THE EXCELLENCY OF JEHOVAH

Deuteronomy 32:31

“For their rock is not like our Rock, as even our enemies concede.”

It is not a little to the honor of those who serve God, that the more fully their principles are investigated, the more just will they appear, and worthy to be adopted by all the world. Those principles embraced by ungodly men are often such as scarcely to be vindicated by their most partial friends; but those principles which the children of God profess, will stand the test of examination from their bitterest enemies. To this effect Moses speaks in the words before us; from which we shall,

I. Point out the superiority of Jehovah above all other objects of confidence.

Neither the idols of heathens, nor any other objects of confidence, can in any point of view be put in competition with Jehovah.

Consider His power.

There is nothing which he is not able to effect, “He does according to his will in the armies of Heaven, and among the inhabitants of the earth.” But what created being can claim this prerogative?

Consider His love.

Incomprehensible are the heights and depths of the Father’s love, revealed in sending his own Son to die for us! Nor less the love of Christ in giving himself a sacrifice for our sins. Is there any other Being that ever has expressed, or ever can, such love as this?

Consider His faithfulness.

God has given to us exceeding great and precious promises, suited to every need we can possibly experience. And has one jot or tittle of his Word ever failed? But where shall we find a creature that has not, in some respect or other, disappointed the expectations of those who trusted in him?

So indisputable is the point before us, that we may even,

II. Appeal to the very enemies of Jehovah in confirmation of our assertions.

We might with propriety appeal to his friends, since they, by their knowledge of him, and their experience of the vanity of earthly confidences, are best qualified to judge. But, waving this just advantage:

1. We will appeal to God’s enemies of former times.

In the contest with the worshipers of Baal, this matter was brought to a trial; and what was the result? The very idolaters themselves exclaimed, “The Lord, He is God! The Lord, He is God! 1 Kings 18:39.” Nebuchadnezzar was in like manner forced to acknowledge the vanity of the idol he had set up, and to confess that no other God could effect such a deliverance for his votaries, as Jehovah had wrought for the Hebrew youths. Daniel 3:29.

2. We will appeal to God’s at this day.

There are many who are ready to think that too much honor is ascribed to God, when the weakness of all created confidences is exposed. But we will appeal to their judgment, whether they do not think that an omniscient and omnipotent Being, whose providence and grace have been so marvelously displayed, be not more worthy of our trust than an arm of flesh? We appeal also to their experience; for though, through their ignorance of Jehovah, they cannot declare what he is—they do know, and must confess, that the creature, when confided in as a source of true happiness, invariably shows itself to be “vanity and vexation of spirit!”

ADDRESS.

1. Let those who have undervalued our Rock, repent of their folly.

Not idolaters alone, but all who do not supremely love and adore the Savior, must be considered as undervaluing this our Rock; and, if they do not repent of their conduct now, they will bewail it before long with endless and unavailing sorrow. Let them then consider, that, with respect to temporal things, there is none other that can deliver them from trouble, or support them under it; and that, with respect to spiritual things, there is no wisdom, strength, or righteousness, but in Him alone.

Let them consider, that “in Him all fullness dwells;” and that, if they trust in him, he will give them all that is needful for body and soul, for time and eternity. O that they were wise and would turn unto him, and cleave to him with full purpose of heart!

2. Let those who trust in Jesus, glory in him as an all-sufficient portion!

Those who build on this Rock need never fear; however high their expectations are raised, they shall never be disappointed of their hope. They may enlarge their desires, even as Hell itself that is never satisfied; they may ask all that God himself can bestow; and, provided it is good for them, they shall possess it all. However “wide they open their mouth, God will fill it.” In vain shall either men or devils seek to injure them; for “one of them should chase a thousand, and two put ten thousand to flight, verse 30.” Let them then consider what an almighty Friend they have; and endeavor to walk worthy of Him who has called them to his kingdom and glory!

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

THE JEWS MOVED TO JEALOUSY BY THE GENTILES

Deuteronomy 32:21

“They made me jealous by what is no god and angered me with their worthless idols. I will make them envious by those who are not a people; I will make them angry by a nation that has no understanding.”

“Known unto God are all his works from the beginning of the world.” Moses informs us, that, in the very first distribution of men over the face of the earth, God had an especial respect to those, who, at a remote period, would spring from the loins of Abraham; and that he assigned to the descendants of cursed Ham that portion of the globe which, in due time, would be delivered into the hands of Israel, cultivated in every respect, and fit for the accommodation and support of the Jewish nation, “When the Most High divided to the nations their inheritance, when he separated the sons of Adam, he set the bounds of the people according to (or, in reference to) the number of the children of Israel, verse 8. Yet at the very time when God carried this decree into execution, at the time when the nation of Israel were, by the discipline of forty years in the wilderness, brought to a state of faith and piety that was never equaled at any subsequent period of their history, even then, I say, did God foresee their declension from his ways, and inspire Moses to predict the wickedness which they would commit, and the chastisements which should be inflicted upon them on account of it; he even instructed Moses to record the whole beforehand in a song, which was, in all succeeding ages, to be committed to memory by the children of Israel, and to be a witness for God against them.

It was probable that, when God would change his conduct towards them, they would reflect on him either as mutable in his purposes, or as unable to execute his promises towards them; but this song would completely vindicate him from all such aspersions, and be a standing proof to them, that their miseries were the result of their own incorrigible perverseness.

“Now,” says God, “write down for yourselves this song and teach it to the Israelites and have them sing it, so that it may be a witness for me against them. When I have brought them into the land flowing with milk and honey, the land I promised on oath to their forefathers, and when they eat their fill and thrive, they will turn to other gods and worship them, rejecting me and breaking my covenant. And when many disasters and difficulties come upon them, this song will testify against them, because it will not be forgotten by their descendants. I know what they are disposed to do, even before I bring them into the land I promised them on oath, Deuteronomy 31:19-21.”

In this song are foretold the awful apostasies of the Jewish nation, together with all the judgments that would be inflicted on them, from that time even to the period of their future restoration.

The words which I have chosen for my text, contain the sum and substance of the whole; they specify the ground of God’s displeasure against his people, and the way in which he would manifest that displeasure; and they particularly mark the correspondence which there should be between their sin and their punishment, “They made me jealous by what is no god and angered me with their worthless idols. I will make them envious by those who are not a people; I will make them angry by a nation that has no understanding.”

In discoursing on these words, there are two things to be considered;

I. The import of this prophecy respecting the Jews.

The general facts relating to it are so well known, that it will not be necessary to enter very minutely into them. Every one knows how highly favored a people the Jewish nation have been; how exalted and privileged above all other people upon earth. The manner also in which they requited the kindness of their God, is well known. We are not disposed to think that human nature is worse in them than in others; the reason that it appears so is, that God’s conduct towards them, and theirs towards him, is all exhibited to view, and forms the most humiliating contrast that can be imagined.

On some particular occasions they seem to have been penetrated with a befitting sense of the mercies given unto them; but these impressions were of very short duration; within the space of a few days only, they forgot that wonderful deliverance which had been wrought for them at the Red Sea; as it is said, “They remembered not the multitude of his mercies, but provoked him at the sea, even at the Red Sea.” Every fresh difficulty, instead of leading them to God in earnest supplication and humble affiance, only irritated their rebellious spirits, and excited their murmurs against God and his servant Moses. Scarcely had three months elapsed, when, while God was graciously revealing to Moses that law by which the people were to be governed, they actually cast off God; and, because Moses had protracted his stay in the holy mount beyond what they thought a reasonable time, they would wait for him no longer; but determined to have other gods in the place of Jehovah, and another guide in the place of Moses, “Up,” they said to Aaron, “make us gods which shall go before us; for as for this Moses, the man that brought us up out of the land of Egypt, we know not what is become of him.” Immediately “they made a golden calf (in imitation of an Egyptian idol), and worshiped it, and sacrificed to it, and said: These are your gods, O Israel, which have brought you up out of the land of Egypt!”

Thus early did they show that propensity which was so fatal to them in after ages. In process of time they degenerated so far as to adopt all the gods of the heathen for their gods; even those gods who could not protect their own votaries, did this rebellious people worship, in preference to Jehovah who had done so great things for them, “they worshiped Ashtoreth, the goddess of the Zidonians, and Milcom, the abomination of the Ammonites, and Chemosh, the abomination of the Moabites.” Yes, “they made their children to pass through the fire unto Moloch,” and “sacrificed their sons and their daughters unto demons, and shed innocent blood, even the blood of their sons and of their daughters, whom they sacrificed unto the idols of Canaan, and the land was polluted with blood.”

Even in the very house of God itself did they place their idols; as though they were determined to provoke the Lord to jealousy beyond a possibility of endurance; nor were there any rites too base, too impure, or too bloody for them to practice in the worship of them. Many times did God punish them for these great iniquities, by delivering them into the hands of their enemies; and as often, in answer to their prayers, did he rescue them again from their oppressors. But at last, as he tells us by the prophet, he was even “broken with their whorish heart;” and, as they would persist in their idolatries notwithstanding all the warnings which from time to time he had sent them by his prophets, he was constrained to execute upon them the judgment threatened in our text.

This is the account given us by the inspired historian in 2 Chronicles 36:14-17: “Furthermore, all the leaders of the priests and the people became more and more unfaithful, following all the detestable practices of the nations and defiling the temple of the LORD, which he had consecrated in Jerusalem. The LORD, the God of their fathers, sent word to them through his messengers again and again, because he had pity on his people and on his dwelling place. But they mocked God’s messengers, despised his words and scoffed at his prophets until the wrath of the LORD was aroused against his people and there was no remedy. He brought up against them the king of the Babylonians, who killed their young men with the sword in the sanctuary, and spared neither young man nor young woman, old man or aged. God handed all of them over to Nebuchadnezzar.”

In confirmation of this exposition of our text, the Jewish writers refer to a passage in the Prophet Isaiah, Isaiah 23:13. The Chaldeans were but very recently risen into power; for, many hundred years after the Jews were established in the land of Canaan, the very name of Babylon was not at all formidable to Israel, or perhaps scarcely known. It was originally owing to the Assyrians that Babylon was exalted into so great and powerful a state; as, says the prophet, in the passage referred to, “Behold, the land of the Chaldeans; this people was not until the Assyrian founded it for them that dwell in the wilderness; they set up the towers thereof, they raised up the palaces thereof.” Now to be vanquished by such a people, and to be carried captive to such a place, appeared a peculiar degradation; which may be supposed to be in part an accomplishment of those words, “I will move them to jealousy with those who are not a people; I will provoke them to anger with a foolish nation.”

But that there was to be a further accomplishment of those words, we cannot doubt. Indeed, the Jews themselves acknowledge, that their present dispersion through the world is a continuation of those very judgments which were denounced against them by Moses. Not only the learned among them acknowledge this, but, as Moses himself foretold, even the most ignorant of the Jews are well aware of it. Moses says, in Deuteronomy 31:17-18, “On that day I will become angry with them and forsake them; I will hide my face from them, and they will be destroyed. Many disasters and difficulties will come upon them, and on that day they will ask, ‘Have not these disasters come upon us because our God is not with us?’ And I will certainly hide my face on that day because of all their wickedness in turning to other gods.”

Now “the Jews themselves take notice that these words have been fulfilled by the many calamities which have befallen them since the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans. This appears from Schebet Jehuda, where Solomon Virgœ quotes this very verse, to prove that their present sufferings proceed not from nature, but from an angry God, more powerful than nature. Section 13.”

The truth is, that this prophecy received but a very partial accomplishment at that time; for there were but two tribes sent to Babylon; the other ten were carried captive to Assyria. Now the idea of “provoking them to jealousy by those who were not a people,” could have no place in reference to the ten tribes, because Assyria was an empire almost thirteen hundred years before Israel was conquered by them; and to the other two tribes, provided they were to be carried captive at all, it could make but little difference whether the nation that subdued them was of greater or less antiquity. For the full accomplishment of the prophecy, therefore, we must undoubtedly look to the times subsequent to the destruction of Jerusalem by the Romans.

And here is a matter for the consideration of every Jew, that wishes to form a correct judgment of the main point that is at issue between the Jews and Christians.

The miseries inflicted on the Jewish nation by the Romans, both in the siege of Jerusalem and in their subsequent dispersion throughout the world, have been incomparably more grievous than any that ever were inflicted on them by the Chaldeans. I would ask then of the Jew, What has been the cause of this severe chastisement? What has your nation done to provoke God in so extraordinary a degree? There must be some particular crime that they have committed; what is it? God is too righteous, and too merciful, to afflict them without a cause. I ask: Are any of your Rabbis able to assign an adequate reason for these severe judgments? Your former idolatries were punished in the Babylonish captivity; and you repented of those sins; insomuch that from the time of your return to your own land, to the destruction of your nation by the Romans, you not only never relapsed into idolatry, but you withstood every attempt to ensnare or to compel you to it. Yet, as your sufferings since that period have been so heavy and protracted, it must be supposed that your fathers committed some crime of deeper die, or at least some that was of equal enormity with your former idolatries.

I ask then again: What crime is it? for there is not one of you that will venture to say, that God punishes you without a cause. If you cannot tell me, I will tell you what that crime is: it is the crucifying of your Messiah. You know, and your Rabbis all know, that there was a very general expectation of your Messiah at the precise time that Jesus came into the world. You know that Jesus professed himself to be the Messiah; you know also that he wrought innumerable miracles in confirmation of his claim; you know that he appealed to Moses and the prophets as bearing witness of him; you know that he foretold all that he should suffer; and showed, that in all those sufferings the prophecies concerning him would be fulfilled; you know also, that the crucifying of him was a national act, in which all ranks and orders of your countrymen concurred; and that when Pilate wished to free himself from the guilt of shedding innocent blood, they all cried, “His blood be on us, and on our children!” You know, moreover, that Jesus foretold the destruction of your city and nation by the Romans, together with your present desolate condition, as the punishment that should be inflicted on you for your murder of him; nay more, that these things should befall your nation before that generation should pass away.

