Samuel, viewed in his place in sacred
history, that is, in the course of events which connect
Moses with Christ, appears as a great ruler and teacher
of his people; this is his prominent character.
He was the first of the prophets; yet, when we read
the sacred narrative itself, in which his life is
set before us, I suppose those passages are the more
striking and impressive which represent him, in the
office which belonged to him by birth, as a Levite,
or minister of God. He was taken into God’s
special service from the first; he lived in His Temple;
nay, while yet a child, he was honoured with the apparel
of a sacred function, as the text tells us, “he
ministered before the Lord, being a child, girded
with a linen ephod.”
His mother had “given him unto
the Lord all the days of his life,” by a
solemn vow before his birth; and in him, if in any
one, were fulfilled the words of the Psalmist, “Blessed
are they that dwell in Thy house, they will be always
praising Thee.”
Such a constant abode in God’s
house would make common minds only familiar with holy
things, and irreverent; but where God’s grace
is present in the heart, the effect is the reverse;
which we might be sure would happen in the case of
Samuel. “The Lord was with him,”
we are told; and therefore the more the outward signs
of that Lord met his eye, the more reverent he became,
not the more presuming. The more he acquainted
himself with God, the greater would be his awe and
holy fear.
Thus the first notice we have of his
ministering before the Lord, reminds us of the decency
and gravity necessary at all times, and in all persons,
in approaching Him. “He ministered before
the Lord, being a child, girded with a linen ephod.”
His mother had made him yearly a little coat for
his common use, but in Divine Service he wore, not
this, but a garment which would both express, and impress
upon him, reverence.
And, in like manner, in his old age,
when Saul sent to seek David at Naioth, where Samuel
was, his messengers found Samuel and the prophets
under him all in decent order. “They saw
the company of prophets prophesying, and Samuel over
them.” And this was so impressive a sight,
that it became an instrument of God’s supernatural
power towards them, and they prophesied also.
On the other hand, if we would have
an example of the want of this reverence, we have
it in Saul himself, the reprobate king, who, when he
was on his way to Naioth, and was visited by God’s
Holy Spirit, did not thereupon receive the garment
of salvation, nor was clothed in righteousness, but
behaved himself in an unseemly wild way, as one whose
destitution and shame were but detected by the visitation.
He stript off his clothes and prophesied before Samuel,
and lay down in that state all that day and all that
night.
This difference we see even at this
day: of persons professing religion, some
are like Samuel, some like Saul; some (as it were)
cast off their garments and prophesy in disorder and
extravagance; others minister before the Lord, “girded
with a linen ephod,” with “their loins
girt and their lamps burning,” like men awfully
expecting the coming of their great and glorious Judge.
By the latter, I mean the true children of the Holy
Catholic Church, by the former, I mean heretics and
schismatic.
There have ever been from the first
these two kinds of Christians those who
belonged to the Church, and those who did not.
There never was a time since the Apostles’ day,
when the Church was not; and there never was a time
but men were to be found who preferred some other
way of worship to the Church’s way. These
two kinds of professed Christians ever have been Church
Christians, and Christians not of the Church; and
it is remarkable, I say, that while, on the one hand,
reverence for sacred things has been a characteristic
of Church Christians on the whole, so, want of reverence
has been the characteristic on the whole of Christians
not of the Church. The one have prophesied after
the figure of Samuel, the other after the figure of
Saul.
Of course there are many exceptions
to this remark in the case of individuals. Of
course I am not speaking of inconsistent persons and
exceptional cases, in the Church, or out of it; but
of those who act up to what they profess. I
mean that zealous, earnest, and faithful members of
the Church have generally been reverent; and zealous,
earnest, and faithful members of other religious bodies
have generally been irreverent. Again, after
all, there will be real exceptions in the case of
individuals which we cannot account for; but I mean
that, on, the whole, it will be found that
reverence is one of the marks or notes of the Church;
true though it may be that some particular individuals,
who have kept apart from it, have not been without
a reverential spirit notwithstanding.
Indeed so natural is the connexion
between a reverential spirit in worshipping God, and
faith in God, that the wonder only is, how any one
can for a moment imagine he has faith in God, and yet
allow himself to be irreverent towards Him.
To believe in God, is to believe the being and presence
of One who is All-holy, and All-powerful, and All-gracious;
how can a man really believe thus of Him, and yet make
free with Him? it is almost a contradiction in terms.
