King Josiah, to whom these words are
addressed, was one of the most pious of the Jewish
kings, and the most eminent reformer of them all.
On him, the last sovereign of David’s house (for
his sons had not an independent rule), descended the
zeal and prompt obedience which raised the son of
Jesse from the sheep-fold to the throne, as a man after
God’s own heart. Thus, as an honour to
David, the blessing upon his posterity remained in
its fulness even to the end; its light not waxing
“dim,” nor “its natural force abating.”
Both the character and the fortunes
of Josiah are described in the text, his character,
in its saying that his “heart was tender,”
and that he feared God; and his fortunes, viz.
an untimely death, designed as a reward for his obedience:
and the text is a part of the answer which the Prophetess
Huldah was instructed to make to him, when he applied
for encouragement and guidance after accidentally finding
the book of Moses’ Law in the Temple.
This discovery is the most remarkable occurrence of
his reign, and will fitly serve to introduce and connect
together what I wish now to set before you concerning
Josiah.
The discovery of Moses’ Law
in the Temple is a very important occurrence in the
history, because it shows us that Holy Scripture had
been for a long while neglected, and to all practical
purposes lost. By the book of the law is meant,
I need scarcely say, the five books of Moses, which
stand first in the Bible. These made up one book
or volume, and were to a Jew the most important part
of the Old Testament, as containing the original covenant
between God and His people, and explaining to them
what their place was in the scheme of God’s
providence, what were their duties, and what their
privileges. Moses had been directed to enforce
the study of this law on the Israelites in various
ways. He exhorts them to “lay up his words
in their heart and in their soul, and to bind them
for a sign upon their hand, that they might be as
frontlets between their eyes.” “And
ye shall teach them your children,” he proceeds,
“speaking of them when thou sittest in thine
house, and when thou walkest by the way, when thou
liest down, and when thou risest up. And
thou shalt write them upon the door-posts of thine
house, and upon thy gates.” Besides
this general provision, it was ordered that once in
seven years the law should be read to the whole people
assembled at the feast of tabernacles. And
further still, it was provided, that in case they ever
had kings, each king was to write out the whole of
it from the original copy which was kept in the ark.
“And it shall be with him, and he shall read
therein all the days of his life . . . that his heart
be not lifted up above his brethren, and that he turn
not aside from the commandment, to the right hand
or to the left; to the end that he may prolong his
days in his kingdom, he, and his children, in the
midst of Israel.”
However, considering how soon the
nation fell into a general disregard of the law and
worship which God gave them, it is not wonderful that
these wholesome precepts were neglected, which could
not be performed without testifying against their
multiplied transgressions. And much more when
they took to themselves idols, did they neglect, of
course, to read the law which condemned them.
And when they had set a king over them against the
will of God, it is not strange that their kings, in
turn, should neglect the direction given them to copy
out the law for themselves, such kings especially
as fell into idolatry.
All this applies particularly to the
age in which Josiah succeeded to the throne, so that
it is in no way surprising that he knew nothing of
the law till it was by chance found in the Temple some
years after his accession. The last good king
of Judah before him was Hezekiah, who had been dead
sixty or seventy years. That religious king had
been succeeded by his son Manasseh, the most profane
of all the line of David. He it was who committed
those inexpiable sins which sealed the sentence of
Judah’s destruction. He had set up an idol
in the Temple; had made his son pass through the fire;
had dealt with familiar spirits and wizards; had “shed
innocent blood very much, till he had filled Jerusalem
from one end to another,” in a word, had “done
wickedly above all that the Amorites did which were
before him.” On his return from captivity
in Babylon, whither he was taken captive, Manasseh
attempted a reformation; but, alas! he found it easier
to seduce than to reclaim his people. Amon,
who succeeded him, followed the first ways of his
father during his short reign. Instead of repenting,
as his father had done, he “trespassed more
and more.” After a while, his subjects
conspired and slew him. Josiah was the son of
this wicked king.
Here, then, we have sufficient explanation
of Josiah’s ignorance of the law of Moses.
He was brought up among very wicked men in
a corrupt court after an apostasy of more
than half a century; far from God’s Prophets,
and in the midst of idols.
In such times was Josiah born; and,
like Manasseh, he came to the throne in his boyhood.