You know also, that, agreeably to his predictions, they did come to pass about forty years after his death, and that these judgments have been upon you from that time to the present hour. If you say, that only two of the tribes were thus guilty of putting him to death; I answer, that every Jew in the universe approves and applauds that act; and that therefore the judgments are inflicted on them all, and will continue to be inflicted, until they repent of it. All preceding judgments were removed, when your fathers repented of the crimes on account of which they had been inflicted; and the reason that your present judgments are not removed, is that your enmity against the Lord Jesus is at this hour as strong as ever; and, if he were to put himself in your power again, you would conspire against him as before, and crucify him again!

Yet, if He was not the Messiah, then your Messiah has not come; and, consequently, those prophecies in your inspired volume which foretold his advent at that time, are falsified. Your Messiah was to come before the scepter should finally depart from Judah, and while the second temple was yet standing, and about the time that the seventy weeks of Daniel should expire; but the scepter is departed, and the temple is destroyed; and Daniel’s weeks are expired; and nearly eighteen hundred years have elapsed, since the period fixed by these prophecies for his appearance!

It is evident therefore that all these prophecies have failed of their accomplishment, if your Messiah is not yet come. As for saying, that the coming of the Messiah was deferred by God for the wickedness of your nation, what proof have you of it? Where has God threatened that, as a consequence of your wickedness? No; your Messiah has come; and has been treated in the manner which your own prophecies foretold, and as Jesus himself foretold; and though you, like your forefathers, in order to set aside the testimony of his resurrection, have recourse to that self-destructive falsehood of his being taken away by his own disciples, while a whole guard of Roman soldiers were asleep, you know that his disciples did at the very next festival, on the day of Pentecost, attest that he was risen, and attest it too in the very presence of the people who had put him to death, no less than three thousand of whom were converted to him on that very day. You know too, that in a short time myriads of Jews believed in Jesus; and that his Gospel continued to prevail throughout the known world, until the judgments threatened against your nation for destroying their Messiah came upon them.

Now by this act, the crucifying of your Messiah, you provoked God to jealousy to a greater degree than by any of your former crimes; for God sent you his co-equal, co-eternal Son; he sent you that Divine Person, who was “David’s Lord,” as well as “David’s Son.” The learned men of his own day acknowledged that the names, Son of man, and Son of God, were of the same import; and that, as assumed by Jesus, both the one and the other amounted to an assertion that he was equal with God. You know also that his claiming these titles was the ground on which they accused him of blasphemy, and demanded sentence against him as a blasphemer. Thus according to your own acknowledgment, supposing him to have been the person foretold by the prophets as the Messiah, you have “crucified the Lord of Glory.”

Moreover, about the time that your fathers crucified him, they were ready to follow every impostor that assumed to himself the title of Messiah. “Gamaliel, a member of the Sanhedrin, a doctor of law, a man who was in high repute among all the Jews,” acknowledged this readiness of the people to run after impostors; he mentions a person by the name of Theudas, who, with four hundred adherents, was slain. And after him one Judas of Galilee, who drew away much people after him, and perished Acts 5:34-37. We are informed also that Simon Magus, by his enchantments, seduced all the people of Samaria, from the least to the greatest, and persuaded them that “He was the great power of God! Acts 8:9-11.” Your own historian Josephus bears ample testimony to these facts.

Here then you can see how you have provoked God to jealousy, in that you have destroyed his own Son, who came down from Heaven to instruct and save you. Yes, though he brought with him the most unquestionable credentials, and supported his claim by the most satisfactory evidences, you rejected him with all imaginable contempt, while you readily adhered to any vile impostor who chose to arrogate to himself the title of Messiah.

Your former idolatries, though sinful in the extreme, were less heinous than this, inasmuch as the manifestations of God’s love were far brighter in the gift of his Son, than in all the other dispensations of his grace from the foundation of the world; and the opposition of your fathers to him was attended with aggravations, such as never did, or could, exist in any other crime that ever was committed.

Here then we are arrived at the true reason of the judgments which are at this time inflicted on you.

Now let us investigate the judgments themselves; and you will see that they also are such as were evidently predicted in our text.

You are cut off from being the people of the Lord, and are absolutely incapacitated for serving him in the way of his appointments. On the other hand, God has chosen to himself a people from among the Gentiles, from “those who were not a people,” and were justly considered by you as “a foolish nation,” because they were altogether without light and understanding as it respected God and his ways. This you know to have been predicted by all your prophets, insomuch that your fathers, who looked for a temporal Messiah, expected that he would bring the Gentiles into subjection to himself, and extend his empire over the face of the whole earth. This the Lord Jesus has done; he has taken a people from among the Gentiles, who are become his willing subjects. Now this rejection of the Jews from the Church of God, and this gathering of a Church from among the Gentiles, is the very thing which in all ages has most angered you, and provoked you to jealousy.

When Jesus himself merely brought to the remembrance of your fathers, that God had, in the days of Elijah and Elisha, shown distinguished mercy to a Sidonian widow, and Naaman the Syrian; they were filled with such indignation, that, notwithstanding they greatly admired all the former part of his discourse, they would have instantly cast him down a precipice, if he had not escaped from their hands! Luke 4:22-30.

When, on another occasion, he spoke a parable to the chief priests and elders, and asked them “what they conceived the lord of the vineyard would do to those gardeners who beat all his servants, and then murdered his Son in order to retain for themselves the possession of his inheritance, they were constrained to acknowledge, that he would destroy those murderers, and rent his vineyard to others who should render him the fruits in their season;” and on his confirming this melancholy truth with respect to them, they exclaimed, “God forbid! Matthew 21:33-41 and Luke 20:14-16.” When the Apostles of Jesus afterwards preached to the Gentiles, the Jews could not contain themselves; the very mention of the name Gentiles, irritated them to madness, Acts 13:44-45; 1 Thessalonians 2:15, 16.” So indignant were they at the thought of having their privileges transferred to others, whom they so despised. And thus it has been ever since.

Nothing is so offensive to a Jew at this day, as the idea of Christians arrogating to themselves the title of God’s peculiar people. The present attempts to bring the Jews into the Church of Christ are most displeasing to them; they regard us as modern Balaam’s, rising up to bring a curse upon their nation; and when any are converted from among them to the faith of Christ, the old enmity still rises in the hearts of their unbelieving brethren; who are kept only by the powerful arm of our law from manifesting their displeasure, as they were accustomed to do in the days of old, Acts 23:21-22.

Here then you see the text fulfilled in its utmost extent; here also you see that perfect correspondence between the guilt and the punishment of the Jewish nation, which was predicted; they have provoked God to jealousy by following vile impostors and rejecting his Son; and He has provoked them to jealousy by rejecting them, and receiving into his Church the ignorant and despised Gentiles.

And now let me ask: Is this exposition of the text novel? No, it is that which is sanctioned by your own prophets, supported by our Apostles, and confirmed by actual experience.

Look at the prophets; do they not declare the call of the Gentiles into the Church, saying, “In that day there shall be a root of Jesse, which shall stand for an ensign of the people; to it shall the Gentiles seek, and His rest shall be glorious, Isaiah 11:10.” The Prophet Hosea’s language, though primarily applicable to the ten tribes, is certainly to be understood in reference to the Gentiles also, “I will have mercy upon her that has not obtained mercy; and I will say to those who were not my people, You are my people; and they shall say, You are my God, Hosea 2:23.” And again, “It shall come to pass, that in the place where it was said unto them, You are not my people, there it shall be said unto them, You are the sons of the living God, Hosea 1:10 with Romans 9:24-26.”

But the Prophet Isaiah points directly to the Gentiles, when he says, “I am sought by those who asked not for me. I am found by those who sought me not. I said, Behold me, behold me, unto a nation that wets not called by my name.” I say he points to the Gentiles there; for he immediately contrasts with them the state of his own people, saying, “I have spread out my hands all the day unto a rebellious people, which walks in a way that is not good, after their own thoughts, Isaiah 65:1-2 with Romans 10:20-21.”

If you turn to the New Testament, you will find there the very words of our text quoted, not merely to prove that the Gentiles were to be brought into the Church of God, but that Israel was apprised of God’s intentions, and that, however averse they were to that measure, they could not but know that Moses himself had taught them to expect it. “Did not Israel know?” says the Apostle: did they not know that “there was to be no difference between the Jew and the Greek; and that the same Lord is rich unto all that call upon him?” Yes! for Moses says: I will provoke you to jealousy by those who are not a people, and by a foolish nation I will anger you, Romans 10:19.

If we look to matter of fact, we find that there are, in every quarter of the globe, thousands and millions of Gentiles who are serving and honoring Jehovah, precisely as Abraham himself did; they are believing in the same God, and walking in the same steps; and the only difference between him and them, is that he looked to that blessed seed of his who would come; and they look to that blessed seed of his who has come, even Jesus, in whom all the nations of the earth are blessed.

It is time that we now inquire,

II. What use is to be made of this prophecy by us Gentiles?

If ever there was a dispensation calculated to instruct mankind, it is that which is predicted in the words before us. I will mention three lessons in particular which it ought to teach us; and the Lord grant, that they may be engraved in all our hearts!

First, it should lead us to adore the mysterious providence of God. Let us take a view of God’s dealings with that peculiar people, the Jews. When, the whole earth was lying in gross darkness, he was pleased to choose Abraham out of an idolatrous nation and family, and to reveal himself to him. To him he promised a seed, whom he would take as a peculiar people above all the people upon earth. These descendants he promised to multiply as the stars of Heaven, and as the sands upon the sea-shore; and in due time to give them the land of Canaan for their inheritance. After he had in a most wonderful manner fulfilled all his promises to them, they rebelled against him, and served other gods, and provoked him to bring upon them many successive troubles, and at last to send them into captivity into Babylon. But during this whole time he still consulted their best interests; and even in the last and heaviest of these judgments, “he sent them into Babylon for their good, Jeremiah 24:5.” Afflictive as that dispensation was, it was the most profitable to them of all the mercies and judgments that they ever experienced; for by means of it they were cured of their idolatrous propensities; and never have yielded to them any more, even to the present hour.

After seventy years God delivered them from thence also, as he had before delivered them from Egypt; and re-established them, to a certain degree, in their former prosperity. In the fullness of time, he, according to his promise, sent them his only-begotten Son, to establish among them that kingdom of righteousness and peace, which had been shadowed forth among them from the time that they became a nation. But on their destroying him, he determined to cast them off; and accordingly he gave them into the hands of the Romans, who executed upon them such judgments as never had been inflicted on any nation under Heaven. But neither was this dispensation unmixed with mercy; for, blinded as they were by prejudice, they never would have renounced their errors, or embraced the Gospel, if they had been able still to satisfy their minds with the rites and ceremonies of their own Church. But as God drove our first parents from Paradise, and precluded them from all access to the tree of life, which was no more to be a sacramental pledge of life to them now in their fallen state; and as he thereby prevented them from deluding their souls with false hopes, and shut them up unto that mercy which he had revealed to them through the seed of the woman; so now has he cut off the Jews from all possibility of observing the rites and ceremonies of the Mosaic law, in order that they may be constrained to seek for mercy through the Messiah whom they have crucified.

At the same time that God has ordered this dispensation with an ultimate view to the good of his once-favored people, he has consulted in it the good of the whole world; for, when he cut them off from the stock on which they grew, he took a people from among the Gentiles, and engrafted them as scions upon the Jewish stock, and made them “partakers of the root and fatness of the olive-tree” which his own right hand had planted.

What he might have done for the Gentiles, if the Jews had not provoked him to cut them off—we cannot say; but the Apostle, speaking on this subject, says, that “they became enemies for our sakes,” and “were broken off that we might be engrafted in.” Doubtless, the stock was sufficient to bear both them and us; for the time is coming when the whole world, Jews and Gentiles, shall grow together upon it, seeing that it is God’s intention to engraft on it again the natural branches, which for the present he has broken off; but so has he ordained that the Jews should be cast out of his Church, and we Gentiles be introduced into it, and that the one event should be preparatory to the other; so that the fall and ruin of the Jews should be the riches and salvation of the Gentile world, Romans 11:11-12; Romans 11:15.

And it is plain, that this appointment of his is carried into effect; for they are broken off, and are no longer his Church, since there is not one among them that either does, or can, serve God according to their law; and we, on the contrary, are his Church; and millions of us, through the world, are rendering to him the service he requires; and, if we are not his Church, then God has not at this hour, nor has he had for above seventeen hundred years, a Church upon earth.

God, however, has not cast off his people fully or finally; not fully, for he brought multitudes of them into his Church in the apostolic age; nor finally; for though, through the shameful remissness of the Christian world, he has done but little for the Jews in these latter ages—yet is he, we trust, showing mercy to them now, and sowing seeds among them, which shall one day bring forth a glorious harvest!

Moreover as, by breaking off the Jews, God made room for the Gentiles—so has he ordained, that the bringing in the fullness of the Gentiles shall contribute to the restoration of the Jews themselves; and that, at last, the whole collective body of mankind shall be “one fold under one Shepherd!” What a stupendous mystery is this! Well might Paul, in the contemplation of it, exclaim, “O the depth of the riches, both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!”

Truly, this mystery is by no means sufficiently considered among us; though it is so great, that not even the Apostles themselves, for six years after the day of Pentecost, could see into it; and even then it was only by a miraculous interference that God prevailed upon them to receive it; it was by repeated visions to Peter and Cornelius, that he induced Peter to preach the Gospel to Cornelius; and it was by the effusion of the Holy Spirit on Cornelius and his family, that he induced the other Apostles to acquiesce in what Peter had done; and, even to the last, it was with reluctance they confessed, “Then has God to the Gentiles also granted repentance unto life! Acts 10; Acts 11:1; Acts 11:18.”

Let me recommend to you then, my brethren, to turn your attention to this mystery more than you have ever yet done; and never imagine that you have attained just views of it, until you are transported with wonder at the wisdom displayed in it, Ephesians 3:6; Ephesians 3:9-10, and filled with gratitude for the mercies it conveys.

