Delivered on Lord's-Day Morning, February 19, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon “Forever, O Lord, Your Word is settled in Heaven. Your faithfulness is unto all generations: You have established the earth and it abides. They continue this day according to Your ordinances: for all are Your servants. Unless Your Law had been my delights, I should then have perished in my affliction.” Psalm 119:89-92. EVEN in those Psalms which are not associated with any particular chapter of history, we can often trace out the trail of the writer’s experience and track his soul through its wanderings. His reflections become vivid with intense reality. The meditation now before us is evidently prompted by some event deeply carved on the writer’s memory. “Unless Your Law had been my delights, I should then have perished in my affliction.” We know nothing of the time or circumstance when the heart was terrified, when the nerves were shaken, when the weakness of nature asserted itself—the veil is wisely drawn over the sharp pains or sullen griefs that bowed the sufferer down and we are simply solaced with a song
celebrating his deliverance out of all his troubles and fears. Possibly his affliction was long, but certainly it reached a crisis so perilous that his life then trembled in the balance! He was then ripe for destruction, ready to have perished.
Moreover, it is noteworthy that whatever his trial may have been, whether it was a sickness or a disaster, or any
other manner of adversity, he refers to it as his own—he calls it, “my affliction.” It would ill become us, therefore, to pry
into the cause or fashion of his grief, or to ask any further questions. Quite likely I may be addressing some dear child of
God who is vexed with an affliction so personal and so peculiar that he feels it to be “his own,” and would deem it an
intrusion for another to interfere. Let us not intrude, for we should only increase the grief by our enquiries.
“My affliction” is an expression that bears a marked emphasis and has a tone entirely its own. I do not know
whether I am more struck with its pathos or its reticence. At the sound of such words, a stranger might well be touched
with pity, but a friend, however sympathizing, would shrink from prying into the secrets of a heart that so delicately
conceals its own bitterness. The one and only thing that the Psalmist was eager to tell us was the prescription that
soothed his pains and sustained his spirits. On mature reflection, he is confident that he would have perished under that
affliction if it had not been for certain comfortable and delightful reflections concerning God’s Word. You and I may, at
any time, be exposed to the same mental or spiritual depression, through one or other of those manifold sorrows which
enter so largely into Christian life. There are plenty of miry places on the way to Heaven and so it will be our wisdom to
diligently enquire how this good man passed through them.
I like to hear how any godly man has been comforted, for it comforts me. I take a deep interest in the simple tale of
any humble prisoner whose bonds the Lord has loosed. And I feel it a choice pleasure to chime in with songs of thanksgiving
which come from the lips of grateful suppliants whose cries the Lord has heard. Observe that the Psalmist appeals
to certain facts which he remembered. “Forever, O Lord, Your Word is settled in Heaven. Your faithfulness is unto all
generations: You have established the earth, and it abides,” etc. And then he refers to certain delights which he experienced
in reviewing these facts –“Unless Your Law had been my delights, I should have perished in my affliction.”
I. Here, then, we have strong consolation IN CERTAIN FACTS WHICH HE REMEMBERED. Fly to the mountains
when the enemy invades the land. Hide in the strongholds of your God!
1. Our first comfort is the eternal existence of God which is implied in the continuance of His faithfulness and power. “The Lord lives” is the plea of souls harassed and haunted by foes without and fears within. Observe, I pray you, that
there is nothing casual or accidental in the tone of the Psalmist’s meditation, as if some stray thought had darted a ray of
light into the mind of one who was dreary and downcast. His joy is not like a flower that blooms in the desert, or a bird
that chirps merrily amidst the frost of winter—he has abundant and even overflowing causes for joy! His confidence runs on the grand old classic lines which Inspiration has hallowed. When Moses was appalled by the frailty of man, he uttered
his majestic ode to the eternity of God. “Lord, You have been our dwelling place in all generations.”
