Our Daily Homily, Exodus
The more
they afflicted them, the more they multiplied - Exodus 1:12
It was a very unequal struggle on which Pharaoh had
entered; for he opposed not the Hebrews, but Jehovah. It is thus that the
great ones of this world have ever spoken and acted. "Let us build a tower;"
"Let us break their bands asunder, and cast away their cords from us."
"Against Thy holy child Jesus, both Herod and Pontius Pilate were gathered
together.'' In every case, He that sits in the heavens has laughed at the
boast of human pride. His cause and His people's are one. Yet times of
affliction have always been on times of multiplication.
In the history of the Church. - When has she made her greatest number of
adherents? When her pulpits have been filled with eloquent preachers, and
her aisles crowded with fashion and wealth? No; but when she has been driven
to the dens and caves of the earth, and her sons have been proscribed
outcasts. The real triumphs of the early Church were in the first centuries
of opprobrium and persecution; her decline began when Constantine made
Christianity the religion of the State.
In the history of each earnest soul. - It is rarely the case that we make
much spiritual headway when winds and currents favor us. We do best when all
is against us. We grow quickest in the dark. In times of persecution we
realize the security, and comfort, and joy, which are in Christ Jesus our
Lord; and as God goes the round of the world, it is in chambers of pain,
sickness, and bereavement, that He beholds the multiplication of the choice
graces of holy character and temper. The affliction, which is for the
moment, is working out an exceeding weight of glory.
He Smote the Egyptian - Exodus 2:12
This was creature-strength, wrought on by
creature-passion, and ending in creature-failure. Moses stood on an
eminence, and reached down to these poor brethren of his with a passing
spasm of pity. He was very careful to look this way and that, so as not to
invalidate his own position at court. And fear for himself carried him
swiftly from the scene of his people's woes. It was a brief effort to do the
Divine work of redemption in his own energy. Long years must pass, during
which God would drain away drop by drop his strength, his resolution, and
his very desire to be an emancipator; that when he had become nothing, God
through him might effect His almighty will.
We sometimes smite the Egyptian within. - We rise up against some tyrant
passion, and strike two or three vigorous blows. Our efforts to rid
ourselves of its thrall originate and are prosecuted in our own resolve. At
first the conflict seems easily our own; finally the dead weight of all the
Egyptians within is more than a match for us.
We often smite the Egyptian without. - We make an assault on some giant evil
- drink, gambling, impurity. It seems at first as though we should carry the
position by our sudden and impetuous rush. But Egypt conquers in the end,
and we flee.
No: we need to learn for the inward and outward conflict the lesson that
forty years in Midian taught Moses, that only the Spirit of God in man can
overcome the spirit of the world. By disappointment and repeated failure, by
the silence of the desert, we are taught that we are nothing - then God
becomes our all in all: and all things become possible to us as we believe.
I am come down - Exodus 3:8
THIS is a marvellous chapter, because it is so full of
God. If the previous one, in its story of human striving, reminds us of Rom.
7., this as surely recalls Rom. 8. There is little mention of the part that
Moses was to play, but much is said of what God was about to do. "I am come
down." "I will bring you up." "I will put forth Mine hand." O weary soul,
bitter with weary bondage, groaning beneath cruel taskmasters, afflicted and
tossed with tempest, the I AM has come down!
God comes down to our lowest to lift us to His highest. - This is the theme
of the Magnificat, and of Hannah's song. God comes down to the dust for the
poor, and to the dunghill for the needy. You cannot be too lonely or broken
in spirit for Him to notice and help. In proportion to your humiliation will
be your exaltation.
He comes down to our saddest to lift us to His joyfullest. - How great the
contrast between the cry of the Hebrews, because of their taskmasters, and
the exultant note that smote on the rocks of the Red Sea! Such shall be your
experience also. If you suffer in the line of God's will and providence, you
are sowing the seeds of light and gladness. Oh, anticipate the harvest!
He comes dawn go our helplessness to succor with His great might. - Israel
could not help herself; but the resources of I AM were sufficient for every
need, and they will be for yours and mine. This is God's blank check; fill
it in! Insert after these majestic words, wisdom, or courage, or love, or
whatever you need most. And He will be all this, and more also: not for a
moment, but always; not spasmodically, but unchangeably.
I am not Eloquent - Exodus 4:10
THIS is what we all say. We think more of the words
than of the message; more of our eloquence or slowness of speech than of the
King's seal and signature. Moses had learned many wholesome lessons through
his long sojourn in Midian; but he had to learn this last one, that God does
not want excellency of speech or of language in His messengers, but the
unction and power which come on those who speak after direct audience with
the Eternal. Aaron, who came to meet Moses, could speak well; but he was a
weak man, whose alliance with Moses caused his nobler younger brother much
anxiety and pain. However, God determined to send Aaron with him, to be his
colleague and spokesman. Better a thousand times had it been for Moses to
trust God for speech, than be thus deposed of his premiership.
Be sure to gel thy message from the King. - Wait before Him in the inner
shrine, till He says the word which thou shalt speak. This will give thee
the real eloquence of the heart.
Look up for the right words. - The Apostle said that the Corinthians were
enriched in all utterance; and he said that he spoke the Divine mysteries in
words which the Holy Spirit taught. Ask for these, and you will not be
disappointed.
Rely on the Divine cooperation. - There is another force at work, more
subtle and penetrating than the most eloquent words of man - the power of
the Holy Ghost. Seek for His Divine demonstration and co-witness. And it
shall come to pass, that mysterious influences shall move over the hearts of
those that listen to thy words, which shall attest the mighty fellowship and
cooperation of One whom the natural man cannot detect.
Why is it that Thou hast sent me? - Exodus 5:22
BEFORE God can use us, He must bring us to an end of
ourselves. When Paul was summoned to the greatest epistles and labors of his
life, his strength was drained to utter weakness, and he despaired even of
life. So in the case of Moses and Israel.
Moses, for forty years, had been undergoing the emptying process; but
perhaps when God called him to this great enterprise, there may have been a
slight revival of confidence in himself, in his mission, his miracles, the
eloquence of Aaron's speech. So in the rebuff he received from Pharaoh, in
the bitter remonstrances of the elders of his people, in the sad
consciousness that his efforts had aggravated their condition, the lesson
was still further taught him - that of himself he could do absolutely
nothing.
Israel also had begun to hope something from his mission. Through the
brickfields the story ran of his early years, his uncompromising speech to
Pharaoh, of his miracles; and the wretched slaves cherished faith in him and
Aaron as their heaven-sent deliverers. They had, however, to learn that all
such hopes were vain, and to see that the brothers, at the best, were as
weak as themselves. Then the way was prepared to lean only on God.
Ourselves. - By repeated failures all along our life-course God is teaching
us the same lesson. We fail to justify and then to sanctify ourselves. Our
efforts to serve and please Him only end in increasing perplexity. The tale
of bricks is doubled; the burdens augment; the strength of our purpose is
broken; we are utterly discouraged; and then, when the soul is utterly
desolate, the heavenly Bridegroom draws near and says, "I will do all; I am
Alpha and Omega; I am thy salvation."
I am Jehovah, and I Will! - Exodus 6:6
WHEN all human help has failed, and the soul, exhausted
and despairing, has given up hope from man, God draws near, and says, I AM.