A second improvement we should make of this subject, is to be afraid of provoking God to jealousy against us also. We have seen that it was the idolatry of the Jews that chiefly provoked God to jealousy against them. But is there not a spiritual idolatry, as well as that which consisted in the worship of graven images? And is it not equally offensive to a jealous God? When his people of old placed idols in their secret chambers, his chief complaint was, that “they set idols up in their hearts! Ezekiel 14:3-4; Ezekiel 14:7. And has he not told us, that “covetousness is idolatry;” and that we may “make a God of our belly?” What then is this but to say, that ‘the loving and serving the creature more than the Creator,’ whatever that creature is, is idolatry? We know full well, that gods of wood and of stone were “vanities.” But are not pleasure, and riches, and honor, “vanities” when put in competition with our God? And does not the inordinate pursuit of them provoke him to jealousy, as much as the bowing down to stocks and stones ever did? And if the rejection of Jesus by the Jews was that crime which filled up the measure of their iniquities, and brought the wrath of God upon them to the uttermost; shall not “the crucifying of the Son of God afresh, and putting him to an open shame,” as Christians do by their iniquities, be also considered as provoking the Most High God?

Let us not think then that the Jews alone can provoke God to anger, or that they alone can ever be cast off for their wickedness; for he has expressly warned us by his Apostle, that he will cast us off, even as he did them, if we provoke him to jealousy by placing on the creature the affections that are due to him alone! Hear what Paul says, “Be not high-minded, but fear; for if God spared not the natural branches, take heed, lest he also spare not you! Romans 11:21.”

My brethren, you cannot but see how grievously God is dishonored by the Christian world; truly, “he is provoked by us every day;” and we, no less than the Jews, are “a rebellious and stiff-necked people.” Look at all ranks and orders of men among professing Christians, and see whether there is not a lamentable departure from primitive Christianity? Compare the lives of the generality of professing Christians with the examples of Christ and his Apostles—and see, not merely how short they come of the pattern set before them, (for that the best among us do,) but how opposite they are in their conduct; insomuch that, if they did not call themselves Christians, no one would ever think of calling them so, from their christless lives.

Those who are in earnest about the salvation of their souls, are still “as men wondered at” among us; so that instead of pointing at an unhappy few as exceptions to the Christian character, no one can tread in the steps of Christ and his Apostles, without becoming “a sign and a wonder” among his neighbors! This you cannot but know; what then must we expect, but that God will punish us precisely as he has done the Jews, and provoke us to jealousy, by others whom we despise?

The fact is, that God is already dealing with us in this manner. The rich, the great, the noble are, for the most part, so occupied with “vanities,” as to forget the services which they owe to God. The consequence is, that God overlooks them, and transfers the blessings of his Gospel to the poor. At this day it is true, no less than in the days of the Apostles, that “not many rich, not many mighty, not many noble are called,” but “God has chosen the weak, and base, and foolish things of the world; yes, and things which are not—to bring to nothing things which are; that no flesh should glory in his presence!” This very circumstance does move the rich to anger, precisely as it did in the days of old, “Have any of the rulers, or of the Pharisees, believed on him? As for these poor contemptible people that make such a noise about religion, they are cursed!”

But I must go further, and say, that God is dealing in this very way even with those who profess themselves his peculiar people. Who are the happy Christians? Who have the richest enjoyment of the Gospel, or most adorn it in their life and conversation? Are they the richer professors, whose hearts are set on “vanities,” or who are laboring night and day to procure them? Are they not rather the poor and the destitute, who, having but little of this world, are more anxious to enjoy their God? We say not indeed that this is universally the case; but it is a general truth; nay more, among Indians and Hottentots there is often found a more lively and realizing sense of the divine presence, than among the worldly-minded professors of our own day!

I must entreat you therefore, brethren, to reflect, that if we do not, as a people, turn more heartily unto the Lord—we have reason to fear, lest “the lampstand should be removed from us,” and be transferred to a people who shall walk more worthy of it.

Lastly, we should be stirred up by this subject to concur with God in his gracious intentions towards the Jews. In the song before us, there are repeated intimations that God will once more restore to his favor his now degenerate and afflicted people. In verse 36, it is said, “The Lord will judge his people, and repent himself for his servants, when he sees that their power is gone, and that there is none shut up or left.”

The song concludes with these remarkable words, “Rejoice, O nations! with his people; for he will avenge the blood of his servants, and will render vengeance to his adversaries, and will be merciful unto his land, and unto his people.” Here then, you see, that there is mercy in reserve for the Jewish people, and that the Gentiles also shall be partakers of their joy. But in our text there is a hint of a very peculiar nature, namely, not merely that God will grant mercy to them, in the midst of their present chastisement, but that he will render those very chastisements subservient to his gracious designs. He intimates that he is even now provoking the Jews to jealousy, by the mercies he bestows on us Gentiles; that is, that he is even now endeavoring to inflame them with a holy desire to regain his favor.

It is precisely in this sense that Paul uses the same expression; indeed, Paul tells us, that he himself used the very same means for the same end, “Through the fall of the Jews (says he) has salvation come to the Gentiles, to provoke them to jealousy. Now I speak to you Gentiles, inasmuch as I am the Apostle of the Gentiles, I magnify my office; if by any means I may provoke to jealousy, Romans 11:11; Romans 11:14; those who are of my flesh, and might save some of them.” This then is the work in which we are to co-operate with God; and, truly, if we were all in earnest about it, we might, with God’s help, do great things.

The Jews behold us professing ourselves to be the peculiar people of God; and, if they saw so great a difference between themselves and us as they ought to see, truly they would begin to envy us, and to wish to be partakers of our blessings. But, if they see that we are as covetous and worldly-minded, as lewd and sensual, as proud and vindictive, and, in short, as corrupt in all respects as the very heathen—then shall we not prove a stumbling-block, rather than a help, to them?

And what if, while we ought all to be uniting with one heart and one soul in the blessed work of leading them to Christ, they should find among us an utter indifference to their salvation? Yes, what if they behold among us some (some too of whom we might hope better things) to whom the exertions of their brethren are rather a matter of offence than of joy; some whose endeavor is rather to frustrate, than advance, our benevolent labors? What if they behold some who, instead of laboring with us to provoke them to jealousy, are themselves provoked to an ungodly jealousy against us, on account of our exertions; and who, like Tobiah and Sanballat of old, “are grieved that we have undertaken to seek the welfare of Israel, Nehemiah 2:10.”

Will not our Jewish brethren take advantage of this? Will they not impute this to our religion? If they see us thus worldly, or thus malignant, will they not judge of our principles by our practice; and, instead of envying us our privileges and attainments, will they not be ready to glory over us, and to thank God they are not Christians?

Oh, brethren! we little think what guilt we contract, while practicing such abominations! It is said of many, that they are no one’s enemy but their own; but this is not true; they are enemies to all around them, whom they vitiate by their example; they are enemies to the Jews, whom they harden in their infidelity; and they are enemies to the heathen, whom they teach to abhor the Christian name.

But let it not be so among us; let us remember that to us is committed the blessed task of bringing back to God’s fold his wandering—yet beloved, people. Nor let us despair of success, “for, if we were cut out of the olive-tree which is wild by nature, and were engrafted contrary to nature into a good olive-tree; how much more shall these, who are the natural branches, be engrafted into their own olive-tree? If they abide not in unbelief, they shall be grafted in; for, though we are unable, God is able to engraft them in again, Romans 11:23-24.” But then, how is this to be accomplished? it is to be by our means; (“as for the times and the seasons, we say nothing; God has reserved them in his own power;”) God has appointed us to seek the salvation of his people; and has communicated his blessings to us on purpose that we may be his depository to keep them, and his channel to convey them, for their benefit. Hear his own words, “As you in times past have not believed God—yet have now obtained mercy through their unbelief; even so have these also now not believed, that through your mercy they also may obtain mercy, Romans 11:30-31.”

Let us then address ourselves to the blessed work that God has assigned to us. Let us, as God’s chosen instruments, endeavor to interest ourselves with him to reinstate them in his favor, and interest ourselves with them to return unto him. Let us make a conscience effort of praying for them in secret; let us devise plans for furthering the communication of divine knowledge among them; let us not shrink from labor, or trouble, or expense; let us not be deterred by any difficulties, or discouraged by any disappointments. But let us labor for them, as their forefathers did for us; let us tread in the steps of the holy Apostles, and be ready to sacrifice time, and interest, and liberty, and life itself, in their service; and account the saving of their souls the richest recompense that God himself can give us.

And that we may the more effectually provoke them to jealousy, let us show them that God has done for us as much as he ever did for the patriarchs of old, giving us as intimate an access to him, as firm a confidence in him, and as assured prospects of an everlasting acceptance with him, as ever Abraham himself enjoyed.

They are apt to think that, in exalting Jesus, we dishonor Jehovah; but let us show them by our lives, that we render to Jehovah all the love, and honor, and service, that were ever rendered to him by his most eminent saints; and that there is no principle whatever so operative and powerful as the love of our adorable Redeemer.

Let us show them, that communion with the Son has the same effect on us, that communion with the Father had on Moses; that it assimilates us unto God, and constrains all who behold us to acknowledge that we have been with God. Their eyes are now upon us; upon us especially, who are endeavoring to convert them to the faith of Christ; let them therefore see in us the influence of Christian principles; let them see that, while we speak of enjoying peace through the blood of our great Sacrifice, and of having the Holy Spirit as our Comforter and Sanctifier, we live as none others can live, exhibiting in our conduct:

the faith of Abraham,

the meekness of Moses,

the patience of Job,

the piety of David,

and the fidelity of Daniel.

In a word, let them see in us an assemblage of all the brightest virtues of their most renowned progenitors. O! would to God that there were in all of us such a heart! Would to God that the Holy Spirit might be poured out upon us for this end, and work in us so effectually, that the very sight of us should be sufficient to carry conviction to their minds; so that our Jewish brethren, beholding “the exceeding grace of God in us,” might be constrained to take hold of our skirt, and say, “We will go with you, for we perceive that God is with you in truth! Zechariah 8:23.”

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

GOD’S REGARD FOR HIS PEOPLE

Deuteronomy 32:9-12

“For the LORD’s portion is his people, Jacob his allotted inheritance. In a desert land he found him, in a barren and howling waste. He shielded him and cared for him; he guarded him as the apple of his eye, like an eagle that stirs up its nest and hovers over its young, that spreads its wings to catch them and carries them on its pinions. The LORD alone led him; no foreign god was with him.”

The declarations of God in his Word are the principal source from whence we derive our knowledge of the Deity. But much may be learned also from the dispensations of his providence, both from those which are recorded in the inspired volume, and those which pass daily before our eyes. Nor can we more profitably employ our thoughts than in meditating on his dealings towards the Church in general, and ourselves in particular.

This Moses recommended to the Israelites just before his final departure from them. He assured them that God, as far back as the Deluge, had appointed the boundaries of the different kingdoms, with an express reference to the children of Israel; and that he had assigned to Canaan, that accursed son of Noah, and to his posterity, the land which he had marked out for his chosen people, and which the Israelites, in pursuance of his will, were now about to possess, verses 7-8. And, with respect to the Israelites in particular, he had conducted them with astonishing kindness and condescension from their first entrance into the wilderness to that present moment.

His words on that occasion will naturally lead us to consider,

I. God’s special interest in his people.

God regarded his ancient people as his portion and inheritance.

When he brought his people into Canaan, he divided the land among the twelve tribes, assigning to each by lot their destined inheritance. Thus among all the people upon the face of the earth he chose, as it were by lot, (“the whole disposal whereof is of the Lord,”) the descendants of Abraham as his portion. Even among these he selected only a part, adopting Isaac, and not Ishmael, and still further limiting his choice to Jacob and his posterity, while he withheld this privilege from Esau.

These he chose, not because they were either more numerous or more holy than other people; for “they were the fewest of all people,” and “a stiff-necked generation from first to last.” “He loved them purely because he would love them, Deuteronomy 7:6-8,” and, having “set them apart for himself,” he ordained them to be his own portion and his own inheritance.

In precisely the same view, he regards his chosen people at this day.

He has a people still, whom “he chose from before the foundation of the world, Jeremiah 31:3; Ephesians 1:4,” and “predestined to the adoption of children to himself, Romans 8:29,” and accounts as “his peculiar treasure above all people upon the face of the earth, Exodus 19:5.” Respecting all who truly believe in Christ it is said, “You are a chosen generation, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a peculiar people! 1 Peter 2:9;” and from these, as from an inheritance, does God expect “a revenue of praise” and glory, such as he receives not from the whole world besides, 1 Peter 2:9.

It is “of his own purpose and grace alone that he has called them to this honor,” without being influenced by any goodness in them, 2 Timothy 1:9. His choice of them was wholly irrespective of their works, past, present, or future, Titus 3:5. “This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins! 1 John 4:10.” “You did not choose me, but I chose you . . . John 15:16.” For his own sake, and not theirs, he has given to them his grace, that to all eternity they may be monuments of his sovereign love and mercy! Isaiah 43:21.

But that which our text chiefly leads us to consider, is,

II. His tender care over them.

His care towards his ancient people is illustrated both by an appeal to fact, and by an apt and beautiful similitude.

It was in the wilderness that he first formed them into a peculiar people for himself. There he took the entire charge of them, leading them in all their way, and supplying their every need. There he instructed them both by his providence and grace; showing them by all his diversified dispensations the extreme depravity of their own hearts, and the marvelous patience and long-suffering of their God, Deuteronomy 8:15-16; Nehemiah 9:19-21. Had he even for a few days intermitted his care over them, they must all have perished; being in the midst of perils on every side, and incapable of protecting themselves against any of the dangers to which they were exposed. But “he kept them even as the apple of his eye,” so that no evil whatever, except what he himself sent for their correction, could assail them.

