This Discourse was preached before the Synod
of Merse and Teviotdale, at their meeting in Kelso, Scotland, on October 27,
1840.
My covenant was with him of life and peace; and
I gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared Me, and was afraid before My
name. The law of truth was in his mouth, and iniquity was not found in his lips;
he walked with Me in peace and equity, and did turn many away from iniquity.
Malachi 2:5-6
The state of the Jewish
priesthood, at the time this prophet wrote, was profligate in the extreme. As
men, they were ungodly and licentious; as priests, they were unfaithful; and as
teachers, they “kept not the law of truth,” but “departed out of the way.
Through them the office became a scandal and a byword. The sanctuary was defiled
and the name of God blasphemed. Very fearful are the charges which the prophets
were commanded to prefer against them, in the name of the Lord. From the time of
Jeremiah and Ezekiel to the days of Malachi, they had been receiving warning and
rebuke, threatening and chastisement; yet, at the end of these two centuries,
they were found even worse than at the beginning. Jeremiah had described them as
“destroying and scattering the sheep of God’s pasture.” Ezekiel had
represented them as “feeding themselves and not the flock”—as “eating
the fat, clothing themselves with the wool; but not strengthening the diseased—not
healing that which was sick—not binding up that which was broken—not
bringing again that which was driven away—and not seeking that which was lost.”
Malachi also, many generations after, presents to us the picture of the
priesthood in his day, unrelieved in aught from its former gloom. Though called
priests of the Most High God, ministering at his altar, wearing the consecrated
garments of their office, and bearing the holy vessels of the sanctuary, they
yet despised the name of Jehovah—they offered polluted bread upon His altar—they
brought the torn, the lame, and the sick for sacrifice—they said of His
service, “Behold, what a weariness is it!”— they committed abomination,
corrupting the covenant of Levi, and “profaning the holiness of the Lord.”
It was thus that the last prophet of Israel was commissioned to proclaim the
sins of an apostate and ungodly priesthood. It was thus that he was sent forth,
bearing to them the awful burden which his prophecy contains—denouncing
against them the righteous displeasure of that God whose compassionate
forbearance and patient love they had tried so long.
But yet, at the very time
that Jehovah was thus warning them of coming doom, and threatening them with the
inflictions of His hot displeasure, He addresses to them words of most marvelous
long-suffering and tender compassion—the words of one still lingering with
fond forbearance over His desolate heritage, His bleating flock—unwilling to
deliver up to vengeance that once honored, once faithful priesthood, who had
borne His name for many generations, and been anointed with His holy oil! Ere
removing from their office the unworthy representatives of Aaron, and Eleazar,
and Phinehas, He reminds them tenderly, in the passage before us, of the
gracious nature of that covenant which they were despising—a covenant of life
and peace established with the fathers of the consecrated tribe that served the
altar. He reminds them of the reverence and godly fear which had marked their
fathers, and because of which, the covenant of life and peace had been committed
to their hands. He reminds them of the character, the speech, the walk, and
deportment which had signalized their fathers; and He makes mention of the
glorious success which had followed their labors, as teachers of the people.
Thus He recalls them to the holy associations of a better age— the still
unforgotten blessings of a purer, happier priesthood. No rebuke could be severer
than that here administered, by the contrast thus drawn between the prevailing
corruption of the time and the purity of earlier days. Yet no admonition or
expostulation could be more gently and more affectionately conveyed than this.
It speaks as tenderly to the heart as it does loudly to the conscience.
Nothing can be more
beautiful than the description here given of the character of the early Jewish
priesthood—the house of Levi, ere they had left their first love, and
corrupted the covenant of their father. “My covenant was with him of life and
peace; and I gave them to him for the fear wherewith he feared Me, and was
afraid before My name. The law of truth was in his mouth, and iniquity was not
found in his lips; he walked with Me in peace and equity, and did turn many away
from iniquity.” Most precious words! Simply, yet strikingly, descriptive of
the character, the walk, the speech, the successful labors of a faithful priest,
and not less so of a faithful minister of the Lord Jesus. How forcibly do these
verses recall the similar commendations bestowed by the Chief Shepherd upon some
of the angels of the churches of Asia! “I know thy works, and thy labor, and
thy patience, and how thou canst not bear them which are evil: and thou hast
borne, and hast patience, and for My name’s sake hast labored, and hast not
fainted.” Thus we are taught, that it is the same Great Shepherd under whom we
hold office as in the case of Israel—the same Master whom we serve—the same
errand on which we are employed—the same end which is set before
us—the
conversion of souls—the turning of sinners from the error of their ways.