So here, the eternal existence of God is the first fact to which the afflicted saint clings. According to the most eminent
scholars, the opening sentence should be read—“Forever You are, O Lord; Your Word is settled in Heaven.” The
second verse, as you may notice, is divided into two sentences, and the poetic parallelism requires a like arrangement in
this verse, if the poetic rule is carried out. But this would not form two stanzas unless we read the first four words as a
distinct sentence—“Forever, O Lord, You are.” Whether this revision is warranted or not does not matter, for, as I have
already said, the fact is implied in the wording of the authorized version. God is. He is forever the same and His years are
throughout all generations. This is a very simple Truth of God—who but a madman or a fool ever doubted it?
If there is a God, He must be self-existent and eternal. But it is from simple things that sweetest consequences flow.
Bread is simple enough—you do not require some eminent chief of the kitchen to teach you the art of making bread. But
see what multitudes of people are fed upon that simple article of food! And so the simplest Truth of God is the most precious,
for it sustains many more than that daintier form of Truth which may be only suitable for men of strong minds or
of great experience in the things of God. In the song of Moses—that song which is linked with the song of the Lamb—
we have an apostrophe that language could hardly surpass. “Who is like unto You, O Lord, among the gods (or mighty
ones)? Who is like You, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?”
To what lofty heights of expression did the holy Prophets often rise in proclaiming the grandeur of the Lord’s being,
the magnitude of His works, the sovereignty of His will and the faithfulness of His promises to His people! And yet the
wealth of imagery that Isaiah or Ezekiel could call up, or the melting tones that Jeremiah could utter, can but faintly
display the excellence of Him that fills all in all! They rehearse His praise to whom, alone, all worship is due, in words
that swell and sound forth like the music of the spheres. They assail the heathen idolatry which offered its incense to engraved
images, or they expose the heartless treachery that withheld homage from the true God. They denounce the unbelief
which limited the Holy One of Israel by distrusting His words. In any of these cases, if we lend them our ears, they
succeed in elevating our hearts from the groveling thoughts of our fleeting life to the infinite perfection of Jehovah’s essential Deity, of whom (to accommodate the idea of His everlasting existence to our tiny computations) we are told “that
one day is as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day.”
My Brothers and Sisters, we are compassed about with God on every side. In Him we live, move and have our being.
His self-existent might is our never-failing mercy. Observe, I pray you, that this simple Truth of God is the most sublime
fact which the mind of a rational creature can aspire to lay hold of. God lives—lives as God! Get a grip of this vital reality
and it will send a glow of health through every faculty of yours soul! “Believe in the Lord, your God; so shall you be
established: believe His Prophets; so shall you prosper.” And unless God is in all your thoughts you cannot be a godly
man! Nothing happens to the Lord by chance. What can threaten His existence, thwart His purpose, weaken His power,
dim the clearness of His eyes, diminish the tenderness of His heart, or distract the wisdom of His judgment? “You are the
same, and of Your years there is no end.”
Then remember, child of God, you are a sheep that can never lose its Shepherd. You are a child that can never lose its
Father. “I will not leave you orphans,” said Jesus, and therein He did but reveal the Eternal Father’s heart. In direst
straits we still have a Father in Heaven! When a widow, who had long been inconsolable, sat moaning for the loss of her
husband, her little child plucked her by her gown, and said, “Mother, is God dead?” That question served to rebuke the
mother’s fretfulness and to remind her that she was not without a Guardian and Friend. “Your Maker is your Husband;
the Lord of Hosts is His name.” It opened up to her a well of refreshment, which, like Hagar in the wilderness, she had
not before been able to see. Listen, child of God—you can lose your goods, but you cannot lose your God! Like Jonah,
you can see your gourd withered; but your God remains! You may lose your land, but not your Lord; your savings, but
not your Savior! Even if it came to the worst and you were left, awhile, as one forsaken of God, Himself, yet still you
would not lose Him, for, like the Lord Jesus on the Cross, you would still call Him, “My God, my God.”