A mother eagle is very careful of its young; and when she judges that her young are prepared to fly, will “flutter over them, and spread abroad her wings, and stir up her nest,” that one or another of her offspring may test their powers. And with such tenderness does she watch the attempt, that, if the scarcely fledged young one prove incapable of stretching its flight so as to return to its nest, she will, with incredible swiftness and skill, fly to its support, and on her own wings bear it back in safety to its usual home.

Thus did God encourage his ancient people to soar towards Heaven, and support them effectually in every hour of need. And in all this he acted “alone, there being no strange god with him,” nor any that could claim the smallest measure of honor from their success.

The passage of the Red Sea,

the bread from Heaven,

the water from the rock,

the passage of the Jordan river,

and the fall of Jericho,

with a thousand other events,

clearly showed that all that was effected for them was done by him alone.

And is he not alike attentive to his redeemed people at present?

Where did he “find any of us,” my brethren, but “in a waste howling wilderness,” where we must have inevitably perished if he of his own sovereign grace and mercy had not come to our relief! And how has he “led us about” even to the present hour, not in the way that would have been most pleasing to flesh and blood, but in the way which he knew would be most conducive to our good, and to the glory of his own name! In this way he has conveyed to our minds such instruction as we could not by any means have so well received in any other way.

By his Word and by his Spirit he has imparted to us much knowledge of himself; but by his various dispensations, and especially those of a more afflictive nature—he has led us into discoveries of his perfections, which we could never otherwise have obtained.

Oh! what views has he given us of our own deserts and of his own tender mercy towards us! In fact, we may, in his dealings with his people in the wilderness, see as in a looking-glass, all that is passing in our own hearts! Our heavenly rest will be infinitely the more endeared to us from our recollection of all our troubles along the way, and of the infinite wisdom and power and love by which we have been led in safety through them.

Think then brethren! What should be our regard towards this Almighty Savior!

Who was it that led his people through the wilderness in the days of old? It was the Lord Jesus Christ, the Angel of the covenant; for he it was whom they tempted, Exodus 23:20; 1 Corinthians 10:9, and he it was “whose reproach Moses counted to be of more value than all the treasures of Egypt! Hebrews 11:26.” That same Jesus is still “Head over all things to his Church, Ephesians 1:22-23.” He “guides all his chosen people by his counsel, until he brings them safely to his glory.”

I ask then with confidence:

Should we not love him with most intense affection?

Should we not trust in him with unshaken affiance?

Should we not serve him with all the powers of our souls?

Methinks there should be no bounds to our love and gratitude, nor any limit to our zeal in his service! Deuteronomy 10:14-15; 1 Samuel 12:24.

We all see and acknowledge this in reference to the Jews, who were favored with his viable interposition; and how much more is it all due from us who enjoy the substance, of which they had but the shadow! I call you then, everyone of you, to show forth your sense of the obligations conferred upon you, and, if possible, to be as zealous in his service as he is in yours.

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

THE CHARACTER OF JEHOVAH

Deuteronomy 32:1-4

“Listen, O heavens, and I will speak; hear, O earth, the words of my mouth. Let my teaching fall like rain and my words descend like dew, like showers on new grass, like abundant rain on tender plants. I will proclaim the name of the LORD. Oh, praise the greatness of our God! He is the Rock, his works are perfect, and all his ways are just. A faithful God who does no wrong, upright and just is he.”

In this chapter is contained the song which Moses wrote for the conviction of the Jews in all future ages, especially in that period when they should have provoked God to scatter them over the face of the whole earth. Its general contents have been before considered. See discourse on Deuteronomy 31:19. At present we shall confine ourselves only to its exordium, in which Moses addresses the whole creation, and then describes the character of the Creator.

An invocation of “the heavens and the earth” is not uncommon in the Scriptures; it is used in order to impress men with a deeper sense of the importance of the subject, and to convey an idea, that even the inanimate creation will rise up in judgment against men, if they should disregard the voice of their Creator.

After requesting their attention, he declares that the whole tendency of his discourse, and especially of that part which exhibits the character of the Deity, is to comfort and enrich the souls of men.

As the dew and rain descend gently and silently upon the earth, softening the parched ground, refreshing and invigorating the drooping plants, and administering nourishment to the whole vegetable creation—so was his Word intended to administer blessings to mankind:

quickening the most dead,

softening the most obdurate,

comforting the most disconsolate, and

fertilizing the most barren, among them all.

We are aware that a directly opposite effect is in general ascribed to a faithful ministration of the word; it is in general supposed, that a scriptural representation of the divine character must of necessity alarm and terrify mankind; but, whatever effect it may produce on them that are determined to hold fast their sins, it cannot fail to comfort all whose minds are duly prepared to receive it, and to operate on their souls as rain upon the new-mown grass. This will appear, while we:

I. Illustrate the representation here given of God.

The description which Moses gives of Jehovah is short, but comprehensive; it sets forth:

1. His personal majesty.

The term “Rock” is often used in reference to the Deity; and intimates to us both what he is in himself, and what he is to us. In himself he is the great unchangeable Jehovah; and to his people he is a safe and everlasting Refuge. Whether it be from the storms of temptation or the heat of persecution, he affords protection to all who flee unto him, Isaiah 32:2; and, to those who build upon him, he is an immovable foundation; nothing shall ever shake them; nothing shall ever disappoint them of their hopes, Isaiah 45:17.

2. His providential government.

Deep and mysterious are his ways—yet are they all ordered in perfect wisdom and goodness. In the world, in the Church, and in our own individual cases, there are many things which we cannot account for; yet if we imagine that any one of them could have been more wisely appointed, we only betray our own ignorance and presumption.

We cannot tell why God confined the revelation of his will to one single family for so many ages, or why it is still known to so small a part of the world; but in due time God will make it evident that such a mode of dispensing mercy was most conducive to his own glory.

When a persecution arose in the Church about Stephen, and the saints, driven from Jerusalem, were scattered over the face of the earth, it probably appeared to them an inexplicable dispensation; but the benefit of it soon appeared, because the banished Christians propagated the Gospel wherever they came, Acts 8:1; Acts 8:4.

When Paul was confined in prison two years, it might be thought a most calamitous event; yet does he himself tell us, that it tended “rather unto the furtherance of the Gospel, Philippians 1:12-14.”

Thus, in innumerable instances, we are ready to say, like Jacob, “All these things are against us,” when in fact they are “all working together for our good, “and we are constrained after a season to acknowledge that our greatest crosses were only blessings in disguise! Psalm 97:2.

3. His moral perfections.

Justice, holiness, and truth, are inseparable from the Deity, “He is a God of truth and without iniquity, just and right is he.” The present state of things indeed does not afford us a just criterion whereby to judge of these perfections, because eternity is not open to our view. But the brightest display of these perfections that can be exhibited to mortal eyes, is seen in the great work of redemption; for God has determined not to pardon any of the human race (at least, not any to whom the light of revelation comes,) except in a way that shall magnify these perfections; nor will he condemn any, without making them witnesses for him, that he is holy, and just, and true.

It is for this very end that he sent his only-begotten Son into the world; for, by bearing our sins in his own body on the tree, Jesus has made a complete satisfaction for the sins of the whole world, and opened a way for the exercise of mercy in perfect consistency with all the other attributes of the Deity.

The true believer makes an open confession of this, and acknowledges, that all his hopes are founded on the sacrifice of Christ. The unbeliever experiences in his own person the weight of that justice, which he would not honor in the person of his surety; so that all in Heaven, and all in Hell too, are constrained to say, “Great and marvelous are your works, Lord God Almighty; just and true are your ways, O King of saints! Revelation 15:3.”

That we may make a practical use of the Divine character we shall,

II. Show how to make it a source of comfort to the soul.

If the Deity is an object of terror to any, it must arise either from an erroneous idea of his character—or from an opposition of mind to it. In order then to derive comfort from it:

1. We must get a just and comprehensive view of the Divine perfections.

If, as is too often the case, we paint to ourselves a God of all mercy, who will never vindicate the honor of his law, nor ever fulfill his threatenings against sin or sinners—then we may allay our fears for the present, but we can never bring peace or comfort into the soul; for, as we have no foundation for such an idea of the Deity, we never can divest ourselves of the apprehension that we may be mistaken, and that we may find him at last such a Being as the Scriptures represent him.

On the other hand, if we view nothing but God’s justice—then He must of necessity appear terrible in our eyes, because we cannot but know that we are transgressors of his law.

But if we regard him as he is set forth in his Word, and particularly as he appears in the person of Christ—then do we find in him all that is great and good; yes all that our souls can wish for, or our necessities require!

2. We must get our own hearts suitably affected with the Divine perfections.

While the majesty of God should fill us with holy awe, and his power make us fearful of incurring his displeasure—these exalted perfections should encourage a trust in him, as an almighty Helper, and an all-sufficient Protector. His very sovereignty should lead us to apply to him for mercy, because he will be most glorified in showing mercy to the chief of sinners. Of course, a view of his love, his mercy, and his truth—must inspire us with holy confidence, and dispel all the fears which conscious unworthiness must create; we should therefore contemplate them with unceasing care, as the grounds of our hope, and the sources of our eternal welfare.

Nor is it of small consequence to have our minds impressed with a sense of his wisdom and goodness in all his providential dealings. It is by that that we shall have our minds composed under all the most afflictive dispensations, and encouraged to expect a happy outcome out of the most calamitous events. In a word, the representations which God has given of himself will then be most delightful to us, when our hearts are most filled with humility and love!

APPLICATION.

“Hear now, O heavens! and give ear, O earth!” say whether these views of the Deity do not tend to the happiness of man. O that God would “shine into all our hearts, to give us the knowledge of his glory in the face of Jesus Christ!” then would our “meditation of him be sweet,” and our fruits abound to the praise and glory of his grace!

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

THE SONG OF MOSES A WITNESS AGAINST THE JEWS

Deuteronomy 31:19

“Now write down for yourselves this song and teach it to the Israelites and have them sing it, so that it may be a witness for me against them!”

In order that Moses in his own person should exemplify the nature of that law which he had given, it was appointed by God that he should die for one offence, and not have the honor of leading the people of Israel into Canaan. The time of his departure was now near at hand; and God said to him, “Behold, your days approach that you must die.” Little remained for him to do. He had written the whole of his law, and had “delivered it unto the priests,” that they might “put it in the ark of the covenant of the Lord their God.”

But God would have a song composed, which would contain a brief summary of his dealings with his people, and which should be committed by them to memory, as “a witness for him against themselves.” This song we now propose to consider; and we shall open to you:

I. The subject-matter of this song.

As being an summary of all their past history, and of God’s dispensations towards them to the end of time, its contents are various:

1. This song was commemorative.

It records God’s sovereign mercy to that people in the original designation of the land of Canaan to them, even from the first distribution of mankind over the face of the earth. When the sons of Adam and of Noah multiplied in the earth, he so ordered and overruled their motions, that the descendants of wicked Canaan should occupy that land, and prepare it, as it were, for Israel; and that the Israelites should be just ready to possess it when the inhabitants would have filled up the measure of their iniquities, and become ripe for the execution of the curse of God upon them. It was in reference to the children of Israel that “the Most High God divided to the nations their inheritance,” and set the bounds of each peculiar people, Deuteronomy 32:8.

The manner also in which God had brought them to it is particularly specified. He had brought them through a waste howling wilderness, where he had preserved them by an uninterrupted series of miracles, and had instructed them in the knowledge of his will, and had kept them as the apple of his eye, and had made them the objects of his tenderest solicitude, like the mother eagle fostering, instructing, and protecting her helpless offspring, Deuteronomy 32:10-12.

The richness of the provision which he had made for them is also described in animated and appropriate terms. The fertility of the land, the stores administered even by its barren rocks, the countless multitudes of its flocks and herds, together with the abundance of its produce in grain and wine—all are set forth, in order that the nation even to their latest posterity might know how to appreciate the goodness of God to them, and be suitably impressed with a sense of their unbounded obligations, Deuteronomy 32:13-14.

2. This song was prophetic.

God had before declared what the ultimate fate of that nation would be; but here he states it in a compendious way. He foretells both their sins, and their punishment. Notwithstanding all that he had done for them, they would soon forget him, and would stupidly worship the idols of the heathen, which had not been able to protect their own votaries. Thus would they entirely cast off their allegiance to him, and provoke him to execute upon them his heaviest judgments, Deuteronomy 32:15-20; Deuteronomy 32:22-25.

Even for their past abominations he would have cast them off, if he had not been apprehensive that their enemies would have exulted, and taken occasion from it to harden themselves in their atheistic impiety. But by effecting his purposes in the first instance, and delaying his judgments to a future and distant period, he would cut off all occasion for such vain triumphs, and should display at once his mercy and forbearance, his power and justice, his holiness and truth, Deuteronomy 32:26-27.

The terms in which his judgments are predicted necessarily carry our minds forward to the times of the present dispersion.

As awful as was their punishment in Babylon, it fell short of these threats, which were only to receive their full accomplishment, when they should have filled up the measure of their iniquities in the murder of their Messiah! This is evident from that part of the song which is:

3. This song was promissory.

Fixed as was God’s determination to inflict “vengeance” upon them “in due time”—he revealed also his determination not to cast them off forever, but in their lowest extremity to remember and restore them, Deuteronomy 32:36. He would indeed banish them from that good land, and admit the Gentiles into fellowship with him as his peculiar people in their stead; but, while he calls on “the Gentiles to rejoice” on this account, he calls on the Jews also to participate in their joy; for though they should be long oppressed by cruel enemies, God would appear again for them, “avenging the blood of his servants, and rendering vengeance to his adversaries,” and would again “be merciful unto his land, and to his once most highly-favored people.” Deuteronomy 32:43 with Romans 15:10.

These promises shall in due time be fulfilled; and we trust that the time for their accomplishment is not now far distant. “The root of Jesse now stands for an ensign to the nations;” and while “the Gentiles are seeking to it,” we hope that God will speedily set it up also as an ensign to the Jews, and “assemble the outcasts of Israel, and gather together the dispersed of Judah from the four corners of the earth,” Isaiah 11:10-12; Isaiah 11:15-16.

