THE WILDERNESS WANDERER
by Joseph Philpot, 1867
"They wandered in the wilderness in a
solitary way; they found no city to dwell in. Hungry and thirsty, their soul
fainted in them. Then they cried unto the Lord in their trouble, and he
delivered them out of their distresses. And he led them forth by the right
way, that they might go to a city of habitation. Oh that men would praise
the Lord for his goodness, and for his wonderful works to the children of
men! For he satisfies the longing soul, and fills the hungry soul with
goodness!" Psalm 107:4-9
We may briefly call Psalm 107 an epitome of Christian
experience. If we view the Psalms, collectively as a general manual of
the experience of God s saints in all ages, and a record or register of the
varied phases of divine life in the soul, this Psalm, in particular, we may
consider as a concise and expressive abstract of the whole. It is for this
reason that it always has been highly valued by, and been particularly dear
to, every one truly taught of God, and most especially to those who have
been led most deeply into the mysteries of the divine life. Thus, though I
have termed it an epitome or abstract of Christian experience, yet I should
add, that it is more adapted to the advanced stages of the divine life than
to its first beginnings, and is more suitable to the tried, the tested, and
the tempted of the family of God, than to those who walk in an easier path
and are led more gently into the ways of grace and truth.
I may observe, also, that in this Psalm there is this
remarkable feature which makes it exceedingly interesting as well as
instructive and edifying; that in describing various cases of Christian
experience, the Holy Spirit has laid down certain marks and lineaments of
the divine life which are common to all that are possessed of the fear and
grace of God, and yet has traced out other points in which there is a clear
and visible difference. This gives to the Psalm two prominent features, of
which the one is unity, and the other variety; and what is thus so
beautifully and so graphically wrought out in the Psalm exactly corresponds
with what observation shows us is the case in different Christians, which
makes it doubly instructive, and edifying. We see in them, as we see in the
Psalm itself, a unity of divine teaching and yet a variety, so that though
all are taught the same truths by the same Spirit, yet not all are taught in
the same manner, nor learn them precisely in the same way.
Observe with me, then, several features stamped upon our
text with some degree of prominence–
I. The description of the wilderness wanderer
II. The wanderings in the wilderness
III. The effects of the wilderness wanderings
IV. The cry of the wilderness wanderer
V. The deliverance of the wilderness wanderer
VI. The guidance of the wilderness wanderer
VII. The end of the wilderness wanderer
I. The DESCRIPTION of the Wilderness Wanderer
This is given, that you may have some evidence in your
bosom how far the character is yours.
1. The wilderness wanderer we may briefly characterize as
one whose heart grace has touched, and to whom the Lord the Spirit has
communicated divine life. Now what are the feelings, the exercises, the
experiences of a soul thus quickened into divine life?
One of the very first is to find this world a wilderness.
There is no change in the world itself--the change is in the man's heart.
The world is whatever it was, and whatever it will be to worldly men. But
the wilderness wanderer thinks it altered--a different world from what he
has hitherto known. His friends, his companions, his very relations, the
employment in which he is daily engaged, the general pursuits of men, the
cares and anxieties, hopes and prospects, amusements and pleasures, and what
I may call the general din and whirl of life, all seem to him different to
what they were; and for a time perhaps he can scarcely tell whether the
change is in them, or in himself. This however is the prominent and
uppermost feeling in his mind, that he finds himself, to his surprise a
wanderer in a world which has changed altogether its aspect to him. The
fair, beautiful world, in which was all his happiness and all his home, has
become to him a dreary wilderness. Sin has been fastened in its conviction
on his conscience, and a sight and sense of sin in himself has shown him sin
in others. The Holy Spirit has taken the veil of unbelief and ignorance off
his heart, and shown him light in God's light. He now sees the world in a
wholly different light, and instead of a paradise it has become a
wilderness--for sin, dreadful sin, has marred all its beauty and happiness.
