(Fifth Sunday after Easter.)
Deut. xi. 11, 12. The
land, whither ye go to possess it, is a land of hills
and valleys, and drinketh water of the rain of heaven.
A land which the Lord thy God careth for: the
eyes of the Lord thy God are always upon it, from
the beginning of the year, even unto the end of the
year.
I told you, when I spoke of the earthquakes
of the Holy Land, that it seems as if God had meant
specially to train that strange people the Jews, by
putting them into a country where they must trust
him, or become cowards and helpless; that so they
might learn not to fear the powers of Nature which
the heathen worshipped, but to fear him the living
God.
In this chapter is another instance
of the same. They were to be an agricultural
people. Their very worship was (if you can understand
such a thing now-a-days) to be agricultural.
Pentecost was a feast of the first-fruits of the harvest.
The Feast of Tabernacles was a great national harvest
home. The Passover itself, though not at first
an agricultural festival, became one by the waving
of the Paschal sheaf, which gave permission to the
people to begin their spring-harvest so
thoroughly were they to be an agricultural and cattle-feeding
people. They were going into a good land, a land
of milk and honey and oil olive; a land of vines and
figs and pomegranates; a rich land; but a most uncertain
land a land which might yield a splendid
crop one year, and be almost barren the next.
It was not as the land of Egypt a
land which was, humanly speaking, sure to be fertile,
because always supplied with water, brought out of
the Nile by dykes and channels which spread in a network
over every field, and where as I believe
is done now the labourer turned the water
from one land to the other simply by moving the earth
with his foot.
It was a mountain land, a land of
hills and valleys, and drank water of the rain of
heaven; a land of fountains of water, which required
to be fed continually by the rain. In that hot
climate it depended entirely on God’s providence
from week to week whether a crop could grow.
Therefore it was a land which the
Lord cared for a land which needed his
special help, and it had it. ’The eyes
of the Lord God were always upon it, from the beginning
of the year unto the end of the year.’
Beautiful, simple, noble, true words deeper
than all the learned words, however true they may
be (and true they are, and to be listened to with
respect), which men talk about the laws of Nature
and of weather. Who would change them for all
the scientific phrases in the world? The eyes
of the Lord were upon the land. It needed his
care; and therefore his care it had.
Therefore the Jew was to understand
from his first entry into the land, that his prosperity
depended utterly on God. The laws of weather,
by which the rain comes up off the sea, were unknown
to him. They are all but unknown to us now.
But they were known to God. Not a drop could
fall without his providence and will; and therefore
they were utterly in his power.
’And it shall come to pass,
if ye shall hearken diligently unto my commandments
which I command you this day, to love the Lord your
God, and to serve him with all your heart and with
all your soul, that I will give you the rain of your
land in his due season, the first rain and the latter
rain, that thou mayest gather in thy corn, and thy
wine, and thine oil. And I will send grass in
thy fields for thy cattle, that thou mayest eat and
be full. Take heed to yourselves, that your
heart be not deceived, and ye turn aside and serve
other gods, and worship them; and then the Lord’s
wrath be kindled against you, and he shut up the heaven,
that there be no rain, and that the land yield not
her fruit; and lest ye perish quickly from off the
good land which the Lord giveth you.’
Now the Bible story is, that this
warning came true. More than once we read of
drought long, and severe, and ruinous.
In one famous case, there was no rain for three years;
and Ahab has to go out to search through the land
for a scrap of pasture. ’Peradventure we
shall find grass enough to save the horses and mules
alive.’
And most distinctly does the Bible
say that these droughts came at times when the Jews
had fallen into idolatry, and profligacy therewith.
That is the Scripture account. And if you believe
in the living God, whose providence ordereth all things
in heaven and earth, that account will seem reasonable
and credible to you.
What special means God used to bring
about these great droughts we cannot know, any more
than we can know why a storm or a shower should come
one week and not another. And we need not know.
God made the world, and God governs the world, and
that is enough for us.
Be that as it may, Moses goes down
to the very root and ground and true cause of the
riches of the land, and of the rainfall, and of the
prosperity of the Jews, and of the prosperity of any
living nation on earth, when he says, ’Therefore
shall ye lay up these my words in your heart and in
your soul, and bind them for a sign upon your hand,
that they may be as frontlets between your eyes.’