It is as though He said, "All that can really help you resides in My nature
as in its native home. I have weaned you from all beside, that you might
seek in Me what you had been wont to seek in men and things and self-help."
Thus God with Israel. The people had come to relish the dainties of Egypt -
the leeks and onions, the fleshpots and sensual delights; therefore the need
for this cruel bondage to wean them, and prepare them for marriage union
with Himself. Moreover, they placed great hopes in Moses, and such appeals
as might be made to move Pharaoh's pity; from these too it was necessary to
withdraw the people's heart, that they might look for all to their heavenly
Lover, and find in Jehovah their infinite supply.
Affliction is always needful in the first stage of the Christian's deepening
experience. The world, with its vainglory, pride, and envy; the delights of
the flesh; the praise and good opinion of our fellows - these take the place
of Christ in His disciples. We must be taught to despise these things, and
feel their vanity and insufficiency to satisfy.
Failure is often necessary to teach humility and patience; so that we may
have no confidence in anything we can call our own, and be prepared to find
all our satisfaction and delight in Jesus only.
Revelation then becomes possible, of all that God can be and do. He draws
near with His sevenfold "I will." He looks on us with infinite delight, and
commences to bring us into such blessedness that we forget all else, and
behold our Bridegroom only.
The Egyptians shall know that I am the Lord - Exodus 7:5
IN God's dealings with His people He purposed to reveal
Himself to Egypt: so that when He led forth Israel's hosts, in redemption
power, from the brick-fields of slavery on to resurrection ground, there
might be afforded such a display of His love, and pity, and power, as the
world had never before witnessed. Egypt and all surrounding nations should
know the character of God in the Exodus, as the Lover and Redeemer of His
own.
So with the Church. - The Apostle tells us that redeemed men are to be the
subjects of angelic contemplation and wonder. In the Church, principalities
and powers shall discern the manifold wisdom and grace of God. When God has
brought all the ransomed hosts up from the Egyptian bondage of the world to
stand in the radiance of the eternal morning, then the universe shall ring
with the ascription, "Great and marvellous are Thy works. Righteous and true
are Thy ways."
So with each individual believer. - Each one of us has been formed for Jesus
Himself, that we might show forth His praise. In growing purity and
sweetness, in our deliverance from the clinging corruptions of the world and
flesh, in our patience under tribulation, our submission and steadfast hope,
in our willingness to sacrifice ourselves for others, let us be revelations
of what Christ is, and of what He can make sinful men become.
Believers are the world's Bibles, by studying which men may come to know the
Lord Himself. Let us see to it that we be clear in type, unmistakable in our
testimony, pleasant to behold, thoughtful and helpful toward all, commending
the blessed Bridegroom whom the world sees not.
I will put a Division between My People and thy People - Exodus 8:23
THIS division is as old as eternity. - In the council
chamber of the Godhead the Father chose Jesus and all who should believe in
Him unto eternal life. We cannot understand the reason of that Divine
choice; we can only affirm it, that in those ages of the unfathomed past,
Christ and His seed stood out from the rest of mankind, the people of God's
own possession and inheritance.
It was affected by the Cross of Jesus. - By it we are crucified to the
world, and the world to us. The cross, with its outstretched arms, stands
sentinel between the Church and the world which cast out her Lord. The
grave, like a great gulf, yawns between those who gather round the risen
Master on resurrection ground, and all men else. From the moment that Jesus
ascended, the rallying centre of the Church was removed from earth to
heaven, from the cross to the throne.
It is wrought out by the daily grace of the Holy Ghost. - It is right, of
course, to come out and be separate in our outward walk and behavior. But,
deeper than this, if only we will let the Spirit of God work unhindered, He
will effect an inward division. Our tastes and desires, our hopes and aims,
will become different, and we shall be aware of a growing dissimilarity
between ourselves and the world.
Then to the separate soul the Bridegroom comes. He says tender and loving
words. In one hour He teaches more than all human teachers could; and sheds
forth by the Holy Ghost the torrent of Divine Love. There may be darkness
without, but there is light in the dwellings of Goshen: there may be plague
and pestilence in the world, but there is peace, joy, and bliss, in the
separated soul.
Only in Goshen, where the Children of Israel were, was there no hail - Exodus 9:26
Those who are included in the provisions of the
covenant are sealed. The storm may sweep around them, but the great angel,
who ascends from the east, cries with a great voice to the angels to whom it
is given to hurt the earth, and the sea, and the trees, saying, Hurt them
not till we have sealed the servants of God in their foreheads (Rev 7:3).
The only spot on which the soul is safe is within the encircling provisions
of the covenant. Israel stood there, and was safe - not only from the hail,
but from the destroying sword. The invulnerable walls of that sacred
enclosure were the oath and promise of God to Abraham. God had bound himself
by the most solemn sanctions to be a God to this people, and deliver them;
it was necessary, therefore, that He should be their pavilion and canopy,
catching the hailstones on His outstretched wings and securing them from
hurt.
The covenant is entered, not by merit nor by works. There was neither the
one nor the other in that race of slaves; but they stood there simply
because of their relationship to the Friend of God. So we enter the blessed
safety of the better covenant, through our relationship with the Lord Jesus,
who is the Beloved of the Father, the one glorious and blessed Man. Without
beauty or merit, the soul attaches itself by faith to Him, and discovers
that it was loved before the worlds were made.
Ah, blessed Lover of souls, we see how the storm swept Thy heart, that it
might never touch us. Thou art our hiding-place, our shield, our deliverer,
our strong tower. Without dismay we Can anticipate the storms of death,
judgment, and eternity, sure that wherever Thou art there can be no hail.
All the Children of Israel had Light in their dwellings - Exodus 10:23
WITHOUT, darkness that might be felt; within, light.
This should be the condition of each believing heart. The sun may have gone
down, and the moon withdrawn herself in the firmament of the world; the
darkness of perplexity and trouble may envelop Pharaoh and all his chosen
counsellors; all things may wear the aspect of approaching dissolution: but
with the Lord as our everlasting Light we walk in the light of life.
Light is purity. - The soul which is exposed to the indwelling of God,
purifies itself even as He is pure; and walks as Jesus did, with white and
stainless robes. He that says he has fellowship with the Holy God, and walks
in the darkness of his own lusts, lies. Where God is really hidden in the
heart, the beams of His lovely purity must irradiate and beautify the life.
Light is knowledge. - There is a wisdom, an insight, an understanding of the
Divine mysteries, which the mere intellect could never give, but are the
product of the Divine indwelling m the holy soul. All around men may be
groping aimlessly after truth, trying to discover the secret of the
Universe, whilst to the loving, childlike soul, in which God has taken up
His abode, these things, which are hidden from the wise and prudent, are
unveiled.
Light is love. - It steals so gently over the world, blessing flowers and
birds, little children and invalids. Everywhere it is the symbol of the
beneficent work of its Creator. His eldest daughter! Thus amid the
selfishness of the world, let Jesus dwell deep in thee, that thou mayest be
rooted and grounded in the love of God, which shall illumine thy dwelling,
and ray out to the world.
Jewels of Silver and Jewels of Gold - Exodus 11:2
THE Egyptians knew very well that they would never see
their jewels again; and the people of Israel were thus, to some extent,
compensated for their unpaid toils. The Lord gave them such favor with the
Egyptians that they gave them whatever they asked; so that "they spoiled the
Egyptians."
