These words, which are taken from
the chapter which you heard read just now in the course
of the Service, declare the victory which David,
the man after God’s own heart, gained over Goliath,
who came out of the army of the Philistines to defy
the Living God; and they declare the manner of his
gaining it. He gained it with a sling and with
a stone; that is, by means, which to man might seem
weak and hopeless, but which God Almighty blessed
and prospered. Let no one think the history of
David’s calling, and his victory over Goliath,
of little importance to himself; it is indeed interesting
to read for its own sake; it raises the mind of the
Christian to God, shows us His power, and reminds us
of the wonderful deliverances with which He visits
His Church in every age; but besides all this, this
history is useful to us Christians, as setting before
us our own calling, and our conflict with the world,
the flesh, and the devil; as such I shall now briefly
consider it.
David, the son of a man in humble
life, and the youngest of his brethren, was chosen
by Almighty God to be His special servant, to
be a prophet, a king, a psalmist; he was anointed
by Samuel to be all this; and in due time he was brought
forward by Almighty God, and as a first act of might,
slew the heathen giant Goliath, as described in the
text. Now let us apply all this to ourselves.
1. David was the son of a Bethlehemite,
one among the families of Israel, with nothing apparently
to recommend him to God; the youngest of his brethren,
and despised by them. He was sent to feed the
sheep; and his father, though doubtless he loved him
dearly, yet seems to have thought little of him.
For when Samuel came to Jesse at God’s command,
in order to choose one of his sons from the rest as
God might direct him, Jesse did not bring David before
him, though he did bring all his other children.
Thus David seemed born to live and die among his
sheep. His brothers were allowed to engage in
occupations which the world thinks higher and more
noble. Three of them served as soldiers in the
king’s army, and in consequence looked down upon
David; on his asking about Goliath, one of them said
to him in contempt, “With whom hast thou left
those few sheep in the wilderness?” Yet God
took him from the sheepfolds to make him His servant
and His friend. Now this is fulfilled in the
case of all Christians. They are by nature poor,
and mean, and nothing worth; but God chooses them,
and brings them near unto Himself. He looks
not at outward things; He chooses and decrees according
to His will, and why He chooses these men, and passes
over those, we know not. In this country many
are chosen, many are not, and why some are chosen,
others not, we cannot tell. Some men are born
within the bounds of holy Church, and are baptized
with her baptism; others are not even baptized at
all. Some are born of bad parents, irreligious
parents, and have no education, or a bad one.
We, on the contrary, my brethren, are born in the
Church; we have been baptized by the Church’s
ministers; and why this is our blessedness, and not
the blessedness of others, we cannot tell. Here
we differ from David. He was chosen above his
brethren, because he was better than they. It
is expressly said, that when Samuel was going to choose
one of his elder brethren, God said to him, “I
have refused him; for the Lord seeth not as man seeth;
for man looketh on the outward appearance, but the
Lord looketh on the heart;” implying, that
David’s heart was in a better state than his
brother’s whom Samuel would have chosen.
But this is not our case; we are in nowise better
by nature than they whom God does not choose.
You will find good and worthy men, benevolent, charitable,
upright men, among those who have never been baptized.
God hath chosen all of us to salvation, not for our
righteousness, but for His great mercies. He
has brought us to worship Him in sacred places where
His saints have worshipped for many hundred years.
He has given us the aid of His ministers, and His
Sacraments, and His Holy Scriptures, and the Ancient
Creed. To others, Scripture is a sealed book,
though they hold it in their hands; but to us it is
in good measure an open book, through God’s
mercy, if we but use our advantages, if we have but
spiritual eyes and ears, to read and hear it faithfully.
To others, the Sacraments and other rites are but
dead ordinances, carnal ceremonies, which profit not,
like those of the Jewish Law, outward forms, beggarly
elements, as they themselves often confess; but to
us, if we have faith, they are full of grace and power.
Thus all we have been chosen by God’s grace
unto salvation, in a special way, in which many others
around us have not been chosen, as God passed over
David’s seven brethren, and chose him.
2. Observe, too. God chose
him, whose occupation was that of a shepherd; for
He chooses not the great men of the world. He
passes by the rich and noble; He chooses “the
poor, rich in faith, and heirs of the kingdom which
He hath promised to them that love Him,” as
St. James says. David was a shepherd.