These things were comprehended in “a song, which was to be taught to the children of Israel.” We proceed to consider,

II. The peculiar use of this song.

It was “to be a witness for God against the children of Israel,” and was for this end to be transmitted to their last posterity. It was intended in this view:

1. To justify God.

When God should have inflicted all these judgments upon his people, they might be ready to reflect on him as variable in his purposes, and cruel in his dispensations. But he here tells them beforehand what he would do, and for what reason he would do it. The change that was to take place, would not be in him, but in them. The very change of his dispensations would prove to them the unchangeableness of his nature. It was for the wickedness of the Canaanites that he was about to cast them out; and for the same reason he would cast out the Israelites also, when they should have provoked him to anger, by sinning in a far more grievous manner, against clearer light and knowledge, and against infinitely greater obligations than they. Of this he forewarned them; and the fault, as well as misery, would be all their own. “He is the Rock, his works are perfect, and all his ways are just. A faithful God who does no wrong, upright and just is he! Deuteronomy 32:4.”

2. To humble them.

The Jews were at all times a stiff-necked people, “a perverse and crooked generation.” The best period of their history was from the death of Moses to the death of Joshua; yet God testified respecting them even then, that they manifested all those evil dispositions, which in process of time would be matured, and grow up into an abundant harvest, “I know their imagination which they go about, even now, before I have brought them into the land which I swore, verse 21.” Hence every Jew must see, that as his forefathers were not put into possession of that land for their righteousness—so he, and all his whole nation, are banished from it for their iniquities. And oh, how humiliating the comparison between their present and their former state! Once the glory of the whole world, and now “an astonishment, and a proverb, and a by-word in every nation where they dwell.” They need only repeat this song, and they have enough to show them how low they are fallen, and enough to humble them in dust and ashes.

3. To prepare them for his promised blessings.

The promise of a future restoration would of itself be sufficient to stimulate their desires after it. But it is worthy of observation that the very judgments which God here denounces against them are as strongly expressive of his gracious intentions towards them, and as encouraging to their minds, as the promise itself, “I will hide my face from them,” he said, “and see what their end will be; for they are a perverse generation, children who are unfaithful. They made me jealous by what is no god and angered me with their worthless idols. I will make them envious by those who are not a people; I will make them angry by a nation that has no understanding!” Deuteronomy 32:21 with Romans 10:19.”

Thus while he transferred the blessings of salvation to the Gentiles, he did it no less for the good of his own rebellious and apostate people the Jews, than for the Gentiles themselves; hoping thereby to stir them up to seek a participation of those privileges, which, when exclusively enjoyed by them, they had despised, Romans 11:11-14. This idea, the moment it shall enter into their minds, will afford them rich encouragement; and we are persuaded, that, if the Christian world evinced a just sense of the mercies they enjoy, and walked worthy of them, the Jews would soon be stirred up to seek those blessings, in the contempt of which they are hardened by Christians themselves.

Let us learn then from hence,

1. To cultivate a knowledge of the Holy Scriptures ourselves.

To us also are they a witness, as they were to the Jews of old, and are at this day. Only they testify for God and against us in a thousand-fold greater degree. Hear what our blessed Lord himself affirms, “Search the Scriptures; for they are they which testify of me!”

O what mysteries of love and mercy do the New Testament Scriptures attest! The incarnation, the life, the death, the resurrection, the ascension of Jesus Christ; his supremacy over all things in Heaven and earth; together with all the wonders of redeeming love. How loudly do they testify for Christ; and how awfully will they testify against us, if we neglect them! If God commanded that the Jews, “men, women and children, and the strangers within their gates, should at stated times be gathered together to hear the law, and learn to fear the Lord and to do his commandments,” and that every individual among them in all successive ages should learn this song; then much more ought we to assemble ourselves together for public instruction, and to commit to memory select portions of Scripture, and to teach them diligently to our children, in order to obtain for ourselves, and to transmit to others, the knowledge of God’s will as it is revealed to us in the Gospel, verse 12, 13.

We call upon all of you then to study the Holy Scriptures in private; to teach them to your children; to be useful, where you can, in reading them to your poorer neighbors, who through ignorance are unable to read them for themselves, or through sickness are incapacitated from attending the public ordinances. To be active also in the conducting of Sunday schools, is a service most beneficial to man, and most acceptable to God.

2. To impart the knowledge of them to the Jewish nation.

They, alas! have almost universally forgotten this song; but we have it in our hands, and profess to reverence it as the Word of God. Ought we not then to concur with God in that which was his special design in transmitting it to us? Ought we not to use it as the means of conviction to the Jews; and as the means of consolation to them also? Ought we not to seek that they may be partakers of our joy, and be again engrafted on their own olive-tree?

Yet, strange as it may appear, not only have mere nominal Christians neglected them, but even the godly themselves have for the most part overlooked them, as much as if they were in no danger, or as if their conversion were a hopeless attempt. But we need not occupy your time in proving the danger of their state; for if they were not perishing, why did Christ and his Apostles make such efforts to save them? Nor need we labor to prove their conversion practical, when God has declared it to be certain. Let then our compassion yearn over them; let us grieve to see them perishing in the midst of mercy; let us unite our endeavors to draw their attention to the Holy Scriptures, and to the Messiah, whom they have so long continued to reject. Let us constrain them to see what blessings they despise; what holiness and happiness we ourselves have derived from the Lord Jesus, and what they lose by not believing in him.

In this way let us endeavor to provoke them to jealousy. Then may we hope to see the veil taken from their hearts, and to have them associated with us in adoring the once crucified Jesus, and in singing to all eternity “the song of Moses and the Lamb!”

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

THE APPROACH OF DEATH

Deuteronomy 31:14

“The LORD said to Moses: Now the day of your death is near!”

Hebrews 9:27 “It is appointed for man to die once, and after that comes judgment!”

To every man, there is an appointed time upon earth. But the precise measure of our days is in mercy, hidden from us. On some occasions, however, God has been pleased to make it known, and to declare with precision the near approach of death, so that the people whose fate was made known might employ their remaining hours in perfecting the work which he had given them to do.

The intimation here given to Moses, we shall consider,

I. As addressed to Moses in particular.

In this view, it comes with peculiar weight to those churches which have been long under the superintendence of an aged minister.

Moses had long watched over Israel.

For the sake of Israel, he had renounced all that the world could give him, and subjected himself to many trials, and exposed himself to many dangers, “He had refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter,” and abandoned all the pleasures and honors of a court, “choosing rather to suffer affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season; and esteeming the reproach of Christ, greater riches than all the treasures of Egypt.”

From a regard for them, he had braved all the wrath of Pharaoh in his most infuriated state; and had led them forth, unarmed and unprovided, in the hope of bringing them to a land flowing with milk and honey. As God’s appointed instrument, he had made known to them the will of God; and had shown them, by a great variety of ordinances, the means which God had provided for their acceptance with him. He had for the space of forty years together fed them with bread from Heaven and with water out of the stony rock. Times without number had he interceded for them, when if his hands had hung down, and his heart had fainted—their ruin would inevitably have ensued. In a word, he had lived only for them.

In all that space of time, not a day had occurred which he had not occupied in their service; and could he but see them happy, nothing that he could forego, nothing that he could do, nothing that he could suffer—was regarded by him as worthy of a thought; so entirely were his interests and happiness bound up in theirs.

But now his care over them must cease.

God had determined that he should not go over the Jordan river, verse 2. This was in part the punishment of his sin at Meribah, when, instead of sanctifying the Lord in the eyes of all Israel by a believing expectation of water from the rock in answer to his Word, he struck the rock, yes, struck it twice, with an unhallowed irritation of mind, See Numbers 20:7-12. But, in part, this exclusion was intended to shadow forth the nature of that dispensation; and to show, that one violation of the law was sufficient to exclude a soul from Canaan; and that all who would obtain an entrance into the promised land, must turn from Moses to Joshua (the Lord Jesus Christ), who alone can save any man.

Moses was now a hundred and twenty years of age; but he was still, as far as natural strength was required, as competent as ever to watch over the people, and to discharge his duty to them. But his time had arrived; and he must transfer his office to another. Happily for him, and for all Israel, there was a Joshua ready to fill his place; and God had ordained him to occupy the vacant post, and to take on him the oversight of this bereaved people.

Just so, could we but see that the charge we vacate would be so supplied, truly, a summons into the eternal world would be a source of unqualified joy. The most painful thought in the separation of aged ministers from their people is, that they know not on whom the care of them shall devolve, whether on one who will watch for their souls—or on one, who, content with a mere routine of duties, will leave them to be scattered by every wolf that shall choose to invade the fold.

However this is, a time of separation must come; the pastor who has fed you more than forty years must be taken from you; and how soon, who can tell? It may be, yes, it is highly probable, that this year will be his last. Certain it is, that “his days approach,” and very rapidly too, “when he must die;” and when the connection that has subsisted between you and him must forever cease.

To God he must give account of his ministry among you; as must all of you, also, in due season, of the improvement made of it. And it is a solemn thought, that your blood will be required at his hand—as will all his labors for your good be required at yours. The Lord grant, that when we shall meet around the judgment-seat of Christ, we may all “give up our account with joy, and not with grief!”

But let us turn from the particular instance, and consider the intimation,

II. As applicable to every man

It is true respecting every man; for we no sooner begin to breathe than we begin to die; and the life, even of the oldest person, is “but as a span long.” “Our time passes away like a shadow;” and death, to whoever it may come, involves in it:

1. A dissolution of all earthly ties.

The husband and wife, however long they may have been bound together in love, and however averse they may be to separate, must be rent asunder; and, while one is taken to his long home, the other must be left to bewail his sad bereavement with unavailing sorrow.

Perhaps there was a growing family that needed their united care, and that must be deprived of innumerable blessings, which, according to the course of nature, they were entitled to expect. But the hand of death cannot be arrested by the cries of parental anxiety or of filial love; it seizes with irresistible force its destined objects; and transmits them to Him whose commission it has executed, and whose will it has fulfilled. Methinks it were well for those who stand in any one of these relations, to bear in mind how soon they may be bereaved, and how speedily what has been only committed to them as a loan, may be demanded at their hands.

2. A termination of all earthly labors.

We may have many plans, either in hand or in prospect; but death, the instant it arrives, puts an end to all! We may have even formed purposes in relation to our souls: we may have determined that we will, before long, abandon some evil habits in which we have lived, or fulfill some duties which we have hitherto neglected. We may have thought that to repent of our sins, and to seek for mercy through Christ, and to give all diligence to the concerns of our souls—was the path which true wisdom dictated; and that we would speedily commence that beneficial course. But death, having once received its commission to transmit us to the presence of our God—can take no cognizance of any good intentions; it executes its office without favor to any; and, in the instant that he inflicts the stroke, his victim, whoever he may be, dies, “his breath goes forth, and he returns to his earth; and in that very day all his plans come to nothing! Psalm 146:4.”

3. A fixing of our eternal doom.

Whatever be the state of our souls in the instant of death—that it will continue to all eternity, “As the tree falls, so it must lie!” If we have lived a life of penitence and faith, and devoted ourselves truly unto God—it is well; death will be to us only like “falling asleep” in the bosom of our Lord. But, if we have neglected these great concerns, or not so far prosecuted them as to have found favor with God—then death will be to us only like the opening of our prison-doors, in order to the execution of eternal vengeance on our souls! Prepared or unprepared, we must go into the presence of our God, and receive at his hands our eternal doom. Oh, fearful thought!

But so it must be; and, the instant that the soul is separated from the body, it will be transmitted either to the paradise of God, or to the lake that burns with fire and brimstone. The day of judgment will make no difference, except that the body will then be made to participate in the doom of the soul; and the justice and righteousness of God, in the sentence awarded, will be displayed to the admiration of the whole assembled universe.

Let this subject be improved by us:

1. For the humbling of our souls in reference to the past.

We have known the uncertainty of life; and have seen, in the mortality of those around us, the approach of death; but how astonishing is it, that these sights have produced such little effect upon our souls! Truly, if we did not know the insensibility of man under circumstances of such infinite consequence, we should scarcely be able to believe what both our observation and experience so fully attest.

2. For the quickening of our souls in reference to the future.

That “the day of death approaches” we are sure; at what precise distance it is, we know not. But should not this thought stimulate us to improve our every remaining hour? Yes, truly; we should turn unto God without delay; and “apply our hearts to wisdom” with all diligence; and so “watch for the coming of our Lord, that, at whatever hour it may be, we may be found ready.” “What I say therefore to one, I say unto all, Watch!”

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

MOSES’ ENCOURAGING ADDRESS TO ISRAEL

Deuteronomy 31:6

“Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the LORD your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.”

The application of passages in the Old Testament to Christians at this time is thought by many to be an unwarrantable liberty, especially if those passages referred to any particular occasion, and still more if they primarily related to any particular individual. We are far from saying that great caution is not requisite on this head; but we feel no hesitation in affirming that passages in the Old Testament, whether general or particular in their primary import, are applicable to Christians in all ages, as far as the situations and circumstances of Christians resemble that in former times. Nay, we go further still, and affirm that passages, which in their primary sense related only to temporal concerns—may fitly be applied at this time in a spiritual sense, as far as there exists a just analogy between the cases.

We cannot have a stronger proof of this than in the words before us. They were first addressed by Moses generally to all Israel, when they were about to invade the land of Canaan. They were then addressed particularly to Joshua in the sight of all Israel verse 8, 23; and they were afterwards again addressed to Joshua by God himself, Joshua 1:5; Joshua 1:9.

Now it might be asked, Have we any right to apply these words to Christians at this time? And may any Christian consider them as addressed personally and particularly to himself? We answer, Yes; he may; and moreover may found upon them precisely the same conclusions as Israel of old did. For this we have the authority of an inspired Apostle; who, having quoted the words in reference to the whole Christian Church, adds, “So that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper; and I will not fear what man shall do unto me, Hebrews 13:5-6.”