As the figure of a wilderness is of such constant
recurrence in the Scriptures, and as it is so very expressive, it may be as
well to look for a few moments at its character naturally, so as to gather
from it what the Holy Spirit intended to convey by it spiritually. In our
English climate, naturally so humid and so continually refreshed with rains
at almost every season of the year, giving us ever verdant fields and trees
clothed in leafy green, except in the dead of winter, we have no idea of a
wilderness, such as was familiar to those for whom the Old Testament
Scriptures were expressly written. And yet I think I can give you a little
idea of it.
Many of you have been by the sea-side, and have there
seen a heap of sand spreading itself as far as your eyes could reach along
the beach, and as you looked at it you would have observed what a contrast
there was between this far-spreading beach of sand, and such a prospect as
we are familiar with in the Midland Counties, where, on every side, we see
grassy meadows, green hedges, and corn fields laden with crops of grain. Now
in imagination take that long tract of desolate sand into a very hot climate
and spread it in all directions, so as to have nothing else before your
eyes, wherever you look, to the utmost verge of the visible horizon, and
then picture a burning, almost vertical sun above your head, and conceive it
beating down with tremendous heat upon this wide and desolate sand, without
the least shade of the smallest tree to protect you from its beams. Toiling
along a dusty road in the heat of summer, without a single tree, may give
you some little idea of the heat.
Now conceive the case of a man, who having been
accustomed to live among corn fields and green pastures, and to walk amid
blooming hedges, finds himself unexpectedly in such a wilderness as this,
with nothing but the burning sun above, and the hot, parched and glowing
sand beneath. I have given you but a faint and feeble description of a
desert or a wilderness, such as is known in Eastern climates, and especially
in that part of the earth in which Palestine was situated. As far as
regarded the land of Canaan itself, it was not a wilderness; for Moses
describes it as "a good land, a land of brooks of water, of fountains and
depths that spring out of valleys and hills, a land of wheat, and barley,
and vines, and fig trees, and pomegranates, a land of oil olive and honey."
But on every side of this favored land there stretched, especially to the
east and south, what Moses calls "a terrible wilderness," a "waste, howling"
desert. The figure, therefore, of a wilderness was very familiar to every
Israelite.
But now, having thus gathered up what is a wilderness,
literally and naturally, let us see how it bears upon the experience of a
child of God when quickened by divine power, and made for the first time to
feel what this world is; for you will recollect that this was the view which
I took of it just now in my explanation. As I said before, it is not because
the world itself is changed that he feels it to be a wilderness, but because
he himself is changed.
Most of us know that our happiness, even naturally, does
not consist in outward things. With everything around him that is naturally
gladdening and beautiful, a man may be truly miserable; and many a young
heart, with blighted affections and crushed prospects, has found a gloomy
pall drawn over the whole face of nature, so that the very sky above, and
the very earth beneath, seemed clothed in mourning. She who once was so gay
and happy is now thoroughly miserable and the most beautiful scenes of
nature cannot restore her to happiness and peace.
So it is spiritually with a soul quickened into divine
life. There is nothing in this world which can really gratify or satisfy it.
What once was to him a happy and joyous world has now become a barren
wilderness. The scene of his former pursuits, pleasures, habits, delights,
prospects, hopes, anticipations of profit or happiness, is now turned into a
barren wasteland. What once was a blooming grain field, a verdant pasture, a
glorious scene of hill and dale, trees and flowers, is now turned into sand
and gravel, with the burning sun of God's wrath above, and the parched sand
of his own desolate heart beneath. He cannot perhaps tell how or why the
change has taken place, but he feels it, deeply feels it. He may try to
shake off his trouble and be a little cheerful and happy as he was before;
but if he gets a little imaginary relief, all his guilty pangs come back
upon him with renewed strength and increased violence.