There is also the same holiness of life and conversation—the same peaceful
walking in the light of God’s reconciled countenance—the same
heavenly-mindedness and calm superiority to the world — the same simple,
disinterested, devoted warmth—the same patient laborious zeal—the same
tender compassion for souls—and the same desire to feed the church of God,
which He hath purchased with His own blood. But let us consider the prophet’s
words more minutely, and in exact order.
I. We have the nature of
the trust committed of old to the Levitical priesthood, and now to the ministers
of Christ. “My covenant was with him of life and peace.” That covenant —
the everlasting covenant, ordered in all things and sure—by which God designed
to convey life and peace to His people, was entrusted to the care and
guardianship of the priesthood. It was deposited in their hands for the benefit
of Israel. They were not merely to enjoy its provisions of grace themselves, but
to make them known to the people, that they might become partakers of its
unsearchable riches. Brief, but full, is the sum here given us of its blessings
—“life and peace”— eternal life and peace with God. Their daily
sacrifices and ceremonies pointed to these, and their daily instructions opened
up the glad tidings of great joy, which these rites both foreshadowed and
contained. Such was the office of the sons of Levi under the law, and such is
still the office of Christ’s ministers under the gospel. Jehovah’s covenant
of life and peace is still with us; nay, more truly and really with us now than
it was of old with the legal priesthood. For now the darkness is past, the
shadows have fled, and the true light has risen. Now the mere figures of the
truth have vanished away, and the TRUTH itself has come! He who is our life and
peace, has, in the fullness of time, been revealed. Our covenant, then, is
especially that of life and peace. Our office, our embassy, our message, are of
life and peace. Ours is the silver trumpet that proclaims the dawn of jubilee.
Ours is the olive branch that speaks of abated waters and indignation overpast.
Ours is the ministry of reconciliation that tells of “glory to God in the
highest, peace on earth and goodwill toward men.
It is through Jesus, then,
that we are commanded to proclaim life and peace. It is through the blood of the
Lamb that these blessings flow. It is Jesus, the life of the world that we
preach to men—Jesus the light of life—Jesus the fountain of life—Jesus the
bread of life and the water of life—Jesus the resurrection and the life—Jesus
the way, and the truth, and the life—Jesus the living and the life-giving One!
It is through Him alone—through His finished work and perfected righteousness—that
we proclaim lasting life to sinners; testifying, according to His own words,
that “whosoever believeth in Him though he were dead, yet shall he live”;
and that “this is life eternal, to know the only true God and Jesus Christ
whom He hath sent.” It is thus that we are “to preach the gospel with the
Holy Ghost sent down from heaven.”
It is Jesus also, as the
world’s peace, that we preach to sinners. “He is our peace,” says the
apostle—He has made peace through the blood of His cross. He is the blessed
peacemaker between man and God. His incarnation speaks of peace; for He is thus
revealed as Immanuel, God with us, so making peace. His life speaks peace: and
in every action was this embodied, as well as in every word declared. His death
was the mighty declaration of peace, for by this He made reconciliation for
iniquity. His blood shed for many for the remission of sins, ratified the
covenant of peace. His legacy was peace —“Peace I leave with you, My peace I
give unto you.” His resurrection was the seal of peace. His gospel which is
now entrusted to our hands, is the gospel of peace—peace with God, through our
Lord Jesus Christ.”
There can be no peace in
the soul, till there is peace with God; and there can be no peace with God till
sin is completely forgiven, and God’s anger against us, on account of sin,
wholly turned away. None but a justified soul can have peace. Peace without
forgiveness is a lie. Distance from God is the source of our disquietude; and
alienation from God is the deadly wound that must be healed, ere the soul have
one moment’s real peace. There is, no doubt, such a thing as worldly peace—the
peace of prosperous days—the peace of pleasure—the peace of fancy—the
peace of carnal security—the peace of self-righteousness—the peace of a
seared conscience— the peace of reckless hardihood, that banishes God from the
thoughts, and cares not whether the Holy One be his friend or not. But these are
all mere names of fiction—names given by a deluded world that never felt the
glad reality of the peace which passeth all understanding. There can be no peace
till we know whether God be our friend or our enemy—whether heaven or hell be
our eternal home. There can be no peace save that which flows from a sense of
the forgiving love of a reconciled God. This is peace; this is life; this is
blessedness: all else is hollow—a shadow—a dream—a lie!