Thus then are we warranted to address the words to you in relation to that warfare which you are to maintain against all the enemies of your salvation; and this we will proceed to do.

Brethren, we suppose you now in the state of Israel when addressed by Moses. And if, like Moses, we knew that the superintendence of your spiritual concerns was speedily to be devolved to another, and that this was the last time that we would ever address you, we could not do better than amplify and expand his ideas, contained in the words before us.

You, brethren, are about to engage in a most arduous warfare.

The enemies of Israel were numerous and very powerful; they were men of gigantic stature, and they “dwelt in cities walled up to Heaven.” There were no less than “seven nations greater and mightier than Israel,” and all these were confederate together for the defense of Canaan. But these were weak, in comparison with the Christian’s enemies.

You, brethren, have to conflict with the world and all its vanities, the flesh and all its corruptions, the devil and all his wiles. There is not anything you see around you, which is not armed for your destruction; nor is there anything within you which does not watch for an opportunity to betray your soul, and to inflict on it the most deadly wounds. Yet these enemies, notwithstanding their number and power, are quite overlooked by Paul, and counted as nothing, in comparison with those mighty adversaries, the principalities and powers of Hell, Ephesians 6:12. Their inconceivable subtlety, their invisible combination, their pre-eminent strength, their inveterate malignity, together with the easiness of their access to us at all times, render them formidable beyond measure; insomuch that if you had not an Almighty Friend to espouse your cause, you might well sit down in despair!

In the prospect of this contest, you are apt to indulge desponding thoughts.

Forty years before, the Israelites had refused to encounter their enemies, from an apprehension that these enemies were invincible; and it is probable that they were not without their fears at this time. And what is it that at the present day deters multitudes from engaging in the spiritual warfare? Is it not a fear that they shall not succeed? When we tell them that they must overcome the world, and mortify the flesh, and resist the devil, they reply, that these things are impossible; and that it is in vain to make such an impracticable attempt, Jeremiah 18:12. Even those who have fought well on particular occasions, are apt to faint, when their trials press upon them with more than usual weight. David himself yielded to unbelieving fears, Psalm 77:7-10, and exclaimed in his haste, “All men are liars, Psalm 116:11 with 73:13.”

Perhaps there is not one among us whose “hands have not sometimes hung down, and his knees been weary, and his heart faint;” not one who has not needed, like Paul himself, some peculiar manifestations of God for his support, Acts 23:11.

But there is no real cause for discouragement to any of you.

It is alleged perhaps, that your enemies are mighty; but “your Redeemer also is mighty;” and “if he is for you, who can be against you?” If it be your own weakness that depresses you, only view it in a right light, and the most consolatory considerations will spring from it; for “when you are weak, then are you strong;” and the more sensible you are of your own insufficiency for any good thing, the more will God magnify his own power towards you, and “perfect his own strength in your weakness.” The peculiar compatibility of our text to all such cases is evident from the repeated application of it to people under discouragement, and the blessed effects produced by it.

We have already supposed the discouragement to arise from a view of duties impracticable, or of difficulties insurmountable; but, in the former case, David consoled Solomon, 1 Chronicles 28:20, and, in the latter case, Hezekiah comforted the Jews, 2 Chronicles 32:6-8, with the very address which we are now considering; a sure proof, that it contains a sufficient antidote against all disquieting fears, of whatever kind they may be, and to whatever extent they may prevail.

God promises his presence and aid to his people.

If he refused to go forth with you, you might well say with Moses, “If your presence go not with us, carry us not up hence! Exodus 33:15.” Even if he offered to send an angel with you, it would not be sufficient, Exodus 33:2. But he has promised to be with you himself, and to exercise all his glorious perfections in your behalf. As in the days of Joshua he sent his Son to be “the Captain of the Lord’s host, Joshua 5:13-14,” so has he given him to be “a Leader and Commander unto” you, Isaiah 55:4; by whom he says to you at this hour, “Lo! I am with you always, even to the end of the world.” Having then his wisdom to guide you, his arm to strengthen you, his power to protect you—then what ground can you have for discouragement? “If he is for you—then who can be against you? Romans 8:31.”

God promises that he will never fail you or forsake you.

There may be times and seasons when he may allow you to be assaulted with more than usual violence; but he will never give you up into the hands of your enemy, or “allow you to be tempted above your strength.” Or if for gracious purposes he see fit to withdraw himself, it shall only be “for a little moment,” that he may afterwards the more visibly show himself in your deliverance. Respecting this he engages in the strongest manner; and refers us to the rainbow in the heavens as an infallible pledge of his faithfulness and truth, Isaiah 54:7-10. Creature helps may fail us; but our God never will! 2 Timothy 4:16-17. You may “be confident that, having begun a good work in you, he will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ, Philippians 1:6.” The manner in which the Apostle quotes the words of our text, abundantly shows how assured he was that it should be fulfilled; for he uses no less than five negatives to express the idea with the utmost possible force, and then “boldly” draws the inference for us, that we have nothing to fear from our most inveterate enemies! Hebrews 13:5-6.

Let these considerations then inspire you with confidence and joy.

Hear the animated exhortation which God himself gives you by the Prophet Isaiah, “Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God! I will strengthen you; yes, I will help you; yes, I will uphold you with the right hand of my righteousness! Isaiah 41:10.”

If you reply, that there are mountains of difficulty before you, and you are but as a worm to contend with them; then God says, “Do not be afraid, O worm Jacob, O little Israel, for I myself will help you,” declares the LORD, your Redeemer, the Holy One of Israel. “See, I will make you into a threshing sledge, new and sharp, with many teeth. You will thresh the mountains and crush them, and reduce the hills to chaff. You will winnow them, the wind will pick them up, and a gale will blow them away. But you will rejoice in the LORD and glory in the Holy One of Israel! Isaiah 41:14-16.”

“Who then are you, that you should be afraid of a man that shall die, and the son of man that shall be as grass, and forget the Lord your Maker? Isaiah 51:12; Isaiah 13.” All that you have to do is to wait upon your God; and then, in spite of all your apprehensions of failure, or even of occasional defeats—you shall rise superior to your enemies, and be triumphant over them at last! Isaiah 40:27-31. I say then to you in the words of our great Captain, “Fear not, little flock; for it is your Father’s good pleasure to give you the kingdom! Luke 12:32.”

Let the captives of Satan arise and assert their liberty.

Behold the kingdom of Heaven is before you, “that good land flowing with milk and honey;” and will you be content that your great adversary shall rob you of it without a struggle? Know that there is armor provided for you; and that if you go forth against him clad with it, you cannot but conquer. O enlist under the banners of the Lord Jesus, and go forth in his strength! fight a good fight; stand firm in the faith; be men of courage; be strong; and be assured, “your labor shall not be in vain in the Lord.”

Let the timid take courage, and return to the charge.

Think not of your own weakness, but of the Lord’s strength. Remember what he has done for his people in old time. Did not the walls of Jericho fall at the sound of rams’ horns? Was not Midian vanquished by a few lamps and broken pitchers? Did not Goliath fall by a sling and a stone? Ah! know that your enemies shall be like them, if only you will take courage. “Resist the devil, and he shall flee from you.” See what Joshua did to the five confederate kings, Joshua 10:24-25; thus shall you also do in due season; for the true Joshua has promised that “he will bruise Satan under your feet shortly! Romans 16:20.”

Let the strong remember in whom their strength is.

Let not any think themselves so strong, but that they still need, even as Joshua himself did, a word of exhortation and encouragement. Be not self-confident even for a moment, lest God leaves you to yourselves, and you “be crushed before a moth.” Peter will remind you how weak you are, if not upheld by God; and what Satan can accomplish, if permitted to sift you as wheat. “Be not high-minded then, but fear;” yet fear not others, but yourselves only. Be weak in yourselves, and strong in the Lord; and then you may dismiss every other fear, and already begin the shout of victory!

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

A FAITHFUL MINISTER’S APPEAL

Deuteronomy 30:19

“This day I call Heaven and earth as witnesses against you that I have set before you life and death, blessings and curses. Now choose life, so that you and your children may live!”

However long a minister may continue with his people, he must part from them at last, and be summoned to give up his account of all his ministrations to them. Moses had now presided over Israel for the space of forty years; and the time was come that he must die, Deuteronomy 31:2. But before his death, he warned them with all fidelity, setting life and death before them; and, in the words which I have just read, he appealed to them, that he had discharged his duty towards them fully in these respects; and urged them to improve the privileges which they had so long enjoyed.

Let me call your attention to,

I. Moses’ appeal.

It is justly said of him, both in the Old Testament and in the New Testament, that “he was faithful in all his house, Numbers 12:7; Hebrews 3:2.” And, indeed, not even Paul himself labored under greater disadvantages, or persevered with more unwearied diligence than he. The whole of God’s laws, moral, ceremonial, judicial, did he make known to the people, enforcing the strict observance of them all (whether “commandments, statutes, or judgments”) on the penalty of death. The violating of anyone of them willfully and presumptuously, was declared to be such an act of rebellion against God, that nothing less than utter destruction was the punishment annexed to it, Numbers 15:30. On the other hand, he promised to them, that, if they were observant of God’s blessed will, they should live, and long enjoy their promised inheritance, verse 16-18. And so uniformly had he devoted all his time and strength to their service, that he could call both Heaven and earth to testify of his fidelity in executing the office that had been assigned him.

Let it not be thought that we would presume to institute a comparison between that holy man and ourselves. We well know how infinitely short of him we have come, in the whole of our personal and official character. Yet we do hope that we can so far adopt his Words, as to appeal both to God and man, that, during the years that we have ministered among you, we have faithfully, according to our ability, “set life and death before you.”

1. We have ministered the same truths unto you.

[In a young minister this kind of address would be inexpedient; but in an aged minister, who had spent his whole official life in superintending one congregation, it would be thought quite in character.]

In the preceding verses, Moses speaks particularly respecting the Gospel, which he had made known unto the people, “Now what I am commanding you today is not too difficult for you or beyond your reach. It is not up in Heaven, so that you have to ask, “Who will ascend into Heaven to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?” Nor is it beyond the sea, so that you have to ask, “Who will cross the sea to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?” No, the word is very near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart so you may obey it. See, I set before you today life and prosperity, death and destruction!” Deuteronomy 30:11-15

The exposition of these words is given to us by Paul, who tells us, that in them Moses spoke, not of the righteousness of the Law, but of the righteousness which is of faith, even of that very faith which Paul himself preached, Romans 10:5-9.”

And what has been the subject of our ministrations? You yourselves will bear me witness, that, from the very first hour that I came among you, “I determined to know nothing among you, but Jesus Christ, and him crucified, 1 Corinthians 2:2.” What Moses preached in types and shadows, I have declared in the plainest terms; showing, at all times, that “the moral law was a schoolmaster to bring you to Christ, Galatians 3:24;” and that the ceremonial law, in all its ordinances, held forth the Lord Jesus Christ as the great sacrifice, that takes away the sins of the world, Hebrews 10:1-10. Never, at any period, have we attempted to lay any other foundation than this, 1 Corinthians 3:11; nor have we ever hesitated to affirm the sufficiency of this to bear the weight of the whole world, Acts 13:39.”

2. We have too, according to our ability, ministered with the same fidelity.

We hope we may, without presumption, appeal to you, as the Apostle Paul did to the elders of Ephesus, not only that “We have kept back nothing that was profitable unto you,” but that “we have not shunned to declare unto you the whole counsel of God; and are therefore, as far as relates to that, we are free, not from your blood only, but from the blood of all men! Acts 20:20; Acts 20:26-27.”

You yourselves will bear me witness, that, notwithstanding “the offence of the cross, which neither is ceased, nor can cease, Galatians 5:11,” I have at all times gloried in it, and exalted it as the only means of our reconciliation with God, Galatians 6:14. Nor have I ever amused you with speculative theories. No, I have preached the Gospel practically; and not in a cold and formal manner, but as a matter of life and death. I have never ceased to exhibit it with all its solemn sanctions; assuring you of life, if you would believe in Christ; and denouncing the wrath of God against all who would not obey the Gospel; executing in this respect the commission given to me to preach the Gospel to every creature, saying, “He who believes, and is baptized, shall be saved; and he who believes not shall be damned! Mark 16:15-16.”

Never, at any time, have I dissembled these truths, “I have never daubed the wall of God’s sanctuary with untempered mortar,” nor “sewed pillows to the armholes of my people,” to let them find ease in sin; never have I “spoken peace to you, when there was no peace,” or “promised life” in any other way than a total surrender of yourselves to God, Ezekiel 13:10; Ezekiel 13:18; Ezekiel 13:22.

And here I will mention one point, which, from the beginning, I have kept in mind without turning to the right hand or to the left. I have never perverted one passage of Scripture to make it speak the language of human systems. I have been anxious to set before you the “unadulterated word” of God, 1 Peter 2:2 and 2 Corinthians 2:17; and to let it speak for itself, without ever concerning myself what human system it either countenanced or opposed; having been “allowed by God to be put in trust with the Gospel, I have spoken, not as pleasing men, but God, who tests our hearts, 1 Thessalonians 2:4-5;” and with the “utmost plainness” also, 2 Corinthians 3:12, “not with enticing words of man’s wisdom,” “lest the cross of Christ should be made of no effect, 1 Corinthians 1:17; 1 Corinthians 2:4-5.”

While, however, “we call Heaven and earth to record this day” respecting these things, let it not be supposed that we are not conscious of innumerable shortcomings and defects in our ministrations; for we are filled with nothing but shame and confusion of face in the review of them, God knows. But as far as respects the fidelity of them, we can, and do, appeal both to God and man, that, like Moses, we have faithfully and invariably “set before you life and death, blessing and cursing,” according as they are revealed in the Gospel, and as they shall be awarded to those who receive or reject the Gospel.

And now let me call your attention to,

II. The advice Moses founds upon it.

“Now choose life!”