But even assuming that he is not thus powerfully dealt
with, but is led in a somewhat milder way, it still comes much to the same
point. God means to make the world a wilderness to every child of His that
he may not find his happiness in it, but be a stranger and a pilgrim upon
earth. He has various ways of effecting this end. I will name some, that you
may compare your experience with it.
1. You have perhaps married the woman or man of your
affections and dreams, and, in thus obtaining the desire of your heart,
imagined to yourself a long series of years of wedded happiness; and the
Lord may, for a time, have allowed you a share of the happiness thus
pictured to yourself. But He knows full well that the heart of man so rests
in, so idolizes the creature, that it must be dislodged from this nest, that
it may find happiness in Him, and in Him alone. Thus it often happens, that
before the Lord quickens the soul into spiritual life, or sometimes at the
very time, using it as an instrument, He brings a blight over this
happiness. Sometimes, for instance, He brings the body down with ill-health,
or takes away the beloved husband at a stroke, or removes the wife out of
her partner's bosom. Or if He spare the root, He may cut off some of the
branches--He may afflict or take away the children. Now where is all the
pleasure which you once so fondly anticipated, and even for a time enjoyed?
It is all broken up, fled, and gone like a dream of the night. And now, what
is this world to you? A wilderness; a barren, waste, miserable wilderness.
2. Or take another case which may have been the
experience of some here. The Lord may have brought you down in
circumstances. You have taken, perhaps, a farm, and were expecting crops
that would repay you for your outlay of capital and unwearied industry; or
you have entered into business, and seemed at one time to have had good
prospects; or have embarked in the exercise of some professional pursuit,
where everything appeared in your favor. But after a longer or shorter time,
a reverse came over the scene, and everything seemed to go wrong; your crops
failed, or your business fell off, or the profits of your profession
dwindled almost to a starving point; and in this, or in some such similar
way, all your blooming prospects were blighted, and poverty came in like an
armed man.
3. Or assume another case, for I wish to meet the varied
experiences of God's people as much as I can. The Lord may have sent upon
you, from different quarters, trial after trial, and affliction after
affliction. All has gone seemingly wrong with you--business, family, the
poor body; and a variety of other circumstances have all opened up continual
sources of grief and sorrow. Now what do you learn from these dispensations
of God's hand? One of the first lessons is, that this world is not a place
of grain fields and green pastures, with nothing around you but happiness
and pleasures, but a barren wilderness. You begin to feel, that after all
the attempts that you and others may use to make it a place of joy and
happiness, it is a miserable world, and that you are a poor miserable sinner
in it.
You will perceive that thus far I have been speaking of
God's dealings in providence, for I have often observed, that God
speaks to us in providence before He speaks to us in grace. It is
often indeed true, that, as Elihu says, "God speaks once, yes twice, yet man
perceives it not;" but sooner or later "he opens the ears of men and seals
their instruction," so that they are obliged to listen. When, then, He has
made them see His hand and listen to His voice in providence, then He begins
to deal with their soul. It is, then, especially when the Lord speaks home
conviction to the heart, applies His law with power to the conscience, lets
down a sense of His displeasure into the spirit, that He turns the fruitful
land into a wilderness, as the Psalmist speaks in the Psalm before us--"He
turns rivers into a wilderness, and the water springs into dry ground; a
fruitful land into barrenness, for the wickedness of those who dwell
therein." (Ps. 107: 33-34.)
The wide flowing river He dries up and turns into a
wilderness; the gushing water-springs He stops at their very head, and
changes the pastures which they watered into dry ground, and the fruitful
land He withers and parches into barrenness. And why? "For the wickedness of
those who dwell therein." This, of course, is a general truth; but we may
take it experimentally.
When, then, he has a sight and sense of the wickedness
that dwells in his heart, how it mars all earthly good; what a wilderness it
makes this world to a child of God, and turns the rivers of former delight
into a barren desert. Instead of the pleasure he expected to reap from this
world, all, all is marred to him; and this is the prevailing and uppermost
feeling of his mind--"I have an immortal soul; I have a holy God to deal
with--how shall I escape the wrath to come, the wrath to come? What shall I
do? Where shall I go? What will be the end of my poor guilty soul unless I
get pardon and peace?"
