Delivered on Lord's-Day Morning, August 13, 1882, by C. H. Spurgeon “I waited patiently for the Lord: and He inclined unto me, and heard my cry. He brought me up also out of a horrible pit, out of the miry clay, and set my feet upon a rock, and established my going. And He has put a new song in my mouth, even praise unto our God: many shall see it, and fear, and shall trust in the Lord.” Psalm 40:1-3. This passage has been used with great frequency as the expression of the experience of the people of God and I think it has been very rightly so used. It is a very accurate picture of the way in which sinners are raised up from despair to hope and salvation—and of the way in which saints are brought out of deep troubles and made to sing of Divine love and power. Yet I am not certain that the first verse could be truthfully uttered by all of us. I question, indeed, whether any of us could thus speak. Could we say—“I waited patiently for the Lord.” Do you think, Brothers and Sisters, that it might rather read—“I waited impatiently for the Lord,” in the case of most of us? All the rest may stand true, but this would
need to be modified.
We could hardly speak in our own commendation if we considered our conduct in the matter of patience, for that is,
alas, still a scarce virtue upon the face of the earth! If we read the Psalm through, we shall see that it was not written to
describe the experience of God’s people, exclusively. Secondarily we may regard it as David’s language, but in the first
instance a greater than David is here. The first Person who uttered these words was the Messiah and that is quite clear if
you read the Psalm through, for we fall upon such language as this—“Sacrifice and offering You did not desire; My ears
have You opened: burnt offering and sin offering have You not required. Then said I, Lo, I come: in the volume of the
Book it is written of Me, I delight to do Your will, O My God: yes, Your Law is within My heart.”
We need not say with the Ethiopian, “Of whom speaks the Prophet? Of himself or of some other?” For we are led at
once by the plainest indications to see that he is not speaking of himself, but of our Lord. And if we needed confirmation
of this we get it in Hebrews 10, where Paul expressly quotes this passage as referring to the Lord Jesus. To Him, indeed,
alone, of all men can it, with accuracy, be applied! So this morning I shall have to show that this text of ours is most fit to
be the language of the Lord, our Representative and Covenant Head. When I have shown this, you will then see how we
can use the same expressions, because we are in Him.
Each Believer becomes a mirror in which is reflected the experience of our Lord, but it would be ill for us to be so
taken up with the mere reflection as to forget the express Image by which this experience is formed in us. I shall ask you,
then, at this time, to observe our Divine Lord when in His greatest trouble. Notice, first, our Lord’s behavior—“I
waited patiently for the Lord; and He inclined unto Me, and heard My cry.” Then consider, secondly, our Lord’s deliverance,
expressed by the phrase, “He brought Me up also out of a horrible pit, out of the miry clay,” and so forth. Then let
us think, thirdly, of the Lord’s reward for it—“Many shall see, and fear, and trust in the Lord”—that is His great end
and objective—and in it He sees of the travail of His soul and is satisfied.
We shall close, fourthly, by perceiving the Lord’s likeness in all His saved ones, for they, also, are brought up from
the Pit of destruction, and a new song is put into their mouths. He is not ashamed to call them Brethren, since in each
one of them His own experience is repeated, though upon a smaller scale.
I. First, let us think of our Lord’s behavior. “I waited patiently for the Lord.” Here, we greatly need the teaching of the Holy Spirit—may it be given us abundantly. First, our Lord’s conduct when He was under the smarting rod was that
of waiting. He waited upon the Lord all His life and this waiting became more conspicuous in His passion and death. He
went down into Gethsemane and there He prayed earnestly, but with sweet submission, for He said, “Nevertheless, not as
I will, but as You will.” Complete submission was the essential spirit of His prayer. He rose up from prayer all crimson
with His bloody sweat and He went to meet His foes, delivering Himself up voluntarily to be led as a sheep to the slaughter.
He did not unsheathe the sword as Peter did, much less did He flee, like His disciples, but He waited upon the will of
the Most High, enduring all things till the Father should give Him deliverance. When they took Him before Annas and
Caiaphas, and Pilate and Herod, hurrying Him from bar to bar, how patiently He kept silence, though false witnesses
appeared against Him. Like a sheep before her shearers He was dumb, submitting Himself without a struggle. In the Omnipotence
of patience, He held His peace even from good, because it was so written of Him. When they led Him away to
crucifixion through the streets of Jerusalem, He did not even encourage the lamentations of the sympathizing women
who surrounded Him, but in His wondrous patience He said, “Daughters of Jerusalem, weep not for Me.”