As if to show us that religion depends on a man’s
self (under God, who gives grace), on the state of
his heart, not on outward circumstances, Manasseh
was the son of the pious Hezekiah, and Josiah was
the son of wicked Amon. Josiah was but eight
years old when his father was slain. We hear
nothing of his boyhood; but scarcely was he of age
to think for himself, and to profess himself a servant
of the true God, but he chose that “good part
which could not be taken away from him.”
“In the eighth year of his reign” (i.e.
when he was sixteen years of age), “while he
was yet young, he began to seek after the God of David
his father.” Blessed are they who so
seek, for they shall find. Josiah had not the
aid of a revealed volume, at least not of the Law;
he was surrounded by the diversities of idol-worship,
the sophistries of unbelief, the seductions of sinful
pleasure. He had every temptation to go wrong;
and had he done so, we might have made allowances,
and said that he was not so bad as the other kings,
for he knew no better, he had not sinned against light.
Yes, he would have sinned against light the
event shows it; for if he had light enough to go right
(which he had, for he did go right), it follows, that
if he had gone wrong, it would have been against light.
Not, indeed, so strong and clear a light as Solomon
disobeyed, or Joash; still against his better knowledge.
This is very important. Every one, even the
poorest and most ignorant, has knowledge enough to
be religious. Education does not make a man religious:
nor, again, is it an excuse for a man’s disobedience,
that he has not been educated in his duty. It
only makes him less guilty than those who have been
educated, that is all: he is still guilty.
Here, I say, the poorest and most unlearned among
us, may take a lesson from a Jewish king. Scarcely
can any one in a Christian land be in more disadvantageous
circumstances than Josiah nay, scarcely
in a heathen: he had idolatry around him, and
at the age he began to seek God, his mind was unformed.
What, then, was it that guided him? whence his knowledge?
He had that, which all men have, heathen as well
as Christians, till they pervert or blunt it a
natural sense of right and wrong; and he did not blunt
it. In the words of the text, “his heart
was tender;” he acknowledged a constraining
force in the Divine voice within him he
heard and obeyed. Though all the world had told
him otherwise, he could not believe and would not,
that he might sin without offence with impunity;
that he might be sensual, or cruel, after the manner
of idolaters, and nothing would come of it.
And further, amid all the various worships offered
to his acceptance, this same inward sense of his, strengthened
by practice, unhesitatingly chose out the true one,
the worship of the God of Israel. It chose between
the better and the worse, though it could not have
discovered the better of itself. Thus he was
led right. In his case was fulfilled the promise,
“Who is among you that feareth the Lord; that
obeyeth the voice of His servant, that walketh in darkness,
and hath no light? Let him trust in the name
of the Lord, and stay upon his God.”
Or, in the Psalmist’s words, “The fear
of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom: a good
understanding have all they that do His commandments.”
Or (as he elsewhere expresses it), “I understand
more than the ancients, because I keep Thy precepts.”
Such was the beginning of Josiah’s
life. At sixteen he began to seek after the
God of his fathers; at twenty he commenced his reformation,
with a resolute faith and true-hearted generous devotion.
From the language of Scripture, it would seem, he
began of himself; thus he is left a pattern
to all ages of prompt obedience for conscience’
sake. Jeremiah did not begin to prophesy till
after the king entered on his reformation,
as if the great prophet’s call were delayed on
purpose to try the strength of Josiah’s loyalty
to his God, while his hands were yet unaided by the
exertions of others, or by the guidance of inspired
men.
What knowledge of God’s dealings
with his nation and of His revealed purposes Josiah
had at this time, we can only conjecture; from the
priests he might learn much generally, and from the
popular belief. The miraculous destruction of
Sennacherib’s army was not so long since, and
it proved to him God’s especial protection of
the Jewish people. Manasseh’s repentance
was more recent still; and the Temple itself, and
its service, contained much doctrine to a religious
mind, even apart from the law or the prophets.
But he had no accurate knowledge.
At twenty, then, he commenced his
reformation. At first, not having the Book of
the Law to guide him, he took such measures as natural
conscience suggested; he put away idolatry generally.
Thus he set out, not knowing whither he went.