These jewels were employed afterward in the adornment and enrichment of the
Sanctuary. They flashed in the breastplate of the High Priest, and shone in
the sacred vessels. In this they remind us of the treasures which David
gathered by his conquests from neighboring nations, and which were afterward
incorporated in the Temple of Solomon. They recall also the glowing
predictions of the prophet, that the kings of the earth shall bring their
treasures into the New Jerusalem.
The jewels of the Church, whether they stand for her graces or her choice
children, have often been obtained from the midst of Egypt. Was not Saul of
Tarsus just such a jewel? The world counted him one of her rarest sons; but
God set him as a jewel in the breastplate of Immanuel.
Let us ever seek jewels from the land of our captivity and suffering. It
will not do to come away empty. It is not enough merely to bear what God
permits to fall on us for our chastisement; but to go further, and extract
from all trials, jewels. Let every trial and temptation enrich you with the
opposite grace. There are Egyptians in your life, which have grievously
tormented you with their heavy whips, yet even these shall yield wealth - "
jewels of silver and jewels of gold"; which you shall consecrate to holy
service, and which shall shine in the fabric and worship of the New
Jerusalem.
With bitter herbs - Exodus 12:8
THE Paschal feast is the emblem of the Christian life.
The Blood is ever speaking to God for us; though we see it not, God sees it,
and hears its prevalent plea. We in the meanwhile are called upon to feed in
faith daily, hourly, on the flesh of the Son of Man, according to His own
command. In all Christian life, even in its hours of greatest rapture, there
must be a touch of the bitter herb.
We can never forget the cost of our redemption. - Even in heaven, in the
full realization of its' bliss, whenever we catch sight of the print of the
nails in His hand, we shall remember the agony and bloody sweat, the cross
and passion, and eat the feast with the flavor of the bitter herb. How much
more on earth, where we are so constantly requiring the efficacy of His
precious death!
There will always be the memory of our sinnership. - We cannot forget our
unworthiness and sin. He has forgiven; but we cannot forget. Ah, those years
of rebellion and perverseness before we yielded to Him; and those years of
self-will and pride since we knew His love l They will sometimes come back
to us, and give us to eat of the bitter herb.
Moreover, there must be the constant crucifixion of the self-life. - We can
only properly feed on Jesus, the Lamb of God, when we are animated by the
spirit of self-surrender and humiliation, of death to the world and to the
will of the flesh, which were the characteristics of His cross. Deep down in
our hearts, the drinking of His cup and being baptized with His baptism,
will be the touch of the bitter herbs in the feast. But "the sufferings of
this present time are not worthy to be compared with the glory which shall
be revealed in us."
By strength of hand the Lord brought us out - Exodus 13:14
FOUR times over in this chapter Moses lays stress on
the strong hand with which God redeemed His people from the bondage of
Egypt; and we are reminded of "the exceeding greatness of His power, which
is to us-ward who believe'' (Eph 1:12-20).
God's strong hand reaches down to where we are. - It would have been useless
if Israel had been bidden to help itself up to a certain point, whilst God
would do the rest. The people were so broken that they could only lie at the
bottom of the pit, and moan. God's hand reached down to touch and grasp them
at their lowest. So God's help is not conditional on our doing something,
whilst He will do the rest. When we are without strength, when we have
expended our all in vain, when heart and flesh fail - then God comes where
we are, and becomes the strength of our heart and our portion forever.
God's strong hand is mightier than our mightiest adversaries. - Pharaoh was
strong, and held the people as a child may hold a moth in its clenched fist.
But a man's hand is stronger than a child's, and God's than Pharaoh's. So
Satan may have held you in bondage; but do not fear him any more, look away
to the strength of God's hand. What can it not do for you?
We must appropriate and reckon on God's strong hand. - It is there toward
them who believe, as a locomotive may be next a line of carriages; yet there
must be a coupling-iron connecting them. So you must trust God's strength,
and avail yourself of it, and yield to it. Remember that His arm is not
shortened, nor His · hand paralyzed, except our unbelief and sin intercept
and hinder the mighty working of His Power.
And Israel saw the Egyptians dead upon the seashore - Exodus 14:30
What a relief that morning brought from the anxieties
of the previous night! Then, as they lifted up their eyes, they saw Pharaoh
and the dreaded Egyptian taskmaster in full pursuit; now they beheld the
seashore strewn with their bodies, stark and cold. They would never see them
again, nor hear the crack of their whips.
So in life we are permitted to see the dreaded temptations and evils of
earlier days suddenly deprived of all power to hurt us. The Egyptians are
dead upon the shore; and we see the great work of the Lord. Let us take
comfort in this.
In the pressure of trial. - You are suffering keenly; yet remember that no
trial is allowed to come from any source in which there is not a Divine
meaning. Nothing can enter your life, of which God is not cognizant, and
which He does not permit. Though the pressure of your trial is almost
unbearable, you will one day see your Egyptians dead.
Amid the temptations of the great adversary of sauls. - They may seem at
this moment more than you can bear; but God is about to deliver you. He can
so absolutely free you from the habits of self-indulgence which you have
contracted, and from the perpetual yielding to temptation to which you have
been prone, that some day you will look with amazement and thankfulness on
these things, as Egyptians dead on the seashore.
So also in the presence of death. - Many believers dread, not the
after-death, but the act of dying. But as the morning of eternity breaks,
they will awake with songs of joy to see death and the grave and all the
evils that they dreaded, like Egyptians, strewn on the shores of the sea of
glass.
The waters were made Sweet - Exodus 15:25
OUR joys and sorrows, like the varied products of
nature, lie very close together. One moment we are singing the joyous song
of victory on the shores of the Red Sea, and vow we will never again
mistrust our God; and then, by a sudden transition, we find ourselves
standing beside the Marah waters of pain and disappointment, inclined to
murmur at our lot.
There is, however, a tree, which, when cast into the waters, makes them
sweet. It is the tree of the cross. "He bare our sins in His own body on the
tree." The cross means the yielding up of the will. Now, it is in proportion
as we see God's will in the various events of life, and surrender ourselves
either to bear or do it, that we shall find earth's bitter things becoming
sweet, and its hard things easy.
We must yield our will to God. - The secret of blessedness is in saying
"Yes" to the will of God, as it is shown in the circumstances of our lot or
the revelations of His Word. It is the will of a Father whose love and
wisdom are beyond question.
We must accept what He permits. - It may be that our pains emanate from the
malevolence or negligence of others; still, if He has permitted them, they
are His will for us. By the time they reach us they have become minted with
His die, and we must patiently submit.
We must do all He bids. - The thread of obedience must always be running
through our hands. At all costs to our choice and feeling we must not only
have His commands, but keep them. Our Lord perpetually lays stress on
obeying His words. This is the spirit of the Cross, and the properties of
this tree sweeten earth's bitterest sorrows. "Disappointments become His
appointments.
A day's Portion every day - Exodus 16:4
IT is said that the twenty-four hours should be divided
thus: Eight hours for work, eight for rest, eight for recreation, food, etc.
There should be a counterpart of this in Christian living. Each day there
should be a portion for work, a portion for restful meditation and sitting
before the Lord, and a portion for the gathering of God's manna.