He did not refuse to bear His Cross, or to let the Cross bear Him. He did not complain of contempt and contumely,
since these were appointed Him. When they nailed Him to the tree and there He hung in the burning sun, tortured, fevered,
agonizing—the words that escaped Him were not those of murmuring and repining, but those of pity, pain, patience
and submission. Till He bowed His head and gave up the ghost, He bowed His whole being to His Father’s will,
waiting His time and pleasure. He steadily took a long draft of the appointed cup and drained it to the bitter end. His
eyes were unto the Lord as the eyes of servants are to the hands of their masters. He waited in service, in hope, in resignation
and in confidence. He knew that God would help Him and deliver Him.
He knew that His head would be raised on high above the sons of men, but still He waited for the Father’s time and,
meanwhile, made Himself of no reputation and took upon Himself the form of a Servant—and as a Servant yielded all
His strength to the work which was given Him to do. He was willing, in the hour of His passion, to be treated as the scum
and scorn of all mankind! Nor did He hurry the hour when all the shame and scorn should blossom into Glory and
honor. He went down in His waiting, even, to the utmost of self-denial and truly proved that He came not to do His own
will, but the will of Him that sent Him. Never man served and waited like this Man!
Our text adds to this word, “waited,” the word, “patiently.” “I waited patiently.” If you would see patience, look
not at Job on the dunghill, but look at Jesus on the Cross! Job, the most patient of men, was assuredly impatient at the
same time, but this blessed Lord of ours gave Himself up completely and showed not the slightest sign of repining. Not a
speck of impatience can be detected in the crystal stream of our Lord’s submission! His soul was all melted and it all
flowed into the mold of the Father’s will—no dross was in or about Him—nothing refused to melt and to run into the
mold. One would have supposed that He would have spoken an angry word to Judas, who betrayed Him. Instead of
which He gently asked of him, “Friend, why are you here?”
It would not have seemed out of place if He had upbraided the Jews who so falsely accused Him, or the rulers who so
unjustly treated Him. But here is the patience of the Saintly One—He was perfect master of His own Spirit. His answer
to His murderers was the prayer, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.” So meek and lowly in heart
was He that to men He gave no sharp replies. His answers were all steeped in gentleness. Take, for example, His word to
the High Priest—“If I have spoken evil, bear witness of the evil; but if well, why do you smite Me?” They sat down
around the Cross and mocked Him, jeered at Him, insulted Him and made mirth even of His cries and prayers! But He
did not utter a single word of rebuke, much less did He leap from the Cross to dash His mockers to pieces and prove by
their destruction that He was, indeed, the mighty Son of God.
“I waited patiently,” He says. No thought or word or deed of impatience can be charged upon Him! Waiting, He
waited and waited more. We are in such a hurry when we are in trouble—we hasten to escape from it at once—every
minute seems an hour and every day an age. “Help me speedily, O my God!” is the natural cry of the child of God under
the rod! But our Savior was in no ill haste to get from the chastisement which came upon Him for our sakes—He was at
leisure in His woe. So thoroughly was He resolved to do His Father’s will that even on the morning of His Resurrection
He arose with deliberation and quit the grave in order, folding His grave clothes and laying the napkin by itself. He
steadily persevered in all His work of holiness and sorrow of Sacrifice, never accepting deliverance till His work was
done. Patiently He endured to have His ear bored to the doorpost, to have His head encircled with thorns, His cheeks
disdained with spit, His back furrowed with the lash, His hands and feet nailed to the wood and His heart pierced with
the spear! In His body on the tree, patience was written out in crimson characters.
Now, this was necessary for the completeness of His Atonement. No expiation could have been made by an impatient
Savior. Only a perfect obedience could satisfy the Law of God. Only an unblemished Sacrifice could put away our sins.