Now, to this man the world is a wilderness. Offer him
pleasures and amusements; give him money; set before him prospects of
advancing himself in life, such as would make the eyes of worldly men
glisten with eagerness and desire; and he would say--"What is all this to
me, when my soul is at stake? The grand point, the only point which presses
hard and heavy upon my mind is this--"What will be my portion when death
closes the scene?" This concern and anxiety about his immortal soul has
turned the world into a wilderness.
Thus far I have described somewhat of the first work upon
the soul, and its effect in making the world a wilderness. But we must not
limit it to the first work. It is the experience of all the "redeemed;" and
those of whom I have thus far spoken are only just entered on it. The
wilderness wanderer is more especially he who, like the children of Israel,
has had his many years of toilsome pilgrimage in the waste, howling
wilderness. He is one, therefore, who has had to wade through trial after
trial, affliction after affliction, and temptation after temptation. He is
one whom the Lord is continually exercising and trying, for "the Lord tries
the righteous" one whom He is thus experimentally teaching that this world
must and can never be to him anything but a barren wilderness. But I must
not linger here, and shall therefore pass on to a further elucidation and
explanation of the character in the text. I have called him a "wilderness
wanderer." Let us now, then, come to his wanderings.
II. The WANDERINGS in the wilderness
"They wandered in the wilderness in a solitary way." The
wilderness had no roads in it of any kind, or in any direction. No beaten
paths were there made, to guide the wanderers, and except from the stars
they did not know north from south, nor east from west; wherever they
wandered it was a wilderness still of wide, waste, barren sand, out of which
it seemed scarcely possible for them ever to emerge. Taking the figure
spiritually, does not this feature describe how many of the Lord's people
are wandering in a wilderness world, not knowing where to direct their
steps, and doubting whether they ever shall emerge out of it, often fearing
that they shall die in it, and that without hope?
But two other marks are added–
1. that they found the wilderness "a solitary way;"
2. "that they found no city to dwell in."
We will consider both these features, and the last first.
1. By finding "NO CITY to dwell in," is meant that the
wilderness wanderers found no place where they could take up a settled
abode. A city is a place with settled inhabitants, in ancient times, and
even now in most foreign countries, surrounded with walls and gates, and
thronged with a populous crowd, engaged in pursuits of business or pleasure.
As opposed to the wilderness, it carries with it the idea of a fixed and
settled habitation; and you can easily conceive what a wide difference there
must be between the inhabitants of a wilderness and of a town. Indeed, so
great is this difference, that nothing can induce the Bedouin Arabs to live
in towns; and on the other hand, the inhabitants of a town could as little
exist in a desert.
Thus the idea is, that these wilderness wanderers could
find no place to obtain settled rest; they could not settle down anywhere,
so as to say--"I have now found a happy home; now I am comfortable; now I am
come out of the wilderness, and here I am in a peaceful, inhabited city,
where I can eat, drink, and be merry." Far better is it for them to be still
wandering in the wilderness than obtain such a false peace and deceptive
settlement as this.
And yet, how many of whom we once hoped well seem to be
entangled in this snare. There seemed to be a time when we could feel toward
them as wilderness wanderers, but now they are sunk into carnal ease and
security. They have found a city to dwell in. They are resting in the form
without the power; the name without the reality; the doctrine without the
life and spirit of it; the shadow without the substance. Far better would it
be for them to be wandering in the wilderness than to have reached and found
a home in 'the city of the dead'. O how many who once seemed exercised with
wilderness trials, and to manifest in them the life of God, are now sunk
into a worldly state, and appear more at home with worldly professors than
with the living family of God.