Possessing this life and
peace in our own souls, we go forth to preach them to others. Having entered
personally into this everlasting covenant, we proclaim its riches abroad. Having
tasted the blessedness of being wholly forgiven, we rejoice to proclaim it
around. Being ourselves reconciled through the blood of the covenant, we beseech
men to be reconciled too. Having felt the preciousness of Christ ourselves, we
testify what we have seen and known of Him, that we may commend Him to others.
For it is not merely the fact of being formally entrusted with this errand—this
covenant—that animates our zeal to make it known; it is especially the
consciousness of possessing the treasure ourselves. It is this that gives
liberty of heart and utterance; it is this that gives us boldness and fidelity;
and, on the other hand, it is the want of this consciousness that straitens our
soul—that damps our energy and fills us with the fear of man. When we speak of
eternal life to our people, we speak as those who have already found it for
ourselves. When we speak of peace and forgiveness, we speak in the fullness of
hearts that are already partakers of these. When we go after the lost and
wandering, we do it as those who have already returned to the Shepherd and
Bishop of their souls. When we speak of joy to the sorrowful and rest to the
troubled, we do it as those who have found rest for their own souls, and have
learned to sink all their own sorrows in the fathomless ocean of their Father’s
love. Thus resting on this covenant of life and peace which is entrusted to us,
we go forth to make known the unsearchable riches of Christ. A dispensation of
the gospel is committed to us. Necessity is laid upon us; yea, woe is unto us,
if we preach not the gospel.
II. This covenant was
entrusted to Levi, because he had been found faithful. This life and peace were
placed in his hands, because he had been found approved of God. “I gave them
to him for the fear wherewith he feared Me, and was afraid before My name.”
The circumstances in which this solemn trust was made over to his guardianship,
are related in the twenty-fifth chapter of Numbers. Phinehas, grandson of Aaron,
had manifested his zeal for God, by his promptitude in avenging the dishonor
done to His name in the matter of Israel’s transgression with the daughters of
Moab. On which occasion we read, “The Lord spake unto Moses, saying, Phinehas
the son of Eleazar, the son of Aaron the priest, hath turned away My wrath from
the children of Israel, while he was zealous for My sake among them. Wherefore
say, Behold I give unto him My covenant of peace;
and he shall have it,
and his seed after him, even the covenant of an everlasting priesthood” (vv.
10-13). To this, also, allusion is manifestly made, in Moses’ blessing upon
the tribes. “Of Levi he said, Let Thy Thummim and Thy Urim be with Thy Holy
One; who said to his father and to his mother, I have not seen him. They have
observed Thy word, and kept Thy covenant. They shall teach Jacob Thy judgments
and Israel Thy law.” Being found zealous for the name and honor of Jehovah—
for the purity of His worship, for the integrity of His law—he was singled out
from the tribes, and the covenant of life and peace entrusted to his care. In
like manner, the apostle, speaking of those to whom the gospel was to be
committed, says to Timothy, “The things that thou hast heard of me, the same
commit thou to faithful men, who shall be able to teach others also.”
And further, in another place, he says, “It is required of stewards that they
be found faithful.”
It is then, because we have
been judged faithful and zealous for God, that we have been placed in the office
of the ministry; and, accordingly, this is one of the very solemn questions
which our Church requires to be put, ere the hands of the Presbytery are laid
upon us—“Are not zeal for the glory of God, love to Jesus Christ, and desire
of saving souls, your great motives, and chief inducements, to enter into the
function of the holy ministry?” What, then, are the prerequisites of character
which warrant the Church in committing to our hands the ministry of the Word and
the charge of souls? Our text sums them all up in one—holy fear of God.