A free choice is given to every one among you.

The Gospel is freely preached to you all; and you are all at liberty to embrace or to reject it. Almighty God is sincere when he says, that “he would have all men to be saved, and to come to the knowledge of the truth, 1 Timothy 2:4 and 2 Peter 3:9.” Never did he reprobate any man, until that man had brought that sentence upon himself by his own willful obduracy. The whole Scripture bears testimony to this truth. If this is not true, how can we ever explain that solemn oath of Jehovah, “As I live, says the Lord God, I have no pleasure in the death of a sinner, but rather that he turn from his wickedness and live. Turn, turn from your evil ways; for why will you die, O house of Israel? Ezekiel 33:11.”

There is not a human being that is excepted from the invitations of the Gospel, or from its blessings, if he accepts them. “Look unto me, and be saved, all the ends of the earth! for I am God; and there is none else! Isaiah 45:22.” And “him who comes unto me, (whoever he is, or whatever he may have done,) I will never cast out! John 6:37.” Moreover, the fault of rejecting these overtures is always imputed to the sinner himself, “You will not come unto me, that you might have life, John 5:40.” If any could have been supposed to have been reprobated from all eternity, it was the people who were given up to reject their Messiah, and to crucify the Lord of glory; yet over them did our blessed Lord mourn, saying, “How often would I have gathered you, even as a hen gathers her chicks under her wings, but you would not! Matthew 23:37.”

That all have a bias towards sin, is certain; but there is no compulsion. That Satan also is permitted to tempt us, is certain; but he cannot compel any man. We are perfectly free agents in all that we do, whether it is good or evil. If it is said, that God “draws men,” it is true; but he “draws them with the cords of a man, and with the bands of love, Hosea 11:4.” And, if he prevails over the reluctance of their hearts, it is not by the exercise of an overpowering force, but by “making them willing in the day of his power, Psalm 110:3.” If he “works in them to do,” it is by “working in them to will, Philippians 2:13.”

I will appeal to every living man, whether he ever did good or evil by compulsion against his will? That he has acted against his judgment and his conscience, is true enough, and that in ten thousand instances; but against his will he never did. God sets good before us; and Satan evil; and, whichever we prefer, that we choose, and that we do.

Exercise, then, your choice with true wisdom.

The generality of people, in spite of all that we can say, will choose evil. It is in vain that we endeavor to allure them by the offer of “life,” or to alarm them with the threatening of “death;” they prefer evil with all its consequences; and therefore they do it; as God has said, “He who sins against me wrongs his own soul; all those who hate me love death Proverbs 8:36.” But do not act thus. “Choose good;” “choose life; that both you and your seed may live.”

Of the beneficial consequences to yourselves you cannot doubt; for, who ever sought the Lord, and was rejected? “Who ever truly believed in Christ, and was confounded? 1 Peter 2:6.” Who ever “chose the good part, and had it violently taken away from him? Luke 10:42.”

Choose God for your Father; and he will acknowledge you as his children.

Choose Christ as your Savior; and “he will present you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding joy.”

Choose the Holy Spirit as your Sanctifier; and “he will perfect that which concerns you,” and “complete in you the work he has begun.”

Choose Heaven for your inheritance; and sooner shall Heaven and earth pass away, than you be permitted to come short of it.

The very choice you make will evince that you yourselves have been chosen by your God, John 15:16 and 1 John 4:19; and “his gifts and calling are without repentance, Romans 11:29.”

And shall not this tend to the benefit of “your seed” also? Is it not a part of God’s covenant, that “he will put his fear in our hearts, for the good of us, and of our children after us, Jeremiah 32:39.” What is there so likely to benefit the rising generation as the piety of their parents? The force of good instruction is great; but when enforced by good example, it is almost irresistible. Children of pious parents, who have diligently instructed them, and “labored earnestly and constantly in prayer to God for them,” cannot sin so easily as others; or if, through the power of temptation, they are drawn aside after wickedness, they will, it is hoped, feel the remonstrances of conscience in seasons of sickness and reflection, and be brought home at last with penitential sorrow to their God. At all events, we have encouragement to hope, that “our labor for them shall not be in vain in the Lord;” and that, though in some instances we would fail, it shall be found generally true, that, if we “bring up a child in the way he should go, when he is old he will not depart from it.”

That I may enforce the counsel in my text, I would beg you to consider,

1. The alternative that is here offered to you.

It is not “life” or annihilation; but “life or death!”

It is not “a blessing, or a mere privation of good;” but “a blessing, or a curse.”

And have you ever thought what that “death” is, and what that “curse?” is? Oh! who shall declare what that “second death” is, in the lake that burns with fire and brimstone? Or what that “curse,” which shall be there endured? Were annihilation, or eternal sleep, the alternative—you would at least have the consolation of knowing, that you would be unconscious of your loss; but, as you must live forever, either in Heaven or in Hell, I entreat you to “choose that life,” which shall be “at God’s right hand, in pleasures for evermore! Psalm 16:11.”

2. The responsibility attaching to you for the privileges you enjoy.

Our blessed Lord said respecting his hearers, “If I had not come and spoken unto them, they had not had sin; but now they have no cloak for their sin, John 15:22.” And may I not say the same to you? Doubtless, if you had the Gospel ministered unto you with less clearness and fidelity, you would have less to answer for, even as Sodom and Gomorrah had on this very account a lighter condemnation than Bethsaida and Capernaum, Matthew 11:20-24.

It is certainly a great comfort to a minister to know that “he has delivered his own soul, Ezekiel 33:8-9.” But it is a painful reflection to think, that the very means he has used for the salvation of his people, will in many cases only increase their guilt; and the word he has spoken to them, instead of being to them a savor of life, will only be a savor of death to their more aggravated condemnation!

Beloved, let me not have to appear in that day as “a swift witness against you,” but rather have to present you to God as my children, Isaiah 8:18, and possess you as “my joy and crown of rejoicing for evermore! 1 Thessalonians 2:19, 20.”

3. The nearness of the final outcome.

Moses had ministered to his people for forty years; and it is now just about that time that I have ministered to you. How much longer God may be pleased to continue my labors among you, he alone knows; but, according to the course of nature, it cannot be long. Be in earnest, then, to improve the light while you have it, John 12:36.

Many who are gone to judgment would be glad enough if they could come back again to hear the invitations and warnings which they once slighted. And it is possible, that, when the present ordinances shall have come to an end, and the tongue that has so often warned you lies silent in the grave, you may wish that you had “known the day of your visitation,” and improved the privileges you once enjoyed.

Let us all “work while it is day; for the night comes, when neither your minister can work for you, nor you for yourselves.” May the Lord grant, that, while we are continued together, I may so preach the word, and you receive it, that we may stand with boldness before God, and obtain his plaudit in the day of judgment!

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

THE GOSPEL CLEARLY CONTAINED IN THE OLD TESTAMENT

[The author’s First Address to the Jews at Catharine Cree, London. The preceding discourse on the same text was written many years before, for Gentiles; this was written in 1818, for Jews.]

Deuteronomy 30:11-14

“Now what I am commanding you today is not too difficult for you or beyond your reach. It is not up in Heaven, so that you have to ask, “Who will ascend into Heaven to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?” Nor is it beyond the sea, so that you have to ask, “Who will cross the sea to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?” No, the word is very near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart so you may obey it.”

The Old Testament is a rich mine of spiritual knowledge, and reflects as much light upon the New Testament as itself receives from this fuller revelation of God’s will. Each is necessary to the understanding of the other; in that is the model of the edifice, which, under the Christian dispensation, has been erected; and, if it were duly attended to, it would prove sufficient to convince the whole world, that Christianity is Judaism perfected and completed; perfected in all its types, and completed in all its prophecies.

To this effect Moses spoke in the words before us. “The commandment” which he mentions, is not to be understood, as many Jews imagine, of the law given upon Mount Sinai, but of another covenant which God entered into with his people in the land of Moab; and which was, in fact, the covenant of grace. It is by Moses himself distinguished from the covenant of works Deuteronomy 29:1; and that distinction is confirmed by the account which he gives of it elsewhere.

The law, as published on Horeb or Mount Sinai, made no provision for the pardon of any sin whatever; it simply said, “Do this and you shall live;” but the covenant made afterwards in the land of Moab, was ratified with the blood of sacrifices; which blood was sprinkled upon the altar, the book, and all the people, Exodus 24:3-8; and therefore sprinkled, that they might know how to seek the remission of their sins, as often as occasion for it should arise.

The author of the Epistle to the Hebrews, who was so deeply conversant with the whole of the Mosaic law, refers to this very covenant in this precise point of view. Hebrews 9:19-20.

In this act the gospel way of salvation was set before them; so that they needed not henceforth to be looking for anyone to come down from Heaven, like Moses, or from the depths of the sea, like Jonah, to proclaim it, seeing that it was “very near unto them” already, even “in their mouth,” which approved of the law, and “in their heart,” which loved the law.

The things which the Gospel more particularly inculcates, are, Repentance, Faith, and Obedience; and these are almost as clearly revealed in the Old Testament as in the New.

To show this to the Jewish people is, I conceive, the very first step towards bringing them to Christianity. The Apostles, when preaching to the Jews, always appealed to the Old Testament in confirmation of all that they delivered; and I also, after their example, will endeavor to show you, my Jewish brethren, that your own Scriptures declare in the plainest terms:

I. That you are guilty and condemned by the moral law.

The law is a perfect transcript of the mind and will of God; and it requires of every human being an obedience to all its commands. For one single transgression it utterly and eternally condemns us; nay more, it requires every individual to express his assent to this as true, and his approbation of it as right and good, “Cursed is the man who does not uphold the words of this law by carrying them out.” Then all the people shall say, “Amen!”

Deuteronomy 27:26.” But of the impossibility of coming to God by the law, we have a most striking illustration in the conduct of your forefathers at the very time that the law was given; they were so terrified by all that they saw and heard, that they repeatedly declared, that, if the same scenes should pass again, “they would die;” they entreated that God would no more speak to them himself, but give them a Mediator, through whom they might receive his law in a mitigated form, and divested of those terrors which they were not able to endure. And of this request God expressed the highest approbation, saying, “They have well said all that they have spoken. O that there were such a heart in them, Deuteronomy 5:22-29.”

In this matter, dearly beloved, my heart responds to the wish of your Almighty Lawgiver, ‘O that there were in you such a heart!’ Could we but once see you thoroughly convinced of your guilt and condemnation by the law, we would have no fear of your speedily and thankfully embracing the salvation offered to you in the Gospel. The great obstacle to your reception of the Gospel is, that instead of regarding the law as a ministration of death and of condemnation, you are looking for life from obedience to it. It is true that temporal blessings were promised to obedience; and that eternal blessings also were promised to those who would “lay hold on God’s covenant,” and keep his commandments. But the covenant on which they were to lay hold, was that which had been made with their father Abraham; and which never was, nor could be, disannulled by the law. The law, as published on Mount Sinai, was intended to shut them up to this covenant, by making known to them the impossibility of being saved in any other way than by the promised Seed. And, when once you understand and feel this, you will not be far from the kingdom of God.

This conviction would also prepare you for another lesson taught to you by Moses; namely,

II. That you must be saved altogether by a sin-atoning sacrifice.

This was taught to you throughout the whole ceremonial law; the daily and annual sacrifices proclaimed it to your whole nation. Nor was this merely taught in theory; it was required of every offender, whatever his sin might be, to bring his sacrifice in order that it might be put to death in his stead, and deliver him from the condemnation which his sin had merited. Even for sins of ignorance this was required; and the offender, whether he were a priest, or an elder, or a ruler, or one of the common people—was required to put his hands on the head of his sacrifice, and thus, by the most significant of all actions, to transfer to it his sins, Leviticus 4:4; Leviticus 4:15; Leviticus 4:24; Leviticus 4:29. What an instructive ordinance was this!

Yet the ordinance of the scape-goat was, if possible, still more instructive. On the great day of annual expiation, the high-priest, after killing the goat on which the Lord’s lot had fallen, was to put his hands on the head of the scape-goat, and to confess over him all the sins of all the children of Israel; and then the goat was led into the wilderness from before them all, never more to be seen; so that the removal of their sins might be made visible, as it were, to their bodily eyes, Leviticus 16:20-22.

Yet, while this glorious truth was thus plainly declared, the insufficiency of the legal sacrifices, and the necessity of a better sacrifice, was proclaimed also. For these very sacrifices were to be repeated from year to year; which showed that the guilt expiated by them was not fully removed. Hence the very sacrifices were, in fact, no other than an annual remembrance of sins, not finally forgiven. In this light they were viewed by those of your forefathers whom you cannot but venerate, and whom I believe to have been inspired of God, the Apostles of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. See Hebrews 10:1-4.

The same thing was intimated by the very partial appointment of sacrifices. There were many sins, as adultery and murder, for which no sacrifice was appointed. Indeed, presumptuous sins, of whatever land they were, if remission was to be obtained by sacrifices, could never be forgiven; because no sacrifice was appointed for them. Nor, in truth, was any man made perfect as pertaining to the conscience by any of the sacrifices; because every man had a secret suspicion at least, if not conviction, that the blood of bulls and of goats could never take away sin! See Hebrews 10:1-4.

Still, however, the great end was answered of directing the eyes of all to the appointed sacrifices, and through them to the Lord Jesus Christ, the great sacrifice, whose blood alone can cleanse from sin, and who is “an atoning sacrifice for the sins of the whole world.”

