious work for eomin^ ages. Imperfect man as ho was, he w;uj the forerunner of the npiritiitif dis.l. cures of the new disjK'nsa- tion. The old di ^ ition was n«'ar its eml. Its Bun waii going down in blood-red chmils. Hut the spiritual meaning of the aneicnt forms and rites was coming slowly to the light. To no other prophet of the olden time, unless it he Isaiah, do we turn for glimpses of it as we do to this despair- ing one. The very bunlen of His soul pressed it out u( him. Ill' was driven to fall l»aek upon the spiritual truths and cons»«•(/ hinj, his sorrows, his self-conllicts, his errt>rs, his sins. Let us pass rapidly over a few suggestions ilrawn from this sketch t>f this remarkable man: — 1. Jeremiah npri» turn to him for relief. And in giving it he announced one of the great jtrinei- I)les of his working in the affairs of his king(h)m: hi works with minorities who are working for him. "Be not afraid nor dismayed by reason of this great multitude; for the battle is nob yours, but God's." (■;.) out against them. The Lord will ])o with you. 1. The history of the Church is full of illustra- tions of this law of divine procedure. Dip into it anywhere, and you come upoTi this divine shat- <^o.y- Napoleon thought that he knew the world well. lie had studied the history of great empires ; but he said it was an inexplicable mystery to him, that Christianity, beginning as it did with a few fishermen of the feeblest nation then on the globe, should hi his time have risen to be so much more mighty than his own conquests, which had almost all the armies of Europe to back them. " Ob I whi-re are kings and cnipiros now, Of old that went and came ? But, Lord, thy Church is praying yet, A thousand years the same." It was God's way of working with minorities who are working for him. When the Chuich be- GOD WORKS WITH MINORITIES. 23 came corrupt, ami needed reform, tin- same thing was repeated. A few earnest men, wlio were hunted likt; wihl beasts, in a few years shook the world. Tlie battle was not theirs, but God's. An old saying of tlie German reformers, which a modern reformer has untruthfully claimed as his own, was, " One, with God on his side, is a majority." "The battle is not yours, but (iod\s." This fragment of our lesson was the favorite text of 8ir Fowell IJuxton. lb- onee wrote to his daughter that she would find iiis IJible opening of itself to the i»laee where this passage oceui-s. This text it wius whieh gave him courage to move in the Ihilish Parliament for the emaneij)ation of slaves throughout the British Empire. When he entered on that conlliet. he stood almost alone ; when his bill was first read in Parliament, it was received with shouts of derisive laughter. Hut he be- thought him of this text, and began his speech saying, "Mr. Speaker, the reading of this bill is the beginning of a movement whieh will surely end in the abolition of slavery throughout the British dominions." The old Hebrew prophet never said a truer word. Sir Fowell knew it : for the battle was not liis, but God's. The same phenomenon was witnessed in the first attempt to establish American missions among the heathen. When one of the early meetings of the American Board was held at Bradford, Mass., less than twenty persons were in attendance ; and they 24 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMKNT. were hooted at by boys on the piazza of the hotel where they were in session. liarely sixty-fivo years have passed ; and at the hist nu'etin^j of tliat Board, in Providence, live tlionsand strangers from abroad were present, and two churches were filled with eager friends. When the first American missionaries readied India, the English CJovernment refused them a landing. " Go back," was the imperious onh-r : "go back in the ship in whicli you came." In the General Assembly of tlie Church of Scotland, when it was first i)r(ij)Osed to send tlio gospel to the heathen, reverend clergymen declared against the fanatical scheme. They said that " the heath- en were a contentcMl and happy jn'ople, and that it was no business of Scottish Christians to disturb them," And this in face of our Lord's express connnand, " Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to. every creature." Not a century has passed since that time : yet now all Christendom rings with gratulation over the achievement of Chiistian missions ; and no other class of men are so reverently canonized in tlie affections of the Church as her missionaries to the heathen world. This is the fruit of God's working with minorities who are working for him. So uniform has been this method of divine pro- cedure, tliat we may safely say that great progress of any good cause is seldom if ever secured in any other way. When a good cause becomes popular, GOD WORKS WITH MIN0IITTII':S. 25 and inajorities swin^' ovor to its support, the work is substantially tlone. Probably somo new cause is then eoniinj_j to the birth untlerneath. Every cause whicli (iod originates starts with only Gid eon's three hundred. 2, From this law of God's working, it is clear that in Kjn'ritiutl (iffairx the balance of power does not depend on numbtrn. Votes have very little to do with it. It depends on sj>iritual forces. It depends on insight into the spiritual wants of the World; on consecration to (Jod's service; on the power of prayer; on spiritual discovery of the side on which God is ; and specially on intenaity of Christian cliaracter. The few who start a great movement towards the world's conversion, and who become its heroes because God has chosen them, are always intense men. They see things vividly. They have great visions. They feel profoundly. Their souls are atlame with holy ardt)r. " His ministers are a llaming iire." Yet they are men of sustained en- thusiasm. The fire does not crackle and blaze out (juickly : it burns like kindled anthracite. In the best sense they are men of one idea, — a vast idea, in which a thousand common ones are centred, yet one to wliich whole souls can be reasonably devoted. So far as this world is concerned, God is possessed of one idea. Such men are always a power in the world. The world cannot help it, and they cannot help it. 26 STUDIES OF THE OLD TEST-;i:MENT. Such men are one of God's powers, imperial in authority, and destined to conquest. In due time numbers will swell around them. Meanwhile it is of very little account how many or how few they are at the outset. " A little flock: so calls He thee Wliu bought thee with his blood; A lit I It' flock, (lisowiu'd of iiit-n, But owned and loved of God." 3. It is a great thought on this subject, that the human race furnislwis hut a small part <>f the holy ministries of this world. The ministry of angels probably swells what we call minorities to secret majorities. " Are they not all ministering spirits ? " Invisible nniltitudes i)robably lill the air with their busy pinions in service to the right. Wv are sur- rounded with a great cloud of witnesses. When conflicts deepen on the earth, for and against the cause of Christ, other worlds send hosts of eager combatants to the fray. Probably no child of God is ever left without these unseen auxiliaries. " He shall give his angels charge over thee.'' Earthly monarchs often form secret treaties of alliance, offensive and defensive, by wliich each pledges the whole force of his kingdom to the support of the other. Let us have faith to see the unseen, and it may often help our wavering coiu'age to remember that countless myriads are in secret alliance with us. GOD WORKS WITH MINORITIES. 27 One of England's great poets says of a noted champion of liberty, — " Thou hast left behind Powers that will work for thee; air, earth, and skies: There's not a breathing of the common wind That will forget the»'. Thou hast great allies. . . . Winds blow and waters roil Strength to the brave." But the friend of Christ has allies more imperial than skies and winds and waters. Principalities in heavenly places, beings some of whom probably sway at their will the powers of nature, are his allies. 4. Success in spiritual affairs often loses the char- acter of a conflict, so overwhelming and so easy is the working of divine auxiliaries. Thus ran the good cheer to the outnumbered men of Judah: " Ye shall not need to fight in this battle : stand ye still, and see the salvation of the Lord with you." God's help often comes in immense waves of spiritual rerenforcements. Our small calcula- tions and petty fears are overborne. We are lilted up, and carried over the obstacles which daunted us. We can no longer find the perils which alarmed us. This comes about with such ease and stillness that we lose the sense of struggle and of combat. Revivals of religion often take on this look. The more powerful and pui-e they are, the more still and godlike. At such periods sanguine be- 28 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTiV3IENT. lievers are apt to think the age of conflict for the Church is over, and the latter days of peace and tran(|uil progress are dawning. In the great awakenings in New England, under the preaching of the l{^^v. Drs. Lyman Beecher and Nettleton, it was a favorite theme of gratulation t<> them, that probably the closing age of this world's pilgrimage was near at hand, and the golden visions of Isaiali were about to ])e realized. Tiiey seemed to them- selves to stand still, and see the salvation of the Lord. 5. Minorities of honest and earnest nwn, devoted to a great cau^e^ should never he opposed heedlessly. If it is God's method to begin great changes for good by putting into the hearts of a few men great ideas and great enterprises and great expec- tation, we need to be cautious how we treat men who man be spiritual pioneers. It is the way of the world to frown them down. They are branded with scornful nicknames. Fanatics, madmen, fools, men call them. " The crazy tinker " was the title by which the world labelled and libelled the author of the " Pilgrim's Progress." '• Method- ists," "Puritans," "Quakers," — all nicknames at first. Not so will the wise and candid treat such men. Fanaticism may always be detected by its affinity with malign passions. Religious earnestness is not fanaticism. Novelty in religious thought and theory of life is not presumptively visionary. GOD WORKS WITH I^rTNORITIES. 20 Tliat men turn the world iipsiile dowu, is no proof that they are madmen. St. Paul did that. When men are obviously moved by profound convictions, and are in dead earnest in proclaiming them, if they are honest, candid, prayerful, unselfish men, and do not contradict either the word of God or the common sense of men, they deserve a hearing. They mai/ /«■ heralds of a new era of Chi'istiau progress. 'I'heir ideas mai/ be from God. The l)ower wliieh moves them mai/ be the power of God. Tjieir self-conlidence may be a tlivine assurance, prophetic of the future. "The homely beauty of the good old cause " may be about to spring into new life and glory in their hands. Take care that you do not recklessly denounce and deride sueh men, lest you should denounce and tleriile (Jod. It is like God to raise up such men, and inspire them, and send them to his peo- ple, as he sent the old prophets. A docile s])irit will welcome God's teaehing, come in what form it may. God usually sends in forms which men have not expected. The true attitude of a Chris- tian thinker and worker toward such phenomena is one of vigilance and candor. \\1sd()ni did not die with our fathers ; neither will it die with us. Old men will not carry it out of the world with them. New truth must be expected from new men. The world has yet to see a great many John the Baptists, voices in the wilderness, forerunners of great eras. 30 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. Let US, th.en, be on the lookout for such men. Let us greet them with a God-speed when they make their divine credentials clear. Let us keep our fades in abe3'anee to our convictions. Wc k)ve what we are used to. We revere the ancient. We all have roots in tlie venerable past. Tliis is well. Yet the grandest arena of (iod's working is the future. A C'liristian's treasure sliould be tliere. Ours is a religion of liopc, of expectation, of on- looking to golden ages yet to come. Bk^ssed were those Jews in our Lord's time who strxxl waiting for his coming, ready to receive him with open hearts. Blessed, too, are the foreseeing men and women of all ages, who are always watching for the morning ; praying for great things ; working for great things; expecting great things; bending forward, and listening for the projdietic voices; quick to see the great light in the heavens, when it lirst gilds the tops of tlie eastern liills. 