But,
oh! How much does this imply? What piety, what reverence, what love, what
devotedness, what sensitiveness to the honor of God, what jealousy for His name,
what zeal for His glory! It is not eloquence, it is not learning, it is not
wisdom, or genius, or high estate, that are required. No; it is holy fear and
love: it is, that we really know the God we speak of—the Savior whom we
preach; it is, that we have really “passed from death to life” ourselves; it
is, that we have the love of God in our hearts, and the fear of God before our
eyes.
Will God commit the
ministry of the gospel to unconverted
men? Will God commission and
accredit, as the messengers of life and peace, men who have never tasted these
themselves? Will God entrust the vessels of the sanctuary to the guardianship of
uncleansed, unholy hands? Is it nothing to him, whether it be Nadab and Abihu,
or Eleazar and Ithamar? Is it nothing to him, whether the blood of the
consecrated sacrifice be upon their ear, their hands, or their feet? Is it
nothing to him, whether the holy anointing oil be sprinkled on their heads? Is
it nothing to him, whether they are clothed with the heaven-appointed raiment,
“for glory and for beauty”— whether the Urim and the Thummim glitter on
their jeweled breast—and whether on their foreheads be engraven in characters
of gold, the inscription of the sanctuary, “Holiness to the Lord”? “Lovest
thou Me?” is still the Savior’s question to those whom He appoints shepherds
of the flock, which He hath purchased with His own blood; and still He expects
the same decided answer, “Thou knowest all things, Thou knowest that I love
Thee,” ere He grants the solemn commission, “Feed My sheep; feed My lambs.”
III. We have the manner in
which the faithful priesthood fulfilled their character and discharged their
office. “The law of truth was in his mouth, and iniquity was not found in his
lips; he walked with Me in peace and equity.” The utterance of his mouth was
truth; no deceit or wickedness was found in his lips; his life was like Enoch’s—a
close and continual walk with God. He kept by the side of the God of truth,
maintaining peaceful, holy fellowship with Him, he leaned upon His arm, he was
guided by His eye, he learned the law at His lips. What a picture of the bold
fidelity, the godly simplicity of ministerial character;
and of the
heavenly walk, the holy calm, of ministerial life!
Such is the character
and such the life of a minister of the Lord Jesus; and for all this, his
sufficiency is of God. For holiness of life, he looks to the power of the
indwelling Spirit; for wisdom, he rests on the promise, “Ye have an unction
from the Holy One, and ye know all things.” It is to the Master’s image that
the servant is to be conformed. His character is our model, His life our rule.
“He has left us an example that we should follow His steps, who did no sin,
neither was guile found in His mouth.” Our light is to shine before men, as
His shone while here. We are not only His servants, but we are His
representatives on earth. We are set to reflect His character to the world, that
men may know Him through us, and glorify His name. How responsible is our
position! How much it concerns us as Christians, how much more as ministers, to
represent Him truly, to reflect Him faithfully, both to His own people and to a
world that knows Him and esteems Him not! We, as ministers of His Word, are
especially to be “epistles of Christ, known and read of all men.”
In this description of the
prophet, there is a twofold exhibition of the faithful minister; first, in his
character; and, second, in his life; and in each of these, again there is a
twofold division. His character is first described positively, then negatively.
His life is set forth as being first a walk of peace, and then of equity.
1. His character.
“The
law of truth was in his lips, and iniquity was not found in his mouth.” He
approved himself a faithful and a true witness for his God, holding fast the
truth, and departing from evil. Walking in the footsteps of this ancient
Pattern, we are called upon to declare to the flocks over which the Holy Ghost
hath made us overseers, the whole counsel of God: keeping back nothing that is
profitable, being zealous for the truth, and not teaching nor tolerating any
manner or degree of error. We are to “preach, not ourselves but Christ Jesus
the Lord,” His infinitely glorious person, His infinitely perfect and precious
work. In Him are summed up all truth, all wisdom, all knowledge. Out of Him, and
apart from Him, there is neither truth, nor wisdom, nor knowledge for the soul
of man. In Him all perfection dwells; in Him all excellencies, divine and human,
visible and invisible, shine forth with matchless luster; in Him all beauty
centers; in Him all life has its source; from Him all glory radiates—to Him
all power is committed, in earth and heaven; round Him all government revolves.
He is the sum of all that we preach. He is truth
itself; and in
testifying of Him, we fulfill our office as witnesses for the truth. It is this,
that makes our ministry such a solemn thing; it is this, that makes even minute
accuracy in our preaching so momentous, and even a shade of error so perilous.