There must not, therefore, be about our Substitute a trace of resistance to the Father’s will, nor as a Sacrifice must He
struggle against the cords, or turn His head away from the sacrificial knife. In truth, His was willing—patiently doing
and suffering the Divine Will. “He gave His back to the smiters and His cheeks to them that plucked off the hair: He hid
not His face from shame and spitting.” “I waited patiently for the Lord,” He says, and you know, Brothers and Sisters,
how true was the declaration.
But while the Savior thus waited, and waited patiently, we must not forget that He waited prayerfully, for the text
speaks of a cry which He lifted up, and of God’s inclining Himself to it. That patience which does not pray is obstinacy! A
soul silent to God is apt to be sullen rather than submissive. A stoical patience hardens itself against grief and asks no
deliverance—but that is not the patience which God loves—it is not the patience of Christ. He used strong crying and
tears unto Him that was able to save Him from death. Let Gethsemane tell of that wrestling which infinitely excelled the
wrestling of Jacob—Jabbok is outdone by Kedron! His was a wrestling, not to sweat, alone, but unto sweat of blood! He
sweats who works for bread, the staff of life, but He sweats blood who works for life, itself.
What prayers those must have been under such a fearful physical, mental and spiritual agony which were so fervent
that they brought an angel from the Throne of God, and yet, so submissive that they are the model of resignation! He
agonized as earnestly as if He sought His own will and yet He wholly resigned Himself to the Father, saying, “Lo, I come:
in the volume of the Book it is written of Me, I delight to do Your will, O My God.” Our Lord was always praying—
there never was a moment in His life in which He was not in full communion with God, unless we except the period when
He cried, “Why have You forsaken Me?” He did often go aside to pray a more special prayer, but yet, even when He
spoke to the people; even when He faced His foes, His soul was still in constant fellowship with His Father. But ah, when
He came between the upper and the nether millstones—when this good Olive was ground in the olive press and all the oil
of His life was extracted from Him—then it was that His strong crying and tears came up before the Lord, His God, and
He was heard in that He feared!
Now, Brothers and Sisters, look at your Pattern and see how far short you have come of it! At least, I will remember
with regret how far short I have come of it! Have we waited? Have we not been in too great a hurry? Has it not been too
much our desire that the Lord might make His will like our will rather than make our will like His? Have you not had a
will of your own, sometimes, and a strong will, too? Have you not been as the bullock unaccustomed to the yoke? Have
you not kicked against the pricks? You have not waited, but you have worried! Can we say that we waited patiently? Oh,
patience! Every man thinks he has it until he needs it! But only let his tender point be touched and you will see how little
patience he possesses. It is the fire which tires our supposed resignation and under that process much of our palace of patience
burns like wood, hay and stubble! Old crosses fit the shoulder, but let a new cross be laid upon us and we writhe
under it. Suffering is the vocation of a Christian, but most of us come short of our high calling. Our Lord Jesus has
joined together reigning and suffering, for we read of “the kingdom and patience of Jesus Christ.” He was the royal example
of patience, but what are we?
Remember, again, that Jesus prayed importunately while He waited—“being in an agony, He prayed more earnestly.”
Have we not, at time, restrained prayer? Have we not pleaded as an excuse for our feeble petitions the very facts
which ought to have been a spur to our earnestness? “I felt too ill to pray.” Could you not pray for health with all the
more fervency? “I felt too burdened to pray.” Should you not pray for help to bear your burden? Can we ever safely say
to ourselves, “I may be excused from supplication, now, for my sorrow is great.” Talk not so! Here is your balm and
benediction, your comfort and your cordial! Here is your strength and succor, your constancy and confidence! Even in
the midnight of the soul let us arise and pour out our hearts like water before the Lord. O tried Believer, get to your
knees and from above the Mercy Seat the Glory of the Lord shall shine forth upon you! Pray even as Jesus did and as all
His saints have done and so shall you, in patience, possess your soul.
In due time the Lord inclined to the afflicted Suppliant, listening to His moaning from the bottom of the pit—of
this it is high time for us to speak. Yet let us not leave this first point till we learn from the example of our Lord that patience is seen in waiting as well as in suffering. To bear a great weight for an hour or two is nothing compared with
carrying a load for many a day. Patience knows its letters, but waiting reads the page and praying rehearses it in the ears of
God! Let us add to our patience waiting—and to waiting—prayer.