6. Within the Church of Christ itself is to fie found a minority of believers ii'hom God regards with peculiar complacency. An eminent clergyman of Philadelphia once expressed the opinion that 'a majority of the professed followers of Christ do not add any appreciable strength to the spiritual power of the Chiu-ch. It saddens one to think that this mav be true. Be it true or not, the fact cannot be doubted that there is within the Church a body of believers of peculiar spirituality of char- acter and consistency of life, who are generally a minority. GOD WORKS WJTU >rTNORITIES. 31 There is a church within the Cluircli. St. Joliii ill his vision of the future deckires, '' Blessed and holy is he that hath part in the fr> ject of prayer and Christian aspiration, to be num- bered among those chosen few. God looks upon them with complacent joy. Christ sees in them of the travail of his soul. They satisfy him. Like David, they are men after God's o\yi\ heart. Like John, they are beloved disciples. Like Mary, they have chosen the good part. Like Paul, they fight a good fight. Theu- very presence in the world, the world feels as a power on the side of right. Every good cause feels the loss of them when they die. As we stand beside their open graves, we thank God anew for the doctrine of immortality. One star differeth from another star in glory. So also is the resurrection of the dead. A INIODEL OF PRAYER IN EMERGENCIES. Ami Asa cried unto the Lord his God, and said, Lord, it is notliin{T •with thee to help, whether with many, or with them that have no power: help us, O Lord our God; for we rest on tluH', and in thy nauie we go apiinst this multitude. O I^ord, thou art our God; let not man prevail against thee. — 2 Citron. xiv. 11. ri^ I IE praters recorded in the Bible are almost 4- all of thorn luodehs in their place. Such is the prayer of the Jewish monarch in the text. King Asa is in a great strait. To all human appearance, his throne and his life are in peril. His Ethiopian enemy is hi battle array before him, M'ith numbers in the proportion to his own of about two to one. His defeat is morall}' cer- tain. He and his staff must have felt, in that valley of Ephratah, as they looked over the roods of glittering spears, as our own Wa.shington felt in Valley Forge, in the most dismal winter of the Revolution. He seems to himself to have come to the place of extreme catastrophe. He he can only lie down and die. Like the '" Father of his Country," the Jewish king betakes himself to prayer. It is about all there is left for him to do, preliminary to the fatal 33 34 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. morrow. His petition is very brief. In great emergencies oui- wants are summed up in few words. We have no heart for more. Tliis is the model of prayer in an emergency. It is made up of four fragments, eacli of which teaches us a funda- mental element in the spirit of prayer in such an exigency. 1. Prayer in emergencies should he founded on a strong faith in God's indi'pendence of human resources and methods of judgment. Hear the stricken monarch, as he kneels beneath the weight of a kingdom: "Lord, it is nothing to thee to help, whether with many or with tliem that have no power." This goes to the heart of the case. Nothing else equals the situation. ''True," we seem to hear him plucking up his own courage in the extremity, — " true, I am out- numbered. Every man of us must engage two to-morrow. The best military science of the age is pitted against us. These Ethiopian invaders are no mean folk. They are stalwart men, led by able generals, flushed with victories. They are doubtless laughing at our temerity, and glorying in our coming shame. And by all human calcu- lations they are right. They are sure to win : we are doomed to fail. The laws of war bid us make the best terms of peace we can. Now is the time for a masterly retreat. But — No: not so, not so ! What are numbers to the God of Judah? AVhat are military tactics, and captains A MODEL OF PKAYER IN E:MEIIGENCIES. 35 of renown, and the pomp of conquest, — what are they all to the God of Israel ? A small mat- ter, — a very small matter. I remind me of the Red Sea. Our God is the living God. He made the heavens and the earth. The nations are as a drop in a Inickct. He taketh up the islands as a very little thing. Yes, Lord, it is nothing to thee to help us in this emergency. It is like thee to give the battle to the weak. It is like thee to over- tlirqw the many by the few." Military history, in every age, is not destitute of similar occurrences. There have been Chris- tian generals, who, to the world's eye, have seemed to have mysterious successes. Tlicy who watched the career of Gen. Havelock in India observed this feature in liis history. His supe- riors used to put him upon service to wliich they dared not send otlier men. They said that he often succeeded, where, by the laws of war, he oucfht not to succeed. Whether due to his habits of pra3'er, or not, there was the fact. In our own civil war, on one occasion, the gen- eral in command of certain forces broke out with the exclamation, on the eve of battle, "We have got them now, and they know it. God Almighty cannot save them." So he had "got them," by all human reckoning of the chances. His staff responded, "• Yes, we are sure of them." But it happened, — how much it had to do with the fortunes of the da}-, we will not presume to say, 36 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. but it happened. — that the commander-in-chief on the other side was a praying man. He had that morning spent an hour in his tent, invoking divine interposition in tlie coming conflict. The close of the day found hnn again in his tent offer- ing tlianksgiving for a victory, while the presump- tuous general who thought that " God Almiglity could not defeat him " was in ignominious flight down the valley of the Shenandoah. Why should it not be so ? Such men command invisible allies. They invoke the onsCt of spirit- ual battalions. They lead their enemies into am- buscades of angelic legions. If our eyes were not holdcn, wc might see that the very air is full of them. Arc there not, in the lives of us all, emergencies in whicli our deliverance may depend on our real- izing to our faith the principle that God is in- dependent of the resources which decide human judgment? In certain extreme hours, very much may depend on the depth of our faith in this. Our own courage may depend on it. Our power to energize others may depend on it. Our power with God may depend on it. We need to feel that prayer may command improbable results, because it commands supernatural resources. ]\Iuch is gained also when we appreciate the ease \vith which God acliieves marvellous issues in response to prayer. " A God doing wonders " is one of his significaut titles, — significant of the A MODEL OF PRAYER IN EMERGENCIES. 37 usage of his dominion. To him there are no such things as emergencies. Prayer never finds liim overwhehned by surprises. " To thee there's nothing old appears, — Great God, there's nothin-j new." The magnitude of oiu' requests never startles his comix)sure. In his serene life, there are no extreme hours, no critical junctures, no unforeseen contingencies. He is never conscious of an hour when his resoui'ces run low, when Ids powers are put to the strain, when he is weary and would pause to rest. The affairs of the universe are never a bm-den to him. Note the biblical way of describing the acts of God: "He «^a^t', and it was done. He connnand- ed, and it stood fast. God said. Let there be light, and there was light." The serenity of the stars characterizes all his working. So calmly, so easi- ly, with such assurance of reserved forces and unused energies, does he perform, in answer to prayer, achievements wliich overwhelm our puny thought by theu' magnitude. Armies in the shock of battle he sways as easily as the breathing of an infant. A few years ago there appeared in our skies the most brilliant coraet of the century. It was six millions of miles distant from our globe. Such was the speed of its movement, that, if it had been aimed hither in its march, it would have come J95 38 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. crasliing upon us in less than two days, with the momentum of a liundrecl and fifty thousand miles an hour. Yet God held that blazing meteor in its appointed groove, worn by millions of years of travel, so that it glided gently across our world's orbit with motion imperceptible. It liad tlie still- ness of a painting. Our infant children looked out upon it, and bade it good-night, as a beautiful plaything in the sky, witliout so much as tlie clos- ing of an eyelid at tlie eternal rush of its progress. So calm, so facile, so beautifully silent, are God's wonder-workings in answer to prayer. Mysteries so vast and so anomalous that astonished anffels desire to look into them, occur with the ease of a summer twilitjht. We need to believe this. With all our hearts we need to accept it as the natural way of God's procedure. We need to be uplifted on the wings of faith to the divine plane of things in our emer- gencies. Then we can look dotvn upon them as aeronauts above the clouds look down upon thun- der-storms and tornadoes, from a region of unut- terable stillness and under an unclouded sun. 2. The example before us suggests, as a second element in believing prayer in emergencies, a pro- found seiise of the inadequacy of all other sources of relief but God. We need to feel that we are shut in to God, and God only. " Help us, O Lord our God, for we rest in thee." This is the plea of the imperilled monarch. This is his argument for the A MODEL OF PRAYER IN EMERGENCIES. 39 rescue of his tottering kingdom : " We are help- less. Our forces are outnumbered beyond the reach of human daring. We can die, but we can do no more. By all chances, as men count them, we are doomed. We do not know wliich way to turn. There is no turning for us. We march right on to death. We are shut up to the arm of God. llt'l}). Lord, or we perish." This familiar element in the spirit of prayer, emergencies force upon our thought. Often divine Providence seems to second the procedure of di- vine grace by leaving us in a great emergency till we feel this. Deliverance is slow in coming. Prayer is not answered in a breath. The (rial gathers intensity. The crisis deepens. The lire waxes hot. The object seems to be to quicken in the soul the sense of God as a reality because he is felt to be a necessity. Ruin here, ruin there, ruin everywhere except in the one thought that there is a God. Intense conceptions of the reality of God come to some minds in no other way than through this secret alliance of providence and grace in the discipline. The needed convictions have to be burned in by fiery trial. But when the end is gained, when God becomes an infinite fact, when we become content to go fearless into solitude with God, to cast every thing upon God, to rest in God, then believing prayer wells up sweet and fresh from the heart, and flows out in glad assurance from the lips. Then relief, success, conquest, is not far off. 40 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. In this spirit, not only the great exigencies of the Church need to be met, but the emergencies of individual life as well. Said Whitefield in one of the crises of his life, "I have thrown myself blindfold into His almighty arms." Said the late Rev. Dr. (Jrilfin in a similar exigency, "I feel that God is all that is left to me." Every human life lies through some such valleys of Ephratah, where the man seems to himself shut out from all human sources of support, and shut in to solitude witli God. If such crises arc met in the spirit of believing prayer, they are tlie pre- cursors of triumph. Some conquest of opposing forces, or some self-conquest preparative to heav- en, or some conquest over powers of darkness of which only God and angels are the witnesses, is in the near future. 3. Prayer in emergencies, as illustrated in tlie example before us, involves a third element. It is a profound identification with God. " In thy name we go against this multitude." That is, " The battle is not oiu-s, but God's. Oiu- interests are lost in God's interests. Selfish desire can have no place here. We are lifted and driven be3-ond all that. For God we pray ; for God we fight." So Luther felt in the great crisis of his life. " Here stand I for God : I can do no other." So the crreat leaders of the Church have marched to victory. Until the cause at stake is thus identi- fied with God, prevailing prayer is impossible. In A MODEL OF PRAYER IN EMERGENCIES. 41 a selfish prayer we beat the winds. Nothing is sure in this world but the purposes of God. No interests are safe but his. No cause is secure but his. Until we can get our private individual concerns within the lines of his plans, we can be sure of notliing. This is the province of believing prayer in emergencies, — to lift us up and out from our petty selves, and so unite us with God that our interests are liis because his interests have become ours. Our will is his because his will has been accepted as ours. Then prayer becomes but a prophecy of his decree. Its success is a foregone conclusion. While we are speaking, the answer is on our own lips. One design, doubtless, of great and crushing emergencies, is to help us up to this summit of identification with God, by driving us up the rocky steep that leads thither. 