To err in our representations of common truths is reckoned, and within certain
limits, may with all safety be reckoned, a matter of but trivial moment. Not so
in preaching Christ; no truth is unimportant which relates to Him; no error can
be without its serious consequences of evil which misrepresents Him. In
preaching Christ, it is no common crime to speak at random, or to speak without
regard being duly had to careful exactness of argument and opinion. To err here
is to dishonor Christ, and to injure souls. We must preach Him
wholly, we
must preach Him fully, we must preach Him
truly. We must not
merely beware of denying Him, but we must beware of setting Him forth
imperfectly, or even with cold exactness, as if unwilling to commend His worth
by any expression of our esteem or love: we must not merely refrain from marring
His beauty, but even from hiding or defacing the very hem of His garment. It can
be no slight evil in the Father’s eyes, to diminish aught of the glory of Him
“in whom his soul delighteth”: who is “the brightness of His glory, and
the express image of His person.” It must be a crime needing both repentance
and forgiveness, in the eyes of the God of truth, to set forth amiss the
character or work of Him who is truth itself— incarnate
truth; and who
is for this very end revealed, that He might be the full and perfect
manifestation of truth to angels and men. It can be no trivial injury done to
souls, when we testify amiss of Him who is “the way, the truth, and the life,”
the “door,” the access, “the new and living way” to the Father’s
house; of Him who is the sinner’s hope, the sinner’s surety and substitute,
the sinner’s peace, the sinner’s high priest and advocate above. Oh! How
infinitely momentous, that, in all that pertaineth to Christ, and His work for
sinners, “the law of truth should be in our lips, and iniquity not found in
our mouth.”
2. His life.
“He
walked with Me in peace and equity.” His daily life corresponded fully with
his ministerial character. His life was like godly Enoch’s—a continual walk
with God; holiness was in his lips, and holiness was in his life. His words were
of God, and his walk
with God. How fair the picture of the
faithful, the upright, the wise, the consistent, the godly priest! What a model
for the life of a minister of Christ! First of all, he walks with God
“in
peace.” He walks in the comfort of the Holy Ghost. He has found peace with
God, through the blood of the Cross, and therefore walks with God as a forgiven
child with a reconciled father. He has found rest for his soul in Christ, and
rejoices in the conscious liberty of his divine adoption. He walks with God in
peace! He dwells in the light of His countenance—he delights in His smiles.
“Perfect love has cast out fear.” He rejoices in his
felt reconciliation,
felt nearness, felt relationship. He leans upon His arm, and “Abba,
Father,” is the unbidden, the joyful utterance of lip and heart. He walks with
God in peace! God is the life, the light, the portion of his soul; he has found
the favor of God, and in that favor is life. Nothing now seems burdensome, but
the body of sin; his yoke is broken, his fetters cast away. How peaceful, how
even, how sweet, is the tenor of his life! Without this peace, this conscious
reconciliation, all labor for God is a burden — all service, bondage. Without
this, all ministerial work is irksome; all care in teaching or in tending the
flock, is weariness and vexation of spirit. Oh! If ever any man upon earth
should walk closely and peacefully with God, it is the minister of the gospel;
if ever any man should dread distance and dispeace between his soul and God, it
is he; if anyone needs to have his conscience daily sprinkled with the
blood of atonement—to have his “conscience purged from dead works to serve
the living God,” it is he—it is he.
His life, however, is not
merely a peaceful, but it is a holy
walk with God. “He walked with Me
in peace and equity.” How consistent, how circumspect should we be in word and
deed, who are invested with such an office as this. “Be ye clean ye that bear
the vessels of the Lord.” How careful should we be that we give none occasion
to the weak to stumble, or to the enemy to blaspheme. What, though we preach the
gospel, if we do not live
it! What, though the Word of God be in our lips
on Sabbath, if the world be in our speech, and in our lives throughout the week,
and, if instead of the fellowship of the saints, we prefer the world’s
communionship! What, though we warn, or rebuke, or exhort, if our careless,
foolish, worldly walk and conversation give the lie to our official testimony!
How awful to undo throughout the week, either by our negligence or sinfulness,
or conformity to the world, all that we were professing to do on the Sabbath!