“The Lord is my portion,” says my soul—a portion that never can be alienated—upon which there is the entail of
an irreversible decree that by two immutable things, in which it is impossible for God to lie, we who have fled for refuge
to lay hold upon the hope set before us, might have strong consolation. He lives! He reigns! This God is our God and He
shall be our Guide even unto death. Yes, it is a simple fact that God is, but it is a fact that may often recur to us with singular freshness.
I met an eminent servant of God one day in the street, a man whose name, were I to mention it, you would all honor.
He was in a rather gloomy and desponding mood that morning and in the course of our conversation he told me that he
believed the powers of evil in this country would get the upper hand and that Christianity would be almost stamped out,
he feared, partly by Romanism and partly by infidelity. And that in all probability I should live to see the streets of London
run with blood while anarchy would riot as it did in the first French Revolution. He went on at such a rate that I felt
bound to remonstrate with him. So I told him that I was not easily scared by such evil prognostications, for I was persuaded
that God was not dead. This is our firm rock of hope—the reins of government are in the hands of the living
God—and the devil cannot frustrate His decrees, nor can events baffle His will!
When Herod, Pontius Pilate, the Gentiles and the people of Israel were gathered together against the Holy Child
Jesus whom the Lord had anointed, how little could they effect! They had it all their own way, or, at least, they thought
they had. How much did they really accomplish with their willful counsels and their wicked hands? Hear it distinctly.
They (these emissaries of Satan) did whatever God’s hand and God’s counsel determined before to be done! And thus it
will always be! The adversaries of the Lord are exceedingly fierce, but you and I who believe in God can afford to smile at
their folly. If it must be so, let the powers of darkness have all the vantage ground they seek—and they will reap all the
greater defeat. “He that sits in the heavens shall laugh. The Lord shall have them in derision. Yet have I set My king
upon My holy hill of Zion.”
The Church, they tell us, is in danger. That depends upon whose church it is! But if it is the Church of our Lord Jesus
Christ, the gates of Hell shall not prevail against her. Let us, in this, then, be joyous and confident! If Luther could sing
when the battle had but just begun—while yet the demon of the seven hills had temporal sway—why should you and I be
hanging our harps on the willows, now that the fight has made the dragon bleed? Come, let us sing unto the Lord, for He
has triumphed gloriously! The horse and his rider He has thrown into the sea. And as for these Amalekites, that meet us
on the road and would arrest our progress, let us, like Jehoshaphat, appoint singers unto the Lord to go before our army
and meet them with hallelujahs! Let us sing—Arise, O God, and make Your enemies flee before You like chaff before the
wind! Yes, let them be as the fat of rams burnt upon the altar, for You, Lord, are King, and You shall reign forever and
ever! This is a flowing well of comfort.
2. Closely allied to the fact of God’s eternal Being is this other fact of the immutability of His Word. “Your Word is
settled in Heaven.” The truth of the proposition will occur to you as simple and obvious. “Thus says the Lord, the
Heaven is My Throne, and the earth is My footstool.” His Word is settled in Heaven and issued from Heaven, the seat of
His government, and it cannot be altered on earth, this distant colony of His empire! We refer to God’s Word, therefore,
in grievous difficulties with great confidence, because we know that every statement it contains is reliable. God’s Word
can never change. It is established.
Some persons have no settled residence. They are always moving to and fro, restless, finding no anchorage. But
God’s Word is not fixed on earth where things are always on the move—it is settled in Heaven among the infinities and
eternities that change not. “Forever, O Lord, Your Word is settled in Heaven.” The design and purpose of God are fixed,
not fickle. He knows what He intends. You and I often begin with a design from which we are bound to deviate as we see
something that would be better, or as we see that our better thing is not attainable and we are obliged to be content with
something inferior. But in God’s case there can be no defect of judgment which would require amendment and there can
be no defect of power which would drive Him from His first determination. God has a plan, depend upon it! It were an
insult to the supreme intellect if we supposed that He worked at random, without plan or method.