4. One other phase of prayer in such emergen- cies, suggested by the fragment of biograjihy be- fore us, is a hearty recogmtiun of God's oivnership of us. " O Lord, thou art our God ; let not man prevail against thee." To Jewish thought the force of this language ^^ was intensified by comparison with pagan theories of Godhead. Every nation was believed to have its deity. Ethiopia had her god, and Judaea had hers. When a Jew therefore said, " Thou art our God," he meant to acknowledge God's ownership of him and all his belongings. That any other 42 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTA5IENT. nation should prevail against Jiula}a, meant to Jewish thought a victory of man over the living God. This gave deep significance to Jewish prayer on the eve of hattle. Not only was his cause God's cause, l)y liis l)cing identilied with God, but he and all he had belonged to Gt)d, His success, therefore, was God's success, and his defeat was God's defeat. "Let not inan prevail against Thee ! " This conception of prayer in critic^il exigencies fills up the Christian idea of it to ihi- brim. We hdnni/ to God. Whatever concerns us concerns liim. Our sorrow is his sorrow. Our joy is his joy. If it is best for us tliat we be delivered, it is as much to God as to us that he shall send deliverance. No wedge can be driven between, to separate him from us, his interests from f»urs. The sacredness and eternity of divine ownership are pledged to our success. By the right of creation ice helony to God. \\y the right of faithful and undying friendship we belong to God. By the right of eternal redemp- tion we helony to God. By the right of purchase with the blood of Christ tee helony to God. Will God desert his o^^Tl with such rights as these? AN ANCIENT REVIVAL OF TJELir.TON. When Asa hoanl those words, he took courage, ami put away thf aliominalilc iilols out of all tlm land, . . . and rrncwed tho altar of tin- Lord. . . . Ami he (gathered all Judah and Ben- jamin, and the strauf^L-rs with them: . . . for tlicy fell to him in alujndance, whon they saw that the Lonl his CkmI wjus with him. . . . And they entriest, and without law." The services of religion have been grossly neglected : idolatry has over- spread the kingdom. Then trouble comes. As usual, God rebukes iiTeligion by calamity. War 43 44 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. ravages the land. No man's life <»r j)roperty is safe. " God did vex them with all adversity." In their aflliftii)n they turn again to God. " They sought him, and he was found of them." God is never far off from men in trouble. An obscure j»rophet, nowhere else named in the Scriptures, rouses the king to attempt a general reformation of the people. The king sets to work with a will, and a wide-spread work of ilivine grace is the result. It is a clear case of deliberate seeking for and working for a revival of religion, and with success. 1. Varying somewhat the order of the narra- tive, we see first that th' heart of a revival lien in a renetval of the covenant of the Chiirrh with God. " They entered into a covenant to seek the Lord God of their fathers, with all their heart and with all their soul." And again, '• They had sworn with all their heart, and sought him with their whole desire." Clearly they mean to make a business of it. It is no half-way affair. With the stern zeal characteristic of a semi-civilized age and a theocratic government, they determine that opposers shall suffer for it. " Whosoever would not seek the Lord .should be put to death." Yes, they are evidently in dead earnest. By their theory the whole nation is the Church ; and the Church must be purified, cost what it may. One of the laws of the working of the Holy Spirit is disclosed here. A revival of religion AN ANCIENT REVIVAL OF RELIGION. 45 becfins in the Cliuicli of Christ. Rarely, if ever, does an exception occur, (iod does not work independently of his chosen people. Tiie con- version of the world waits on the will of the Chm-cli. Tiie history i>f ri'\ivals emphasizes this law. A dead Church holds back from God the dead world. An awakened Church is the pioneer of an awakened world. A fragment of the Church vital- ized by the Spirit of God will be felt l)y a godless community. CJodly faith is a great power. ll takes but little of it to set men thinking and asking what it means. Apply a little fire, in one small spot, to a block of marble, and you soon send a fissure rending through the whole. So the quickening of one small church b}' a new infusion of divine grace will break up the solidity of sin through a whole community. A little group of men who mean what they say, and who say the great truths of God and an eternal world, will always get a hearing. Crowds often follow one man who has received a new baptism from on high. There is a wonderful magnetism about such a man. 2. A second feature in this ancient revival of religion was a public proclamation of a revived faith hrfore the trorhl. It is often objected to modern revivals, that men make so much ado about them, luligion, it is said, is a still affair. It lies between a man's own soul and God. We are commanded to pray in secret chambers with the door shut. 46 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. Why all this noise about living to God and saving souls? Kid us of this cant. Give us rather the poetry of a silent faith. Let each man look after his own soul, and not annoy his neighbors. As one such wise man once expressed it, •• Let each man have a snug little Zion of his own." Not so thinks the awakened king of Judah antl his subaltern chiefs. Tliey make a great ado about the regeneration of the realm. They go through the land like the hot-headed reformers in the Netherlands ; pulling down idols, and rebuilding desecrated altars, and putting a stop to ungodly rites of worship. Small chance is theirs if they try to keep the business secret. " They sware unto the Lord with a loud voice, and with shout- ing, and with trumpets, and with cornets." Camj)- meetings and tent-preaching and tabernacles are a small matter compared with this uprising of a whole nation. Jt is more like the ui)-springing of our country when Sumter fell. We made no silent affair of that. Religious men in earnest are too much in earnest to be still about it. They are moved by a great power. It will express itself as becomes a great power. Out it will come in speech, in act, in prayer, in song, in great enterprise, and in glad achievement. It is the instinct of religious faith to bear its witness to the world. It is not ashamed. Why should it skulk? God has given a great deliverance : men must proclaim it to those who AN ANCIENT KEVIVAL OF RELIGION. 47 need the same. The pearl is of great price : ineii will rejoice over it. A certain degree of publicity, therefore, in a spiritual quickening of the Church, is inevitable. It is but natural. Other great awakenings work in the same way. We do not denounce the ardor of a political campaign as the hysteria of old women and sick folk. We do not call the rush to the gold-mines of California and tlie Black Hills cant. Why, then, judge by a different law tlie great awakenings of men to the realities of eter- nity? The Black Hills, with all their golden treasure, will one day burn to cinders in volcanic fire- The souls of the men now crowding there will then be still living somewhere, undying as God is. Where ? That is the question the Chiu-ch tries to answer in a great revival. On one occasion Etlmuud Burke came upon the hustings to contest a seat in Parliament before an excited assembly. The people had come together with preparations for bonfii-es and illuminations, and processions marcliing to the sound of di-um and fife. When he had just mounted the plat- form, the news came that his opponent, who was to have met him there that morning, had been just found dead in Ids bed. Both Burke and his hear- ers were so overwhelmed by that momentary open- ing of the eternal world to their dim vision that he could not speak, and they were in no mood to hear. He only lifted his voice for one solemn 48 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. moment, and exclaimed, " What shadows we are, and what shadows we pursue 1 " Was that cant ? Yet a revival of religion is no other than just that awakening to the reality of eternal things, and a permanent setting of the current of popular thouglit in that channel. Why not? 3. This old Jewisli revival developed a third feature. It icas attended ivith a great influx of con- verts from without. "The strangers fell to him out of Israel in abundance, when they saw that the Lord his God was ivith hinu^ So comluouly works a pure revival upon the world. Very rare is the exception in which the heart of the world does not resjjond to the heart of the Church. Growth is the law of all life. A tree expands from the life of its root. Double the vitality there, and you double the fruitage. So is it with the spiritual life, of which the Church of God is the centre. " They saw that the Lord his God was with him." Tliis is the conviction with which a pure revival impresses men of the world. A feeling of awe often becomes general in a community in which the Holy Spii'it is moving with great power. The consciousness of God fills hearts unused to such convictions. JNIany years ago an eminent officer in the gov- ernment of Massachusetts returned from Europe to his home in an inland town in which a power- ful work of divine grace was in progress. He had not heard of it. As he passed through the streets, AN AKCIENT REVIVAI^ OF RELIGION. 49 the look of tilings seemed strange to liim. The countenances of those whom he met impressed him with a sense of something unusual. The church-bell was tolling at an unusual hour. " What has happened here ? " was his inquiry. *' Something is in the air. Tilings seem like the day of judg- ment." There was no mystery in this. It wuk like the day of judgment. God was there, deciding the eternal destiny of hmidreds of souls. It proved so to -that awe-struck man, for he was soon one of the rejoicing converts. In the great awakening under President Ed- wards, men cried out in great assemblies under the overpowering sense of the reality of God's being. The same phenomenon occui-red diu'ing the " Year of Grace " in Ireland. Under the preaching of the late Rev. Dr. Blackburn of Mis- souri, men were known to rush out of churches and off from camping-grounds, saying that they could not bear the terror of God's presence, which threatened to crush them. Certain animals have a mysterious sense by which they tliscern the coming-on of an earth- quake, or the presence of death, before the dull eyes and ears of humankind detect them. So there seems to be in man a spuitual sense which under certain conditions feels the presence of God as it cannot at other times. What are the path- olocrical affections of the bodv, often witnessed in intense revivals, but the succumbing of the ner- 50 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTA:kIENT. vous system to spiritual impressions which flesh and blood cannot bear with cciuanimit y ? They are liints of that awful majesty of God which shook Mount Sinai, and which God himself expressed in the law, " No man ^iliall see me and live." 4. A fourth feature of a true revival of religion is a thorough reformation of public and private mor- als. " Asa took courage, and put away the abom- inable idols out of all the land." To i)ut away idolatrous worship was what \vc should call a reformation in morals. Idolatry Wijs immorality concentrated in most liideous forms. No religious zeal could have been genuine in a monarch which did not sweep the land clean of them. Thus in every so-called revival, the critical test of its genuineness is the incpiiry, "How does it affect the real life of converts?" It is in perfect keeping with such an awakening that a temper- ance revival should accompany it. The most valuable fruit of Mr. Moody's work in Boston during the winter of 1870-77 was believed by saere observers to be the reformation of hundreds of inebriates and many aban(h)ned women, — re- formed because religiously converted. They attrib- ute their reformation to no other cause than their new-found religion. The metropolitan police remarked a perceptible diminution of the crimes usually caused l)y rum. Rumsellers complained that their business was interrupted. There are localities in New York and Boston where once a AN ANCIENT REVIVAL OF RELIGION. 