But it is the rule of God’s providence, that
those who act up to their light, shall be rewarded
with clearer light. To him that hath, more shall
be given. Accordingly, while he was thus engaged,
after a few years, he found the Book of the Law in
the course of his reformations. He was seeking
God in the way of His commandments, and God met him
there. He set about repairing the Temple; and
it was in the course of this pious work that the high
priest found a copy of the Law of Moses in the Temple,
probably the original copy which was placed in the
ark. Josiah’s conduct on this discovery
marks his character. Many men, certainly many
young men, who had been so zealous as he had already
shown himself for six years, would have prided themselves
on what they had done, and though they began humbly,
by this time would have become self-willed, self-confident,
and hard-hearted. He had already been engaged
in repressing and punishing God’s enemies this
had a tendency to infect him with spiritual pride:
and he had a work of destruction to do this,
too, might have made him cruel. Far from it:
his peculiar praise is singleness of mind, a pure
conscience. Even after years of activity against
idolatry, in the words of the text, “his heart
was tender,” and he still “humbled himself
before God.” He felt full well the immeasurable
distance between himself and his Maker; he felt his
own blindness and weakness; and he still earnestly
sought to know his duty better than he did, and to
practise it more entirely. His was not that
stern enthusiasm which has displayed itself in some
so-called reformations, fancying itself God’s
peculiar choice, and “despising others.”
Here we have the pattern of reformers; singleness
of heart, gentleness of temper, in the midst of zeal,
resoluteness, and decision in action. All God’s
Saints have this union of opposite graces; Joseph,
Moses, Samuel, David, Nehemiah, St. Paul: but
in which of them all is the wonder-working power of
grace shown more attractively than in Josiah?
“Out of the strong came forth sweetness;”
or perhaps, as we may say more truly, Out of the sweet
came forth strength.
Observe, then, his conduct when the
Law was read to him: “When the king had
heard the words of the book of the law, he rent
his clothes.” He thought far more
of what he had not done, than of what he had done.
He felt how incomplete his reformation had been, and
he felt how far more guilty his whole people were
than he had supposed, receiving, as they had, such
precise guidance in Scripture what to do, and such
solemn command to do it; and he learned, moreover,
the fearful punishment which was hanging over them;
for in that Book of the Law were contained the threats
of vengeance to be fulfilled in case of transgression.
The passages read to him by the high priest seem to
have been some of those contained in the Book of Deuteronomy,
in which Moses sets good and evil before the people,
to choose their portion. “See, I have set
before thee this day life and good, and death and
evil. . . . . I call heaven and earth to record
this day against you, that I have set before you life
and death, blessing and cursing.” “A
blessing and a curse; a blessing if ye obey the commandments
of the Lord your God: . . . a curse if ye will
not obey.” And there was more than
the mere words to terrify him; there had been a fulfilment
of them. Samaria, the ten revolting tribes,
the kingdom of Israel, had been led away captive.
Doubtless he already knew that their sins had caused
it; but he found in the Book of the Law that it had
been even threatened them beforehand as the punishment;
and he discovered that the same punishment awaited
his own people, should they persist in sin. Nay,
a judgment had already taken place in Judah; for Manasseh,
his grandfather, had been carried away into Babylon,
and only restored upon his repentance.
In the twenty-eighth chapter of Deuteronomy,
you will see what was to be the curse of disobedience:
or again, consider the words of the twenty-ninth chapter:
“Ye stand this day all of you before the Lord
your God . . . that thou shouldest enter into covenant
with Him, and into His oath; . . . neither with you
only do I make this covenant and this oath;
but with him that standeth here with us this day before
the Lord our God, and also with him that is
not here with us this day: . . . lest there should
be among you man, or woman, or family, or tribe, whose
heart turneth away this day from the Lord our God”
(alas! as it had happened in the event, even all ten
tribes, and then the whole twelve had fallen away)
“to go and serve the gods of these nations,
lest there should be among you a root that beareth
gall and wormwood; and it come to pass, when he heareth
the words of this curse, that he bless himself in
his heart, saying, I shall have peace, though I walk
in the imagination of mine heart, to add drunkenness
to thirst: the Lord will not spare him, but then
the anger of the Lord and His jealousy shall smoke
against that man, and all the curses that are written
in this book shall lie upon him, . . . so that . .
. the strangers that shall come from a far land .