The Angel appeared to the shepherds as they kept watch
over their sheep at night. The most solitary,
the most unlearned, God hears, God looks upon, God
visits, God blesses, God brings to glory, if he is
but “rich in faith.” Many of you
are not great in this world, my brethren, many of
you are poor; but the greatest king upon earth, even
Solomon in all his glory, might well exchange places
with you, if you are God’s children; for then
you are greater than the greatest of kings.
Our Saviour said, that even the lilies of the field
were more gloriously arrayed than Solomon; for the
lily is a living thing, the work of God; and all the
glories of a king, his purple robe, and his jewelled
crown, all this is but the dead work of man; and the
lowest and humblest work of God is far better and more
glorious than the highest work of man. But if
this be true, even of God’s lower works, what
shall be said of His higher? If even the lilies
of the field, which are cut down and cast into the
oven, are more glorious than this world’s greatest
glory, what shall be said of God’s nobler works
in the soul of man? what shall be said of the dispensation
of the Spirit which “exceeds in glory?”
of that new creation of the soul, whereby He makes
us His children, who by birth were children of Adam,
and slaves of the devil, gives us a new and heavenly
nature, implants His Holy Spirit within us, and washes
away all our sins? This is the portion of the
Christian, high or low; and all glories of this world
fade away before it; king and subject, man of war
and keeper of sheep, are all on a level in the kingdom
of Christ; for they one and all receive those far
exceeding and eternal blessings, which make this world’s
distinctions, though they remain distinctions just
as before, yet so little, so unimportant, in comparison
of the “glory that excelleth,” that it
is not worth while thinking about them. One person
is a king and rules, another is a subject and obeys;
but if both are Christians, both have in common a
gift so great, that in the sight of it, the difference
between ruling and obeying is as nothing. All
Christians are kings in God’s sight; they are
kings in His unseen kingdom, in His spiritual world,
in the Communion of Saints. They seem like other
men, but they have crowns on their heads, and glorious
robes around them, and Angels to wait on them, though
our bodily eyes see it not. Such are all Christians,
high and low; all Christians who remain in that state
in which Holy Baptism placed them. Baptism placed
you in this blessed state. God did not wait
till you should do some good thing before He blessed
you. No! He knew you could do no good thing
of yourselves. So He came to you first; He loved
you before you loved Him; He gave you a work which
He first made you able to do. He placed you
in a new and heavenly state, in which, while you remain,
you are safe. He said not to you, “Obey
Me, and I will give you a kingdom;” but “Lo
I give you a kingdom freely and first of all; now obey
Me henceforth, for you can, and you shall remain in
it;” not “Obey Me, and I will then give
you the Holy Spirit as a reward,” but “I
give you that great gift in order that you may obey
Me.” He first gives, and then commands;
He tells us to obey Him, not to gain His favour, but
in order not to lose it. We are by nature diseased
and helpless. We cannot please Him; we cannot
move hand or foot; He says not to us, “Get well
first, and I will receive you;” but He begins
a cure in us, and receives us, and then says, “Take
care not to go back; take care of yourselves; beware
of a relapse; keep out of danger.” Such
then is your state, my brethren, unless you have fallen
from Christ. If you are living in His faith
and fear, you are kings kings in God’s
unseen and spiritual kingdom; and that, though like
David, you are but keeping sheep, or driving cattle,
or, again, working with your hands, or serving in
a family, or at any other lowly labour. God seeth
not as man seeth. He hath chosen you.
3. Next, observe God chose David
by means of the Prophet Samuel. He did not think
it enough to choose him silently, but He called him
by a voice. And, in like manner, when God calls
us, He does so openly; He sent His minister, the Prophet
Samuel, to David, and He sends His ministers to us.
He said to Samuel, “Fill thy horn with oil,
and go, and I will send thee to Jesse the Bethlehemite;
for I have provided Me a king among his sons.”
God was looking out for a king, and sent Samuel to
David. And so, in like manner, God is looking
out now for kings to fill thrones in His Son’s
eternal kingdom, and to sit at His right hand and
His left; and He sends His ministers to those whom
He hath from eternity chosen. He does not say
to them, “Fill thy horn with oil,” but
“Fill thy font with water;” for as He chose
David by pouring oil upon his head, so does He choose
us by Baptism. So far, then, God chooses now
as He did then, by an outward sign. Samuel was
told to do then, what Christ’s ministers are
told to do now. The one chose David by means
of oil, and the other choose Christians by means of
water. In this, however, there is a difference.