To some of us it is a Truth which we never doubt, that God has one boundless purpose which embraces all things—
both things which He permits and things which He ordains. Without, for a moment, denying the freedom of the human
will, we still believe that the supreme wisdom foresees, also, the curious twisting of the human will and overrules all for
His own ends. God knows and numbers all the inclinations and devices of men—and His plan, in its mighty sweep, takes
them all into account! From that plan He never swerves. What He has resolved to do He will do. The settled purpose of
His heart shall stand forever sure. Of what use could the opposition of angels or of men be when Omnipotence asserts its
supremacy? As you walk down your garden on an autumn morning, the spiders have spun their webs across the path, but
you scarcely know it, for as you move along, the threads vanish before you.
So is it with every scheme, however skillfully contrived, that would arrest the fulfillment of the Divine purpose! The
will of God must be done! Without the semblance of effort, He molds all events into His chosen form. In the sphere of mind as well as in that of matter, His dominion is absolute! One man cannot immediately operate on the will of another
man so as to change its course, although intermediately he may propound reasons which, by their effect on the understanding,
may completely alter the inclination of His fellow creature. But this is a true Proverb—“The king’s heart is in
the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water: He turns it wherever He wills.”
God can bend the thoughts of men as easily as we can lay on the pipes and turn the water into any cistern we choose.
His purpose is settled forever in Heaven! So, too, are His Covenant and His Plan. Brothers and Sisters, I could imagine
God changing His mode of procedure, but I could not imagine His changing His Covenant! He has entered into Covenant
with Christ on our behalf—the Sacrifice that makes it valid has been slain—and now the Covenant is ordered in all
things and sure! Every jot and tittle of it is signed and sealed and ratified by the death and the Resurrection of our glorious
Surety and blessed Representative! From that Covenant God will never turn aside. The Covenant of Works we broke,
but God kept it, for He did what He said He would do.
The Covenant of Grace we cannot break, for it is made with Another, on our behalf, who has already fulfilled it, so
that the Covenant of Grace stands, now, towards the saints without an, “if,” or, “but,” or “perhaps,” and consists simply
in unconditional promises of, “I will,” and, “you shall.” Read that Covenant for yourselves and see. Whether you
choose to take the copy of it in Ezekiel, or the copy of it presented by the Apostle in the Epistle to the Hebrews, there it
stands—a Covenant without conditions, enduring forever, never to be changed! Oh, how I rejoice in the sure mercies of
David! “This is as the waters of Noah unto Me,” says the Lord, “for as I have sworn that the waters of Noah should no
more go over the earth, so have I sworn that I will not be angry with you, or rebuke you.” Now, blessed be His name, the
Covenant is settled in Heaven!
Then there is another matter which is settled, namely, God’s promise and the power to carry it out. I spoke of the
promise being settled because it is virtually a constituent element of the Covenant, but now I mean that Gospel promise
which has been proclaimed to the sons of men. “He that believes and is baptized shall be saved”—that shall stand good
throughout all generations. “He that believes in Him has everlasting life”—that shall always be true. “Him that comes
to Me I will in no wise cast out”—that shall never alter till the day of doom. God will not reverse the things that have
gone forth out of His lips! It was proclaimed by Christ, Himself! It was testified by His Apostles. It was ratified by the
descent of the Holy Spirit! The promises of the Gospel are settled in Heaven and, therefore, the preaching of the Gospel is
full of power among the sons of men.
Go and preach it, dear Brothers! Go and tell it, dear Sisters! Never be afraid that you will make a mistake if you proclaim
free Grace and dying love! God has not spoken in secret in a dark place of the earth. The salvation of souls shall be
the evidence of the efficacy of the Gospel till every blood-bought one is brought by its power to Jesus’ feet. There is no
change in the charge that is committed to our keeping—“Your Word is settled in Heaven.” Moreover, the doctrine of the
Gospel as well as the promise of the Gospel is settled in Heaven. I do not know where I shall drift if I once leave the old
channel to wind about among sandbanks. Certain of my Brothers delight to sail down a river which has neither buoys
nor fixed lights, but plenty of ever-shifting sands! They do not steer according to any chart, but according to their own
heaving of the lead, from time to time, and very heavy lead it is to heave!