51 man could not safely go unarmed after nightfall, but where now a woman can go safely at midnight; and the power which has wrought the change is the work of a few Cliristian women in mission- schools. That dishonest men l)ecome honest ; that ftilso men become true ; tliat drunkards become temper- ate ; that vile men l)ecome pure ; that lost women recover the purity of their childhood ; that men of intrigue and sharp dealing become guileless in act and speech ; that profane men become rever- ent ; that sabbath-breakers are found in the house of God, — these are among the legitimate tokens of a great and general revival, which are to be reasonably looked for if it is a work of God. One of the most significant evidences of conversion was given by a poor and ignorant man to a com- mittee of examination for his admission to the church wlicu he said, " I don't know what reli- gion has done for me in my business, except that I have burned my bushel-measure." An apparent religious awakening which does not result in making converts more honest, more truth- ful, more piu-e in private morals, is not worthy of trust. God is not in it. The payment of honest debts ; dealing in trade by equity rather than by law ; the giving-up of tricks of trade ; a living price for slop-work ; the sale of pure milk ; the surrender of trades which are inimical to public morals ; the destruction of distilleries; the refusal to lease 52 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMEI^^T. houses for immoral uses, and hotels for the sale of alcoholic liquors ; care not to be ignorant of such leases ; suffering loss of dividends for the observ- ance of the Lord's Day ; the honest report of prop- erty to assessors ; a fair day's work when working for the Government ; refusing to cheat the post- office ; truthful invoices of imported goods ; honest oaths at the custom-house ; in a word, freedom from guile in transactions of business, — these are among the proper fruits of a revival of religion. The world has a right to look for \hem. The world is right in heaping its indignation and con- tempt on any religious epidemic which does not prove its right to exist by these plain signs of a live conscience in worldly affairs. Shall a man be a smooth and smiling communicant in God's Church, doing serAdce, it may be, at the Lord's table, and at same time a fit candidate for the penitentiary ? God is on the side of the world in its indignant protest. " Your new moons and sabbaths, and calling of assemblies, I cannot away with ; incense is an abomination unto me ; when ye make many prayers, I will not hear." Of all compounds of human weakness and depravity, the most repulsive is a bonfire of reli- gious cant, wliich is all feeling and no principle, all talk and no character, all prayer and no life, all Sunday and no week-day. Ye whited sepulchres ! Ye generation of vipers ! The holiest of men join the indignant outcry of the world against such AN ANCIENT REVIVAL OF RELIGION. 53 nauseating hypocrisy. That is a wise and always timely petition of the Church of England : " From the deceits of the world, from the crafts of the Devil, good Lord, deliver us ! " 5. One other fact suggested by this ancient model of a revival is, that often such awakenings are followed hy jyeriods of temporal 'prosperity. " The Lord gave them rest round about." In that semi-civilized age the symbol of all temporal calamities was a state of chronic war, and the symbol of all temporal blessings was a state of peace. Rest from civil and foreign discord meant the prosperity of the arts of peace. The encour- agement of industry, the increase of property, the unity of families, the preservation of young life, the growth of the able-bodied population, the in- crease of the comforts of civilization, and the advance of the general culture, all attended long- continued peace. This was the blessing which God gave as a sequence of the quickening of the national conscience. Not always do all forms of temporal blessing attend repentance and holy living. But such is the tendency of a godly life. The promises of God have never yet been tested by the spiritual conversion of an entire nation. That test the Christian religion is to receive in the golden age which prophecy promises to the Church. The ces- sation of war and intemperance alone would double the property of the globe in a single generation. 64 STUDIES OF THE OLD TEST^\JMENT. All that facts bear witness to at present is that the drift of religious living is to better a man's worldly condition. Many a country village has been improved in its physical condition — in the comfort of families ; in the lessening of poverty ; in the peace of neighborhoods ; in the charitable- ness of conversation ; in the obedience of children ; in the fidelity of parents; in the refinement of amusements ; in the adornment of streets ; in the beautifying of cemeteries; in aspirations toward literatui-e, art, and general culture — 'Ijy a thor- ough renovation of its society througli a powerful revival of religion. No other civilizing power equals that of pure religion. It never hurts a man, for any of the right uses of this world, to make a Chi-istian of him. CHRISTIAN ALLIANCES WITH WICKED MEN. And Jehu the son of Hanani the seer . . . said to king Je- hoshaphat, Sliouldest thou help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord? — 2 CiriiON. xix. 2. IT is \yoiiderful at how many points the biogra- pliies of the Old Testament touch modern life. "Shouldest thou help the ungodly, and love them that hate the Lord ? " Such is the reproof addressed by the prophet to the king of Judah. Jehoshaphat seems to have been a good sort of man, as the world goes, — better than the average of his age. '* Good things are found in thee," is the kindly judgment of the prophet about him. But he was an ambitious man. He wanted to stand well with the world. He aspired to the glory of a splendid reign. To promote Ms politi- cal aspirations, he sought alliance with one of the most impious princes of the time, and an apostate from the true religion. As the monarch of a theo- cratic government he could hardly have done a worse tiling. Jehoshaphat was a representative man, — repre- sentative of a large class of good men in every 55 56 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. age, who for selfish ends choose their friends from among the irreligious and the worldly. 1. The friendship of wicked men is one of the most dangerous social temptations to ivhich Chris- tians are subjected. Modern life in cities illustrates it with special force. The wealth of the world is very largely in the hands of men who are not the friends of Christ. Wealth is a great power. It commands respect. Honestly gained and properly used, it deserves respect. It is not necessarily a sin t<3 desue the friendship of the rich. In many communities intelligence and eidture also are possessed mainly by the irreligious. Re- ligion often thrives best amongst the poor and the illiterate. " Not many rich or noble called, Not many ijreat or wise : They whom God makes his kings and priests Are poor in human eyes." The)' who heard Christ gladly were the com- mon people. " Have any of the rulers believed on him ? " His chosen apostles were humble trades- men and fisher-folk. Irreligious men are often very bright men. They are brilliant conversers, ready wits, racy in thought and speech. Even profane men are forci- ble talkers. The society of such men is often fas- cinating. Fun, repartees, humorous anecdote, though not forbidden by the Christian religion, it CHRISTLAN ALLIANCES WITH WICKED MEN. 57 must be conceded, are not its strong points. Irre- ligion often seems to have a monopoly of them. The joy of a godly life does not depend largely on the risible faculties. The young, therefore, often find powerful allurement to irreligious friend- ships in the social brilliancy of those who are living without God. The interests of business sometimes create a similar peril. Two men once took the lease of a hotel. One was a professing Christian, the other not. The enterprise threatened to bankrupt them both. Nothing could save them but the secret and illegal sale of intoxicating drinks. The Chris- tian partner's faith was not strong enough to with- stand the resolute selfishness of the other. In a higher circle of life professional success often tempts a 3'oung man of aspiring mind to seek to ally himself with those who love not God, and care notliing for his cause. Many years ago a young law^^er, who afterwards became a mem- ber of the House of Representatives of the United States, was a member of an obscure church in the mountains of New England. So long as he re- mained nestled among the liills, he was faithful to the religion of his fathers. But his professional prospects required him to migrate to the metropo- lis. There he found himself in a new world. The faith of his childliood was unpopular. Very largely it was the faith of the poor and the middling classes of society. The wealth, the culture, the 58 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTA.AfEXT. social rank, the professional prestic^e, of the com- munity, were compacted iu almost solid phalanx against it. Prejudice against' it ran so high, that the churches in which it was preached were branded with opprobrious nicknames. Their wor- shippers were hustled in the street. It was a severe temptation to the 3'outhrul and ])rilliant lawyer, who may have felt that he had the making of a great statesman in his brain. The necessities of his professional future — yes, of his professional usefulness — seemed to compel him to abandon the old faith of the Pilgrim.;, and to seek association with the magnates of the bar and bench by casting in his lot \vith those who denied Christ, llf fell before the temptation. From that time to liis death, his religious faith, though probably not theoretically changed, was clouded over, and practically buried under his professional alliances. This form of trial is often not only severe, Init insidious. The wiles of a crafty adversary seldom create one more plausible and alluring. There seems to be no escape from it, and often nothing fatal in it. Men find themselves confronted by a compact and insurmountable wall of circumstance, which shuts them in and hedges them around. As they see things, no course is left to them, but to choose their friends fi'om the secret or avowed enemies to the cross of Christ. Said an excellent Chiistian lady not long ago, "Almost my entire CnRISTIAN ALLLVNCES "WITH WICKED IMEN. 59 circle of friends is made up of those who liave no sympathy with my religion. In the city where I live, there are no others with whom I can associate on terms of social equality." 2. Of this trial of Christian principle, it should be further said, that the Christian religion requires no narroiv or ascetic seclusion from the world. " I pray not that thou shouldest take them out of the world, but that thou shouldest keep them from the evil." Such was the sensible prayer of our Lord for his disciples. No fanaticism here. It is our cliic-f discipline for a better world, to learn to live as a good, man should in this world. A crystal is sometimes formed in the embrace of a bowlder of granite. To clear it of its rough enclosure, and to bring its beautiful facets to the light, Nature submerges it in deep waters, shatters it by tempests, and abrades it by contact with stones and mud, and the rubl)ish of the sea. Thus a redeemed soul is by the plan of God immersed in the cares and toils and enticements and useful- ness of a world of sin, so that by sheer resistance to evil, and abrasion with depravity, it may be jiolished to the transparent image of Him who made it. The thing which Cliristian principle forbids is the seeking of worldly friendships and alliances for selfish ends, and to the peril of religious use- fulness and religious character. Every Christian's good sense discerns the distinction, and acknowl- edges its reasonableness. 60 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAiVIENT. 3. Yet tlie irreligious friendships of religious meu violate the ruling spirit of the Scriptures. A deliberate invitation of this form of temptation is close akin to apostasy. Gloss it over as we may, — and very ingenious and winsome are the dis- guises by which a deceived conscience can adorn it, — gloss it over as we please, it is a policy of life which iter, or wife ? " If ever human being gets to heaven, she will," is his tes- timony. That one life keeps open to his faith the celestial gates. 