Samuel could choose but one. He was not allowed
to choose more than one; him, namely, whom God pointed
out; but now Christ’s ministers (blessed be
His name!) may choose and baptize all whom they meet
with; there is no restriction, no narrowness; they
need not wait to be told whom to choose. Christ
says, “Compel them to come in.” Again,
the Prophet says, “Ho, every one that thirsteth,
come ye to the waters.” Now every one
by nature thirsteth; every soul born into the world
is in a spiritual sickness, in a wasting fever of
mind; he has no rest, no ease, no peace, no true happiness.
Till he is made partaker of Christ he is hopeless
and miserable. Christ then, in His mercy, having
died for all, gives His ministers leave to apply His
saving death to all whom they can find. Not
one or two, but thousands upon thousands are gifted
with His high blessings. “Samuel took the
horn of oil, and anointed” David “in the
midst of his brethren.” And so Christ’s
ministers take water, and baptize; yet not merely one
out of a family, but all; for God’s mercies
are poured as wide as the sun’s light in the
heavens, they enlighten all they fall upon.
4. When Samuel had anointed David,
observe what followed. “Samuel took the
horn of oil, and anointed him in the midst of his brethren;
and the Spirit of the Lord came upon David from that
day forward.” And so, also, when Christ’s
ministers baptize, the Spirit of the Lord comes upon
the child baptized henceforth; nay, dwells in him,
for the Christian’s gift is far greater even
than David’s. God’s Spirit did but
come upon David, and visit him from time to time; but
He vouchsafes to dwell within the Christian, so as
to make his heart and body His temple. Now what
was there in the oil, which Samuel used, to produce
so great an effect? nothing at all. Oil has no
power in itself; but God gave it a power. In
like manner the Prophet Elisha told Naaman the Syrian
to bathe in Jordan, and so he was healed of his leprosy.
Naaman said, What is Jordan more than other rivers?
how can Jordan heal? It could not heal, except
that God’s power made it heal. Did not
our Saviour feed five thousand persons with a few
loaves and fishes? how could that be? by His power.
How could water become wine? by His power.
And so now, that same Divine power, which made water
wine, multiplied the bread, gave water power to heal
an incurable disease, and made oil the means of gifting
David with the Holy Spirit, that power now also makes
the water of Baptism a means of grace and glory.
The water is like other water; we see no difference
by the eye; we use it, we throw it away; but God is
with it. God is with it, as with the oil which
Samuel took with him. Water is something more
than water in its effects in the hand of Christ’s
Minister, with the words of grace; it does, what by
nature it cannot do; it is heavenly water, not earthly.
5. Further, I would have you
observe this. Though David received the gift
of God’s Holy Spirit, yet nothing came of it
all at once. He still seemed like any other
man. He went back to the sheep. Then Saul
sent for him to play to him on the harp; and then he
went back to the sheep again. Except that he
had strength given him to kill a lion and a bear which
came against his flock, he did no great thing.
The Spirit of the Lord had come upon him, yet it
did not at once make him a prophet or a king.
All was to come in good time, not at once. So
it is with Christian Baptism. Nothing shows,
for some time, that the Spirit of God is come into,
and dwells in the child baptized; it looks like any
other child, it is pained, it frets, is weak, is wayward,
like any other child, for “the Lord seeth not
as man seeth; for man looketh at the outward appearance,
but the Lord looketh on the heart.” And
“He who seeth the heart,” seeth in the
child the presence of the Spirit, “the mind
of the Spirit” “which maketh intercession
for the Saints.” God the Holy Ghost leads
on the heirs of grace marvellously. You recollect
when our Saviour was baptized, “immediately the
Spirit of God led Him into the wilderness.”
What happened one way in our Saviour’s course,
happens in ours also. Sooner or later that work
of God is manifested, which was at first secret.
David went up to see his brothers, who were in the
battle; he had no idea that he was going to fight
the giant Goliath; and so it is now, children are baptized
before they know what is to happen to them.
They sport and play as if there was no sorrow in the
world, and no high destinies upon themselves; they
are heirs of the kingdom without knowing it, but God
is with those whom He has chosen, and in His own time
and way He fashions His Saints for His everlasting
kingdom; in His own perfect and adorable counsels He
brings them forward to fight with Goliath.
6. And now, let us inquire who
is our Goliath? who is it we have to contend with?