Hence even heathen religions have ever considered
faith and reverence identical. To believe, and
not to revere, to worship familiarly, and at one’s
ease, is an anomaly and a prodigy unknown even to false
religions, to say nothing of the true one. Not
only the Jewish and Christian religions, which are
directly from God, inculcate the spirit of “reverence
and godly fear,” but those other religions which
have existed, or exist, whether in the East or the
South, inculcate the same. Worship, forms of
worship such as bowing the knee, taking
off the shoes, keeping silence, a prescribed dress,
and the like are considered as necessary
for a due approach to God. The whole world,
differing about so many things differing in creed and
rule of life, yet agree in this that God
being our Creator, a certain self-abasement of the
whole man is the duty of the creature; that He is in
heaven, we upon earth; that He is All-glorious, and
we worms of the earth and insects of a day.
But those who have separated from
the Church of Christ have in this respect fallen into
greater than pagan error. They may be said to
form an exception to the concordant voice of a whole
world, always and every where; they break in upon
the unanimous suffrage of mankind, and determine,
at least by their conduct, that reverence and awe are
not primary religious duties. They have considered
that in some way or other, either by God’s favour
or by their own illumination, they are brought so
near to God that they have no need to fear at all,
or to put any restraint upon their words or thoughts
when addressing Him. They have considered awe
to be superstition, and reverence to be slavery.
They have learnt to be familiar and free with sacred
things, as it were, on principle. I think this
is really borne out by facts, and will approve itself
to inquirers as true in substance, however one man
will differ from another in the words in which he would
express the fact itself.
Samuel was a little child who had
never fallen away from God, but by His grace had ever
served Him. Let us take a very different instance,
the instance of a penitent sinner as set before us
in the parable of the Publican and Pharisee.
I need hardly say which of the two was the most pleasing
to God the Publican; whereas the Pharisee
was not accepted by Him. Now what did the Pharisee
do? He did not even go so far as to behave in
an unseemly, extravagant way: he was grave and
solemn, and yet what he did was enough to displease
God, because he took too much upon himself, and made
too much of himself. Though grave and solemn,
he was not reverent; he spoke in a haughty, proud way,
and made a long sentence, thanking God that he was
not as other men are, and despising the Publican.
Such was the behaviour of the Pharisee; but the Publican
behaved very differently. Observe how he came
to worship God; “he stood afar off; he lift
not up so much as his eyes unto heaven, but smote
upon his breast, saying, God be merciful to me a sinner.”
You see his words were few, and almost broken, and
his whole conduct humble and reverent; he felt that
God was in heaven, he upon earth, God All-holy and
Almighty, and he a poor sinner.
Now all of us are sinners, all of
us have need to come to God as the Publican did; every
one, if he does but search his heart, and watch his
conduct, and try to do his duty, will find himself
to be full of sins which provoke God’s wrath.
I do not mean to say that all men are equally sinners;
some are wilful sinners, and of them there is no hope,
till they repent; others sin, but they try to avoid
sinning, pray to God to make them better, and come
to Church to be made better; but all men are quite
sinners enough to make it their duty to behave as the
Publican. Every one ought to come into Church
as the Publican did, to say in his heart, “Lord,
I am not worthy to enter this sacred place; my only
plea for coming is the merits of Jesus Christ my Saviour.”
When, then, a man enters Church, as many do, carelessly
and familiarly, thinking of himself, not of God, sits
down coldly and at his ease, either does not say a
prayer at all, or merely hides his face for form’s
sake, sitting all the while, not standing or kneeling;
then looks about to see who is in the Church, and
who is not, and makes himself easy and comfortable
in his seat, and uses the kneeler for no other purpose
than to put his feet upon; in short, comes to Church
as a place, not of meeting God and His holy Angels,
but of seeing what is to be seen with the bodily eyes,
and hearing what is to be heard with the bodily ears,
and then goes and gives his judgment about the sermon
freely, and says, “I do not like this or that,”
or “This is a good argument, but that is a bad
one,” or “I do not like this person so
much as that,” and so on; I mean when a man
acts in all respects as if he was at home, and not
in God’s House, all I can say is,
that he ventures to do in God’s presence what
neither Cherubim nor Seraphim venture to do, for they
veil their faces, and, as if not daring to address
God, praise Him to each other, in few words, and those
continually repeated, saying, Holy, holy, holy, Lord
God of Sabaoth.
What I have said has been enough to
suggest what it is to serve God acceptably, viz.
“with reverence and godly fear,” as St.
Paul says. We must not aim at forms for their
own sake, but we must keep in mind where we are, and
then forms will come into our service naturally.