Each day brings its own work. - God has created us for good works, and has
prepared our pathway, so that we may come to them one by one. He has
apportioned to each one some office to fulfill, some service to render, some
function in the mystical body of our Lord. It is comforting to know that we
have not to scheme for ourselves, but to look up for guidance into the
Divine plan.
Each day brings its own difficulties. - God spreads them over our days,
giving each day only what we can sustain. The servant girl might be startled
were she told that she would have to carry the coals, which it has taken two
horses and a great cart to bring to her master's door; but she will be
comforted by being reminded that they will be borne upstairs only a coal
scuttle full at a time.
Each day brings its own supply. - No Israelite could point to his store of
manna and congratulate himself that he was proof against any famine that
might befall. The lesson of daily trust for daily bread was constantly being
enforced; for as the day came the manna fell. Those who followed the cloud
were always certain of their sustenance. Where the cloud brooded the manna
fell. Whatever any day may bring there always will be within reach of you,
lying ready prepared on the sands of the desert, just what you require. Go
forth and carry it; there will be no lack.
I will stand before thee upon the rock in Horeb, and than shall smite the rock - Exodus 17:6
HERE is a beautiful example of the coopera-lion between
God and His servants in providing for the needs of His people. Clearly the
smiting of the rock was a very small item in this incident, the main
consideration was what God was doing in the heart of the earth. But the two
wrought together: Moses in the eyes of the people, God in hidden depths.
Similarly we are fellow workers with God.
One of the greatest revelations that can come to any Christian worker is the
realization that in every act of Christian ministry there are two agents,
God and man: that God does not need to be implored to help us, but wants us
to help Him; that our part is the very unimportant and subsidiary one of
smiting the rock, whilst His is the Divine and all important part of making
the waters flow.
Did Moses go to the rock that day weighted with care, his brow furrowed with
the anxiety of furnishing a river of which his people might drink? Certainly
not; he had only to smite: God would do all the rest, and had pledged
Himself to it. So, Christian worker, you have been worrying as though the
whole weight of God's inheritance were upon you, but you are greatly
mistaken; smiting is very easy work.
In every congregation and religious gathering the Holy Spirit is present,
eager to glorify Christ, and to pour out rivers of living water for thirsty
men; believe this. See that you are spiritually in a right condition, that
He may be able to ally you with Himself. Keep reckoning on Him to do His
share; and when the river is flowing, be sure not to take the praise.
"We are workers together with God."
And God command thee so - Exodus 18:23
It was good and sound advice that Jethro gave his
son-in-law. It could hardly have been better. It is always better to set one
hundred men to work than attempt to do the work of one hundred men. There is
no greater art in the world than to develop the latent capacities of those
around us by yoking them to useful service. But good though the advice
obviously was, Jethro carefully guarded Moses against adopting it, unless
the Lord had been consulted, and had commanded it.
Let us test human advice. - There are plenty of voices that advise us, and
each has some nostrum for our health, some direction for our path. Some are
true guides, whom God has sent to us, as Jethro to Moses. Often an on-looker
can see mistakes we are making, and can suggest something better. But we are
wise to get alone into the holy presence of God, and ask what He commands,
what is His will.
Let us test human teachings. - So full is the world of voices, so
bewildering the din of religious schools and sects! The Apostle was
justified in advising us to prove all things, and to try the spirits,
whether they were of God. There are four tests for truth: what glorifies
Christ; what humbles the flesh; what is in accord with the Word of God; and
what has stood the trial of Christian experience in the past.
There is no teacher like God, and we may always detect His voice. It is
small and still; it casts down imagination, and brings our thoughts into the
captivity of Jesus; it is definite and distinct. When there is an indistinct
murmur of many sounds along the wire, you may be sure that you are not in
communication with your Father's person. When He speaks, there is no
mistaking His voice or His will.
A peculiar Treasure unto Me - Exodus 19:5
OUR Saviour told of a man who, in ploughing his field,
heard his ploughshare chink against buried treasure, and hastened to sell
all that he had in order to buy it. In speaking thus, He pictured Himself as
well as us. He found us before we found Him. The treasure is His people, to
purchase whom He gave up all that He had, even to His throne (Mat 13:44).
"Ye are an elect race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God's
own possession, that ye may show forth the excellencies of Him who called
you out of darkness into His marvellous light" (1Pe 2:9, R. V.).
Where his treasure is, there is a man's heart. If it is in ships on the
treacherous sea, he tosses restlessly on his bed, solicitous for its safety.
If it is in fabrics, he guards against moth; if in metal, against rust and
thieves. And is Christ less careful for His own? Does He not guard with
equal care against all that would deteriorate our value in His esteem? Need
we fear the thief? Will not the Only-begotten keep us, so that the evil one
shall not touch us (Mat 6:19-20)?
God's treasure is His forever. "They shall be Mine, saith the Lord of Hosts,
in the day that I do make, even a peculiar treasure." He will hold His own,
as men cling to their treasure, binding it about their loins, in a storm at
sea (Mal 3:17, R. V.).
Let us mind the conditions: to obey His voice, and keep His covenant; then
on eagles' wings He will bring us to Himself. Compliance with these is
blessed in its results. God regards us with the ecstasy of a love that
rejoices over us with singing; and counts on us as a mother on her child, a
miser on His gold.
The thick darkness where God was - Exodus 20:21
GOD is light, and dwells in light, but it is mercifully
veiled to the weak eye of man. This is why Christ spake in parables - that
seeing, they might not see. As Moses veiled his face when he spake to the
people, so God veils Himself in the flesh of Jesus, in which He tabernacles;
and in the mysteries of His providence, beneath which He conceals a smiling
face. The Sun of Righteousness in whose beams we rejoice must needs hide
beneath the cloud, else we should fall at His feet as dead. It may be that
His light seems to us darkness, because of its excessive brilliance; but God
dwells in the thick darkness - clouds and darkness are round about. Him.
The darkness of mystery. - God has still His hidden secrets, hidden from the
wise and prudent. Do not fear them; be content to accept things you cannot
understand; wait patiently. Presently He will reveal to you the treasures of
darkness, the riches of the glory of the mystery. Mystery is only the veil
on God's face.
The darkness of trial. - Do not be afraid to enter the cloud that is
settling down on your life. God is in it. The other side is radiant with His
glory. "Think it not strange concerning the fiery trial which is to try you,
as though some strange thing happened unto you: but rejoice, inasmuch as ye
are partakers of Christ's sufferings.''
The darkness of desertion. - When you seem loneliest and most forsaken, God
is nighest. Jesus once cried "Forsaken," and immediately after, "Father."
God is in the dark cloud. Plunge into the blackness of its darkness without
flinching - under the shrouding curtain of His pavilion you will find God
awaiting you.
With an awl - Exodus 21:6
THE Hebrew slave who meant perpetual consecration of
service had to lose a little blood. It was a disagreeable and not wholly
painless process, by which his vows were ratified and rendered permanent.
But not otherwise could he serve forever. That awl represents the nail that
affixed Christ to the cross, and we must expect it in every true act of
consecration. For want of it so many seem to go through that supreme act,
and shortly after go back from it, bringing discredit and shame upon the
teaching they had eagerly welcomed. There are two stages in the Christian
life: that in which we serve with the spirit of a slave, and that in which
we freely yield ourselves to serve our Master forever. This is the service
represented by the pierced ear.