64 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTiVMENT. Said Walter Scott, on one occasion, to his daugh- ter, — substantially, I quote from memory, — "I know this world ; I have read many books ; ,1 have known many splendidly educated men in my time ; but I declare to you that I have heard more lofty and noble sentiments from the lips of poor, unedu- cated men and women in times of trouble, than I ever met with elsewhere outside of the pages of the Bible." Yes, the world reveres the honest principles of our religion in plain, honest lives. By the same instinctive insight intb facts, they recoil with contempt when they encounter men or women who sacrifice those principles to worldly policy or social ambitions. They never at heart trust such a man. They may use liiin as they do other tools; but they never love him in return, because they cannot trust him. In religion, as in other things, few things command the respect of the world like courage. Fidelity to honest convictions, conformity of heart to the faith of the head, the struggle at least to make the heart tally with the profession, the world bows reverently to these tilings always. Men will bear to be browbeaten by an act of religious fidel- ity better than to be fawned upon. They tolerate a fanatic sooner than a traitor. We all respect a pugilist more than we do a coward. A profess- iner Chi-istian never makes a meaner blunder than when he thinks to flatter wicked men, and win their good-will, by trampling on his deepest con victions, or ignoring his most solemn vows. CHEISTIAN ALLIANCES WITH WICKED MEN. 65 6. Loving those that hate God inflicts a wound of great severity on the feelings of the Lord Jesus CJirist. When a young man is choosing his life's companions, Christ is looking on. When a 3^oung woman is wavering between the Church of Christ and the world, in her choice of the dearest friend she is ever to know, Christ is watching the trem- bling scales. Every professed follower of his, Christ regards as his personal friend. He loves liim as if he were the only friend left him. Picture his look on the scared Peter. Tliink of him in Gethsemane say- ing, " Could ye not watch with me one hour?" See him on the cross, turning his languid eyes in sfearch of liis hiding disciples. Every one who bears his name, he remembered and thought of in that supreme hour. To-day he longs for your friendship, my brother, as if there were no other one in the universe to share the gift of his life's blood. He would have died for you alone, as readily as for countless mil- lions. Hear him : "• I was hungr}-, and ye gave me no meat ; I was thirsty, and ye gave me no di'ink ; I was sick, and ye took me not in." Deeds of common human kindness, such as we lavish on a stranger, he longed for. He longs for them now. From you, from me, from each one whom he died for, he craves the human love which is so precious to us all. Love is hurt if it is not loved in return. What, then, must his feelings be when he sees 66 STUDIES OF THE OLD TEST-t\JMENT. one who has been his friend, turning cold]}'- from him, and choosing in his place the friendship of the world wliich crucified him, and which would crucify him again ? My brother, it is not so much that you are losing Clirist, as that Clu'ist is losing you. It is from Calvary that the voice comes now to each one of us in our solitude : " Shouldest thou love them that hate the Lord ? " HONORING GOD'S HOUSE. And it came to pass after tlus, that Joaah was minded to repair the house of the Llirlii worshipped. Like every other vital prineii)le of religion, it may degenerate into super- stition. Hut it is natiu-al to the spirit of worship. Catholic Christians are right in their reverent regard for their churches and utensils of service. If Protestant Christians have lost the ancient spirit of the Church in this respect, they are none the better for it. An incident occurred in ]>oston not long ago, which made me wish that all our churches were open for daily and hourly individual worship. A poor emigrant-woman, \Wth her helpless children, apparently just from the ship in which they had come to a strange land, saw a Protestant church, on the spire of which was the familiar cross. She HONoraxG god's house. 73 thought it a temple of her own fjiith. But, as its doors were closed, she could not enter ; and she devoutly knelt with her children on the pavement, and offered silent prayer. She was a stranger in a strange land. Strange faces and sounds which she could not understand were all around her ; but there was one thhig wliich was familiar and dear to her, — the cross, emblematic of our connuon Redeemer. She could understand that. I seemed to hear her voice as her heart flowed out in grate- ful prayer for herself and children in the new life which they were beginning, or in thanksgiving for their safety from the perils of the sea. Was that superstition? I could not call it so. I once sat in the shadow of one of the arches of the Colosseum at Rome, in the autunmal moon- light, and alone. That ruin has long since been consecrated as a place of Christian worship. A cross stands in the centre, art)und wliich a crowd of worshippers is often gathered on a Friday, lis- tening to very eai'nest, and by no means unchris- tian, preaching. As I sat tlicre trying to picture the scenes of the early martyrdoms which had oc- curred there, when Christian captives were thrown to wild beasts amidst the ferocious plaudits of a hundred thousand spectators in the galleries above, a solitary peasant came through ; and bending under his burden of fagots, and unconscious that any human eye was looking on, he knelt and of- fered silent prayer before the cross. The cross 74 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. was nothing to my Puritan iconoclasm ; and the promise on tlie phicard appended to it, of deliver- ance from I do not know how much time in pur- gatory to any one who shall imprint a kiss there, saddened me. But I c(»uld not jutlge by my se- verer faitli the impulsive devotion of the poor Italian. I wanted to grasp his hand as that of a Christian brother. He was expressing in his way the same instinct of religious reverence which I felt in looking upon the spot whore thousands of (^liristian martyrs had scaled their l>lte in Idood. Who shall judge between us, and say that my mood was religion, and his superstition? It may have been an extreme of this instinct which led Dr. Samuel Johnson to lift his hat rev- erently whenever he passed a churcli in the streets of London ; but better that than the covered head and the laugli and the jest often seen and heard in our churches. That is a becoming, because a per- fectly sensible, act of reverence, in which worshij)- pers of the Church of England bow the head in silent prayer at the beginning of public religious service. Our plainer forms of worship would be improved by the usage. 4. The associations of the Lord's house are an itwalculable help to the culture of religious character. We are creatures of association. We are often movetl more profoundly than we think by our surroimdings. The recollection of our experiences in the house of God may be among the most HONORINQ god's HOUSE. 75 precious treasiu-es that memory hoards. The prayers we have heard there ; the ohl hymns of the lathers, some of them redolent with the incense of a thousand years ; the senuons wliieh have moved us ; the Scriptures read and expounded ; certain texts which were new to us and most timely ; the light of the setting sun streaming in at western windows when it seemed like the glory of God's countenance; tlie seat whore the mother sat holding fast our childish hand, or the corner from which the father turned his loving eye upon us in mikl reproof ; the pews from which sainted men and women have gone to their rest, — oh, there are holy forces in such reminiscences ! They are "golden vials full of odors." They come back to us in after-years, "trailing clouds of glory." They make the very walls of the house of God eloquent. The stone cries out of the wall, and the beam out of the timber answers it. The very silence of the place on a week-day is more potent than angels' voices. O thou homely "meeting- house " of my youth, God bless thee ! If I forget thee, let my right hand forget her cunning; if I do not rememl)er thee, let my tongue cleave to the roof of my mouth ! An eminent statesman of our country, whose funeral was attended by reverent thousands, once boasted flippantly that he " had not seen the inside of a church in twelve years." Well, he had sought other tilings, and he had liis reward. But his 76 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAJNIENT. cliiiracter, through his long public career, showed the want of just those qualities which devout at- tendance on the serWces of religion would have tended to develop. He was irreverent, unchar- itahle, selfish, intenij)erate in speech, one-sided in policy, a man of few friends, whom all men feared but few could love. And, so far as men could see, — God knows how truthfully, — he died as the fool dicth. Not one word of Christian consolation relieved his last agonies. lie uttered not one word which could indicate whether ke believed in God or not, whether he had a soul or not, whether lie thought of or cared for the world to which ho was going. An educated Greek who had ni'ver heard of the New Testament might have died as calmly and as rationally. Socrates died more ra- tionally, Many a savage in our Western wilds has died elianting his tribal death-song, with more evi- dence of fitness to meet the Great Spirit than that man over whose bier thou.>rtl his God, and went into the tcuipk- of the Lord to Vturn incfiise ui>on tlu' altar of incense. . . . And A/ariah the priest went in after him, and with him fouracore priests of the Loni, that were valiant men: . . . And they withstood L'z/.iah the king, and said unto him, It apportaineth not to thee, Uzziah, to burn incense unto the Lord, but to the priests, the sons of Aaron, that are consecrated to burn incense. Gd is often in- curred in modern times. 1. It ought not to provoke a smile when the first is named as that of deephuj in* GotVs houae. We must not be severe — for God is not so — in jur. J\'(»ple flock tliitlier as to a place of re- ligious entertaiimient. Many of them profess no otlier motive. The sermon, the prayer, the scrip- tural lesson, are but appendages to the perform- ances of the operatic troupe. Is that worship? Can God be pleased with it? "My house shall be called a house of prayer, but ye have made it a den of thieves." Is it any more a sin to sell a dove in the temple than to sell a song ? The only instance in which our Lord gave way to violence in his holy indignation was at the sight of the desecration of the sanctuary. Would he not find use for the whip of small cords if he should wan- der into certain churches in our day ? 4. We are guilty of presumptuous sin in wor- ship, if we endeavor to conceal from ourselves hidden sin under cover of scrupulous devotion. In PEESUaiPTION IN THE "WORSHIP OF GOD. 85 the time of the judges of Israel there lived a man, Micah by name, who stole eleven hundred shekels of silver. He built him an idol with a part of it, thus " consecrating it to the Lord " as he thought. He was an idolater and a thief. His conscience pricked him. So, to make every thing sure, he hired a young Levite to be his household chaplain. " Now," said he, " the Lord will do me good, see- ing that I liave a Levite to my priest." That was a semi-ljarbarous age. The trick of the thiev- ing rascal seems transparent. We marvel that even an old half-civilized Jew could juggle liim- •self with it. But are there no such self-cheated worshippers in our tunes ? By more ingenious devices perhaps, and in more recondite twists of conscience, yet not a wliit less impiously towards God, we may make our very fidelity to God's house, and tlie zeal of our worship, a cover to hid- den sin wliich we are not willing to abandon, and therefore not willing to see. A recent celebrated forger in New York was one of the most faithful attendants upon the wor- ship of a Christian sanctuary. For years, while he was setting his hand to the deeds for which he now hes in the penitentiary, he was repeating every sabbath the prayers of an ancient church ; singing the songs which the voices of martyrs had hallowed ; giving freely of his stolen goods to the benevolences of God's people ; and, as he seems to have believed, loving rather to do deeds of charity 86 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAJfENT. than to hoard gohl. It Avoiihl be just like man, if that i)Oor man really persuaded himself that his re- lijjious devotions would somehow offset his crimes. Yes : that is man as he is by nature. Such are we all, but by the grace of God. Our very consciences become tortuous and serpentine under the wiles of sin, till we verily think we can mock God with impunity. Oh, how idiotic we become when we make Satan our ally ! 