Dear brethren, it was to this better sacrifice that David looked, when, after the commission of adultery and murder, he prayed, “Purge me with hyssop, and I shall be clean; wash me, and I shall be whiter than snow! Psalm 51:7.” Let your eyes be directed to the same sacrifice, even to your Messiah, the Lord Jesus Christ, of whom the Prophet Isaiah says, “He was wounded for our transgressions;” and again, “The Lord has laid on him the iniquities of us all.” This is He whom your forefathers pierced, and nailed to the cross; and through whom thousands of those who crucified him, found peace with God; and, if you also could now be persuaded to look unto him for salvation, then you would immediately experience the effect produced by the bronze serpent in the wilderness, and be healed every one of you. O that you would obey the direction given you in the writings of your own prophets, “Look unto Me, and be saved, all the ends of the earth.” You would no longer continue strangers to peace and joy; for strangers you must be to these divine sensations, while you are condemned by the law, and ignorant of the way in which your guilt is to be removed. On the contrary, your “peace would flow as a river,” and, as “children of Zion, you would be joyful in your King.”

But further, it is declared in your law,

III. That all who are thus saved, must be holy in heart and life.

God, as you know, requires you to be “holy as he is holy;” and to be “a peculiar people unto him above all the people upon earth.” I rather bring this to your minds, because you are ready to think that we wish to proselyte you to Christianity, that we may have to glory in such an accession to our cause. But I beg permission to assure you, that I would not move a finger to proselyte your whole nation to our religion, if I did not at the same time raise them to be better men, fitter to serve their God on earth, and fitter to enjoy him forever in Heaven. And this I entreat you to bear in mind. It is to the divine image that we wish to bring you, and to the full possession of that blessing promised to you by Jehovah himself, “I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you will be clean; I will cleanse you from all your impurities and from all your idols. I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit in you; I will remove from you your heart of stone and give you a heart of flesh. And I will put my Spirit in you and move you to follow my decrees and be careful to keep my laws, Ezekiel 36:25-27.” This is necessary for you, as it is also for us; nor have we ourselves any other rule of conduct than that which was prescribed to you in the Ten Commandments.

The advantage we have in the New Testament is not that new things are revealed to us, but that the things originally revealed to you are made more clear and intelligible. Not that in your Scriptures there is any obscurity in relation to this matter; we may truly say, “It is not far off, nor is it hidden from you; but it is very near unto you, even in your hands and in your mouth;” I pray God we may be able to add, as Moses did in my text, that it is “in your heart” also!

And now permit me to address a few words to you, my Jewish brethren.

It is to your own Scriptures that I wish in the first instance to direct your attention; for you yourselves know that they testify of your Messiah, and are intended to direct you to him. It is greatly to be lamented, that they are not studied among you as they ought to be; and that your Rabbis for the most part pay more deference to the voluminous commentaries with which your Scriptures are obscured, than to the Scriptures themselves. But let it not be so with you. Begin to search the Scriptures for yourselves; search them as for hidden treasures; and pray to God to give you his Holy Spirit, to instruct you, and to guide you into all truth. When you take the blessed book of God into your hands, lift up your heart to God, and say with David, “Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law!” Then compare your Scriptures with ours, the Old Testament with the New; and mark how exactly they correspond with each other, even as the vessel with the mold, or the wax with the seal. Then I fear not but that you will soon acknowledge Him of whom the Law and the Prophets do speak, even Jesus of Nazareth, to be the true Messiah, the Savior of the world. Yes, he whom you have hitherto rejected will become precious to your souls; and you will, in a far higher sense than you have ever yet been, become the children of Abraham, and the sons of God.

To the Christian part of this auditory I will also beg permission to address a few words.

You have seen that with care and labor I have endeavored to establish the true import of my text from the writings of Moses himself. But, if I had been speaking to you alone, I might have spared that trouble, having the text already explained by God himself. Paul tells us, that the commandment which was near to the Jews, was the Gospel itself, even that word of faith which declares, that whoever with the heart believes in Christ, and with the mouth confesses him, shall assuredly be saved, Romans 10:5-13.

How thankful should we be for such a light! and having been favored with it, shall we conceal it from our Jewish brethren, from whom, under God, we have received it? What would you think of a man, who, being stationed in a light-house for the purpose of warning ships in its vicinity to avoid some rocks, and of directing them into a safe harbor, should, when he saw a whole fleet approaching, conceal the lights, and leave the whole fleet to perish on the rocks; and, when called to an account for his conduct, should say, ‘I did not think it right to create any alarm among the crews and their passengers?’ Would you think his excuse valid? Would you approve of his pretended benevolence? Would you not rather be filled with indignation against him, and say, that the blood of all who perished should be required at his hands?

Do not then act in a way, which, under other circumstances, you would so severely condemn; but, as God has given you a light, improve it carefully for your Jewish brethren. This is what their fathers did for you, when you were bowing down to stocks and stones. Do it then for them, if perhaps you may be the means of enlightening some among them, and of saving their souls from eternal death.

At the same time remember, that Paul applies the passage unto you; and tells you from it, that you must believe in Christ with your hearts, and confess him openly with your mouths. The word is, in the strictest sense, “very near unto you;” read it then, and ponder it in your hearts, and treasure it up in your minds, and live upon it, and glory in it; so shall it be a light to your paths, and make you wise unto salvation through faith in Christ Jesus.

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)

THE WAY OF SALVATION PLAIN AND EASY

Deuteronomy 30:11-14

“Now what I am commanding you today is not too difficult for you or beyond your reach. It is not up in Heaven, so that you have to ask, “Who will ascend into Heaven to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?” Nor is it beyond the sea, so that you have to ask, “Who will cross the sea to get it and proclaim it to us so we may obey it?” No, the word is very near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart so you may obey it.”

It is a very prevalent idea in the world, that all people shall be saved by the law under which they live; so that Jews, Turks, and heathen of every description, have as good a prospect of salvation, as those who enjoy the light of the Gospel. But there has been only one way of salvation from the fall of Adam to the present moment. How far God may be pleased to extend mercy for Christ’s sake to some who have not had an opportunity of hearing the Gospel, we cannot presume to say; but to those who have the Scriptures in their hands we are sure that there is no hope of acceptance, but through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. This was the way of salvation revealed to Adam, confirmed to Abraham, and more fully opened in the Mosaic law. It was of this that Moses spoke in the words before us; to elucidate which, we shall inquire,

I. What is the commandment here spoken of?

What it was may be seen by consulting,

1. The testimony of Moses himself.

It was not the moral law that was given on Mount Sinai, but “the covenant which the Lord commanded Moses to make with the children of Israel in the land of Moab, beside the covenant which he made with them in Horeb, Deuteronomy 29:1.”

The law given on Mount Sinai, of which Horeb was a part, was strictly a covenant of works; but that which was given in the land of Moab, was a covenant of grace.

That law on Mount Sinai made no provision for the smallest transgression; it simply said, Do this, and live.

That law in the land of Moab was accompanied with the sprinkling of the blood of sacrifices both on the altar and on the people, Exodus 24:3-8; and intimated, that through the blood of the great Sacrifice, that their iniquities, if truly repented of, might be forgiven. This distinction is very carefully noticed in the Epistle to the Hebrews, where Paul, mentioning some particulars not related by Moses, declares, that, by the covenant thus ratified, remission of sins was provided for, and might be obtained by all who sought it in the appointed way.

2. An inspired exposition of the passage, Romans 10:5-10.

The apostle Paul is expressly contrasting the nature of the two covenants; the Law, he tells us, required perfect obedience, and said, “He that does these things shall live by them, Leviticus 18:5 and Deuteronomy 27:26.” But the Gospel, that is, “the righteousness which is of faith, speaks in this way;” and then he quotes the words before us, and explains them as referring to the Gospel. Some have thought that he quoted these words only in a way of accommodation; but it is plain that he understood them as strictly applicable to his point. Speaking of the righteousness which is of faith, he says, “But what does it say?” He then, quoting the very words of Moses, answers, “The word is near you, even in your mouth and in your heart;” and then he adds, “This is the word of faith which we preach.”

If then the Apostle was inspired by the Holy Spirit, the matter is clear; and the Gospel was the commandment of which Moses spoke.

It is worthy of observation, that Christ and his Apostles speak of it under very similar terms. Our Lord says, “This is the work of God, that you believe on him whom he has sent;” by which he means, that it is the work which God requires of us, John 6:28-29. Paul calls the Gospel, “the law of faith, Romans 3:27.” John says, “This is his commandment, that you believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ, 1 John 3:23.” And “obeying the Gospel” is the common term used for believing in Christ, Romans 10:15; Romans 16:26; 2 Thessalonians 1:8; 1 Peter 4:17.

3. The particular characters by which this covenant in Moab is distinguished.

Moses speaks of it as plainly revealed, and as easily understood. Now this representation accords with that dispensation of the Gospel which was given to the Jews; they had no necessity for anyone to ascend up to Heaven, or to go over the sea, to bring them information about the way of life; for God had already revealed it to them from Heaven; he had shown them by the moral law that they were all in a state of guilt and condemnation; and he had shown them by the ceremonial law that they were to be saved by means of a sacrifice, which should in due time be offered. And though that revelation was comparatively obscure—yet any Jew with pious dispositions might understand it sufficiently to obtain salvation by it.

But these characters in the fullest sense agree with the Gospel as it is made known to us. We are not left to inquire whether there is a Savior or not? Whether Christ has come down from above? Or whether he has been raised up again from the dead? We know that he has come into the world; that he has “died for our sins, and has risen again for our justification.” We know that he has done everything that is necessary for our reconciliation with God, and will do everything that can be necessary for the carrying on and perfecting the salvation of our souls.

There is no uncertainty about any point that is of importance to us to know. Nor indeed is there any difficulty in understanding what he has revealed. All that is required, is, a simple, humble, teachable spirit; and to such a one, however ignorant he is in other respects, every part of the Gospel is dear.

The humble Christian “has within himself the witness” of all the fundamental truths of the Gospel. What doubt can he have that he is a guilty and condemned creature; or that he needs an atonement for his sins, and a better righteousness than his own for his justification before God? What doubt can he have that he needs the influences of the Holy Spirit to renew him after the divine image, and to render him fit for Heaven?

“If the Gospel is hidden from any, it is because the god of this world has blinded their eyes;” it is not the intricacy or obscurity of the Gospel that makes it unintelligible to them, but the simplicity and brightness of it, “they love darkness rather than light;” and complain of the Gospel, when the fault is only in themselves. As revealed to us, the Gospel is not obscure; as revealed in us, it is bright as the meridian sun.

Such then “is the commandment which God commands us this day.” We proceed to consider,

II. What is the obedience which this covenant at Moab requires.

1. This covenant at Moab demands from us an inward approbation of the heart.

Without this, all the knowledge of men or angels would be of little use. On this our salvation altogether depends. Moses says, “The word is in your heart;” and Paul’s exposition of it is, “If you shall believe in your heart that God has raised the Lord Jesus from the dead, you shall be saved.” Thus a mere rational assent to divine truth is particularly excluded from the office of saving; and salvation is annexed to that faith only which calls forth all the affections of the soul, “a faith which works by love.”

As “a commandment,” it is to have all the force of a law within us, “casting down imaginations with every high thing that exalts itself against the knowledge of God,” and “bringing every thought into captivity to the obedience of Christ.” It is not sufficient that we merely acknowledge the death and resurrection of Christ as parts of our creed; we must see and feel the necessity of them in order to the deliverance of our souls from death and Hell; and we must also glory in them, as the infinitely wise, gracious, and all-sufficient means of our redemption. We must have such a view of these truths, as makes us to “account all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of them! Philippians 3:8.” This was insisted on as necessary to the admission of converts into the Christian Church. And it is the experience of all who truly belong to Christ, Romans 6:17.

2. This covenant at Moab demands from us an outward confession of them with the mouth.

It is curious to observe what minute attention the Apostle paid to the words of Moses, and what emphasis he has laid upon them. Moses had transiently observed, “The word is in your mouth and in your heart;” but the Apostle amplifies the idea, and shows repeatedly that the confessing of Christ with the mouth is quite as necessary as the believing on him with the heart; by the latter indeed we obtain “righteousness;” but by the former we obtain complete “salvation, Romans 10:9-10.”

In that age, to confess Christ before men was to subject oneself to persecutions and death in their most cruel forms; but our Lord would not acknowledge anyone as his disciple, who would neglect to do it; he warned his disciples that such cowardice would infallibly exclude them from the kingdom of Heaven.

How necessary then and indispensable, must a confession of Christ in this age be, when we have nothing to fear but the loss of some temporal interest, and the being stigmatized with some ignominious name! Truly, if we are ashamed to confess him, we may well be banished from his presence as the weakest and most contemptible of the human race! Mark 8:38.

Let this then be considered by all who would secure the salvation of their souls; they must openly confess their attachment to Christ, and must “follow him outside the camp, bearing his reproach.” A public acknowledging of him indeed will not supersede the necessity of internal piety; nor will the piety of the heart supersede the necessity of honoring Christ by an open profession of our faith; both are necessary in their place; and both must be combined by those who would derive any benefit from either.

Learn then from hence,

1. To value aright the privileges you enjoy.

The Jews were far exalted above the heathen; but we are no less exalted above them; for we have the substance, of which the Jews had only the shadow. But even among Christians also there is a great difference; some having the Gospel more fully and clearly opened to them than others. We pray God that the light which you enjoy may be improved by you; else it will leave you in a more deplorable state than Sodom and Gomorrah!

2. To guard against entertaining discouraging thoughts about the salvation of your souls.

Moses tells you that you have no occasion for such thoughts; and Paul guards you against the admission of them into your minds, “Say not in your heart,” who shall do such and such things for me? It is very common for people to think their salvation on one account or other is unattainable. But “what could God have done for us that he has not done?” or what provision do we need which he has not laid up in store for us? To say, ‘This salvation is not for me,’ is to contradict the Scriptures, and to “make God a liar.” Repeatedly is it said, that “whoever believes in Christ, and whoever shall call on his name—shall be saved.” It matters not whether he is a Jew or a Gentile, a greater sinner or a lesser sinner; for “God is rich unto all that call upon him,” whatever guilt they may have contracted, or whatever discouragements they may labor under, Romans 10:11-13.

Put away then all unbelieving fears, and know, that, as the Gospel is revealed for the benefit of all, so it shall be effectual for all who believe and obey it!

Charles Simeon (1759-1836)