The answer is plain; the devil is our Goliath:
we have to fight Satan, who is far more fearful and
powerful than ten thousand giants, and who would to
a certainty destroy us were not God with us, but praised
be His Name, He is with us. “Greater is
He that is with us, than he that is in the world.”
David was first anointed with God’s Holy Spirit,
and then, after a while, brought forward to fight Goliath.
We too are first baptized, and then brought forward
to fight the devil. We are not brought to fight
him at once; for some years we are almost without
a fight, when we are infants. By degrees our
work comes upon us; as children we have to fight with
him a little; as time goes on, the fight opens; and
at length we have our great enemy marching against
us with sword and spear, as Goliath came against David.
And when this war has once begun, it lasts through
life.
7. What then ought you to do,
my brethren, when thus assailed? How must you
behave when the devil comes against you? he has many
ways of attack; sometimes he comes openly, sometimes
craftily, sometimes he tempts you, sometimes he frightens
you, but whether he comes in a pleasing or a frightful
form, be sure, if you saw him himself with your eyes,
he would always be hateful, monstrous, and abominable.
Therefore he keeps himself out of sight. But
be sure he is all this; and, as believing it, take
the whole armour of God, that you may be able to stand
in the evil day, and having done all, to stand.
Quit you like men, be strong. Be like David,
very courageous to do God’s will. Think
what would have happened had David played the coward,
and refused to obey God’s inward voice stirring
him up to fight Goliath. He would have lost
his calling, he would have been tried, and have failed.
The Prophet’s oil would have profited him nothing,
or rather would have increased his condemnation.
The Spirit of God would have departed from him as
He departed from Saul, who also had been anointed.
So, also, our privileges will but increase our future
punishment, unless we use them. He is truly
and really born of God in whom the Divine seed takes
root; others are regenerated to their condemnation.
Despise not the gift that is in you: despise
not the blessing which by God’s free grace you
have, and others have not. There is nothing to
boast in, that you are God’s people; rather
the thought is an anxious one; you have much more
to answer for.
When, then, Satan comes against you,
recollect you are already dedicated, made over, to
God; you are God’s property, you have no part
with Satan and his works, you are servants to another,
you are espoused to Christ. When Satan comes
against you, fear not, waver not; but pray to God,
and He will help you. Say to Satan with David,
“Thou comest against me with a sword, and with
a spear, and with a shield; but I come to thee in
the name of the Lord of Hosts.” Thou comest
to me with temptation; thou wouldest allure me with
the pleasures of sin for a season; thou wouldest kill
me, nay, thou wouldest make me kill myself with sinful
thoughts, words, and deeds; thou wouldest make me a
self-murderer, tempting me by evil companions, and
light conversation, and pleasant sights, and strong
stirrings of heart; thou wouldest make me profane
the Lord’s day by riot; thou wouldest keep me
from Church; thou wouldest make my thoughts rove when
they should not; thou wouldest tempt me to drink,
and to curse, and to swear, and to jest, and to lie,
and to steal: but I know thee; thou art Satan,
and I come unto thee in the name of the Living God,
in the Name of Jesus Christ my Saviour. That
is a powerful name, which can put to flight many foes:
Jesus is a name at which devils tremble. To
speak it, is to scare away many a bad thought.
I come against thee in His All-powerful, All-conquering
Name. David came on with a staff; my staff is
the Cross the Holy Cross on which Christ
suffered, in which I glory, which is my salvation.
David chose five smooth stones out of the brook,
and with them he smote the giant. We, too, have
armour, not of this world, but of God; weapons which
the world despises, but which are powerful in God.
David took not sword, spear, or shield; but he slew
Goliath with a sling and a stone. Our weapons
are as simple, as powerful. The Lord’s
Prayer is one such weapon; when we are tempted to
sin, let us turn away, kneel down seriously and solemnly,
and say to God that prayer which the Lord taught us.
The Creed is another weapon, equally powerful, through
God’s grace, equally contemptible in the eyes
of the world. One or two holy texts, such as
our Saviour used when He was tempted by the devil,
is another weapon for our need. The Sacrament
of the Lord’s Supper is another such, and greater;
holy, mysterious, life-giving, but equally simple.
What is so simple as a little bread and a little wine?
but, in the hands of the Spirit of God, it is the
power of God unto salvation. God grant us grace
to use the arms which He gives us; not to neglect
them, not to take arms of our own! God grant
us to use His arms, and to conquer!