. . when they see the plagues of that land, and the
sicknesses which the Lord hath laid upon it . . .
that it is not sown, nor beareth, nor any grass groweth
therein, . . . even all nations shall say, Wherefore
hath the Lord done thus unto this land? what meaneth
the heat of this great anger? Then men shall
say, Because they have forsaken the covenant of the
Lord God of their fathers, . . . for they went and
served other gods, . . . and the Lord rooted them
out of their land in anger, and cast them into another
land.” These words, or such as these, either
about the people or relating to his own duties,
Josiah read in the Book of the Law, and thinking of
the captivity which had overtaken Israel already, and
the sins of his own people Judah, he rent his clothes.
Then he bade the priests inquire of God for him what
he ought to do to avert His anger. “Go,”
he said, “inquire of the Lord for me, and for
them that are left in Israel and in Judah, concerning
the words of the book that is found: for great
is the wrath of the Lord that is poured out upon us,
because our fathers have not kept the word of the Lord,
to do after all that is written in this book.”
It is observable, that not even yet
does he seem to have known the prophets Jeremiah or
Zephaniah, though the former had been called to his
office some years. Such was God’s pleasure.
And the priests and scribes about him, though they
seconded his pious designs, were in no sense his guides:
they were unacquainted with the Law of Moses, and
with the prophets, who were interpreters of that Law.
But prophets were, through God’s mercy, in
every city: and though Jeremiah might be silent
or might be away, still there were revelations from
God even in Jerusalem. To one of these prophets
the priests applied. Shallum was keeper of the
king’s wardrobe his wife Huldah was
known to be gifted with the spirit of prophecy.
To her they went. She answered in the words
of which the text forms a part: “Thus saith
the Lord God of Israel, Tell ye the man that sent
you to Me, Thus saith the Lord, Behold, I will bring
evil upon this place, and upon the inhabitants thereof,
even all the words of the book which the king of Judah
hath read; because they have forsaken Me, and have
burnt incense unto other gods . . . My wrath
shall be kindled against this place, and shall not
be quenched. But to the king of Judah, which
sent you to inquire of the Lord, thus shall ye say
to him, Thus saith the Lord God of Israel, as touching
the words which thou hast heard; because thine heart
was tender, and thou hast humbled thyself before the
Lord, when thou heardest what I spake against this
place, and against the inhabitants thereof, that they
should become a desolation and a curse, and hast rent
thy clothes, and wept before Me; I also have heard
thee, saith the Lord. Behold therefore, I will
gather thee unto thy fathers, and thou shall be gathered
into thy grave in peace: and thine eyes shall
not see all the evil which I will bring upon this
place. And they brought the king word again.”
How King Josiah conducted himself
after this message I need not describe at any length.
We have heard it in the First Lesson of this Service.
He assembled all Judah at Jerusalem, and publicly
read the words of the Book of the Law, then he made
all the people renew the covenant with the God of
their fathers; then he proceeded more exactly in the
work of reformation in Judah and Israel, keeping closely
to the directions of the Law; and after that he held
his celebrated passover. Thus his greater knowledge
was followed by stricter obedience: his accurate
attention to the whole ritual is the very praise bestowed
on his passover; “Surely there was not holden
such a passover from the days of the judges.”
Whatever he did, he did it with all his heart:
“Like unto him was there no king before him,
that turned to the Lord with all his heart, and with
all his soul, and with all his might, according to
all the Law of Moses.”
Passing by the particulars of his
reformation, let us come to the fulfilment of the
promise made to him by Huldah, as the reward of his
obedience. “Behold therefore, I will gather
thee to thy fathers, and thou shalt be gathered into
thy grave in peace; and thine eyes shall not see all
the evil which I will bring upon this place.”
His reward was an early death; the event proved that
it was a violent one also. The king of Egypt
came up against the king of Assyria through the land
of Judah; Josiah, bound perhaps by an alliance to the
king of Assyria, or for some strong reason unknown,
opposed him; a battle followed; Josiah disguised himself
that he might not be marked out for death; but his
hour was come the promise of release was
to be accomplished. “And the archers shot
at king Josiah; and the king said to his servants,
Have me away; for I am sore wounded. His servants,
therefore . . . brought him to Jerusalem; and he died,
and was buried in one of the sepulchres of his fathers.”
Thus the best king of Judah died like Ahab, the worst
king of Israel; so little may we judge of God’s
love or displeasure by outward appearances.