5. We are guilty of presumptuous worship when we offer to God services in which any essential truth of God's being is denied or ignored. A celebrated preacher of " another gospel," recently deceased, has publislied as a part of the " truth as it is in Jesus," as he understood it, the folloAving frag- ments : " I take not the Bible for my master, nor even Jesus of Nazareth. . . . He is my best historic ideal of human greatness; not without errors, and I presume of course not without sins. For men AWthout sins exist in the dreams of girls. You and I never saw such a one, and we never shall." Let us think kindly of the erring one who has gone to a world where the " Lamb that was slain " sits as judge of the living and the dead. He has discovered before this time who and what the Lord Jesus Christ is. He has learned what that means, " Who is the brightness of his glory and the cxj^ress image of his pci^son." But can God ever have been pleased with worship which denied his triune being; with pra3-er which as- PRESUMPTION IN THE WORSHIP OF GOD. 87 Slimed that the Lord of glory was a sin ner ; with songs of praise in which the claims of Ilim who " was with God, and was God," were ignored ? How God will deal in eternity with honest in- fidelity, if there be such a thing in the strictest and final anal^'sis of the liuman heart, we may safely leave to liim. I do not know, and do not wish to know. But it becomes us who believe with all oiu" souls that Jesus Christ is indeed the Lord of glory, " very God of very God," and that in him we have an infinite and eternal and sinless Saviour, to beware how we offer, or seem to offer, worship which denies him liis place on the throne of the universe. The place of worship where he is thus denied is no phuje for us. Prayer offered other- wise than in his name is not prayer to us. What- ever it may be to those who honestly offer it, to us it cannot be worship of the true God. We kindle unhallowed fire on a strange altar if we thus seek communion with the Most High. Our fellowship is with the Father and his Son Jesus Christ. Even in our own usages of prayer, and in our own sanctuaries, we need to be most watchful of our moods, lest we pray as a regenerate heathen might pray, who had never heard of Christ; as Socrates and Plato, for aught we know, may have prayed ; with no hearty recognition of the merits of Clirist as our only ground of approach to the throne of grace. A redeemed siuuer, who believes that he is redeemed, who knows that he 88 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. has been bought with the precious blood of Christ, commits an act of fearful presumption if he ever hipses into what may, for distinction's sake, be called iuu-hr'i8tian prayer. In what other form more insolent to the most high God can he take God's name in vain ? FIDELITY TO THE RELIGION OF A GODLY ANCESTRY. And the Lord was with Jehoshaphat, because he w^alked in the ways of his fathor David, and soujjht not unto Baulini; but souRht to the Lord God of his fatlur, and walked in his com- luanchui'nts. . . . Therefore the Lord stablished the kingdom in his hand ; . . . and he had riches and honor in abundance. — 2 Cuijox. xvii. 3-5. KING JEHOSHAPHAT was the son of a pious father. The chief fact about him which the Bible emphasizes is, that he was faithful to that father's instructions, and followed his ex- ample. " He souglit to the Lord God of liis father, and walked in liis connnandments." He was also the child of other godly ancestors, gomg far back to the beginning of the royal line. " God was with Jehoshaphat, because he walked m tlie first ways of liis father David." In the religion of the Old Testament, much is made of family descent. A favorite title, by which God declared himself to his ancient people, was, " The God of thy fathers." Moses at the Red Sea sang, " The Lord is my father's God, and I will exalt him." King Hezekiah made it his plea for the pardon of his people : " The good 89 90 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. Lord pardon every one that prcpareth lus heart to seek the Lord God of his fathers." Daniel prays, " I thank thee, O thou God of my fathers." Solo- mon at the dedication of the temple prays, " The Lord our God be with us as he was ^vith our fathers." Moses, j^redicting the calamities which should come upon the nation in the distant fu- ture, imagines the lookers-on as asking, " What mcaneth the heat of this great anger?" And he rei)lies, " Men shall say. Because they have for- saken the covenant of the Lord God of their fathers." Yes, in the theory of religion and its blessings in tlie Old Testament, the glory of the children is their fathers. One topic suggested b}- the present lesson is that of fidelity to the faith and example of a pious ancestry. Observe : — 1. It is an unspeakable blessing to have been born in the line of a Christian parentage. Wliat lan- guage can express the thanksgivings of thousands of us for our Christian mothers ? Do not many of us owe as much to the firmness and the prayers of Christian fathers? How many of us could have borne, \nthout a wi-eck of character, the temptations of early youth, but for the hallowed restraints of a Christian home? The vbice of family prayer is that of a guardian angel in a multitude of homes. Much more than godly mstruction and exam- ple is involved in the blessing. By a mysterious FIDELITY TO RELIGION. 91 law of God's government, tendencies to character spring from the line of natural descent. Quali- ties of mind, natural sensibilities, the fineness of conscience, the very make of the soul, in whicli the elements of voluntary character germinate, come to us by no choice of ours. It is a great thing to have had that fountain of our moral being purified and vitalized by tlie grace of God. The purest hlood tliis world has ever known is that of a Christian ancestry. It outranks all other aristocracies. Descent from kings and em- perors bears no comparison with it. Yes, William Cowper, thou art right : — "My boast is not that I deduce my birth From loins enthroned, the rulers of the earth; But higher far my proud pretensions rise, — The son of parents passed into the skies." The length of the line of Christian inheritance is in many cases a reduplication of the blessing. Blessed above princes of the blood royal is a fellow-toAvnsman of mine, who is the descendant, in the eighth generation, from a well-known Eng- lish martyr, and the golden cord of whose godly heritage has never once in all that time been broken. It is an impressive thought, what an accumula- tion of prayer surrounds an infant at its birth in such a line ! It was a favorite habit of the Pil- grim Fathers, to pray for their posteritj- to the end 92 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAJVIENT. of time. If "their angels do always behold the face of my Father which is in heaven," a convoy of angels must herald the advent of such an infant upon its earthly career. What a different thing is the probation of such a child from that of one who bears in his very blood the virus of a dozen generations of vice and pollution ! Probably in no other nation on the globe are there so many as in our own of such Christian families, who trace back then- lineage through centuries of prayer and godly living. Says a historian of the early settlement of this country, " God sifted three kingdoms, that he might send choice spirits to people this continent." Many of us are li^^ng in grooves of spiritual blessing, fixed by answered prayer a thousand years before we were born. An eminent Clnristian of my acquaint- ance used to thank God daily for concealed bless- ings. Chief among such secret,gifts is the shadowy hand of godly ancestors, stretched forth across the asres in benediction on our heads. 2. The religion of our fathers^hecause it is siich, has a strong j^resumptive claim upon our faith. The presumption may be balanced by opposing evi- dence ; but, till it is thus neutralized, it exists in the case of every man. It is no dishonor to a young man to believe in the religion of his father. It shows no want of independence to be a Chris- tian because one's father was a Christian. To believe as my father believed, to trust the faitJi FIDELITY TO EELIGION. 93 which my mother sang to me, to cling to the Christian hopes which first bloomed at the fireside of my childhood's home, to rest in my inherited religion, and follow the example of my godly parents, is no nnmanly thing. God forbid that I should glory in breaking loose from such sacred ties ! Said a clergyman of my acquaintance, " I have been young, and now am old, and I have spent my life in the study of the religions of the world ; but I have yet to find a stronger proof of the truth of the Christian Scriptures than I dis- covered forty years ago in the character and life of my father and mother." That pride of intellect wliich a young man some- times feels, which makes him thmk that nothing in religious faith can be settled by the past, that he must therefore inquire de novo, as if no expe- rience had taught his ancestry any thing, is a very weak and narrow affection of the brain. No gen- eration exists, in God's plan, for nothing. Every generation of Christian believers adds something to the reasonable faith of the world in Christ, as truly as every generation of astronomers furnishes data for the calculations of astronomers who fol- low them. I have no more reason for rejecting the Christian faith of my father because I have not investigated every thing about it, than I have for going back to the Ptolemaic theory of the stars because I am not an expert in the Copernican astronomy. 94 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. 3. It is one of the divine laws of the increase of the (Jliurch^ that the children of CJiristian parents should themselves be Christians. Tlie conversion of this world to Christ is not to be brought about by revivals of religion alone. There are laws of grace as well as laws of nature. There is a law of Cliristian nurture, by which, through the grace of God, every Christian family becomes a nursery of the Church of Christ. Such is God's obvious design. CJiaracter is not transferable from father to son, but the elements out of whivh character grows are so. Religion once rooted in a Christian family should achieve so much conservation of Christian forces. A moral dike is thus built up against tho Hoods of dcj)ravity, beliind which children may be safe, as Holland is from the inroads of the sea. There is no good reason why our children should not yrow up into Christian faith, instead of being \vTenched into it by moral con\^lsions after years of riot in depravity. Plant an acorn anywhere, and anyhow, in good soil, and it will grow upward, and not downward. By the law of its being it seeks the sun. So a child set in the groundwork of a Christian household, and nurtured in its holy light and atmosphere, should by the very condi- tions of liis existence grow up towards God and heaven. Many do thus grow up Cliristians. Many Chris- tian men and women cannot remember the day FIDELITY TO RELIGION. 95 when they did not love God and trust in Christ. A Christian childliood may be reasonably expected to be free from llasjrant vices. The very birth- hour may be the hour of holy regeneration. Cliris- tian training may be the medium of sanctifying grace, liy this hnv of religious nurture, as well as by that of great awakenings from a godless life, it is God's design that tlie Church shall grow, till it covers all the families of the redeemed. One such family is in God's plan the fountain of a pure stream which is to widen and deepen till it flows in holy majesty into eternity. 4, The imitation of a godly ancestry is peculiarly pleasi7iy to God. It is everywhere so represented ill the Scriptures. Says St. Paul to Timothy, "I thank (Jod when I call to remembrance the un- feigned faith that is in thee, wliich dwelt first in thy grandmother Lois and thy mother Eunice." The transmission of godliness to the third genera- tion is here the theme of thanksgiving. God is pleased with honor paid to his own laws. Wlien he has given to a young man the inestimable blessing of a Christian parentage, he looks to see the blessing recognized. It is a joy to Christ to see a youth treading in the steps of a Christian father, and pra3'ing to old age the prayers taught by a Christian mother. Such a life honors God's mode of procedure. It is the supreme form of obedience to parents, ^vith which God is well pleased. "When Christian living follows a long 96 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. line of godly progenitors running back through centuries of grace, there is an aicunnilation of glory to the gracious pkms of God which cannot but be a joy to him. T). It is fin act of ttii/nal niul rfhntlexn (/iiilt, to hr*ak the line of a pinux heritutje hy a god/exn life. It involves a terrific contest with (rod for the damnation of the soul. Tough is the task which such a young man sets liimself, to destroy his soul. He must do it lighting against the most potent de- vices of (Jod for his salvation. Fatlfur's counsels, mother's prayers, godly example, the imhfinable atmosphere, like to none (tthcr, of a Christian home, tiie holy momentum from a long procession of Christian forefathers, going back, it may be, into unknown hist«)ry, must be j)ersistently, in dead earnest, insolently, contended with and defied. That is a conflict more siinguinarv, and of more woful issue, than any ever fought with sword or cannon on sea or land. A tripled and quadrupled cordon of spiritual inlluences must be charged and broken through. Such forces are never overcome but 1)V tlie aid of opposing forces from the powers of darkness. Such a one must achieve his destruc- tion by inviting Satan into alliance. He must throw himself into the embrace uf malignant auxiliaries. It is as if he cried out from within the reserved enclosure in which God lias sought to protect him, '* Come and help me to withstand God I " Oh ! it is the saddest sight that angels ever look upon, FIDELITY TO RELIGION. 