Chapter 60:
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| Jamieson Faussett Brown
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 Song of Solomon Jeremiah
Isaiah 60
Complete Concise
This whole chapter is all to the same purport, all in the same
strain; it is a part of God's covenant with his church, which is spoken of in
the last verse of the foregoing chapter, and the blessings here promised are the
fruits of the word and Spirit there promised. The long continuance of the
church, even unto the utmost ages of time, was there promised, and here the
large extent of the church, even unto the utmost regions of the earth; and both
these tend to the honour of the Redeemer. It is here promised, I. That the
church shall be enlightened and shone upon (v. 1, 2). II. That it shall be
enlarged and great additions made to it, to join in the service of God (v. 3-8).
III. That the new converts shall be greatly serviceable to the church and to the
interests of it (v. 9-13). IV. That the church shall be in great honour and
reputation among men (v. 14-16). V. That it shall enjoy a profound peace and
tranquility (v. 17, 18). VI. That, the members of it being all righteous, the
glory and joy of it shall be everlasting (v. 19-22). Now this has some
reference to the peaceable and prosperous condition which the Jews were
sometimes in after their return out of captivity into their own land; but it
certainly looks further, and was to have its full accomplishment in the kingdom
of the Messiah, the enlargement of that kingdom by the bringing in of the
Gentiles into it, and the spiritual blessings in heavenly things by Christ Jesus
with which it should be enriched, and all these earnests of eternal joy and
glory.
Verses 1-8
It is here promised that the gospel temple shall be very
lightsome and very large.
I. It shall be very lightsome:
Thy light has come. When
the Jews returned out of captivity they had
light and gladness, and joy and
honour; they then were made to
know the Lord and to
rejoice in his
great goodness; and upon both accounts their light came. When the Redeemer
came to Zion he brought light with him, he himself came to be a light. Now
observe, 1. What this light is, and whence it springs:
The Lord shall arise
upon thee (v. 2),
the glory of the Lord (v. 1)
shall be seen upon
thee. God is the father and fountain of lights, and it is in his light that
we shall see light. As far as we have the knowledge of God in us, and the favour
of God towards us, our light has come. When God appears to us, and we have the
comfort of his favour, then
the glory of the Lord rises upon us as the
morning light; when he appears for us, and we have the credit of his favour,
when he shows us some token for good and proclaims his favour to us, then his
glory is seen upon us, as it was upon Israel in the
pillar of cloud and fire.
When Christ arose as the sun of righteousness, and in him
the day-spring from
on high visited us, then
the glory of the Lord was seen upon us, the
glory
as of the first-begotten of the Father. 2. What a foil there shall
be to this light:
Darkness shall cover the earth; but, though it be gross
darkness, darkness that might be felt, like that of Egypt, that shall overspread
the people, yet the church, like Goshen, shall have light at the same time. When
the case of the nations that have not the gospel shall be very melancholy, those
dark corners of the earth being
full of the habitations of cruelty
to poor souls, the state of the church shall be very pleasant. 3. What is the
duty which the rising of this light calls for:
"Arise, shine; not
only receive this light, and" (as the margin reads it)
"be
enlightened by it, but reflect this light;
arise and shine with rays
borrowed from it." The children of light ought to shine as lights in the
world. If God's glory be seen upon us to our honour, we ought not only with
our lips, but in our lives, to return the praise of it
to his honour, Mt.
5:16; Phil. 2:15.
II. It shall be very large. When the Jews were settled again in
their own land, after their captivity, many of the people of the land joined
themselves to them; but it does not appear that there ever was any such numerous
accession to them as would answer the fulness of this prophecy; and therefore we
must conclude that this looks further, to the bringing of the Gentiles into the
gospel church, not their flocking to one particular place, though under that
type it is here described. There is no place now that is the centre of the
church's unity; but the promise respects their flocking to Christ, and coming
by faith, and hope, and holy love, into that society which is incorporated by
the charter of his gospel, and of the unity of which he only is the centrethat
family which is named from him, Eph. 3:15. The gospel church is expressly called
Zion and
Jerusalem, and under that notion all believers are said
to
come to it (Heb. 12:22.