2. But now let us consider another special feature that
is stamped upon the true wilderness wanderer. His path is a SOLITARY PATH.
"They wandered in the wilderness in a solitary way." The wilderness was so
wide, and they were so thinly scattered in it, that they seemed, for the
most part, to be without friends or companions. One was wandering here and
another there, each traversing his own path as if he were alone in the
desert. How this adds to its trials and difficulties. In a literal desert,
it is almost, if not wholly, death to be alone; and therefore they always
travel in caravans or companies. You will recollect it was to a company or
caravan, as we now call it, of Ishmaelites or Arabs, that Joseph was sold;
and so it says in Psalm 84:7--"They go from strength to strength," where it
is in the margin, "from company to company." But in the spiritual wilderness
there is not much of this company, nor do the pilgrims heavenward travel
much in caravans. Theirs is for the most part a solitary way. One well says–
"Companions if we find,
Alas! how soon they're gone;
For 'tis decreed that most must pass
The darkest paths alone."
Now I believe that all true religion is a solitary
religion--a religion carried on between God and one's own soul; and I do
also believe that a saint of God can never do without solitude. He must have
seasons of retirement for prayer, reading, and meditation. I pity those who
are compelled from circumstances to live in houses or families where they
can scarcely get an hour's solitude to meditate, to pray, to confess their
sins, and to carry on that gracious and heavenly communion with God--without
which religion soon dwindles away. The best of our religion is what we learn
in solitude, in the quiet hours of the day, or the solemn seasons of the
night.
But as the Lord knows all our circumstances, as in
trouble He can give quiet, so in a crowd He can give solitude. And thus He
no doubt often deals with those of His dear people who are crowded up in
their rooms or their families, even amid crying children or a confused din
of conversation. They can sometimes be, as it were, dead to all surrounding
noises, and dropping their head upon their bosom, commune with God as much
as if they were in the most solitary spot. Besides which, they can get away
sometimes from their families into the fields; can creep under a hedge, or
stand under a tree, as I have often done, and there pour out their souls
before God. A laborer who truly fears God, when engaged in his daily work,
can carry on secret dealings with God who reads the heart, when those who
work at the same bench, or are laboring in the same field, are carrying on a
busy communion with thoughts and desires of carnality and sin.
As solitude in itself cannot make a carnal man
spiritual--so company, when he is thrown by necessity into it; cannot
make a spiritual man carnal. He may be surrounded by company, as in a
railway carriage, where all manner of conversation is going on, yet sit in a
corner and have solitary dealings with God. The Lord may come down and
commune with him while all around him is vanity and sin. I remember when the
Lord was first pleased to indulge my soul with some sense of His goodness
and mercy, I have sat in a room, where I was obliged to be present, and when
those around me were talking of all manner of worldly things, my heart was
secretly going up to the Lord. It is not the place, it is not the company,
though we should never go into the place or company where we cannot ask the
Lord to accompany us; but at any time and at any place the soul may have
solitary moments of prayer and meditation, and the Lord may commune with it
from off the mercy seat.
But look at it in another point of view. A solitary way
is for the most part the lot of God's people; and especially in our
darkest paths, each has to walk alone. We are brought at times into
circumstances where none can help us but God; into temptations out of which
none but the Lord can deliver; into trials under which none but the Lord can
support; afflictions in which none but the Lord can comfort; and fears in
which none but the Lord can relieve. As thus walking in a solitary way, we
find we are in places where God alone can do us any good. And as all the
help and support we get, we get in this way, it endears to us a solitary
religion. Not that we do not prize and love the company of those who truly
fear God; but the Lord is often pleased to place us in those peculiar
circumstances when all our help must come directly from Him alone. We must
die alone, and therefore it is good to learn to live alone.
But time admonishes me to pass on with our subject. What
was the effect of their wandering in the wilderness, and each journeying in
such a solitary way?