97 wlien the child of a ^odly aiK-estry forces his way to hell over tiiiiupled prayers, and mangled forms of fathers and mothers extending back in the shadtiwy past j)erhaps a thonsand years. Of the eminent men in American history, no one has come t(> the close of life under a darker cloud of reprobation from God and man than Aaron Burr. He was the son of parents eminent for piety. His father was the venerable president of a Christian college. His mother was the daugh- ter of the Rev. President Edwards, a most godly man, and herself also a woman renowned for lier rare Christian culture. The family ext^^nded far back in a luminous pathway of Christian faith and prayer. Wliat an accumulation of holy forces was concentrated upon Aaron Burr's boyhood and early manhood ! They surrounded him in no liard, re- pellant forms, but in the genial graces and beau- tiful adornments of educated Christian society. The piety of his father Wiis lighted up by a miith- ful humor. Xo hajipier men ever lived tlian the clergy of that age. The best education of the times, too, was liis. Thuii directed, so far as home and inheritance and circumstance could do it, thus directed toward heaven, he entered on his active manhood. When approaching his twentieth year, he be- came interested in the salvation of his soul. The Spirit of God then clearly set before liim the great alternative, and pressed his decision on the side of 98 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. virtue and religion. Pie retired for some weeks to a rural town in Connecticut, for the sake of set- tling once for all the question of his religious character. Nobody knows what was the history of those critical weeks, — through what conflicts lie passed, how near he may have approached to the God of his fathers, nor what fatal influences turned him back. But he came home resolved, as he said, " never again to trouble himself about his soul's salvation." To all appearance he kept that resolution to the last. The die was cast, as he meant it should be, " once for all." It is not known that he was ever again seriously disturbed by religious convictions. He entered on wliat promised to be a brilliant })ublic career, without God and without hope. He passed through it a godless man. He ended it disappointed in his ambitions, and soured against all the world. He died in obscurity, abandoned by old fi-iends for years before, unsaluted by them as they passed him in the street, with the guilt of murder on his soul, and the brand of Cain on his bi"ow. So far as man can know, he went speech- less into eternity, with a seared conscience and a hardened heart. God suffered him, as he generally does suffer such men, to die as he had lived. His was a representative history, — representa- tive of those who break the line of ancestral piety, and force theii- way to an irreligious life and death, in defiance of God's protective plans for their sal- FIDELITY TO RELIGION. 99 vation. It is an appalling question — do not angels pause, and " lean on their harps " to catch the an- swer ? — " Who are the Aaron Buits now living in Chi"istian families ? " THE LOST SON OF A GODLY FATHER. Tlie Lord brought Judah low because of Ahaz king of Israel. And in the time of his distress did he trespass yet more against the Lord. This is that king Ahaz. . . . lie said, Because the gods of the kings of S.\Tia help them, therefore will I sacri- fice to them, that thej' may help me. But they were the ruin of him. . . . And in every several city of Judali ho made high places to hum incense unto other gods, and provoked to anger the Lord God of his fathers. — 2 Cmtox. xxviii. 19, 22, 23, 25. "TTT^HEREFORE do the wiekud Uve?" Some > » wic-ked men are among the most useful of maiildnd. Certain poisons medical science uses to fight certain diseases which yield to no other remedy. So certain examples of iniquity may be transformed by the grace of God into remedial forces, by the contrast they furnish to the virtues, and the wisdom they teach to observers. King Ahaz is one of the stupendous monuments of guilt in Israelitish history. He is one of the few men in any liistory of whom not one good thine: is recorded. His career was one uniform and unmitigated stream of iniquity from begin- ninsT to end. Not one virtue or virtuous act is thoujjht worthy of mention in his whole life. So black and disgraceful was liis reign, that when he 100 THE LOST SON OF A GODLY FATHER. 101 died, the indignant and revolted conscience of the nation refused him burial in the ro3'al sepulchre. Let us inquire what lessons may be learned from the life of such a supreme model of depravity. 1. His career illustrates that law of character by which the wickedness of a man is proj^ortioned to the amount of holy influence which he has conquered. We find a reason for his extreme depravity in the extreme facilities which he had for being a saint. He was the son of a godly father. His youth was passed under the restraints of holy example. He was one in a royal line which had been distin- guished for examples of illustrious piety. He had good blood. He came from good stock. He knew thai he alone, of all the monarchs of the world, held his crown and kingdom by divine riglit as king of God's chosen people. He knew that a splendid history lay behind him, and that a more splendid future was before liim. In the line of regal descent, in which he was a connecting link. One was to appear in whom all the nations of the world were to be blessed. That ancient promise of God to Abraham spanned like a rainbow the royal family of Judah. Mysterious as its meaning was, it must have been a power of moral restraint and moral stimulus to a man called of God to sit on the throne of Judah. Said a French monarch, when once solicited to consent to a dishonorable treaty, " The blood of Charlemagne is in my veins; and who dares to ^ 102 STUDIES OP THE OLD TESTAMENT. propose this tliiiij^ to me ? " The sense of honor- able inheritance must luive been a moral power of immense significance to a monarch who stood in a line of theocratic princes. And it was not frit> tered away and lost in the mere sense of chivalry : it was a direct and potent help to holy living before God. Such a combination of holy inllu- ence this Judiean king broke through; and there- fore he became the man he was. The depth of Ids fall was proportioned to the momentum acquired in bursting the bonds which held him. Such is the natural working of things in the experience of sin. It is a fundamental law of character. As virtue is proportioned in vigor to the temptations resisted, so depravity is propor- tioned to the forces of conscience and inheritance and education and ('xam[)le and persuasion, and the Spirit of God, wliich have been fought with and conquered. This must alwaj's be reckoned in forecasting a man's future in a career of sin. The best things perverted are the worst. Christian birth abused becomes a curse. Religious educa- tion trampled on becomes a fountain of moral disease. Sal)baths broken become an opportunity to vice. Natural sensibilities to religion, indurated by transgression, become a foundation for towering iniquity. Convictions of sin resisted are often transformed into beliefs of falsehood. The striv- ings of the Holy Spirit quenched become the basis of Satanic conquest. Devils fill the place from which the Spirit of God has been ejected. THE LOST SON OF A GODLY FATHER. 103 It used to be proverbial in the days of American slavery, that the most ferocious overseers were Northern men who had to override the convictions of their youtli and their inherited faith in order to become slave-drivers. This was one variety of the universal law which governs the degree of charac- ter, good or bad. Tell me what good influence a man has defied and scorned in becoming what he is, and I will give you the gauge of his de- pravity. The worst of men are apostates fi-om the best of faiths. 2. The career of this apostate prince illustrates also the faithfulness of God in chastising ivicked men for their good. '■" The Lord brought Judah low because of Ahaz." From the beginnmg to the end of his reign, he experienced the truth that the way of transgressors is hard. In war he was whipped all around. In alliances he was cheated and checkmated. His people were made captives by thousands. Nothing went well with him. His public life was one long career of de- fying God, yet of God's persistent efforts to save limi by chastising Mm. This is repeated over and over again in the ex- perience of wicked men. Such men often think it a great mystery that they suffer so much. They do not understand why it is that misfortune pur- sues them so. " Just my luck," says one, when ill success attends his business. Yet often the secret reason is that God is trying to save the man. He 104 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. is contending with God in one way, and God is contending with him in another. There is no luck about it. It is God's faithfuhiess to the soul, at the expense of the pocket. " It is a great mystery ; I do not understand it : it is unjust," says an ungodly man whom disease lays low, perhaps just on the eve of splendid suc- cesses. The cup is dashed from his lips, just when he is best able to enjoy it. Ill health follows him perhaps till he is glad to find such rest as he can in the grave. Often it is no mystery." It is God's striving to save the man. It is God's faithfulness to his soul, at the cost of his body. Somebody's prayers are answered in his afflictions. In one of the works of a popular author of fic- tion, a \\'icked man, engaged in a wicked business, is represented as scolding and swearing at and beating liis Christian wife, because she persists — poor soul I — in praying for him. He protests that she shall stop pra3dng, or he must stop his busi- ness. Both cannot go on together: one or the other must give way. He thinks he has tried it, and found it so. The fancy is often true to fact. Often prayer cannot be answered except by chas- tising a man. He must be whipped out of his sins, or he never can be a happy man. This is the secret of the misfortunes of many an ungodly man. The sufferings of this world are not in the strict sense retributive. They are disciplinary. The world of retribution lies farther on. In love, God THE LOST SON OF A GODLY FATHER. 105 holds the rod over many a bad man. He strikes him here, and he strikes liim there. God's flail threshes him like wheat. He surrounds him with trouble. He heaps up misfortunes. They come thick and fast. Life is one long disappointment. " Few and evil have my days been," is his lament as he looks backward : " all is vanity and vexation of spirit." Is not this the general feeling with which men reach old age without the consolations of rjeligion ? " Oh that I had never been born ! " exclaimed Voltaire in his old age. But in this experience of the wicked, God is never vindictive. This is his way of striving to save men from eter- nal death. Sometimes he pursues it to the very last, till the grave closes over the incorrigible sinner, and he passes on to a world where the retributive decisions of eternity displace the be- nign discipline of time. 3. The life of this depraved prince illustrates further the extreme which sin reaches tvhen men fight successfully against GocVs chastisements. " In the time of his distress did he trespass yet more against the Lord." This is the fearful phenomenon some- times witnessed in the developments of sin in this world. Some men are not subdued by suffering. They refuse to bow to chastisement. The more they suffer, the more they sin. Trouble angers them against God. They indicate their growing fitness for the world of woe in this induration of heart by wliich susceptibility to the softening 106 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAJMENT. effect of sorrow is destroyed. Sometimes this phenomenon is witnessed on a large scale. Times of pestilence are proverbially times of unusual wickedness in great cities. The j)lague in London developed the vices of the metropolis frightfully. Men patrolled the streets singing ribald songs beside the dead-cart. In the peril of shipwreck, two classes of sufferers are often observed, — those whom the peril subdues to prayer, and those whom it tlrives to the rum-bottle. When the Pemberton Factory fell, two classes of sufferers were crushed under the ruins, and two sets of voices came forth from the smoke and flame. The favorite hymns of the Methodist Church from the one cb-owned the curses and im- precations from the other. Thus the two went up on those wings of fire to meet God. How like to the contrast of the two crucified thieves ! " Lord, remember me ; " and, " If thou be the Christ, save thyself and us." Few things are so trutliful a touchstone to the character of men as the way in which they treat the suffering wliich God sends as chastisement. One man turns at its bidding, and becomes an heii- of glory; another defies it, and becomes a monument of perdition. Lord, who maketh us to differ? 