You have come unto Mount Zion, to the city
of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem), which serves for a key to this
prophecy, Eph. 2:19. Observe,
1. What shall invite such multitudes to the church: "They
shall
come to thy light and to the brightness of thy rising, v. 3. They
shall be allured to join themselves to thee," (1.) "By the light that
shines upon thee," the light of the glorious gospel, which the churches
hold forth, in consequence of which they are called
golden candlesticks.
This light which discovers so much of God and his good will to man, by which
life and immortality are brought to light, this shall invite all the serious
well-affected part of mankind to come and join themselves to the church, that
they may have the benefit of this light to inform them concerning truth and
duty. (2.) "By the light with which thou shinest." The purity and love
of the primitive Christians, their heavenly-mindedness, contempt of the world,
and patient sufferings, were the brightness of the church's rising, which drew
many into it. The beauty of holiness was the powerful attractive by which Christ
had a willing people brought to him in
the day of his power, Ps. 110:3.
2. What multitudes shall come to the church. Great numbers
shall
come, Gentiles (or
nations)
of those that are saved, as it is
expressed with allusion to this, Rev. 21:24.
Nations shall be
discipled
(Mt. 28:19), and even kings, men of figure, power, and influence, shall be
added
to the church. They come from all parts (v. 4):
Lift up thy eyes round
about, and see them coming,
devout men out of every nation under heaven,
Acts 2:5. See how
white the fields are already to the harvest, Jn. 4:35.
See them coming in a body, as one man, and with one consent: They
gather
themselves together, that they may strengthen one another's hands, and
encourage one another.
Come, and let us go, ch. 2:3. "They come from
the remotest parts:
They come to thee from far, having
heard the
report of thee, as the queen of Sheba, or
seen thy star in the east,
as the wise men, and they will not be discouraged by the length of the journey
from coming to thee. There shall come some of both sexes. Sons and daughters
shall come in the most dutiful manner, as thy sons and thy daughters, resolved
to be of thy family, to submit to the laws of thy family and put themselves
under the tuition of it. They shall come
to be nursed at thy side, to
have their education with thee from their cradle." The church's children
must be nursed at her side, not sent out to be nursed among strangers; there,
where alone the unadulterated milk of the word is to be had, must the church's
new-born babes be nursed,
that they may grow thereby, 1 Pt. 2:1, 2. Those
that would enjoy the dignities and privileges of Christ's family must submit
to the discipline of it.
3. What they shall bring with them and what advantage shall
accrue to the church by their accession to it. Those that are brought into the
church by the grace of God will be sure to bring all they are worth in with
them, which with themselves they will devote to the honour and service of God
and do good with in their places. (1.) The merchants shall write
holiness to
the Lord upon their merchandise and their hire, as ch. 23:18.
"The
abundance of the sea, either the wealth that is fetched out of the sea (the
fish, the pearls) or that which is imported by sea,
shall all
be
converted to thee and to thy use." The wealth of the rich merchants
shall be laid out in works of piety and charity. (2.) The mighty men of the
nations shall employ their might in the service of the church:
"The
forces, or troops,
of the Gentiles shall come unto thee, to guard thy
coasts, strengthen thy interests, and, if occasion be, to fight thy battles."
The forces of the Gentiles had often been against the church, but now they shall
be for it; for as God, when he pleases, can, and, when we please him, will, make
even
our enemies to be at peace with us (Prov. 16:7), so, when Christ
overcomes the strong man armed, he divides his spoils, and makes that to serve
his interests which had been used against them, Lu. 11:22. (3.) The wealth
imported by land-carriage, as well as that by sea, shall be made use of in the
service of God and the church (v. 6):
The camels and dromedaries that bring
gold and incense (gold to make the golden altar of and incense and sweet
perfumes to burn upon it),
those of Midian and Sheba, shall bring the
richest commodities of their country, not to trade with, but to honour God with,
and not in small quantities, but camel-loads of them. This was in part fulfilled
when the
wise men of the east (perhaps some of the countries here
mentioned), drawn by the brightness of the star, came to Christ, and presented
to him treasures of
gold, frankincense, and myrrh, Mt. 2:11. (4.) Great
numbers of sacrifices shall be brought to God's altar, acceptable sacrifices,
and, though brought by Gentiles, they shall find acceptance, v. 7.