II. We come, secondly, to consider our Lord’s deliverance. In due time, when Patience had had her perfect work and
prayer had, at last, prevailed, our suffering Lord was brought up, again, from the deeps of sorrow. His deliverance is set
forth under two images. First, it is represented as a bringing up out of a horrible pit. It is a terribly suggestive metaphor.
I have been in the dungeon in Rome in which, according to tradition, Peter and Paul were confined (though, probably,
they were never there at all).
It was, indeed, a horrible pit, for originally it had no entrance, but a round hole in the rock above. And when that
round hole at the top was blocked with a stone, not a ray of light nor a particle of fresh air could possibly enter. The
prisoners were let down into the cavern and they were left there. When once the opening was closed, they were cut off
from all communication with their fellow men. No being has ever been so cruel to man as man! Man is the worst of monsters
to his kind and his cruel inventions are many. He has not been content to leave his fellows their natural liberty, but
he built prisons and dug pits in which to shut up his victims!
At first they would place a man in a dry well merely for custody and confinement, or they would drop him into some
hollow cavern in the earth in which corn or treasure had been concealed. But afterwards, with greater ingenuity of malice,
they covered over the top of these pits so that the prisoners could not be partakers of God’s bountiful air, or the merciful
light of the sun, or the silver sheen of the moon. Covered all over and shut in, the captives were buried alive. Even in
modern times we have seen what they call oubliettes, or dungeons in which prisoners were immured, to be forgotten as
dead men out of mind, buried so as never to come forth, again. Such unfortunates as were doomed to enter these tombs of
living men bade farewell to hope. They were inhabitants of oblivion, dwellers in the land of death-shade, to remain apart
from their kind, cut off from memory.
These worst of dungeons may illustrate our text—“He brought Me up also out of a horrible pit.” In the original, we
get the idea of a crash, as when some mailed warrior in the midst of the battle stumbles into a pit and there he lies,
bruised and broken. And there is the thought of the fall of waters rushing strangely, furiously, mysteriously. The Hebrew
has it, “The pit of noises,” or as some render it, “the pit of destruction.” Such was the condition of our dear Redeemer
when He was bearing our sin and suffering in our place. Just notice, first, that our Lord was like a man put into a pit and
so made to be quite alone. Imagine yourself now confined in one of those caverns with a big stone rolled over the mouth
of it. There would be neither hearing nor answering.
Now you will know the dread solemnity of silence! You may speak, but no gentle whisper of sympathy will reach
your ears in return! You may cry again and again and make the dungeon’s dome echo to your voice—but you are speaking
as to brass—no man cares for your soul. You are alone—alone in a fearful solitude. Thus it happened to our Savior.
All His disciples forsook Him and fled. And what was infinitely worse, His God forsook Him, too. He cried, “My God,
My God, why have You forsaken Me?” Can any man tell me all that was meant by that infinite lament? Of course, a prisoner
in such a pit as that was in total darkness. He could not see the walls which enclosed him, nor so much as his own
hand. No beam of sunlight ever wandered into that stagnant air—the captive would have to grope for the pitcher of water
and the morsel of bread which a cruel mercy would allot to him.
Our Lord was in the dark. Midnight brooded over His spirit. He said—“Now is My soul troubled.” “My soul is exceedingly
sorrowful even unto death.” His was a pit of gloom, the region of the shadow of death, a land of darkness as
darkness, itself! When a man is shut up in a pit he is, of course, full of distress. If you were, any of you, to go into one of
the solitary cells of our own jails, I guarantee you a short sojourn in it would be quite enough! These cells, some years
ago, were thought to be wonderful cures for all sort of evil dispositions in men, but probably they have more often destroyed
reason than conquered depravity. Go in, if you dare!
Ask the warden to shut the door and leave you in the dark, all alone, that you may try the solitary system for yourself.
No, I would not advise you to try it even for five minutes, for you might, even in that short time, inflict such an injury
upon your nervous system as you would never recover. I believe that many of the gentler ones, here, would be quite
unable to bear total darkness and solitude even for the shortest time. In the grim gloom, the soul is haunted with phantom
fears, while horror peoples the place which is empty of human beings! The heart is worried with evil imaginations
and pierced with arrows of distress. Grief takes hold of the spirit and alarm conquers hope.