The awl spiritually means the humiliation and pain with which we surrender
the self-life. We are tempted to consecrate ourselves in our own energy; to
resolve on the devout life in the strength of our own resolution; to say, "I
will serve Christ utterly." We avoid the awl which deprives us of our own
energy, which is applied to us by the hand of another, and which makes us
helpless and self-emptied, that God may become all in all. In your case the
awl may be the daily fret of some uncongenial associate; the pressure of
loss and anxiety for the sake of Jesus; the humiliation of your pride by
perpetual sense of failure. Whatever it be, welcome all that binds you to
His cross, because through death you live.
"I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present
your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your
reasonable service."
He shall make Restitution - Exodus 22:5
THIS chapter is full of restitution, of which there is
far too little in ordinary Christian life. We try to make amends for injury
done to another by an extraordinary amount of civility; but we are reluctant
in so many words to frankly confess that we have done wrong, and make proper
reparation for the act or speech. We often excuse ourselves by the thought
that we were fully justified in speaking or acting as we did, whereas we may
behave ourselves wrongly in courses of conduct which are themselves
legitimate.
Loosing a beast into another man's field (Exodus 22:5). - We may through our
carelessness allow another to suffer detriment. The beast ought not to have
been thus allowed to stray; and, as we let it loose, we should make amends
for our carelessness in respect to our brother's interests. We wrong another
not only by what we do, or permit to be done, but in what we carelessly fail
to do.
Kindling a fire (Exodus 22:6). - The tongue is a spark that kindles a great
matter. If we drop firebrands and lighted matches in the inflammable
material of a circle of gossip, we should make amends to the person whose
character may have been thereby injured.
Borrowed goads (Exodus 22:14). - To return a house, a book, a horse, in the
state in which we received it, fair wear and tear excepted, or to make good
any injury, should be a commonplace of Christian morality. Trustees are
responsible for not making due inquiry into risky investments. Each is his
brother's keeper. If we remember at the prayer-hour that he has aught
against us, let us seek him, and confess, and restore.
An enemy unto thine enemies - Exodus 23:22
IT is a most helpful thought that the angel of the
covenant in whom is God's name, always precedes us. In our march through the
wilderness we perceive His form, which is viewless to others, and realize
that His strong hand prepares our path. Let us be very careful not to grieve
or disobey Him, lest we lose His mighty championship. Strict obedience to
His slightest whisper secures the certainty of His vindication of us from
the wrongs we suffer at the hands of our foes. A little further on the same
voice promises to send a hornet before the chosen host (Exodus 23:28). He
who is an angel to the saint is a hornet to his foes. A swarm of hornets is
the most relentless and irresistible foe that man can face.
Have you enemies? Be sure that they hate you only for the truth's sake, and
because darkness must always be in antagonism to light. "Who is he that will
harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good? But and if ye suffer for
righteousness' sake, happy are ye: and be not afraid of their terror,
neither be troubled." But see to it that you cherish no spirit of hatred or
retaliation toward them. Think of the misery of their heart, which is full
of jealousy, envy, and bitterness. Pity and pray for them.
When we are right with God we shall have many new enemies. All who hate Him
will hate us. But this is rather to our credit than otherwise. Those who
have defamed the master of the household will be hostile to his servants.
But when our cause is one with God's, and His foes ours, our foes are His,
and He deals with them; He stands between us and their hate. He will not
leave us in their hands; He will give us vindication and deliverance.
They beheld God, and did eat and drink - Exodus 24:11
It is a beautiful combination, which we should do well
to emulate.
Some eat and drink, and do not behold God. - They are taken up with the
delights of sense. Their one cry, as the children of this world, is, What
shall we eat, what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we be clothed? But
the God in whose hand their breath is and whose are all their ways, they do
not glorify. Let us beware; it was of Christian professors that the Apostles
said, Their god is their belly.
Some behold God, and do not eat and drink. - They look on God with such
awful fear that they isolate Him from the common duties of life. They draw a
strict line between the sacred and secular, between Sunday and weekday,
between God's and their own. This divorce between religion and daily life is
fatal to true religion, which was meant to be the bond between the commonest
details of life and the service of God.
Some behold God, and eat and drink. - They turn from the commonest
avocations to look up into His face. They glorify God in their body as well
as in their spirit. They obey the apostle's injunction, "Whether therefore
ye eat, or drink, or whatsoever ye do, do all to the glory of God." Oh for
the grace to be able to combine the vision of God with every common incident
- to live always beneath His eye in the unrestrained gladness of little
children in their Father's presence!
Never a trial that He is not there,
Never a burden that He doth not bear;
Never a sorrow that He doth not share -
Moment by moment I'm under His care.
According to all that I show thee, even so shall ye make it - Exodus 25:9
IT was clear that God would only be responsible for the
material that was needed for His plan. If Moses, or the people, insisted on
putting in more than was in his original plan, they would have to bear the
anxiety of securing the stuff. This is our mistake. We incur
responsibilities that God does not put on us; we burden our hearts with
anxiety and care because we insist on introducing so many items into our
daily life, which would not have been there if we had but been content with
God's pattern, and acquiesced in His programme.
This injunction is repeated in four different passages, showing the
importance with which God regards it. Indeed, to be on God's plan is the
only place of rightness, safety, and joy.
It is presented in the human life of Jesus. We are to walk as He walked.
Having been called according to His purpose, let us never rest content with
anything less than being conformed to the image of God's Son.
God's plan in our character. - It is presented in the human life of Jesus.
We are to walk as He walked. Having been called according to His purpose,
let us never rest content with anything less than being conformed to the
image of God's Son.
God's plan in our Christian service. - Not seeking to resemble some other
devoted life; but endeavoring to be as God would have us, the embodiment of
His thought, the expression of His conception. Then our efforts will be
crowned with success, and we shall bear much fruit to the glory of God.
God's plan for every day. - He has prepared a scheme for the employment of
every hour, and will show it to us by the indication of His Spirit, or by
the trend of circumstances. Let us abide in Him, doing nothing that He does
not teach, doing all He does. So life will become a tabernacle, in which the
Shekinah will shine and sacrifices be offered.
The vail shall divide unto you - Exodus 26:33
That vail was rent when Jesus died, the Holy Ghost
signifying that from that moment access was free into the Holiest. All
believers are now welcome to draw near and live in the perpetual presence of
God, their Father, even as Jesus did in His earthly life, and as He does in
the Heaven of Heavens. This is the clear teaching of Heb 10:19-22 : - "
Having therefore, brethren, boldness to enter into the holiest by the blood
of Jesus, by a new and living way, which He hath consecrated for us, through
the vail, that is to say, His flesh; and having a High Priest over the house
of God; let us draw near with a true heart, in full assurance of faith,
having our hearts sprinkled from an evil conscience and our bodies washed
with pure water."
But there is a deeper significance still. The new and living way was opened
through the rending of the flesh of Jesus Christ. As His flesh was rent on
the Cross, the Temple vail was rent from the top to the bottom. And it is
only when we have chosen the cross, with its shame and death, as the lot of
our self-life, that we can enter into that immediate fellowship with God,
which is described as "within the vail."
