The justice of God in punishing sinners.
"Howbeit thou art just in all that is brought upon us; for thou hast done right, but we have done wickedly." The words express a just and salutary conviction, and make an acknowledgment suitable to accompany an appeal to the Divine compassion.
I. THE CONVICTION EXPRESSED. Of very great importance that we should not only verbally utter it, but sincerely feel it. How may we arrive at this conviction?
1. By faith in God's essential rectitude. That he cannot be unrighteous in any of his proceedings (see Deuteronomy 32:4).
2. By considering the rectitude and goodness of the laws against which we have sinned.
3. By remembering all that God has done to guard us against sin (see on Nehemiah 9:29). If we sin notwithstanding, we are justly punished.
4. By calling to mind our sins. Their essential evil, their number and magnitude, and the circumstances which aggravate their guiltiness (God's varied kindness, our opportunities, advantages, knowledge, convictions, good resolutions, etc.). Such a review will lead us to exclaim with Ezra, "Thou our God hast punished us less than our iniquities deserve" (Ezra 9:13).
5. By comparing what we endure with the Divine threatenings. The Israelites had been warned of the consequences of their rebellion against God. He was only fulfilling his word. So it is with us. What we suffer is no more, is indeed less, than we were warned to expect.
II. THE BENEFITS OF SUCH A CONVICTION.
1. It will prevent our murmuring at our sufferings. "Wherefore doth a living man complain, a man for the punishment of his sins?" (Lamentations 3:39).
2. It will greatly aid in producing repentance. Suffering is likely to do its proper work in humbling us and making sin odious when we recognise the justice of God in inflicting it.
3. It will lead to an appeal to the mercy of God for deliverance. Such an appeal, made through Christ, will be regarded, while an appeal to justice would be as futile as groundless. Finally, observe that the goodness of God is as conspicuous as his justice in the sufferings he inflicts in this life. They have in view "our profit, that we may be partakers of his holiness," and so of true and everlasting blessedness. But if through our perversity they fail of this result, they are followed by the penalties of "judgment without mercy."
HOMILIES BY W. CLARKSON
Confession.
The feast of tabernacles, held in such wise as Israel had not known since the days of Joshua (Joshua 8:17), concluded, "according unto the manner" of that festival, with a "solemn assembly" on the eighth day (Joshua 8:18)—"the last day, that great day of the feast" (John 7:37). After one day's interval, when nothing unusual was done, "on the twenty-fourth day of the month the children of Israel were assembled with fasting" (verse l), and a very great day was held of confession, adoration, and prayer. This was entirely an optional act on their part; it was not done to conform to any injunction' it was felt to be a suitable and desirable thing. Under the law there was some—under the gospel is more—room for spontaneous service. Not only the ordinances and services that are prescribed, but such and so many as the cultivation of our spiritual life requires, are what the wise and the good will practise. These should not be
I. OUTWARD SIGNS OF HUMILIATION (verse 1). "The children of Israel were assembled with fasting, and with sackcloth and earth upon them" (verse 1). They took those measures to indicate humility which in their age and land were natural to them:
Whenever outward manifestations of this kind—"bowing down the head as a bulrush, or spreading sackcloth and ashes" (Isaiah 58:5), or fasting—become purely formal or simply ostentatious (Matthew 6:16), they become unacceptable or even positively repugnant to him who demands sincerity and spirituality (Psalms 51:2; John 4:24). But the bent head, the downcast eye, the uncontrollable tear, the unconscious sigh—these are often the inarticulate but eloquent utterances of contrition which the eye of the all-seeing, the ear of the all-hearing Father fails not to see and hear.
II. WORDS OF PENITENCE. One "fourth part they confessed, and worshipped the Lord their God" (verse 3). "With a loud voice" (verse 4) the eight Levites led their devotions, calling on them to "stand up and bless the Lord their God for ever and ever" (verse 5), and then the people followed them in their confession; thus:—"Our fathers dealt proudly, and hardened their necks, and hearkened not to thy commandments, and refused to obey, neither were mindful of thy wonders that thou didst among them" (verses 16, 17); they "wrought great provocations" (verse 18); "they were disobedient, and rebelled against thee, and cast thy law behind their backs" (verse 26); "they did evil again before thee" (verse 28); "they dealt proudly, and sinned against thy judgments,… they withdrew the shoulder" (verse 29). "We have done wickedly: neither have our kings, our princes, our priests, or our fathers kept thy law;… they have not served thee.; in thy great goodness." Here is ample and unreserved confession of their own and their fathers' guilt:—
1. Manifold shortcoming—not hearkening to commandments, being unmindful of wonders, not serving God in his great goodness.
2. Positive and aggravated transgression—dealing proudly, working great provocations, rebelling against God, casting law behind them, etc.
3. Backsliding—"withdrawing the shoulder" that had been given to the yoke. We are summoned to "take with us words and turn to the Lord" (Hosea 14:2). "With the mouth confession is made unto salvation" (Romans 10:10). Our confession should be
(a) shortcoming,
(b) transgression, and, if called for,
(c) backsliding; it must be
HOMILIES BY J.S EXELL