In our Lord’s case, the grief and sorrow which He felt can never be described, nor need it be conceived. It was something
tantamount to the miseries of damned souls. The holy Jesus could not feel the exact misery which takes hold on
abandoned rebels, but He did suffer what was tantamount to that at the Judgment Seat of God. He gave a quid pro quo,
a something which, in God’s esteem, reckoning the dignity of His mighty Person, stood instead of the sinner’s eternal
suffering. He felt woe upon woe, night blackening night! Do not try to realize His agony—He wills that you should
not—for He has trod the winepress alone and of the people there were none with Him—as if to show that none could
understand His sorrows and that we can do no more than speak of His “unknown sufferings.”
But I must add, to complete the figure, that shut up in such a pit there might be a great tumult above, like to the
tramping of armed hosts. Or there might be a rush of waters underneath the captive deep in earth’s bowels. He could not
tell what the noise was, nor from where it came and, therefore, he would often be in terrible fear while he sat alone in the
thick darkness. Our Lord had His fears, for we read that He was heard in that He feared. Torrents of sin rushed near
Him! Floods of wrath were heard around Him and cataracts of grief fell upon Him. Besides, there was a mystery about
this anguish which intensified it—a mystery not to be written or explained. Our Redeemer’s spirit was cast down within
Him far beyond anything that is common to men. In that horrible pit, that pit of destruction, He lay with none to pity or
sustain.
But, oh, change the strain, and sing unto the Lord, awhile, as we read the verse, “He brought Me up out of a horrible
pit.” The Lord Jesus Christ was lifted up from all sorrow of spirit at that moment when He said so bravely, “It is finished,”
and though He died, yet was He lifted up from death, as it is written, “You will not leave My soul in Hell; neither
will You suffer Your Holy One to see corruption.” His Spirit ascended to God and, by-and-by, when the third day had
blushed with morning light, His body rose from the tomb, to ascend, in due time, to Glory! He came up out of the pit of
the grave, delivered from all fear of corruption, pain, or defeat! Now His sorrow is ended and His brow is clear from
care. His visage is marred no more! He bears the scars which do but illumine His hands and feet with splendor, but—
“No more the bloody spear, Sing you unto the Lord, you saints of His, as you behold your Master brought up again from among the sorrowful, the
despised, the deserted, the dead!
A second figure is, however, used here to express our Lord’s grief and deliverance from it—“Out of the miry clay.”
Travelers tell us that wherever pits are still used as dungeons, they are damp, foul and utterly loathsome, for they are
never cleansed, however long the prisoner may have been there, or however great the number of victims shut up within
them. You know what the prisons of Europe were in Howard’s days—they were even worse in the East in periods further
back. The imprisoned wretch often found himself sinking in the mire! He found no rest, no hope of comfort and when
extricated, he needed a hand to drag him out of the thick clay.
Our blessed Lord and Master found Himself, when He was suffering for us, where everything appeared to give way
beneath Him. His spirits sank, His friends failed Him and His heart melted like wax. Every comfort was taken from Him.
His blessed Manhood found nothing upon this earth upon which it could stay itself, for He had been made sin for us,
made a curse for us—and so every foundation of comfort departed from Him. He was deprived of visible support and
reduced to a sad condition. As a man who has fallen into a slough cannot stir so as to recover himself, so was it with our
Redeemer, who says in the Psalms—“I sink in deep mire, where there is no standing.” Some morasses are so destructive
that if a man should once fall into them, he might give up his life for lost unless someone came that way to drag him out.
So did the Savior sink in the miry clay of our sin and misery until the Lord Almighty lifted Him out! The clay of sorrow
clung to Him. It held to Him while He was performing the great work of our redemption. But the Lord brought
Him up out of it. There is no mire upon His garments now! His feet no longer sink! He is not held by the bands of death!
He slides not into the grave, again! He was dragged down, as it were, by bearing our sin, but that is over and He has ascended
on high—He has led captivity captive and received gifts from men! All honor be unto Him and to His Father who
delivered Him!