How many there are who never get beyond that dividing vail! They know the
brazen altar of Atonement, the laver of daily washing, the golden altar of
intercession; but they are never admitted to that blessed intimacy of
communion which sees the Shekinah glory between the cherubim and
blood-sprinkled mercy-seat.
O Spirit of God, apply the blood to sprinkle our consciences, and the water
to cleanse the habits of our daily life; and lead us where our Forerunner
and Priest awaits us.
Pure olive oil beaten for the Light - Exodus 27:20
THE saintly McCheyne used to say, when urging his
brother ministers to diligent preparation for the pulpit: "Beaten oil for
the sanctuary.'' And he strove never to present to his people truth which
had not been beaten out by careful devout meditation.
But there is yet another thought. That lamp in the Holy Place was an emblem
of the testimony of the Church, that is, of believers. As the incense table
was a type of their aspect toward God, as intercessors, so the
seven-branched candlestick was a type of their aspect toward the world, as
luminaries. In the Book of Revelation the Lord compares His churches to
candlesticks: "the seven candlesticks which thou sawest are the seven
churches."
The oil is, of course, as always in Scripture, a type of the Holy Spirit. He
in us is the only source of light-bearing. But the beaten oil reminds us of
the chastisement and discipline through which alone our best testimony can
be given. The persecutions of the Church have always been the times when she
has given her fairest, brightest witness to the Redeemer. The sufferings of
believers have ever led to the tenderest, strongest words for the Master,
whether by the sick bed or in the hospital ward. That brokenness of spirit,
which is the surest mark of mature work of God in the heart, is also a rare
condition of light-giving. The more beaten and broken you are, in poverty of
spirit, the purer will be the heavenly ray of love and light which will
shine forth from your life; and it is the purpose of God that you should be
"blameless and harmless, the sons of God, without rebuke, in the midst of a
crooked and perverse nation, among whom ye shine as lights in the world"
(Phi 2:15).
A golden bell and a pomegranate - Exodus 28:34
The robe of the high priest's ephod was of blue, the
color of heaven, of deep lakes, of the glacier-crevasse, of the gentian and
forget-me-not. On the hem of the robe were these alternate bells and
pomegranates.
Those skirts may illustrate our own position. - We dare not take a high
place near the head or arm; but, thank God, there is a place for each of us
at the skirt, near the foot; and the holy oil will reach us there, for the
Psalmist tells us that it descended even to the skirts of the high priest's
robe. It is a blessed thought, that we may receive the droppings of each
anointing that fails on the head of Jesus.
But the anointing of the Holy Ghost always shows itself in sweetness and
fruitfulness; the sweetness of the golden bell, tinkling with every
movement, and the fruitfulness of the pomegranate.
We must be sweet, as well as fruitful - Too many Christian workers are
over-tired and overwrought; they are peevish and fretful. When they come
back from meetings on which they have bestowed their last energies, they are
neither sweet nor gentle to the home-circle, which has been so lonesome
during their absence.
We must be fruitful, as well as sweet. - True religion is not a mere
sentimentality; it is strong, healthy, helpful, fruit-bearing. Some seem to
think that to attend moving meetings, to be profuse in emotional tears and
smiles, to make profuse use of the word dear, is to touch the high-water
mark; let them learn that the worth of our life is measured by its influence
on others, and its bearing fruit, which has in it the seed of reproduction.
"Herein is My Father glorified, that ye bear much fruit."
Thou shall wash them with water - Exodus 29:4
THIS chapter tells of the consecration to their high
office of Aaron and his sons. The entire family is constantly joined thus
together as one in God's sight. Similarly, Christ and His house - which is
ourselves, who believe - are one. We too must be sprinkled by the blood on
ear and thumb and toe, as those who have been redeemed. We too must be
consecrated and anointed; and there must be the cleanliness of which these
words speak.
This is where so many have erred; they have sought consecration, anointing,
and the priestly office; but have not remembered that their bodies must
first be washed with pure water.
We must be clean in our habits. - If there is anything in our daily behavior
which is not quite clean, it must be put away. There seems some incongruity
between the anointing of the Holy Ghost and the smell of spirits or fumes of
tobacco. Any excessive indulgence of the flesh, even in legitimate
directions, and all indulgence in wrong ones, are inconsistent with the life
of consecration.
We must be cleansed in our thoughts. - Whenever temptation is suggested,
even though it is still in the far distance, we must turn from it with
loathing, and ask that the blood of Jesus may go on cleansing hour by hour.
"Cleanse the thoughts of our hearts by the inspiration of Thy Holy Spirit,
that we may perfectly love Thee."
We must be cleansed in our intentions. - The self-life recedes as it is
driven from the outworks of our nature, and goes deeper into the motives and
springs of action. We discover that self is the spring of so much of our
religious activity. Everywhere we need the laver, the hourly washing of John
13.
Upon the flesh of man shall it not be poured - Exodus 30:32
WHAT perpetual references to the work of the Holy
Spirit, under the symbol of the Anointing Oil, meet us in these chapters. It
becomes us to ask ourselves very seriously whether we lay an equal stress on
it in our daily experience. Is it true of us, as of those to whom the
Beloved Apostle wrote, that the anointing which we received abideth in us?
It is not enough to have the Spirit in us for sanctification; He must be on
us for service and ministry.
But He cannot come on the flesh of the natural man; He descends only to
those who are washed, consecrated, set apart for God. Many claim the Holy
Spirit's anointing, and try to reckon they have received it; but they find
it fail, because they desire it for the flesh.
There must be no yielding to fleshly appetite. - When we were in the flesh,
sinful passions wrought in our members. But there must be no permission
given in these directions. A calm, reverent, self-disciplined nature is
alone fitted to be the seat of the Holy Ghost, His nest and home.
There must be no gratification to worldly pride and ambition. - Too many are
eager for the Holy Ghost, that they may be able to make a name, or gather an
audience; but God is not likely to give us His river of throne-water to turn
the mill-wheels of personal ambition.
There must be no fleshly striving after it. - We wrestle and struggle to win
the Spirit, and miss Him. It is only when our hope of attaining this
blessing by our own efforts dies down, and we are humbled and broken before
God; when we cry out to Him to give what we cannot win, that He draws near
and gives the best of all His donations.
I have called by name Bezaleel - Exodus 31:2
WE lightly speak of a man's occupation as his calling,
and fail to realize the profound significance of the phrase. One man is
called to the ministry; another to the bar; others, like Bezaleel and
Aholiab, to work in all manner of workmanship. Each should realize,
therefore, that faculty, desire, circumstance, constitute a Divine call, and
that there may be as distinct a vocation in the merchant's office, the
tradesman's shop, or in the work of a domestic servant, as in the Church
itself.
The morning bell that summons us to daily duty is the call of our Father,
bidding us to engage in the toils to which He has assigned us. He, who gave
Moses the plan, gave the artificers the power to work it in gold, silver,
brass, and wood. Let this be your faith; and each morning, as you go to your
work, however distasteful it may be, say, "God has called me to this; and He
will fill me with all the strength, wisdom, and grace, that I need for its
right-doing."
Abide in your calling, - Unless it is a wrong or dishonorable one, it is
better to stay in it than to become restless and changeable; and if you must
leave it, wait for God to open another door.