We must in all respects act as if we saw God; that
is, if we believe that God is here, we shall keep
silence; we shall not laugh, or talk, or whisper during
the Service, as many young persons do; we shall not
gaze about us. We shall follow the example set
us by the Church itself. I mean, as the words
in which we pray in Church are not our own, neither
will our looks, or our postures, or our thoughts, be
our own. We shall, in the prophet’s words,
not “do our own ways” there, nor “find
our own pleasure,” nor “speak our own words;”
in imitation of all Saints before us, including the
Holy Apostles, who never spoke their own words in
solemn worship, but either those which Christ taught
them, or which the Holy Ghost taught them, or which
the Old Testament taught them. This is the reason
why we always pray from a book in Church; the Apostles
said to Christ, “Lord, teach us to pray,”
and our Lord graciously gave them the prayer called
the Lord’s Prayer. For the same reason
we too use the Lord’s Prayer, and we use the
Psalms of David and of other holy men, and hymns which
are given us in Scripture, thinking it better to use
the words of inspired Prophets than our own.
And for the same reason we use a number of short petitions,
such as “Lord, have mercy upon us,” “O
Lord, save the Queen,” “O Lord, open Thou
our lips,” and the like, not using many words,
or rounding our sentences, or allowing ourselves to
enlarge in prayer.
Thus all we do in Church is done on
a principle of reverence; it is done with the
thought that we are in God’s presence.
But irreverent persons, not understanding this, when
they come into Church, and find nothing there of a
striking kind, when they find every thing is read
from a book, and in a calm, quiet way, and still more,
when they come a second and a third time, and find
every thing just the same, over and over again, they
are offended and tired. “There is nothing,”
they say, “to rouse or interest them.”
They think God’s service dull and tiresome,
if I may use such words; for they do not come to Church
to honour God, but to please themselves. They
want something new. They think the prayers are
long, and wish that there was more preaching, and
that in a striking oratorical way, with loud voice
and florid style. And when they observe that
the worshippers in Church are serious and subdued
in their manner, and will not look, and speak, and
move as much at their ease as out of doors, or in
their own houses, then (if they are very profane)
they ridicule them, as weak and superstitious.
Now is it not plain that those who are thus tired,
and wearied, and made impatient by our sacred services
below, would most certainly get tired and wearied
with heaven above? because there the Cherubim and Seraphim
“rest not day and night,” saying, “Holy,
holy, holy, Lord God Almighty.” Such as
this, too, will be the way of the Saints in glory,
for we are told that there will be a great voice of
much people saying, Alleluia; and again they said
Alleluia, and the four-and-twenty elders said Alleluia,
and a voice of many waters and of mighty thunderings
said Alleluia. Such, too, was our Lord’s
way, when in His agony He three times repeated the
same words, “Thy will, not Mine, be done.”
It is the delight of all holy beings, who stand around
the Throne, to use one and the same form of worship;
they are not tired, it is ever new pleasure to them
to say the words anew. They are never tired;
but surely all those persons would be soon tired of
hearing them, instead of taking part in their glorious
chant, who are weaned of Church now, and seek for
something more attractive and rousing.
Let all persons, then, know for certain,
and be assured beforehand, that if they come to Church
to have their hearts put into strange and new forms,
and their feelings moved and agitated, they come for
what they will not find. We wish them to join
Saints and Angels in worshipping God; to say with
the Seraphim, “Holy Lord God of Sabaoth,”
to say with the Angels, “Glory to God in the
highest, and in earth peace, good-will towards men,”
to say after our Lord and Saviour, “Our Father,
which art in heaven,” and what follows; to say
with St. Mary, “My soul doth magnify the Lord;”
with St. Simeon, “Lord, now lettest Thou Thy
servant depart in peace;” with the Three Children
who were cast into the fiery furnace, “O all
ye works of the Lord, bless ye the Lord, praise Him,
and magnify Him for ever,” with the Apostles,
“I believe in God the Father Almighty, Maker
of heaven and earth, and in Jesus Christ His only
Son our Lord; and in the Holy Ghost.” We
wish to read to them words of inspired Scripture,
and to explain its doctrine to them soberly after
its pattern. This is what we wish them to say,
again and again: “Lord, have mercy;”
“We beseech Thee to hear us, O Lord;”
“Good Lord, deliver us;” “Glory be
to the Father, and to the Son, and to the Holy Ghost.”
All holy creatures are praising God continually we
hear them not, still they are praising Him and praying
to Him. All the Angels, the glorious company
of the Apostles, the goodly fellowship of the Prophets,
the noble army of Martyrs, the Holy Church universal,
all good men all over the earth, all the spirits and
souls of the righteous, all our friends who have died
in God’s faith and fear, all are praising and
praying to God: we come to Church to join them;
our voices are very feeble, our hearts are very earthly,
our faith is very weak. We do not deserve to
come, surely not; consider what a great
favour it is to be allowed to join in the praises and
prayers of the City of the Living God, we being such
sinners; we should not be allowed to come
at all but for the merits of our Lord and Saviour.