They say that they are thinking out their doctrines! I would be greatly sorry to have to think out the road to Heaven
without the guiding star of Heaven’s Grace or the map of the Word of God! Not Gospel preachers but Gospel makers
these men aspire to be. And their message comes forth, not as the Gospel of the Grace of God, but as the gospel of the
imagination of men—a gospel concocted in their own kitchen—not taught them by the Holy Spirit! It is the reverse of
being “settled in Heaven.” It is not even settled in the mind of its inventor! I pity the hearers, as well as the preachers, of a precarious gospel! That which I preached to you in the beginning of my ministry, I shall preach to you, by God’s Grace,
till this tongue shall be silent in the grave! I know the doctrines better, but I know no better doctrines!
There are certain things indelibly impressed on my mind, of a surety fixed, definite, true and beyond doubt. As to
ideas that are dubious, concerning which we need to be diffident—I leave my Brothers to discuss them. Sentiments fluctuate
so constantly in this 19th Century that I suppose we shall soon require to have barometers to show us the variations
of doctrine as well as the prospects of the weather! We shall have to consult quarterly reviews to see what style of religious
thought is predominant—and then we shall have to accommodate our sermons to the dictum of the last wise man
who has chosen to make a special fool of himself! As for myself, I shall continue to be unfashionable and abide where I am. “Stick in the mud,” says somebody. “Standing on the Rock,” say I! No, if you will—grown to the Immovable
Rock—not to be turned aside.
If this Gospel is a lie, I grieve that I ever preached it and I will never preach it again. If it is true, truth is not a thing of almanacs and quarterlies. If true in the year, “two,” it is as true in the year, “1882.” And if it is not true today, it never was and never will be true, for the Truth of God does not come and go and be and cease to be. Fall you back, O
simple hearts, upon this blessed fact—God’s Word is “settled in Heaven.” It cannot be settled at Oxford, or settled at
Cambridge, or at any other university! But it is settled in Heaven. Go to Heaven’s Book and read Heaven’s Word under
the teaching of Heaven’s own Spirit. And you shall go from strength to strength in the knowledge—not of what may be
true, but of what is true, having the Revelation of God to confirm it—an authority from which there can be no appeal!
3. The third thing is the faithfulness of the fulfillment of that Word of God. “Forever, O Lord, Your Word is settled
in Heaven. Your faithfulness is unto all generations.” Those men who have trusted God’s Word in any generation have
always found it true. In Apostolic times, or further back than that, in David’s age, in the era of Moses, in the time of
Abraham, in the days of Noah, in the life of Abel—whoever has trusted in God—has found that He has heard prayer,
that He has been the Rewarder of all them that diligently seek Him!
The Covenant, as I have already said, does not change, and the Truth of God does not change, and though the generations
greatly differ in the judgment of men, I greatly question whether God thinks them different. One generation is as
like another as successive waves of the sea. We think we grow much wiser, but it is not a very strong proof that we are
wiser because we think we are! I very much question all this fiddle-faddle about the progress of the 19th Century. True, we
rush over the country by steam instead of traveling by broad-wheeled wagons, and we get smashed up all the more readily!
We now go all round the world to buy a bit of bread—we used to grow it in our own fields—and it was just as good,
then, as it is now that it comes from afar.
There were good people then. There are good people now. I will not decry whatever progress has been made in machinery
and the arts and so on. I thank God for it all, but about the improvement in ourselves—that is the point! I imagine
that we bear a striking resemblance to our fathers. When I read the story of the children of Israel in the wilderness, I
think I see their sins and their follies, their murmurs and complaints repeated in our own lives. But whether or not the
race has changed, there has been no change in God’s dealings with the race. Whenever a Believer has rested in Him, He
has fulfilled His Word to that Believer to the letter. This has always been the rule of the Kingdom of God—“According
to your faith, so is it unto you.”