As we read our text, we pursue this story of our Master’s deliverance and we are told that He was brought up out of
the lowest deeps. Say the words or sing them as you choose—“He brought Me up.” God raised up His obedient Son from the depths into which He had descended on our account. He was brought up, like Jonah who went to the bottom of the
mountains and yet was landed safely on the shore. He was brought up like Joseph, who rose from a pit to a palace; like
David, who was led up from the sheepfold to the kingdom. “The king shall joy in Your strength, O Lord; and in Your
salvation how greatly shall he rejoice! His glory is great in Your salvation: honor and majesty have You laid upon Him.
For You have made him most blessed forever: You have made Him exceedingly glad with Your Countenance.”
Then we are told He was set on a rock, and oh, the Glory of our blessed Lord in this matter, for now He stands on a
firm foundation in all that He does for us! Judgment and truth confirm His ways and the Judge of all the earth approves
His doings. Christ has no sandy foundation for His work of mercy or His words of comfort. When He saves, He has a
right to save—when He puts away sin—He does it on indisputable grounds! When He helps and delivers His people, He
does it according to Law, according to the will of the Highest. As Justifier, Preserver and Perfecter of His people, He
stands upon a rock! This day I delight to think of my Lord as settling His Church with Himself upon the immutable foundations
of the Covenant, on the decree of God, on the purpose of the Father, on His own work and on the promise of
God that He would reward Him in that work!
Well may we say that His feet are upon a rock, for He is Himself, by another figure, the Rock of Ages, the Rock of
our salvation! And now the goings of our glorious Christ are established. When He goes out to save a sinner, He knows
that He can do it and has a right to do it! When He goes up to His Father’s Throne to make intercession for sinners, His
goings are established and the desire of His heart is given Him! When He comes in among His Church, or marches forth
with His people to the ends of the earth, His goings are established. “For the King trusts in the Lord, and through the
mercy of the Most High He shall not be moved.” He shall surely come a second time without sin unto salvation, for so has
the Father decreed—His glorious goings are as surely established as were those of His labor and suffering.
We shall never be without a Savior! We shall never have a fallen or a vanquished Savior, for His goings are established
for continuance, certainty and victory! Such honor have all His saints, for, “the steps of a good man are ordered of
the Lord.” And again, “None of his steps shall slide.” Best of all, there is a new song in the mouth of our Well-Beloved.
It is grand to think of Jesus singing! Read the 22nd Psalm and you will find Him doing it, as also in the Hebrews—“In the
midst of the Church will I sing praise unto You.” Toward the end of His earthly career, you hear Him bursting into song.
Was not that a grand occasion just before His passion, when He was going out to die? We read that “after supper they
sang a hymn.”
If we had been bound to die that night, as He was, we should rather have wept or prayed, than sang! Not so our
Lord. I do not know what Psalm they sang—probably a part of the great Hallel, usually sung after the Passover—which
consists of those Psalms at the end of the book which are so full of praise. I believe the Savior, Himself, pitched the tune
and led the strain. Think of Him singing when near His hour of agony! Going to scorn and mockery, singing! Going to
the crown of thorns and the scourge, singing! Going to death, even the death of the Cross, singing! For the joy that was
set before Him, He endured the Cross, despising the shame! But now, what must that new song be which He leads in
Heaven? “They sang, as it were, a new song before the throne.” But it is He that leads the heavenly orchestra!
How greatly He excels Miriam, the sister of Moses, when she took her timbrel and led forth the women in their
dances, saying, “Sing unto the Lord, for He has triumphed gloriously: the horse and His rider has He thrown into the
sea.” This is called, “the song of Moses, the servant of God and of the Lamb,” so I gather that the Lamb’s new song is
after the same triumphant fashion—it is the substance of that which Moses’ song foreshadowed! In Christ Jesus, the Lord
our God has led captivity captive. Let us praise Him on the high sounding cymbals! Sing unto the Lord, for He has triumphed
gloriously! The powers of darkness are destroyed! Sin, death and Hell are drowned in the atoning blood—the
depths have covered them—there is not one of them left. Oh, “sing unto the Lord, for He has triumphed gloriously!”
“Ascribe you greatness unto our God.”