Let us firmly look at the Cross, that is the token
of our salvation. Let us ever remember the sacred
Name of Jesus, in which devils were cast out of old
time. These are the thoughts with which we should
come to Church, and if we come a little before the
Service begins, and want something to think about,
we may look, not at who are coming in and when, but
at the building itself, which will remind us of many
good things; or we may look into the Prayer Book for
such passages as the 84th Psalm, which runs thus:
“O how amiable are Thy dwellings, Thou Lord
of hosts! my soul hath a desire and longing to enter
into the Courts of the Lord: my heart and my
flesh rejoice in the Living God.”
Such will be our conduct and our thoughts
in Church, if we be true Christians; and I have been
giving this description of them, not only for the
sake of those who are not reverent, but for the sake
of those who try to be so, for the sake
of all of us who try to come to Church soberly and
quietly, that we may know why we do so, and may have
an answer if any one asks us. Such will be our
conduct even when we are out of Church. I mean,
those who come to Church again and again, in this
humble and heavenly way, will find the effect of it,
through God’s mercy, in their daily walk.
When Moses came down from Mount Sinai, where he had
been forty days and forty nights, his face quite shone
and dazzled the people, so that he was obliged to
put a veil over it. Such is the effect of God’s
grace on those who come to Church in faith and love;
their mode of acting and talking, their very manner
and behaviour, show they have been in God’s
presence. They are ever sober, cheerful, modest,
serious, and earnest. They do not disgrace their
profession, they do not take God’s Name in vain,
they do not use passionate language, they do not lie,
they do not jest in an unseemly way, they do not use
shameful words, they keep their mouth; they have kept
their mouth in Church, and avoided rashness, so they
are enabled to keep it at home. They have bright,
smiling, pleasant faces. They do not wear a
mock gravity, and, like the hypocrites whom Christ
speaks of, make themselves sad countenances, but they
are easy and natural, and without meaning it cannot
help showing in their look, and voice, and manner,
that they are God’s dear children, and have His
grace within them. They are civil and obliging,
kind and friendly; not envious or jealous, not quarrelsome,
not spiteful or resentful, not selfish, not covetous,
not niggardly, not lovers of the world, not afraid
of the world, not afraid of what man can do against
them.
Such are they who worship God in spirit
and in truth in Church; they love Him and they fear
Him. And, besides those who profess to love
without fearing, there are two sorts of persons who
fall short; first, and worst, those who neither fear
nor love God; and, secondly, those who fear Him, but
do not love Him. There are, every where, alas!
some bold, proud, discontented persons, who, as far
as they dare, speak against religion altogether; they
do not come to Church, or if they come, come to see
about what is going on, not to worship. These
are those who neither love nor fear; but the more
common sort of persons are they who have a sort of
fear of God without the love of Him, who feel and
know that some things are right, and others wrong,
yet do not adhere to the right; who are conscious
they sin from time to time, and that wilfully, who
have an uneasy conscience, who fear to die; who have,
indeed, a sort of serious feeling about sacred things,
who reverence the Church and its Ordinances, who would
be shocked at open impiety, who do not make a mock
at Baptism, much less at the Holy Communion, but,
still, who have not the heart to love and obey God.
This, I fear, my brethren, may be the state of some
of you. See to it, that you are clear from the
sin of knowing and confessing what is your duty, and
yet not doing it. If you be such, and make no
effort to become better; if you do not come to Church
honestly, for God’s grace to make you better,
and seriously strive to be better and to do your duty
more thoroughly, it will profit you nothing to be ever
so reverent in your manner, and ever so regular in
coming to Church. God hates the worship of the
mere lips; He requires the worship of the heart.
A person may bow, and kneel, and look religious,
but he is not at all the nearer heaven, unless he
tries to obey God in all things, and to do his duty.
But if he does honestly strive to obey God, then his
outward manner will be reverent also; decent forms
will become natural to him; holy ordinances, though
coming to him from the Church, will at the same time
come (as it were) from his heart; they will be part
of himself, and he will as little think of dispensing
with them as he would dispense with his ordinary apparel,
nay, as he could dispense with tongue or hand in speaking
or doing. This is the true way of doing devotional
service; not to have feelings without acts, or acts
without feelings; but both to do and to feel; to
see that our hearts and bodies are both sanctified
together, and become one; the heart ruling our limbs,
and making the whole man serve Him, who has redeemed
the whole man, body as well as soul.