Kedar
was famous for flocks, and probably the fattest rams were those of
Nebaioth;
these shall come up with acceptance on God's altar. God must be served and
honoured with what we have, according as he has blessed us, and with the best we
have. This was fulfilled when by the decree of Darius the governors beyond the
rivers (perhaps of some of these countries) were ordered to furnish the temple
at Jerusalem
with bullocks, rams, and lambs, for the burnt-offering of the
God of heaven, Ezra 6:9. It had a further accomplishment, and we trust will
have, in the bringing in of the fulness of the Gentiles to the church, which is
called the
sacrificing or
offering up of the Gentiles unto God,
Rom. 15:16. The flocks and rams are precious souls; for they are said to
minister to the church, and to come up as living sacrifices, presenting
themselves to God by a
reasonable service on
his altar, Rom. 12:1.
4. How God shall be honoured by the increase of the church and
the accession of such numbers to it. (1.) They shall intend the honour of God's
name in it. When they bring their gold and incense it shall not be to show the
riches of their country, nor to gain applause to themselves for piety and
devotion, but to
show forth the praises of the Lord, v. 6. Our greatest
services and gifts to the church are not acceptable further than we have an eye
to the glory of God in them. And this must be our business in our attendance on
public ordinances, to
give unto the Lord the glory due to his name; for
therefore,
as these here, we are called out of darkness into light, that we should
show
forth the praises of him that called us, 1 Pt. 2:9. (2.) God will advance
the honour of his own name by it; so he has said (v. 7):
I will glorify the
house of my glory. The church is the house of God's glory, where he
manifests his glory to his people and receives that homage by which they do
honour to him. And it is for the glory of this house, and of him that keeps
house there, both that the Gentiles shall bring their offerings to it and that
they shall be accepted therein.
5. How the church shall herself be affected with this increase
of her numbers, v. 5. (1.) She shall be in a transport of joy upon this account:
"Thou shalt see and
flow together" (or flow to and fro),
"as in a pleasing agitation about it, surprised at it, but extremely glad
of it." (2.) There shall be a mixture of fear with this joy:
"Thy
heart shall fear, doubting whether it be lawful to
go in to the
uncircumcised and
eat with them." Peter was so impressed with
this fear that he needed a vision and voice from heaven to help him over it,
Acts 10:28. But, (3.) "When this fear is conquered thy heart shall be
enlarged in holy love, so enlarged that thou shalt have room in it for all the
Gentile converts; thou shalt not have such a narrow soul as thou hast had nor
affections so confined within the Jewish pale." When God intends the beauty
and prosperity of his church he gives this largeness of heart and an extensive
charity. (4.) These converts flocking to the church shall be greatly admired (v.
8):
Who are these that fly as a cloud? Observe, [1.] How the conversion
of souls is here described. It is flying to Christ and to his church, for
thither we are directed; it is flying like a cloud, though in great multitudes,
so as to overspread the heavens, yet with great unanimity, all as one cloud.
They shall come with speed, as a cloud flying on the wings of the wind, and come
openly, and in the view of all,
their very
enemies beholding them
(Rev. 11:12), and yet not able to hinder them. They shall
fly as doves to
their windows, in great flights, many together; they fly on the wings of the
harmless dove, which flies low, denoting their innocency and humility. They fly
to Christ, to the church, to the word and ordinances, as doves, by instinct, to
their own windows, to their own home; thither they fly for refuge and shelter
when they are pursued by the birds of prey, and thither they fly for rest when
they have been wandering and are weary, as Noah's dove to the ark. [2.] How
the conversion of souls is here admired. It is spoken of with wonder and
pleasure:
Who are these? We have reason to wonder that so many flock to
Christ: when we see them all together we shall wonder whence they all came. And
we have reason to admire with pleasure and affection those that do flock to him:
Who are these? How excellent, how amiable are they! What a pleasant sight
is it to see poor souls hastening to Christ, with a full resolution to abide
with him!
Verses 9-14
The promises made to the church in the foregoing verses are here
repeated, ratified, and enlarged upon, designed still for the comfort and
encouragement of the Jews after their return out of captivity, but certainly
looking further, to the enlargement and advancement of the gospel church and the
abundance of spiritual blessings with which it shall be enriched.