III. Such is the exalted condition of our Lord at this hour. Let us turn and look upon the Lord’s reward. The Lord’s
reward for having gone down into the horrible pit and having sunk in the miry clay for us, is this—that “many shall see,
and fear, and trust in the Lord. “Many!” Not all mankind, but, “many” shall look to Jesus and live. Alas! Vast numbers
continue in unbelief, but “many” shall believe and live! And the Lord’s “many” means very many. As I was thinking over
my text, I thought, “I hope there will be some at the Tabernacle this morning that belong to the ‘many’ who shall see and
fear and trust in the Lord.” “Many shall,” for the Lord has promised it.
But, Lord, they will not. “But they shall,” says God. Oh, but many refuse. “But they shall,” says God and He has the
key of men’s hearts and power over their judgments and their wills. “Many shall.” Do you, oh you unbelievers, think
that Jesus shall die in vain? Oh, Sinners, if you will not have Christ, others will! You may despise Him, but He will be
none the less glorious! You may reject His salvation but He shall be none the less mighty to save! He is a King and you
cannot pluck a single jewel from His crown! If you are so foolish as to provoke His iron rod so that He shall break you in
shivers with it, yet He will be glorious in the sight of God and He will save His own! Notwithstanding your hardness of
heart, be this known unto you, oh House of Israel, that, “many shall see, and fear, and trust in the Lord.”
What shall the many do? They shall “see.” Their eyes shall be opened and they shall see their Lord in the horrible pit
and in the miry clay—and as they look, they shall see that He was there for them! What joy this will create in their spirits!
If they do not see the Lord Jesus as their Substitute, they shall, at any rate, be made to see the exceedingly sinfulness of
sin. If, when Jesus only takes imputed sin and has no sin of His own, yet He must be cast into the horrible pit and sink in
the miry clay—then what will become of men who have their own sins about them, provoking the fierce anger of the
Lord? If God thus smites His Well-Beloved, oh Sinner, how will He smite you! Beware, you that forget Him, lest He tear
you in pieces and there be none to deliver you!
By the suffering Surety, all covered with His own gore, I do beseech you, provoke not God, for if His Only-Begotten
must suffer so, you must suffer yet more if you break His Law and next reject His Gospel! “Many shall see.” Do you wonder
that it is added, “and shall fear?” It makes men fear to see a bleeding Christ and to know that they crucified Him! It
makes men fear, however, with a sweet filial fear that is akin to hope when they see that Jesus died for sinners, the Just for
the unjust, to bring them to God. Oh, when they see the Lord of Love acting as a scapegoat and bearing their sins away
into the wilderness of forgetfulness, they begin to hate their evil ways and to have a reverent fear of God, for so says the
Scripture, “there is forgiveness with You that You may be feared.”
But best of all—and this is the chief point—they come to “trust in the Lord.” They build their hope of salvation
upon the righteousness of God as manifested in Christ Jesus. Oh, I would to God that some of you would trust Him at
once! Beloved Friends, are you trying to be saved by your own works? That is a delusion! Are you hoping to be saved by
your own feelings? That is a lie! But you can be saved, you shall be saved if you will trust yourself with that Blessed One
who was alone in the dark pit of noises for the sake of sinners—and slipped in the miry clay for the ungodly! You shall
assuredly be saved from wrath through Him! Trust Him and as surely as He lives, you shall be saved, for He that trusts in
Him cannot perish! God’s truthfulness were gone if the Believer could be lost. Has He not said, “He that believes and is
baptized shall be saved”? The Throne of God must rock and reel before the Cross of Christ shall lose its power to save
those that believe!
IV. Fourthly, let us see the Lord’s likeness in His people. This whole passage, as I said in the beginning, has often
been used by individual Believers as a description of their own deliverance. It is a true picture, because we are made like
unto our Head and all the Brethren are partakers of that which the Head has endured. Do I speak to any of my Master’s
servants in sore trouble? Dear Friends, are you made to wait, though your trial is sharp and severe? Is it so that your
prayer has not yet been answered? Then remember the waiter’s place was once occupied by the Lord Jesus, for He says, “I
waited patiently.” If the Lord keeps you waiting for a certain blessing, year after year, do not despair. He will give it, at
length, if it is truly for your good, for He has said, “no good thing will I withhold from those that walk uprightly.”