How necessary that we should be holy, spiritual, heavenly-minded—a continual
rebuke to the ungodly, a continual pattern to the flock! How strange to let our
light shine before men, when professionally called to do so; but to hide it
under a bushel on every other occasion. And further, how responsible we are for
being holy! We have not merely the promised gift of the Holy Spirit as
Christians, but we have the special promise of this gift as ministers, that we
may be fully anointed and fitted for our work. With such a full gift of the Holy
One; with such a necessity laid upon us to be examples to the flock; and with
such a pattern as the Chief Shepherd Himself, oh, what manner of persons ought
we to be in all holy conversation and godliness. Let us be men of faith—men of
prayer—men of love—men of patience, and meekness, and gentleness and
heavenly-minded zeal — men of singleness of aim and simplicity of heart.
Wherever we are, in whatever circumstances, in whatever company, let us never
forget nor allow others to forget that we are ministers of the Lord Jesus. Let
us be the pastor always, less than the pastor, never! Let us manifest to all men
the light and luster of a holy life—the sweet serenity of a peaceful walk with
God. Let us follow the Lamb whithersoever He goeth. Let the same mind be in us
that was in Christ Jesus. Oh! Let us beware lest it be said of us, “They made
me keeper of the vineyards, but mine own vineyard have I not kept.”
IV. We have the success of
a faithful minister, “he did turn many from iniquity.” This is the great end
of our ministerial work—the conversion of souls, and it is this that makes it
such a solemn, such a perilous undertaking, as one of the fathers describes it—”A
burden which even angels’ shoulders might shrink from.” Nevertheless, having
entered upon it, we are sacredly bound to give ourselves wholly to it, and to
make full proof of our ministry.
Our errand is the same as
our Master’s, to seek and to save the lost. Our mind and feeling must be the
same as His—compassion for souls. Our great desire and aim must be the
conversion of sinners. Less than this we dare not seek. With less than this we
cannot be content. To be admired, to be applauded, to be followed, is nothing,
so long as our ministry is unfruitful and our labors unsuccessful. Such were the
apostle’s feelings, when he went about warning and entreating sinners night
and day “with tears”: and when he said, “My little children of whom I
travail in birth again till Christ be formed in you.” These surely ought to be
the feelings and desires of everyone who has given himself to the ministry of
the gospel, and bound himself by solemn vows to watch for souls. If we are
really in earnest, nothing will satisfy us but success. If we have truly “the
desire of saving souls,” which we solemnly vowed at ordination, we can never
be at rest unless we see some fruit of our labor. How sad, how criminal must be
our condition, if we can go in and out among our people, and yet feel no anxiety
about their souls, no concern whether many, or few, or none, are turned from
their iniquity? If souls are committed to us, and if souls are to be required of
us, how can we be indifferent about their state. To those who treat the
doctrines of regeneration and conversion as the dreams of fanaticism,
indifference may seem a virtue, but to those who believe them to be solemn
realities, it must appear a crime of fearful magnitude. Remissness in duty may
be lightly spoken of, and lightly thought of now; unfaithfulness in
preaching,
or negligence in visiting,
may press lightly upon the conscience now;
but, oh, how different in the day of recompense, when the blood of souls shall
be required at the watchman’s hands! Then, how overwhelming the anguish of the
hireling shepherd that fed himself and not the flock! How agonizing the remorse
that shall seize upon his guilty conscience, and wring from him the cry of the
traitor Judas, “I have sinned in that I have betrayed the innocent blood”?
And how bitter the response from the companions of his despair—the spirits
that kept not their first estate—his seducers upon earth—”What is that to
us, see thou to that?” The sad estate of unconverted men may not now disturb
the easy quiet of his life; but oh, how dismal shall be the cry of lost souls
resounding throughout eternity in the ears of the unfaithful shepherd; the cry
of souls that were lost through his neglect, that perished because he never
watched for them, never warned them, never prayed for them, never sought their
conversion and salvation!