III. The EFFECTS of the Wilderness Wanderings
"Hungry and thirsty, their soul fainted in them." Their
wanderings produced the necessary effect of hunger and thirst; for the
wilderness gave them no food to eat, no water to drink. This was a terrible
state to be in. The pangs of hunger and thirst are acute enough anywhere;
but in a wilderness they are little short of death. But I must not here
enlarge. Let us view it spiritually. Wilderness wanderings had given them a
spiritual appetite; and thus they were brought under that gracious promise,
"Blessed are those who hunger and thirst after righteousness."
They needed food which the world could not give; they
needed water that the world could not supply. Having tasted that the Lord
was gracious, having been fed in some small degree with heavenly manna, it
put them out of taste with earthly food, They might have all the world could
offer if they liked. But the world cannot give them the heavenly food
which their souls long for. It cannot give sweet and precious views of
Christ, cannot apply promises to their heart, cannot bestow upon them
manifestations of the Person and work of Jesus, or drop one drop of His love
and blood into their soul. It is the lack of these divine realities which
makes them hunger and thirst. It is for these testimonies, these blessings,
these manifestations, this sweet assurance of pardoning love, with the
witness of the Spirit to their spirit that they are God's children, that
they inwardly long and pine. They are not hungering and thirsting after such
earthly things as worldly hearts seek and delight in, but in the enjoyed
favor and presence of the Lord. But this is often either delayed or given in
a scanty measure; and what was the consequence?
That "their soul fainted in them." They hungered so long;
they thirsted so long; the wilderness was so long and wearisome; the sun
beat so hotly upon their head; their feet were so galled with the stones;
the sand so got into their shoes, that having no food brought and no water
given, the effect was that their soul fainted in them. It was in their
feelings as if they must die, must languish away; as if there was nothing in
those who could keep them alive, because they had not the food they longed
for, nor the water their souls desired. How distressing was all this; but
what blessed marks of life. Those dead in sin, or dead in a profession, are
not thus hungering and thirsting after Christ. They are not crying out for
Christ; not thirsting for the water of life, for the visitations of the
presence of God, for a smile of Jesus' face, for a touch of Jesus' hand, for
a whisper of Jesus' love.
Now have you ever thus hungered for the Lord of life and
glory? Have you ever thus thirsted for the water of life; ever thus felt
faint and exhausted because no word was given, no promise applied, no blood
sprinkled, no love shed abroad? If not, can you be one of these wilderness
wanderers? But on the other hand, if you say, "I do hunger after Christ; I
do thirst for the water of life; my soul is often very faint and weary, and
I am languishing for a word from His gracious lips; but I find this to be a
wilderness world, and myself a wanderer in it--mine is a solitary path, and
I find no city to dwell in;" these are marks that God Himself has
consecrated as evidences of life divine; these tally with the description
given by the blessed Spirit of a wilderness wanderer; and the Lord has
written these things in the word of His grace to encourage those who need
encouragement.
IV. The CRY of the Wilderness Wanderer
"Then they cried unto the Lord in their trouble." What a
mercy it is, that the Lord does put a sigh and a cry into the bosom of His
people; what a mercy to have a spirit of prayer. I do believe when God is
pleased to quicken the soul into life divine, He always gives with that life
divine, a spirit of prayer; and I believe also though that spirit of prayer
may sink at times very low, it never is extinguished out of a believing
heart.
Now, it is by this spirit of prayer, as the blessed
Spirit draws it forth, that these wilderness wanderers are enabled to plead
their cause with God, to groan forth the desire of their soul, and sigh out
their earnest petitions. Don't you find sometimes there is a sigh and a cry
going up out of your heart, and this with great earnestness and
supplication? But who has raised up this sigh and cry in your heart, and
drawn it out, as it were, from your inmost soul--but the Spirit? And by what
means chiefly has He wrought? Is it not by bringing you into the wilderness,
making you to see and feel that this world is little else but a scene of
sorrow and trouble, and thus causing you to walk in a solitary way where
none can do you good but God Himself? Have you not found that these
tribulations have made you seek the Lord with a sincerity and earnestness
that you never knew before, and that in them you have learned the reality
and power of prayer?