’Ye shall lay up these my words
in your heart and your soul, and teach them your children
when thou sittest in thine house and when thou walkest
by the way, when thou liest down and when thou
risest up.’ That is, thou shalt believe
continually in a living God a God who is
working everywhere at every moment, about thy path
and about thy bed, and spying out all thy ways; and
not only about thee, but about all that thou seest.
From him comes alike rain and sunshine; from him
comes the life of man; from him comes all which makes
it possible for man to live upon the earth.
And it is a plain fact that the Jews
for a long time did believe this at least
the prophets, psalmists and good men among them to
the most intense degree; to a degree in which perhaps
no nation has believed it since. With them God
is everything, and man nothing. Man finds out
nothing: God reveals it to him. Man’s
intellect does nothing: the Spirit of God gives
him understanding to do it even, says Isaiah,
understanding to plough, and to sow, and to reap his
crops in due season. It is the Spirit of God,
according to the prophets and psalmists, which makes
the difference between a man and a beast. But
upon the beasts too, and the green things of the earth,
and on all nature, the Spirit of God works. He
is the Lord and giver of life. Take only those
four Psalms, the 8th, 18th, 29th, 104th, and learn
from them what the old Jews thought of this wonderful
world in which we live.
’These all wait upon thee’ all
living things by land and sea ’that
thou mayest give them meat in due season. When
thou givest it them they gather it. When thou
openest thy hand they are filled with good.
When thou hidest thy face they are troubled.
When thou takest away their breath they die, and are
turned again to their dust. When thou lettest
thy breath go forth they shall be made, and thou shalt
renew the face of the earth.’
So again, in the world of man, God
is the living Judge, the living overlooker, rewarder,
punisher of every man, not only in the life to come,
but in this life. His providence is a special
providence. But not such a poor special providence
as men are too apt to dream of now-a-days, which interferes
only now and then on some great occasion, or on behalf
of some very favoured persons, but a special providence
looking after every special act of man, and of the
whole universe, from the fall of a sparrow to the
fall of an empire.
And it is this intense faith in the
living God, which can only come by the inspiration
of the Spirit of God, which proves the old Testament
to be truly inspired. This it is which makes
it different from all books in the world. This
it is, I hold, which marks the canon of Scripture.
For in the Apocrypha true, noble, and good
as most of it is you do not find the same
intense faith in the living God, or anything to be
compared therewith; and that for the simple reason
that the Jews, at the time the Apocrypha was written,
were losing that faith very fast. They felt
themselves that there was an immense difference between
anything that they could write and what the old psalmists
and prophets had written. They felt that they
could not write Scripture. All they could do
was to write commentaries about it, and to carry out
in their own fashion Moses’ command, ’Thou
shalt bind my words for a sign upon your hands, and
they shall be as frontlets between your eyes, and thou
shalt write them upon the doorposts of thine house.’
They were right in that; but as they lost faith in
the living God, they began to observe the command
in the letter, and neglect it in the spirit.
You know some of you, at
least how these words were misused afterwards;
how the scribes and the Pharisees, in their zeal to
carry out the letter of the law, went about with texts
of Scripture on their foreheads, and wrists, and the
hems of their robes, enlarging their phylacteries,
as our Lord said of them. But all the time they
did not understand the texts, or love them, or get
any good from them; but only made them excuses for
hating and scoffing at the rest of the world.
They had them written only on their foreheads, not
on their hearts an outside and not an inside
religion. They had lost all faith in the living
God. God had spoken, of course, to their forefathers;
but they could not believe that he was speaking to
them not even when he spoke by his only
begotten Son, the brightness of his glory, and the
express image of his person. God, so they held,
had finished his teaching when Malachi uttered his
last prophecy. And now it was for them to teach,
and expound the law at secondhand. There could
be no more prophets, no more revelation; and when
one came and spoke with authority, at first hand,
out of the depth of his own heart, he was to be persecuted,
stoned, crucified. No. They had the key
of knowledge; and no man could enter in, unless they
chose to open the door. Nothing new could be
true. John the Baptist came neither eating nor
drinking, and they said, ‘He hath a devil.’