4. The reign of this wicked monarch illustrates the disappointments ivhicli wicked men experience in their hopes of happiness in sin. The liistorian THE LOST SON OF A GODLY FATHER. 107 relates of him : " He said, Because the gods of the kings of Syria help them, therefore will I sacrifice to them, that they may help me. But they were the ruin of him.'''' True to the life, every word of it ! In no more truthful figure can we express the experience of many young men who enter on a career of worldliness. They see other men living for this world alone, as it seems to a looker-on, on the top of the wave of human felicity. A rich man seems to them a supremely happy man. A successful statesman appears to have all that an aspiring man can ask for. A man who has gained the summit of social rank and splendor becomes, to many who are below hmi, the model of earthly bliss. Any man at the top of the ladder seems very high up to a man at the bottom. So a young man is apt to look on the world to which he pro- poses to devote his being. '• The world makes these men happy," he says ; " and I will try it, that it may make me happy too." This is the secret experience, probably, of all who give themselves deliberately to a life of irreligion. They are allured by the glamour of irreligious prosperity. But, when they try the experiment for them- selves, '' it is the ruin of them." The fruit turns to ashes. No such young man ever finds the world to be what it looked to be when he surveyed it from afar. It is a beautiful mirage. The testi- mony of experience is proverbial, that the richest men are not the happiest men. The most success- 108 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. ful ambitious men are not the happiest men. The pleasure-seekers who seem to have their fill of all they planned for in life are not the happiest men. One word expresses the issue of all such experi- ments, — disappointment. This world is full of soured and disappointed men. The more irreli- gious men are, the more profoundly they experi- ence this inward consciousness of failure in their life's plans. They have " hewed out to themselves broken cisterns that can ludd no water." In one of Hawthorne's thrillingly fehrful fictions, he represents a wretched man going about with a serpent in liis bosom. Every now and then he clutches at his breast with his fingers, crying, "It gnaws me ; it gnaws me ! " As lie walks the streets among his kind, he thinks he finds that every man he meets is cursed with the same snaky guest in his bosom. Each man at intervals seems to thrust his hand up to throttle the reptile. All alike are doomed to the hideous companionship. " It gnaws me ; it gnaws me I " is the universal confession. The whole world seems to his crazed fancy to be at the mercy of vipers, each man warminof and cTierishinff his own. Such a world is any world of beings given over to seeking happiness in itself. Such is this world, except as its fearful consciousness is relieved by the grace of God. Such is self in any man or woman, when turned away from God and turned inward. No flagrant crimes like those of the THE LOST SON OF A GODLY FATHER. 109 JiicUean king are necessary to reduce a man to this condition of inward and conscious curae. Perjury, arson, murder, are not the only nor the most com- mon precursors of such,a doom. A man has only to abandon God, and live to himself, and he is as sure of it as Judas. Such a man may sit on the throne of the Caesars, or revel in the wealth of " far- thest Ind ; " yet he carries the snake in his bosom. In liis honest hours, when he confesses the truth to his own soul, his ghastly soliloquy is, " It gnaws me ; it gnaws me ! " 5. The career of this wi-etched prince illustrates the distinction ivhich it is possible for a man to gain in this world as a monument of guilt. "He did trespass more against the Lord. TJiis is that king Ahaz!'^ Such is the reflection of the annalist, after enumerating the monarch's crimes. " This is that king Ahaz. Look at him ; mark him ! let him stand in history as a monster of iniquity ; let the world stand agliast at liim." Such seems to be the spirit of the inspired recorder. We all natu- rally crave distinction, — one man for one thing, another for another : all hanker for it in something. Any thing to lift us up and out of the common herd ! This is the temper of a world without God. It is possible for a man of reckless impiety to be- come illustrious for guilt, and that only. Some such names stand out in history, and will stand thus forever. Where all are sinners, some become guilty above their fellows, — princes in depravity ; 110 STUDIES OF THE OLD TEST ANIENT. royal dukes in iniquity ; men so like to Satan in character, that he dwells with and takes possession of them before the tune. This, I repeat, is possible to any man. It re- quires no great genius or invention. A man need not travel far and explore distant seas to gain the means of this hideous renown. It requires only a strong, persistent, and selfish ivilU determined to fio^ht God. This is the natural drift of sin. What a scaffold is among hiunan punishments, what hy- drophobia is among deadly diseases,' such may a man become among his fellow-sinners, by simply giving himself to himself, and defying the rights of God. This is the legitimate ending of a long career of alternate chastisement and sin without repent- ance. A Cornish proverb says, "He that will not be rided by the rudder must te ruled by the rock." This is the rock on which haughty and defiant guilt is wrecked. It is simply left to itself, to become what it has chosen to be, — such a de- mon of iniquity as to be abhorred of God and man. God save us from ourselves ! We carry within us the elements of hell, if we but choose to make them such. Ahaz, Judas, Nero, Borgia, Alva, — all w^ere once prattling infants in happy mothers' arms. The first babe of our race — a marvel of joy to the first mother — was the first murderer. Who shall dare to encounter the possibilities of human guilt, without the grace of God ? THE GODLY SON OF AN UNGODLY FATHER. Hezekiah . . . did that which was right in the sight of the Lord, according to all that David his father had done. Thus did Hezekiah . . . and wrought that which was good and right and truth before the Lord his God. And in every work that he be- gan in the service of the house of God, and in the law, and in the commandments, to seek his God, he did it with all his heart, and prospered." — 2 Chron. xxix. 1, 2, xxxi. 20, 21. ONE liuman life illustrates the whole govern- ment of God. We live under such overshad- owiugs of God's purposes, that at every turn we come upon something which shows forth principles which are eternal. Truth is indeed stranger than fiction. Romance cannot equal the grandeur which every human life, if read aright, discloses. Hence it is that the Bible is made up so largely of fragments of biography. 1. Studying the life and reign of Hezekiah, we discover, among other things, that he is an illustra- tion of the sovereignty of God in conversion. He was one of the model princes of Judah. Yet early in his life his conversion was one of the most im- probable of events. He was the son of one of the most impious monarchs that ever sat on the throne of Israel. Bad blood was in his veins. His youth 111 112 STUDIES OF THE OLD TESTAMENT. was cursed by a most polluted parental example. The abominations of Oriental idolatry were the atmosphere of liis childhood. Not in the retire- ment of a private home, surrounded by better homes, did he live, but among the splendid cor- ruptions of a court which set the ciu-rent of pop- ular opinion, and defiled the whole kingdom. No other spot on earth is so fatal to youthful inno- cence as a corrupt court. Yet there this heir to the tlirone was born and bred. Parental and royal example combined to make him a b;id man and a worse king. It is the mj'^sterious lot of many other men, to be born and educated under circumstances wliich render their conversion to God intrinsically im- probable. They seem born to vice. Tliey are trained to immorality. Childish and even infan- tile lips are taught to profiuie God's name. This is not always the lot of the poor and the ignorant only. It was the favorite pastime of one of the statesmen of the first period of our Republic, to teach his beautiful little motherless daughter at four years of age to prattle the oaths with which his own conversation was polluted. It is one of the unsolved mysteries of God's government, that such enormities are permitted. Humming-birds seem to have a more blessed existence than the children of such impious fathers and mothers. Yet God often enters such homes with his sav- ing grace. He spcidis the word, '* Thou art mine," THE GODLY SON OF AN UNGODLY FATHER. 113 and a child of immortality is saved. Chi-ist is swift to take such a little one in his arms, and bless it ; and it becomes an heir of glory. It is like God to do sovereign things. Therefore it is like God to do things which to human view seem to border on the impossible. 2. The conversion of Ilezekiah^ therefore^ should give encourad from thy hand. A fugitive and a vagabond shalt thou be in the earth. And Cain said unto the Lord, My punishment is greater than I can bear. — Gen. iv. 8-13. TTIE story of Cain is the story of all ages. Sin, suffering; the one following the other by a law fixed and imperative like that by which pain agonizes a burning hand. A living poet speaks of "Tlie coils Of those twin serpents, — Sin and Suffering." So far as the narrative informs us, the suffering of the first murderer was mental suffering. Dis- ease did not blast liim ; chains did not bind him ; the mysterious mark on his forehead was not a burning brand. He went his way like other men. lie had sons and daughters : he built the first city known in history. Tradition &ays that he founded 137 138 STUDIKS OF THE* OLD TESTAMKNT. many cities, and became the head of a great em- pire*. Yet Cain " U'e7it oiU from the presence of the Lord.'' He lived a life of conscious curse. The serpents coiled within. Cursed in thought, cursed in feeling, cursed in fears, cursed in blasted hopes, cursed in one h»ng despair: such was life to the first man who bore the fruit of the first matured and rii)ened sin. And such will be the life of the last man who shall go out from the j)resence of the Lord, bearing the burden of a ^finished crime unrepented of and unforgivtii. Sin finds in thi' t'eri/ voiuftitution if tJir human wind (he luiiiiury if itn oxen retrihution. Let us note some of tht'se retributive experiences of sin, as ileveloped in the eommon life of men. 1. Thf very conxcioiumetts of ain in destructive of a ginnerx peace. The consciousness of sin is itself snfferinfj- " J^in revived, and I dief St. Paul. And this is the testimony of every sinner of every age. Tlie bare conviction of guilt in having transgressed the law of God is the basis of the keenest anguish a man ever suffers in this world or any other. We are so made that it cannot be otherwise. God has so constituted our nature that no man ever yet lived who felt absolutely no emotion when the naked fact of sin was laid on liis con- science by the Spirit of God, and held there. That fact of guilt, to a soul thus compelled to face it, is like a live coal to a naked eyeball. THE TWIN SERPENTS. 139 Moreover, the worst of it is that conscience, if left to itself, never finds an adequate remedy. It never teaches a sinner how he may gain deliver- ance from sin or suffering. It never hints to him tlie possibility of deliverance from cither. That is no part of its design. The design of conscience is siini)ly to express God's law. Therefore, in a sinner's experienOe, its working is to exi>ress tlie evil of transgressing that law. Its legitimate work is to pour out upon a sinner burning and indignant accusations of guilt, (»f folly, of dis- honor, of degradation, of moral defilement, of of- fcnsiveness to the lu)ly universe, and of exposure to the wrath of a holy God, and — leave them there. 2. The destructive working of sin in a sinner's experience is further seen in the fact that sin tends to develop t