I. God will be very gracious and propitious to them. We must
begin with that promise, because thence all the rest take rise. The sanctuary
that was desolate begins to be repaired when God
causes his face to shine
upon it, Dan. 9:17. All the favour that the people of God find with men is
owing to the light of God's countenance and his favour to them (v. 10):
"All shall now make court to thee,
for in my wrath I smote thee,
while thou wast in captivity" (and the sufferings of the church, especially
by its corruptions, decays, and divisions, against which these promises will be
its relief, are sad tokens of God's displeasure), "But now
in my
favour have I had mercy on thee, and therefore have all this mercy in store
for thee."
II. Many shall be brought into the church, even from far
countries (v. 9):
Surely the isles shall wait for me, shall welcome the
gospel, and shall attend God with their praises for it and their ready
subjection to it.
The ships of Tarshish, transport-ships, shall lie ready
to carry members from far distant regions to the church, or (which is
equivalent) to carry the ministers of the church to remote parts, to preach the
gospel and to bring in souls to join themselves to the Lord. Observe, 1. Who are
brought
thy sons, that is, such as are designed to be so, those
children
of God that are scattered abroad, Jn. 11:52. 2. What they shall bring with
them. They live at such a distance that they cannot bring their flocks and their
rams; but, like those who lived remote from Jerusalem (who, when they came up to
worship at the feast, because they could not bring their tithes in kind, turned
them into money), they shall
bring their silver and gold with them. Note,
When we give up ourselves to God we must with ourselves give up all we have to
him. If we honour him with our spirits, we shall honour him with our substance.
3. To whom they shall devote and dedicate themselves and all they are worth
to
the name of the Lord thy God, to God as the Lord of all and the church's
God and King, even to the
Holy One of Israel (whom Israel worships as a
Holy One, in the beauty of holiness),
because he has glorified thee.
Note, The honour God puts upon his church and people should not only engage us
to honour them, but invite us to join ourselves to them.
We will go with you,
for God is with you, Zec. 8:23.
III. Those that come into the church shall be welcome; for so
spacious is the holy city that though,
Lord, it is done as thou hast
commanded, yet still there is room. "Therefore thy gates shall be open
continually (v. 11), not only because thou hast no reason to fear thy
enemies, but because thou hast reason to expect thy friends." It is usual
with us to leave our doors open, or leave some one ready to open them, all
night, if we look for a child or a guest to come in late. Note, Christ is always
ready to entertain those that come to him, is never out of the way, nor can they
ever come unseasonably; the gate of mercy is always open, night and day, or
shall soon be opened to those that knock. Ministers, the door-keepers, must be
always ready to admit those that offer themselves to the Lord. God not only
keeps a good house in his church, but he keeps open house, that at any time, by
the preaching of the word,
in season and out of season, the forces of the
Gentiles, and the kings or commanders of those forces,
may be brought
into the church.
Lift up your heads, O you gates! and let such welcome
guests as these come in.
IV. All that are about the church shall be made in some way or
other serviceable to it. Though dominion is far from being founded in men's
grace, it is founded in God's; and he that made the inferior creatures useful
to man will make the nations of men useful to the church. The earth helped the
woman.
All things are for your sakes. So here (v. 10), "Even
the
sons of strangers, that have neither knowledge of thee nor kindness for
thee, that have always been
aliens to the commonwealth of Israel, even
they
shall build up thy wall, and their kings shall in that and other
things
ministers unto thee and not think it any disparagement to them to
do so." This was fulfilled when the king of Persia, and the governors of
the provinces by his order, were aiding and assisting Nehemiah in building the
wall about Jerusalem. Rather than Jerusalem's walls shall lie still in ruins,
the
sons of the stranger shall be raised up to build them. Even those
that do not belong to the church may be a protection to it. And the greatest of
men should not think it below them to minister to the church, but rejoice that
they are in a capacity, and have a heart, to do it any service. Nay, it is the
duty of all to do what they can in their places to advance the interests of God's
kingdom among men; it is at their peril if they do not; for (v. 12),
The
nation and kingdom that will not serve thee shall perish; not that they must
perish by the sword or by human anathemas, or as if this gave any countenance to
the using of external force for the propagating of the gospel, or as if men
might be compelled by penalties and punishments to come into the church; by no
means. But those who will not by faith submit to Jesus Christ, the King of the
church, and serve him, shall perish eternally, Ps. 2:12. Those that will not be
subject to Christ's golden sceptre, to the government of his word and Spirit,
that will not be brought under, or kept in, by the discipline of his family,
shall be broken in pieces by his iron rod.