He kept His Son waiting and He may very well keep you in the same posture, for how long did you delay and cause
the Lord of Grace to wait on you! “Blessed are they that wait for Him.” I have seen people very uppish when they have
called on a public man and have had to wait a little. They feel that they ought not to be kept in the lobby. But suppose
some young man said to them, “I am his own son and yet I have been waiting an hour”? Then they are more patient! So
when God keeps you waiting, do not be proud, and say, “Why should I wait for the Lord any longer?” But remember,
“It is good for a man both to hope and quietly wait for the salvation of God.” Jesus waited—“waited patiently.” Seek to
be like He and in patience possess your soul.
“I cannot see how I am to be delivered.” Wait. “Ah, this is such a heavy burden.” Wait. “But I am ready to die under
this terrible load.” Wait! Wait on! Though He tarry, wait for Him—He is worth waiting for. “Wait” is a short word,
but it takes a deal of Grace to spell out its full meaning—and still more Grace to put it in practice. Wait: wait! “Oh, but
I have been unfortunate.” Wait. “But I have believed a promise and it has not been fulfilled.” Wait, for you wait in blessed company—you may hear Jesus saying, “I waited patiently.” Blessed be His name, He is teaching us to do the same
by His gracious Spirit!
Next, the Lord may send you, His dear child, a very heavy sorrow. You may fall into the horrible pit and see no
light, no comfort and no one may be able to cheer you or help you. Some that have a touch of despondency in their nature
have been brought so low as almost to despair of life. They have sat in darkness and seen no light—they have felt the
walls of their prison and have not discovered a crack or cranny through which escape was possible—they have looked up
and even then they have seen nothing to console them. Ah, well, here is a word I commend to you—the Savior says it—
“He brought Me up.”
The Lord God can and will bring up His troubled ones. You will have to write in your diary, one of these days, “He
brought me up.” I was in the dark, I was in the dungeon, but, “He brought me up.” I can personally say this with gladsome
gratitude, for, “He has brought me up,” again and again! My heart is glad as I reflect upon my past deliverances. I
have often wondered why I am so often shut up in prison and bound as with fetters of steel. But I cease to wonder when I
think of the many among you who are called to wear the same bonds. This is my portion, that I may be a witness-bearer
for my God! And that I may be able to speak to the experiences of God’s tempted people and tell how graciously the Lord
delivers His servants who trust in Him. Faith shall never be shamed or confounded, world without end! God can and will
hasten to the rescue of the faithful.
I set to my seal, also, that, “He brought me up,” and, beloved Brothers and Sisters in tribulation, He will bring you
up. Only rest in the Lord and wait patiently for Him. “Ah,” you say, “But I do not know how to stand, for I sink as in
miry clay, through faintness of heart. I cannot find the slightest foothold for my hope.” No, you are sinking in the miry
clay like your Master, but, in answer to prayer, the Lord will bring you up out of your hopeless state and He will set your
feet upon a rock and establish your goings, give you joy, peace and delight. Therefore see and fear, and trust in God and
give Glory to His blessed name!
Lastly, do I address any seeking one who finds no rest for the soles of his feet? Dear Friend, are you sinking in the
deep mire of your guilt? The Lord can pardon you, for, “the blood of Jesus Christ, His Son, cleanses us from all sin.” Are
you shut up by conscience in prison under a just sense of deserved wrath? Jesus will give you immediate rest if you come to
Him! Do you feel as if you cannot kneel to pray, for your very knees slip in the mire of doubt? Remember, Jesus makes
intercession for the transgressors! Do you seem as if, every time you move, you are burying your hope and slipping deeper
and deeper into ruin? The Lord has plenteous redemption! Do not despair! You cannot deliver yourself, but God can
deliver you—you cannot stand of yourself, but God can make you stand! You cannot go to Him nor go abroad among
your fellow men with comfort, but the Lord can make you to run in His ways.
You shall yet go forth with joy and be led forth with peace! The mountains and the hills shall break forth before you
into singing and all the trees of the field shall clap their hands. Only see Christ, and fear and trust your God, and you,
too, shall sing unto Jehovah your Deliverer, and this shall be your song—
“He raised me from a horrid pit, |