But, let us observe the
connection here declared to subsist between faithfulness and success in the work
of the ministry; between a godly life, and the “turning away many from
iniquity.” The end for which we first took office as we declared at ordination
was the saving of souls;
the end for which we still live and labor is the
same; the means to this end are a holy life and a faithful fulfillment of our
ministry. The connection between these two things is close and sure. We are
entitled to calculate upon it. We are called upon to pray and labor with the
confident expectation of it being realized; and where it is not, to examine
ourselves with all diligence lest the cause of the failure be found in
ourselves; in our want of faith—our want of love—our want of prayer—our
want of zeal and warmth—our want of spirituality and holiness of life, for it
is by these that the Holy Spirit is grieved away. Success is attainable; success
is desirable; success is promised by God; and nothing on earth can be bitterer
to the soul of a faithful minister than the want of it. To walk with God, and to
be faithful to our trust is declared to be the certain way of attaining it. Oh,
how much depends on the holiness of our life—the consistency of our character—the
heavenliness of our walk and conversation. Our position is such, that we cannot
remain neutral. Our life cannot be one of harmless obscurity. We must either
repel or attract—save or ruin souls! How loud then the call, how strong the
motive, to spirituality of soul and circumspectness of life! How solemn the
warning against worldly-mindedness and vanity, against levity and frivolity,
against negligence, and sloth, and cold formality!
Of all men, a minister of
Christ is especially called to walk with God. Everything depends on this—his
own peace and joy; his own future reward at the coming of the Lord. But
especially does our text point to this as the true and sure way of securing the
blessing. This is the grand secret of ministerial success. One who walks with
God reflects the light of His countenance upon a benighted world; and the closer
he walks the more of this light does he reflect. One who walks with God carries
in his very air and countenance a sweet serenity and holy joy that diffuses
tranquillity around. One who walks with God receives and imparts life
whithersoever he goes; as it is written, “Out of him shall flow rivers of
living water.” He is not merely the world’s light, but the world’s
fountain—dispensing the water of life on every side, and making the barren
wastes to blossom as the rose. He waters the world’s wilderness as he moves
along his peaceful course. His life is blest; his example is blest; his
intercourse is blest; his words are blest; his ministry is blest! Souls are
saved— sinners are converted, and many are turned from their iniquity!
God has of late been
teaching us this. He has of late been visiting many parishes of our land with
showers of blessing, and refreshing them with the outpouring of His Spirit. Our
own eyes have seen, our own ears have heard that of which our fathers spake in
other days. In this we are called upon greatly to rejoice, and for it to render
praise to God. How often have we prayed that God would pour out His Spirit; yea,
do we not make it matter of public prayer each Sabbath day that He would do so?
And shall we be astonished when He answers us? Shall we be slow of heart to
believe it? Shall we be reluctant to acknowledge the gift? When we see many
turned from iniquity shall we presume to call that excitement or fanaticism,
which, taking it even at the lowest count, bears at least the appearance of a
Divine work, and may be hereafter displayed to the eye of the most incredulous,
as in very deed a work of God?
For the acknowledgment of
what God has thus been doing in reviving His work, with reference to the
difficulties in which we are at present involved; and with a desire to carry
forward and extend the work of revival, the last General Assembly of our Church
has sent forth an earnest recommendation to all her ministers to hold
congregational prayer meetings, to implore the Divine blessing upon our church
that her present difficulties may be removed, and “that by the outpouring of
His Holy Spirit, the means of grace may be still more eminently blest than in
the year that is past.” Following out this recommendation, and stirring up
ourselves and our people to fervent prayer and believing intercession, let us go
forward to our ministerial and pastoral labors; not merely contented to
discharge these with professional exactness, and to fulfill our allotted round
of necessary duty, but watching for souls as they that must give an account—desiring
success, laboring for success, expecting success. Let us give ourselves
continually to prayer, and to the ministry of the Word. Let us walk closely with
God, maintaining peaceful and unbroken fellowship with Him as our own, our
reconciled Father, and counting it our meat and drink to do His will, and to
advance His glory! And as our success is sure, so is our eternal reward—the
crown of righteousness which the Lord the righteous Judge will give us at that
day, and not to us only, but to all that love His appearing. He that winneth
souls is wise—wiser and greater far than the learned and mighty of this world,
and surer of what they are vainly striving after—the riches of an
incorruptible inheritance, the glory of an immortal name—for “they that be
wise shall shine as the firmament; and they that turn many to righteousness as
the stars forever and ever.”
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Providence
Baptist Ministries ©
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PBM Desktop Publications ©
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Revised: April 13, 2009
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