The Son of Man came eating and drinking, and they
said, ’Behold a gluttonous man and a wine-bibber,
a friend of publicans and sinners.’ And
meanwhile the poor, the ignorant, those whose hearts
were really in earnest, were looking out for a prophet
and a deliverer often going after false
prophets, with Theudas and Barcochab, into the wilderness;
but going, too, to be baptized with the baptism of
John, and crowding in thousands to hear our Lord preach
to them of the living God of whom Moses had preached
of old; while the scribes and Pharisees sat at home,
wrapped up in their narrow, shallow book-divinity,
and said, ’This people, who knoweth not the law,
is accursed.’ Nothing new could be true.
It must be put down, persecuted down, lest the Romans
should come and take away their place and nation.
But they did not succeed. Our
Lord and his truth, whom they crucified and buried,
rose again the third day and conquered; and the Romans
came after all, and took away their place and nation.
And so they failed, as all will fail, who will not
believe in the living God.
My friends, all these things were
written for our example. As it was then, so
may it be again.
There may come a time in this land
when people shall profess to worship the word of God;
and yet, like those old scribes, make it of none effect
by their own commandments and traditions. When
they shall command men, like the scribes, to honour
every word and letter of the Bible, and yet forbid
them to take the Bible simply and literally as it
stands, but only their interpretation of the Bible;
when they shall say, with the scribes, ’Nothing
new can be true. God taught the Apostles, and
therefore he is not teaching us. God worked
miracles of old; but whosoever thinks that God is working
miracles now is a Pantheist and a blasphemer.
God taught men of old the thing which they knew not;
but whosoever dares to say that he does so now is
bringing heresy and false doctrine, and undermining
the Christian faith by science falsely so called.’
And all because they have lost all
faith in the living God the ever-working,
ever-teaching, ever-inspiring, ever-governing God whom
our Lord Jesus Christ revealed to men; in whom the
Apostles, and the Fathers, and the great middle-age
Schoolmen, and the Reformers believed, and therefore
learned more and more, and taught men more and more
concerning God and the dealings of God, as time went
on.
And then, when they see ignorant people
running after quacks and impostors, spirit-rappers
and table-turners, St. Simonians and Mormons, and
false prophets of every kind, they will have nothing
to say but ‘This people which knoweth not the
law is accursed.’ While when they see
anything like new truth, or new teaching from God
appear, instead of welcoming the light, and going to
meet the light, and accepting the light, they will
say, ’What shall we do? For all men will
believe on him, and then the powers of this world will
come and take away our station and our order?’
As if Christ could not take better care of his Church
for which he died than they can in his stead!
And so they will persecute God’s servants, in
the name of God, and call upon the law to put down
by force the men whom they cannot put down by reason.
From ever falling into that state
of stupid lip-belief, and outward religion, and loss
of faith in the living God: Good Lord, deliver
us.
From all blindness of heart; from
pride, vainglory, and hypocrisy; from envy, hatred,
and malice, and all uncharitableness: Good Lord,
deliver us.
From all false doctrine, heresy, and
schism; from hardness of heart and contempt of thy
word and commandment: Good Lord, deliver us.
For if people ever fall into that
frame of mind (as did the scribes and Pharisees),
and the good Lord do not deliver them from it, it
will surely happen to them as it is written in the
Bible.
The powers of this world will come
and take away their place, and their power, and their
station: but meanwhile the truth which they
think that they have stifled will rise again, for Christ,
who is the truth, will raise it again; and it shall
conquer and leaven the hearts of men till all be leavened;
and while the scribes and Pharisees shall be cast
into the outer darkness of discontented and hopeless
bigotry, the kingdoms of the world, which they fancied
were the devil’s dominion, shall become the
kingdoms of God and of his Christ, and be adopted
into that holy and ever-growing Church, of which it
is written, that the gates of hell shall not prevail
against it, for in it is the Spirit of God to lead
it into all truth.
To which blessed end may God bring
us, and our children after us. Amen.