Were I to enlarge upon all the vicissitudes through which God’s servants have passed, we should have to come to the
one conclusion, “Many are the afflictions of the righteous; but the Lord delivers him out of them all.” That is so today as
it was thousands of years ago. O Beloved, this is the mercy—that God is still faithful! When I used to hear my grandfather
tell of the faithfulness of God to him, my young heart was encouraged to trust in God. When I have heard my father
tell of the faithfulness of God to him, I have been strengthened in my confidence in my father’s God. But I can tell the
same tales, myself and, perhaps, I can record more instances than they of God’s goodness to those that put their trust in
Him. It will be the same with our children and with our children’s children.
O tried Brothers and Sisters, the Lord will be faithful to you as He has been to me! The Lord will not fail you. Therefore
be not discouraged. As your days, so shall your strength be. Underneath you are the everlasting arms. You shall
conquer, however hot the fight may become. Only stay yourself upon the Lord and wait patiently for Him. Fret not
yourself, in anything, to do evil, for you shall be delivered and God shall be glorified in you.
4. But I must pass on to the next fact worth considering, and that is the perpetuity of the Word of God in Nature. To
this the Psalmist alludes in the following words—“You have established the earth and it abides. They continue this day
according to Your ordinances, for all are Your servants.” By the Word of God were the heavens made and it is by His
Word that all things consist. We talk of the force of gravitation and the laws of Nature, but in very deed the one force in
Nature is that God spoke. The Word of the Lord is the power by which all things hold together and remain in their
places.
Look at the earth. We talk of the pillars of it—the columns upon which it leans—but what does it rest upon? Our
modern science does not weaken the point of the text, it rather strengthens it. The earth rests upon nothing! There it is,
floating in space, and yet it has never drifted from its place or turned aside from its proper orbit! There are little quivers
within its own bosom, but it does not rush away from the place where God ordained it to be. It continues its course around the sun with immutable fidelity. This world is rather larger than you are and requires more power to keep it in its
place than is requisite to keep you in your place. Yet there it is! Shall not the Lord hold up His servant and keep him from
wandering? All the machinery in the world could not turn the globe on its axis or move it in its orbit. I suppose that no
angelic force would be adequate to bring about such results as God accomplishes simply by His will. He establishes the
world and it abides.
Let us be confident, then. Whenever God means to break His Word and change His ordinances, we may expect to
find this earth go steaming into the sun, or else it will rush far off into space, nobody knows where. But while it keeps its
place, what have you and I to worry about? Is it not the sign that the Lord will keep us, also? Has He kept the stars,
which are the major? Shall He not much more keep us, who are the minor? What are we but small specks, grains of dust
things scarcely to be seen? And yet we talk about the great power of God that we shall need to keep us in our place! Let us
cease from doubt as we see this huge world kept like a sapphire in its golden setting by the Divine hands. Nor, Brothers
and Sisters, is it this world alone, vast though it may seem to us, yet a little planet amidst the larger spheres! The Lord
upholds all worlds comprehended in one vast system. “They continue this day according to Your ordinances.”
Every star maintains its place. “One sun by day, by night ten thousand shine,” yet these constellations and all other
creations of God’s hands observe, each one, the ordinance of Heaven! God does not swerve from His own statutes, nor
does He suffer the shining hosts to break their ranks. They may not rush about in wild confusion. They are the sentinels
of Heaven. He calls them all by name, as He musters and marshals their serried ranks. Are they not all His servants, waiting
at His feet as maidens attend their mistress? They all do His bidding! Ought not this cheer our hearts and inspire us
with courage? If the heavenly bodies—as we are known to call those inanimate creatures of the Most High—are upheld
by His power and disposed of by His wisdom, why should we discredit the Omnipotence which preserves our souls, or the
Omniscience which orders our steps? If yon arch stands without buttress, cannot my faith rest on the promise, though no
means of support are visible?
Those mighty orbs to which we have been referring are under God’s Law and subject to the Divine statutes—alike in
respect to the motions they perform and to time influence they produce. All the creatures obey their Maker except man!