Find in God the makeweighl to all the deficiencies of your life. - If you
are enslaved by daily duty, remember that in Christ you are free; if free
from daily toil, in Christ you are a slave. The supply of every deficiency,
the rectification of every hardship, is to be found in Jesus.
Mind to do all for God. - To do all in God and for Him, remembering that He
sees and accepts all, not according to the results accomplished, but to the
heavenly and holy motives that prompt the worker - this is to be blessed.
Peradventure I shall make an Atonement for your sin - Exodus 32:30
THE heart of Moses was full of that great, wonderful
new word, Atonement. For many days God had been telling him about it, and
speaking it over and over to his heart. He seemed, however, to feel that no
ordinary sacrifices would avail: the blood of goats and bulls would surely
be insufficient to put away the black transgression into which Israel had
fallen. But there was rising in his heart a resolve, to which he gave
expression when he returned to God: "Blot me, I pray thee, out of the book
which Thou hast written." He did not realize that his blood would not avail,
but that the blood of Christ, who should, in the fullness of times, offer
Himself without spot to God, alone could put away sin.
In every heart there is a deep conviction of the necessity of an Atonement.
- This is the source of the temples, altars, and sacrifices, which have
marked the history of every nation under heaven. Man has felt as by a
natural instinct that some reparation was necessary to the broken law.
The insufficiency of animal sacrifice. - In the Levitical system there was a
remembrance of sin made year by year; but the sin itself could not be purged
by such rites. The fact that the worshippers so constantly came back to
offer their sacrifices shows that they were not assured. The priests always
stood- their attitude was an emblem of an unfinished work.
The sufficiency of Christ's Atonement. - He was willing to be cut off out of
the land of the living for the transgression of His people; and because He
died, there is no longer the " - " which in Moses' prayer speaks of
uncertainty; but a blessed assurance that we are at one with God, with each
other, and with all holy beings.
In a Cleft of the Rock - Exodus 33:22
THAT rock was Christ. In the Divine thought the
position of Moses, first on the rock, and afterward in its cleft, was a
moving emblem of the position in which alone we can dare to look out on the
sublime progress of God's glory.
God is always passing by. - In the great movements of history which evolve
His plans, and are leading to Christ's advent; in the passage of the ages,
which are His swift chariots; in storm and catastrophe, which break up old
forces and forms of evil; in the goodness of His daily mercy; in the
revelation of His character - we are always living in the very midst of
God's presence and power.
In our condition of weakness and sinfulness we need a position of stability
and shelter from which to look on God. - No man can see that face of awful
holiness and love and live. Sir John Herschel says that when sweeping the
heavens with his telescope the brilliant Sirius suddenly burst on his view,
he nearly fainted. Who then could behold God! But in Jesus, we are stable,
established in Him, accepted in the Beloved; and in Him we are covered. The
full blaze of the Divine glory is tempered to our gaze; it comes to us
through the medium of the pierced hand. We stand on the rock; we are hidden
under the covering hand.
Our Rock was cleft. - How scarred are the great Alps! Their sides have been
split by the action of tempest, avalanche, earthquake, frost, and glacier.
Hence their clefts. But who shall enumerate all that has been borne by our
dear Lord for us! What storms have pelted on Him, that we might have a safe
hiding. On Calvary, a niche was hollowed in which a world of sinners may
take shelter!
Moses wist not - Exodus 34:29
UNCONSCIOUSNESS of goodness is always a main element in
the highest forms of goodness: in the same way that unconsciousness is
characteristic of the worst forms of depravity. "Samson wist not that the
Lord had departed from him."
Directly people become conscious of their superiority to others, and boast
of it, it is certain that they have never really seen the beauty of God's
holiness, and have no clear knowledge of the condition of their own hearts.
They see that they have been cleansed from their old sins; but they do not
perceive that the spirit of selfishness has retreated into the springs of
motive and intention.
We are all tempted to this terrible self-consciousness. We are proud of
being humble, complacent for being lowly, self-congratulatory because we
take back-seats. In all this we betray the vanity of our pretensions. This
sort of goodness is like a thin veneer of mahogany on very common deal.
The real goodness is more conscious of the remaining evil than of the
acquired good; of the lingering darkness than of the hilltops smitten with
the dawn; of that which has not been attained. But we can only attain this
blessed condition by intimate and prolonged, fellowship with God, in
solitudes where human voices and interests cease to distract. The brightness
of which Moses was unconscious was caught from the Presence-chamber of the
Divine Loveliness. Ah, what patterns are seen on the Mount! What cries are
uttered there! What visions are seen there! What revelations are made there!
What injunctions are received there! Oh for the closer access, the nearer
view, the more intimate face to face intercourse, such as is open still to
the friends of God!
Go work all manner of workmanship - Exodus 35:35
THERE was an infinite variety in the contributions made
to the Tabernacle, from the precious jewels of the rulers to the acacia wood
of the poor, and the goats' hair of the women. The completed structure was a
monument of the united gifts, handicrafts, and gems of the entire people.
But in all there was the unity of the spirit, and plan, and devotion.
In the Church and the world there is a work for each of us to do. - It may
be a very humble part in the great factory - like minding the lift, or
stoking the furnace, or fetching materials for the more skilled operatives;
but there is a berth for each willing worker, if only the will and way of
God are diligently sought and followed.
This work is suited to our special powers. - He who prepares the work for
the worker, prepares the worker for the work. Whenever God gives us a task
to fulfill, it is because He sees in us faculties for its successful and
happy accomplishment, in cooperation with Himself. It is a mistake then to
turn back daunted by difficulty and opposition. As Caleb and Joshua said of
the possessors of Canaan, "We be well able to overcome them."
We must bring our resources and powers to God. - Willing hearts were
summoned to bring their offerings to the Lord. The maker of a musical
instrument knows best how to develop its waiting music, and He who created
and endowed us can make the most of us. Let us not work for Him; but yield
ourselves to His hand, and our members as instruments of righteousness for
His service. We may differ from all others in the special character of our
work; but it matters not, so long as God effects through us His purpose in
our creation.
Much more than enough - Exodus 36:5
This is always God's way. No words could better express
the Imperial measure and standard of His dealings with His people. When He
calls us out, as He did Moses, Bezaleel, and Aholiab, and entrusts us with
His plan; and when we are careful to work out His specifications; He always
makes more than enough provision for all our need.
The redemption in Christ Jesus. - Where sin abounded grace did much more
abound. The topmost bills were covered by the waters of the deluge, and the
Alpine heights of human rebellion were more than atoned for when Jesus died.
Grace overtops sin.
God's ability to answer prayer. - He does exceeding abundantly above all
that we ask or think. We ask great things, and secretly think that if God
were to give only a fraction, we would be thankful. How we straiten Him! He
cannot do much because of our unbelief! He yearns to do not only enough, but
much more than enough for us. See His prodigality in nature: its enamelled
shells, its profusion of flowers, its swarming life.
In daily provision for spirit, soul, and body. - Give, and it shall be given
to you, good measure, pressed down, shaken together, and running over. God
is not niggard. If He withholds, it is that we may cling to the Giver rather
than the gift. But for the most part, He gives all things richly to enjoy.
He opens His hand, and satisfies. Whatever thy need, God has much more than
enough to meet it. He has riches of grace and of glory. Trust Him, obey Him,
appropriate thy share in thy Father's rich provision. Weak and needy as thou
art, there is much more than enough strength in God to perfect what concerns
thee.