“The righteous perisheth, and no man layeth
it to heart: and merciful men are taken away,
none considering that the righteous is taken away
from the evil to come. He shall enter into peace;
they shall rest in their beds, each one walking in
his uprightness.”
The sacred narrative continues:
“And all Judah and Jerusalem mourned for Josiah.
And Jeremiah lamented for Josiah; and all the singing
men and the singing women spake of Josiah in their
lamentations to this day, and made them an ordinance
in Israel:” probably there was a yearly
commemoration of his death; and so great was the mourning
at the time, that we find it referred to in the Prophet
Zechariah almost as a proverb. So fell the
last sovereign of the house of David. God continued
His promised mercies to His people through David’s
line till they were too corrupt to receive them; the
last king of the favoured family was forcibly and
prematurely cut off, in order to make way for the
display of God’s vengeance in the captivity of
the whole nation. He was taken out of the way;
they were carried off to Babylon. “Weep
ye not for the dead,” says the prophet, “neither
bemoan him: but weep sore for him that goeth
away: for he shall return no more, nor see his
native country.” As for Josiah, as
it is elsewhere written of him, “His remembrance
. . . is sweet as honey in all mouths, and as music
at a banquet of wine. He behaved himself uprightly
in the conversion of the people, and took away the
abominations of iniquity. He directed his heart
unto the Lord, and in the time of the ungodly he established
the worship of God. All, except David, and Ezekias,
and Josias, were defective; for they forsook the law
of the Most High, even the kings of Juda failed.”
In conclusion, my brethren, I would
have you observe in what Josiah’s chief excellence
lay. This is the character given him when his
name is first mentioned; “He did . . . right
in the sight of the Lord, and walked in all the ways
of David his father, and turned not aside to the right
hand or to the left.” He kept the narrow
middle way. Now what is this strict virtue called?
it is called faith. It is no matter whether
we call it faith or conscientiousness, they are in
substance one and the same: where there is faith,
there is conscientiousness where there
is conscientiousness, there is faith; they may be
distinguished from each other in words, but they are
not divided in fact. They belong to one, and
but one, habit of mind dutifulness; they
show themselves in obedience, in the careful, anxious
observance of God’s will, however we learn it.
Hence it is that St. Paul tells us that “the
just shall live by faith” under every
dispensation of God’s mercy. And this is
called faith, because it implies a reliance
on the mere word of the unseen God overpowering the
temptations of sight. Whether it be we read and
accept His word in Scripture (as Christians do), or
His word in our conscience, the law written on the
heart (as is the case with heathens); in either case,
it is by following it, in spite of the seductions
of the world around us, that we please God. St.
Paul calls it faith; saying after the prophet, “The
just shall live by faith:” and St. Peter,
in the tenth chapter of the Acts, calls it “fearing
and working righteousness,” where he
says, that “in every nation he that feareth
God and worketh righteousness is accepted with Him.”
It is all one: both Apostles say that God loves
those who prefer Him to the world; whose character
and frame of mind is such. Elsewhere St.
Paul also speaks like St. Peter, when he declares
that God will render eternal life to them, who by
“patient continuance in well-doing seek
for glory.” St. John adds his testimony:
“Little children, let no man deceive you.
He that doeth righteousness is righteous, even as
He is righteous.” And our Saviour’s
last words at the end of the whole Scripture, long
after the coming of the Spirit, after the death of
all the Apostles but St. John, are the same: “Blessed
are they that do His commandments, that they
may have right to the tree of life.”
And if such is God’s mercy,
as we trust, to all men, wherever any one with a perfect
heart seeks Him, what think you is His mercy upon
Christians? Something far greater, and more wonderful;
for we are elected out of the world, in Jesus Christ
our Saviour, to a glory incomprehensible and eternal.
We are the heirs of promise; God has loved us before
we were born. He had us taken into His Church
in our infancy. He by Baptism made us new creatures,
giving us powers which we by nature had not, and raising
us to the unseen society of Saints and Angels.
And all this we enjoy on our faith; that is, on our
believing that we have them, and seriously trying to
profit by them. May God grant, that we, like
Josiah, may improve our gifts, and trade and make
merchandise with them, so that, when He cometh to reckon
with us, we may be accepted!