O what a mercy it is that there is a God to go! Yes! a
God who hears and answers prayer! And what a blessing it is to be able to
unbosom before Him the burdened spirit! Observe the words--"Then they cried
unto him in their trouble." If you have trouble it is a sufficient
warrant for you to go to God with it. Does He not say--"Call upon me in the
day of trouble; I will deliver you and you shall glorify me?" If you have a
day of trouble, you have here a sufficient warrant to call upon God. Write
not, then, bitter things against yourself. If you are enabled to sigh and
cry unto the Lord there is life in your soul. God has quickened you by His
blessed Spirit if He has put a sigh and cry into your bosom. Remember the
men in Ezekiel on whom the Lord put the approving seal. It was those who
sighed and cried for the abominations which they saw and felt in themselves
and others. (Ezek. ix. 4.) If, then, the Lord has put a sigh and cry into
your bosom on account of your felt inward abominations, you are one of those
on whom He has set His seal. Sanctified troubles are some of our
greatest blessings; and one of their blessed fruits is that they keep us
from settling on our lees and being at ease in Zion.
Careless, worldly minded, proud, covetous professors,
stench in carnality and death--where is there ever a cry in their soul? They
may have a formal prayer--a morning prayer, an evening prayer, a family
prayer, and all as cold as ice. Stiff and frozen in carnality they are ice
themselves, and they bring their ice with them wherever they come. But God
does not allow His people to go on in this cold, lifeless, frozen, icy way,
with mere formal devotion, lip service, and prayers worn out like an old
shoe with long and continual treading. He sends afflictions, trials, and
troubles upon them, takes them into the wilderness, exercises them well in
the path of tribulation, and supporting them under it, raises up a cry which
He is sure to hear.
V. The DELIVERANCE of the Wilderness Wanderer
"And he delivered them out of their distresses." How He
does this is blessedly intimated in a verse of the Psalm before us--"He sent
his Word and healed them." Thus in due time He sends a healing word, gives a
gracious smile, drops into their soul a sweet manifestation of His goodness
and mercy, and thus delivers them out of their distresses. They had been in
a very distressed state of mind because they could not see their signs; and
they scarcely knew where they were or what they were. But when the Lord
appears in them and for them, He delivers them out of their distresses. One
smile, one touch, one soft whisper, one intimation--"I have loved you and
given myself for you;" one breaking in of His presence and His power; one
manifestation of pardoning mercy,--let the soul have but this, and it will
say, "It is enough, Lord, it is enough; I want no more."
When the promise thus comes with power, and the Lord
appears, every crooked thing is made straight, and every rough place plain.
Sins, however great or many, are cast behind God's back; and everything made
clear and right between God and the soul. Now it sees the reason why the
world was made to it a wilderness; the necessity that there was for the
afflictions, bereavements, losses in providence, trials in the family,
difficulties in circumstances, dark clouds which so long hung over it; and
it is fully reconciled to the rough and thorny path by which it has been
brought.
It can now say, feelingly and gratefully, "I needed every
stroke; I needed to be dealt with in this painful way; I was getting into a
worldly state of mind; I was hugging my idols and would not part with them.
Bless God for the affliction; thank Him for His rod upon my back; honors
crown His brow that He would not let me go on in my sins, but would tear my
idols from my breast, and pulled me roughly along, if He could not bring me
to my right mind in any other way." But how this tallies with the last point
of our text.
VI. The GUIDANCE of the Wilderness Wanderer
"He led them forth by the right way, that they might go
to a city of habitation."