A mercy-seat of pure gold - Exodus 37:6
THIS was the Propitiatory. Beneath it lay the tables of
the law, which even Moses had broken, almost as soon as they came into his
hands, but which had been renewed. Concealing and covering them lay this
golden lid, encrusted with the blood which successive generations of priests
sprinkled there on the Great Day of Atonement.
There can be no doubt that this golden slab sets forth our Saviour's
obedience unto death. God set Him forth to be "the Propitiation for our
sins; and not for ours only, but also for the sins of the whole world."
Our Lord's obedience is priceless in the Divine esteem. - What pure gold is
among metals, that is His advent to do God's will, in comparison with all
other endeavors to do it. It takes the first place, and is of peerless
beauty and excellence. "Though He were a Son, yet learned He obedience by
the things which He suffered."
His obedience was to blood. - His wounds tell the story. He held nothing
back; but yielded all to blood-shedding. Blood is life, and life is in the
Blood: this He freely poured out to meet the claims of justice, and herein
gave the sublimest token of His love.
His person and work are the medium of our approach. - In Jesus the Shekinah
of God's presence awaits us. On this priceless mercy-seat the Divine Fire
trembles, and we may draw near with boldness. We are beloved children; but
let us never forget that we are redeemed sinners.
There is a place where Jesus sheds
The oil of gladness on our heads;
A place than all beside more sweet -
It is the blood-stained Mercy-seat.
The laver of the mirrors of the serving-women - Exodus 38:8
THIS was a good use to put these mirrors to. The women
were so deeply interested in the work which was afoot, that they counted no
sacrifice too great. But the main suggestion for ourselves is the wisdom of
renouncing self-in-spection.
The mirror speaks of self-scrutiny. - We are constantly holding up the
mirror to our tuner life, studying its mechanism and operations. Our fingers
often on our pulse; the attention of the soul turned back on itself; the
study of symptoms carried to the grievous extent of inducing the diseases
which we dread. Of course, where there is evident mischief at work, we do
well to take heed; but we must guard against a morbid self-anatomy, a
perpetual analysis of motive and intention, an inwardness which diverts our
attention from the person of Christ and the performance of duty.
The evils of self-scrutiny. - If we look clown into the depths of our own
nature, we miss the face of Jesus. To consider self is to become involved in
a maze of perplexities and disappointments. The disease cannot be cured by
ceaselessly pondering its symptoms. The soul cannot lift the soul. Self can
never expel the spirit of self.
Its cure. - These women became so interested in the service of the
Tabernacle that they were weaned from their mirrors. The better expelled the
worse; the higher cast out the lower. Go out of yourself, find some work to
do for God and man; seek in the laver the removal of the strains of human
sin; find your centre in God and His plans; and you will abandon the habit
of morbid self-scrutiny. For every look at self, take ten at Christ: He "healeth
all thy diseases."
Holy to the Lord - Exodus 39:30
ZECHARIAH tells us that these words were to be written
on the bells of the horses. The sacred inscription, which stood on the brow
of Aaron, designating his separation to his sublime office, was to become
incorporated with the business of the farm and city, where burdens were
borne and heavy weights drawn with difficulty. The inscription befits all
bells that ring in the home, the shop, the factory. We are to be God's
priests everywhere.
The priest was separated from all impurity. We must be in the world, but
separate from its sin. When evil threatens us from a distance, we must be
sensitive to its approach, and quick to put the covering presence of Christ
between.
The priest was separated to holy service. - He was keenly sensitive to the
honor of Jehovah, and to the demands of His service. Rather be cut clown at
His altar, like Zechariah the son of Berachiah, than prove a delinquent. We
cannot all do the inner service of offering incense and of blessing men, but
we can render every act as a sacred service to God; always treading the holy
floor, and within sight of the holy presence, and within earshot of the
Divine voice; eating, drinking, doing everything for the glory of God.
Throughout this chapter we are reminded that all was made as the Lord
commanded Moses; this should be the law of our life.
The priest bore holiness written where all could read it; so should we. - It
should not be necessary for us to be labelled. For men to need telling that
we are Christians, is a sign that we are far from what we should be. But so
to live that the first and slightest glance at us should betray our heavenly
calling, is to adorn the Gospel and please our Master.
The cloud of the Lord by day, and there was fire therein by night - Exodus 40:38
THIS was the cloud of the Shekinah, in the heart of
which was fire, the symbol of the presence of God. Probably this fire was
always present, but only visible against the background of the surrounding
darkness. In the New Testament fire is always associated with the ministry
of the Holy Spirit; and in (Isa 4:5) we learn that in the coming time God
would give, on every dwelling-place in Mount Zion, and in all her
assemblies, the same cloud of smoke by day, and flaming fire by night, as
had been vouchsafed to the Tabernacle where God dwelt. What a glorious
revelation is this!
The Holy Spirit brooding over each individual believer. - It is a symptom of
the highest life, when God spreads His tabernacle over the soul. We should
march only when He lifts up His enfolding presence, rest under His canopy,
and recognize the sanctity of all life.
The Holy Spirit resting on each home. - "Every dwelling-place in Zion" must
stand for the homes of God's people. How blessed it is when the home is a
temple, and each inmate of the beloved circle a priest! Such homes are rare,
but they are possible. Let those who are founding a new family make this
their ideal.
The Holy Spirit directing and filling each assembly and believer. - As of
old the movements of the cloud determined those of the tent and people, so
in the Pentecostal Church the Spirit was Guide, Director, Executor.
"Separate Me, to the work to which I have called them." We must rely most
absolutely on Him, waiting for His initiation, His teaching, the settling
down of His infinite benediction. Then there will be glory and defence. A
sweet savor unto the Lord. Lev 1:9, Lev 1:13, Lev 1:17. HOW sweet the
offering up of the Son was to the Father! "Christ also hath loved us, and
hath given Himself for us an offering and a sacrifice to God for a
sweet-smelling savor" (Eph 5:2). The burnt-offering was an imperfect type of
His entire devotion to His Father's will. When Jesus saw the inability of
man to keep the holy law, and volunteered to magnify it, and make it
honorable; when He laid aside His glory, and stepped down from His throne,
saying, "I delight to do Thy will, O my God "; when He became obedient even
to the death of the cross - it was as sweet to God as the fragrance of a
garden of flowers to us.
Let us never forget the Godward aspect of the cross. The sacrificial fire
fed on every part of the sacrifice, on the inwards as well as the carcase;
so did the Holy God delight to witness the spotless and entire devotion of
the Son to the great work in which the entire Godhead was most deeply
interested. The fragrant graces of Christ were made manifest on the cross,
and are perpetuated in His intercession.
There is a sense also in which our consecration to God is fragrant and
precious. When we see His claims, and yield to them; when we submit to His
will, and commit our lives wholly to His direction; when we offer and
present ourselves to Him, a living sacrifice, keeping nothing back - His
heart is gladdened, and His fire of complacency feeds on our act. Always
count on this; you may feel no thrill, and see no light, but reckon on God,
believe that He accepts what you give, and will crown your sacrifice with
the fire of Pentecost. Who to-day will surrender to God, and become an
offering of a sweet savor?