There is no rebellion, to our knowledge, anywhere in the universe except among fallen angels and fickle mortals like ourselves.
What, then, am I troubled about? Opposing forces cannot injure me. If God wills, He can send a squadron of angels
to help me. He can bid the stars in their courses fight for me if it is necessary. All are His servants. The perpetuity of
the Laws of Nature is a proof of the continuance of the Word of God. Strengthen your confidence as to things not seen by
the steadfastness of the things that are—
“His very Word of Grace is strong 5. There is one other fact which I will only touch upon—the perpetuity of the Word of God in experience. “Unless,”
said the Psalmist, “Your Law had been my delights, I should then have perished in my affliction.” We know, by experience,
what he means. The trouble is a thing of the past, but the trembling is still present to our memory. We were mercifully
delivered when we might have been utterly destroyed! My Brothers and Sisters, that same Word of God which has
made the earth keep its place, has, up to now, been sufficient to make you keep your place. Some of you have passed
through deep waters and yet you have not been drowned. I have a sympathy with young people, when they are doubting,
because they have not seen the mighty works of which their fathers have told them. But if you have been sustained for 40
years in the wilderness, you ought to know the faithfulness of God—and I am ashamed of you when you get disheartened
and discourage your Brethren.
Most of all, I am ashamed of myself whenever I fall into despondency. Admiral Drake had been round the world. He
had survived all sorts of storms and battles. One day, when coming up the Thames, he was caught in such an ugly wind
that he was likely to be wrecked, and the admiral cried, “No, no, I have been round the world, and I do not intend to be
drowned in a ditch.” I want you to be animated by the same courage, for the Lord will not leave you! Surely He who has
preserved you in all your previous distresses will not desert you in your present adversities! If you had not taken delight
in God’s Word, you would long ago have perished in your affliction! Look back upon the past, then, and see that God has been sufficient for you up till now. What reason have you for the suspicion that He will not befriend you even to the
end?
II. Having thus drawn your attention to the facts that the Psalmist recounts, I pass on, in the second place, to speak
of THE DELIGHTS WHICH HE EXPERIENCED IN THE TIME OF HIS TROUBLE. “Man is born unto trouble, as
the sparks fly upward,” said one of Job’s comforters, though I fear Job got little enough of comfort out of that sage reflection.
Those troubles, however, that are common to men, are often the occasion of uncommon anguish to persons of
sensitive nature. Some men and women receive a shock from which they never recover. They gradually droop and languish,
health and happiness, alike, failing them. It is in such seasons of acute distress, when this world has no palliative to
offer, that God’s Word can minister infinite delights to soothe the distractions and heal the sorrows of the heart. These
Psalms—most of them written by David, and the rest written by disciples of the David school—compass almost every
conceivable form of adversity to which our poor suffering humanity is exposed.
And there is another thing which I am sure you will find it sweet to muse upon. It is this—in all cases the sigh was
turned into a song before it was admitted into the sacred calendar. This is a Law of the Kingdom of Heaven over which I
linger with unspeakable delight! In fact, I can take a survey of your troubles, as well as of my own, with much composure
when I perceive that they are all capable of being turned into joy! Our sympathies are continually stirred by the bereavements
one and another of us are called to suffer. The ties of kindred and friendship are being broken all around. Each day
has its obituary. This goes on from generation to generation. But the sharp pang of losing those we love is in no wise
lightened by the fact that it is so general.
Some of us today live in dread. Others have drawn down the blinds. He is gone on whom you leaned for succor. She
has been snatched from your side, of whom you could say that none upon earth excelled her. Your nurslings, the flowers
that bloomed around your hearth, have faded. I hear your desolate moan, but there is music not far off! All creatures are
shadows, yet there is substance. At length you turn to these Scriptures and as you read, “The Lord lives; and blessed be
my Rock; and exalted be the God of the rock of my salvation,” your soul revives! You quit the treacherous sea and reach
the solid rock when you repeat the words, “Lord, You have been our dwelling place in all generations.” Alas, dear
mourner, your thoughts have wandered, like the dove from out the ark, over the watery waste. But now, again, Noah’s
hand encloses you. There you have calm and peaceful rest. Here is the pillow on which your aching head can lie at ease—
“You are the same; of Your years there is no end.” Such delights can sustain a sinking soul.