It was God who led them forth. He was going before them,
then, all the time; His sacred light in their conscience, His secret life in
their soul, His inward teachings in their heart, were all along guiding
them, but at the time they could not see it. They were led along by a sure
and powerful, yet invisible hand. They had to be brought forth out of many
evils--open and secret, known and unknown, seen and unseen, external and
internal. And from no one of these could they deliver their own souls. How
deeply were they indebted even to restraining grace.
Can you not say so? What has kept you from bringing an
open disgrace upon the cause of Christ? What has kept you tender in
conscience, consistent in conduct, circumspect in life, desirous to adorn
the doctrine of God, and afraid to dishonor it? Why, the grace of God--and
that only--and this working for the most part in and by a path of
tribulation. Your exercises of mind; the various trials and temptations
that have fallen to your lot; your griefs and sorrows; and especially those
which have most closely touched your soul, have all worked for good, to make
your conscience tender, to show you the evil of sin, and to keep you from
being wrapped up in carnality and covetousness, or entangled in pride and
self-righteousness. Thus, you may bless the Lord for being afflicted as well
as comforted--being wounded as well as healed--emptied as well as
filled--stripped as well as clothed--for all have worked together for the
good of your soul.
It is much in this way that the Lord leads His people
forth; and when the Lord leads, we can follow. The path may be rough, but if
the Lord upholds, we can walk in it without stumbling. Whatever the Lord
bids, we can do if we have but His presence; whatever He calls upon us to
suffer, we can bear if we have but the approbation of a good conscience and
His approving smile. O the wonders of sovereign grace! The cross is
no cross if the Lord gives strength to bear it; affliction is no affliction
if the Lord supports under it; trial is no trial if sweetened by His smile,
and sorrow no grief if lightened by His love. It is our fretfulness,
unbelief, carnal reasoning, rebellion, and self-pity which make a rough way,
a wrong way. But grace in its all-conquering power, not only subdues every
difficulty without, but what is its greater triumph, subdues every
difficulty within.
Now look back and see how the Lord has led you from the
very first. Can you say, looking up to God, "Lord, it has all been a wrong
way?" You may say, and say feelingly, "I have often done what is wrong,
wrong in myself, wrong to myself; no, I have always, left to myself, chosen
the wrong way; my wicked, perverse heart has ever chosen what was pleasant
and sweet to the flesh, and thence has sprung so much of my guilt and shame.
But as to the way in which the Lord has dealt with me, where I can trace any
of His dealings, I dare not so insult His divine Majesty, or so belie my own
conscience, as to say He has led me wrong."
God forbid that any saint of His should say the Lord has
led them by a wrong way. He cannot do but what is right; for as He is good
and does good, so He is right and does right. It is, and ever must be, one
of the strongest principles of our faith, that every way must, in the end,
be a right way if it be God's way.
And is it not, according to the verdict of our own
conscience, a right way to lead us forth out of the world, out of sin, out
of self, out of pride and self-righteousness, out of evil in every form,
into everything which is good, holy, gracious, acceptable, saving, and
sanctifying; everything that can conform us to the image of Christ, who was
a man of sorrows and acquainted with grief, and make us meet for the
inheritance of the saints in light?
VII. The END of the Wilderness Wanderer
And what is the end of all this leading and guiding?
"That they might go to a city of habitation"--the new Jerusalem, the
glorious city which has foundations whose builder and maker is God. There,
some of our friends have gone before; there they dwell as citizens of that
blessed city which is all of pure gold, as clear as glass; a city which has
no need of the sun, neither of the moon to shine in it, for the glory of the
Lord lightens it, and the Lamb is the light thereof. The Lord has led forth
our dear friends, whom He has taken out of our midst, that they might go to
this city of habitation, inhabited by the spirits of just men made perfect.
This is the city of habitation where the saints will dwell forever. And the
Lord is leading forth each and all of His wilderness wanderers by the right
way, that He may bring them in the same way into His eternal presence, and
to the enjoyment of those pleasures which are at His right hand for
evermore.