David was oftentimes in such a condition that everything seemed shifting and inconstant. Nothing about him was
fixed. Those whom he had most trusted seemed to be his worst enemies. His fortunes changed. He was driven from the
home of his father and from the palace of the king to wander in the wilderness and lodge in caves of the earth. And he
became distrustful, at times, of his own destiny, for his heart was heavy, even though, once, he had been the happiest of
the sons of men! Oh then, this was his delight—he fell back upon the eternal settlements! “Your Word is settled,” said
he. “I have no settlement. I have to go off to Gath to try and find a shelter, but every place seems to cast me out. The men
of Keilah will deliver me up. I am hunted and harried by Saul. Nothing is settled for me, but O, my God, Your Word is
settled.” Now peace comes like a river to his spirit. His delights are in the Word of God and his heart is full of holy glee.
So, too, sometimes he felt that his own faith failed him—and that is a desperate failure. When your vision is obscured
and you walk in darkness, you are sorely molested by doubts and haunted with fears. You can believe nothing.
You can hardly grip at anything that others believe in—this is terrible! Your own frailty, your own unfaithfulness to
God, your own waywardness, your own fickleness disquiet you with feverish dreams and waste every particle of your
strength. Then what a grand comfort it is to stand upon the Divine faithfulness— “Your faithfulness, O God, is unto all
generations. You have not changed.” Oh, try, dear troubled ones, and may God the Holy Spirit help you in the trying, to
get a hold of this delightful Truth of God! And while you mourn your own unfaithfulness, rejoice in the faithfulness of
God and the immutability of His Covenant.
David’s Bible was of much smaller compass than ours, but there was one passage in it which I dare say he often read
and deeply pondered. It was that which tells us how, when Abraham was lonely and desponding, “The Lord brought him
forth abroad, and said, Look now toward Heaven and count the stars, if you are able to number them.” How often have
those ordinances of Heaven sent beams of light into the heart of the spiritual mariner while he has been heaving to and
fro on the troubled sea of life! So did David look right up to the deep of Heaven and rest in God, the Stable and Abiding!
Last of all, when none were his servants and all helpers failed him—when he was alone and none would do him homage,
he found comfort in this thought—that all are God’s servants, that all the powers of Nature wait upon the princes
of the blood royal and do homage to the children of the King of kings! You are not poor! Your Father is rich! You are
not deserted! God is with you! You are not without helpers! The angels are bid to keep watch about you! Oh, that I could
touch the mourner’s downcast eyes and let him see the mountain full of horses of fire and chariots of fire round about
Elisha! Oh, that I could touch the heart of some of God’s desponding servants and make them see how God is working for
them, even now, and how surely they shall be helped!
Perhaps you remember the story of a conversation between the burgomaster in Hamburg and holy Mr. Oncken when
he first began to preach. The burgomaster said to him, “Do you see that little finger, Sir? While I can move that little
finger, I will put the Baptists down.” Mr. Oncken said, “With all respect to your little finger, Mr. Burgomaster, I would
ask you another question. Do you see that great arm?” “No, I do not see it.” “Just so,” said Mr. Oncken, “but I do, and
while that great arm moves, you cannot put us down! And if it comes to a conflict between your little finger and that
great arm, I know how it will end.”
It was my great joy to see the burgomaster sitting in the Baptist Chapel, at Hamburg, among the audience that listened
to my sermon at the opening of the new Chapel. The little finger had willingly given up its opposition and the
great arm was made bare among us. Trust in the Lord forever, for in the Lord Jehovah there is everlasting strength! God
bring us all to that, both saint and sinner, for Christ’s sake. Amen. |