Bring them forth and slay them
before me, Lu. 19:27. Nations of such shall be utterly and eternally wasted,
when Christ shall come to take vengeance on those that
obey not his gospel,
2 Th. 1:8.
V. There shall be abundance of beauty added to the ordinances of
divine worship (v. 13):
The glory of Lebanon, the strong and stately
cedars that grow there,
shall come unto thee, as of old to Solomon, when
he built the temple (2 Chr. 2:16), and with them shall be brought other timber,
proper for the carved work thereof, which the enemy had broken down, Ps. 74:5,
6. The temple, the
place of God's sanctuary, shall be not only rebuilt,
but beautified. It is the
place of his feet, where he rests and resides,
Eze. 43:7. The ark is called his
footstool, because it was under the
mercy-seat, Ps. 132:7. This he will make glorious in the eyes of his people and
of all their neighbours.
The glory of the latter house, to which this
refers, though in many instances inferior, was yet really
greater than the
glory of the former, because Christ came to that temple, Mal. 3:1. It was
likewise
adorned with goodly stones and gifts (Lu. 21:5), to which this
promise may have some reference; yet so slightly did Christ speak of them there
that we must suppose it to have its full accomplishment in the beauties of
holiness, and the graces and comforts of the Spirit, with which gospel
ordinances are adorned and enriched.
VI. The church shall appear truly great and honourable, v. 14.
The people of the Jews, after their return out of captivity, by degrees became
more considerable, and made a better figure than one would have expected, after
they had been so much reduced, and than any of the other nations recovered that
had been in like manner humbled by the Chaldeans. It is probable that many of
those who had oppressed them in Babylon, when they were themselves driven out by
the Persians, made their court to the Jews for shelter and supply and were
willing to scrape acquaintance with them. This prophecy is further fulfilled
when those that have been enemies to the church are wrought upon by the grace of
God to see their error, and come, and join themselves to it:
"The sons
of those that afflicted thee, if not they themselves, yet their children,
shall crouch to thee, shall beg pardon for their folly and beg an interest in
thy favour and admission into thy family," 1 Sa. 2:36. A promise like this
is made to the church of Philadelphia, Rev. 3:9. And it is intended to be, 1. A
mortification to the proud oppressors of the church, that have afflicted her,
and despised her, and taken a pleasure in doing so; they shall be brought down;
their spirits shall be broken, and their condition shall be so mean and
miserable that they shall be glad to be obliged to those whom they have most
studied to disoblige. Note, Sooner or later God will pour contempt upon those
that put contempt upon his people. 2. An exaltation to the poor oppressed ones
of the church; and this is the honour that shall be done to them, they shall
have an opportunity of doing good to those who have done evil to them and saving
those alive who have afflicted and despised them. It is a pleasure to a good
man, and he accounts it an honour, to show mercy to those with whom he has found
no mercy. Yet this is not all. "They shall not only become suppliants to
thee for their own interest, but they shall give honour to thee:
They shall
call thee, The city of the Lord; they shall at length be convinced that thou
art a favourite of heaven, and the particular care of the divine providence."
That city is truly great and honourable, it is strong, it is rich, it is safe,
it is beautiful, it is the most desirable place that can be to live in, which is
the city of the Lord, which he owns, in which he dwells, in which
religion is uppermost. Such a one is Zion; it is the place which God has chosen
to put his name there; it is
the Zion of the Holy One of Israel;
therefore, we may be sure, it is a holy city, else the Holy One of Israel would
never be called the patron of it.
Verses 15-22
The happy and glorious state of the church is here further
foretold, referring principally and ultimately to the Christian church and the
spiritual peace of that, but under the type of that little gleam of outward
peace which the Jews sometimes enjoyed after their return out of captivity. This
is here spoken of,
I. As compared with what it had been.
This made her peace
and honour the more pleasant, that her condition had been much otherwise.
1. She had been despised, but now she should be honoured, v. 15,
16. Jerusalem had been forsaken and hated, abandoned by her friends, abhorred by
her enemies; no man went through that desolate city, but declined it as a rueful
spectacle; it was an
astonishment and a hissing. But now it shall be made
an eternal excellency, being reformed from idolatry and having recovered the
tokens of God's favour, and it shall be
the joy of good people for
many
generations. Yet considering how short Jerusalem's excellency was, and how
short it came of the vast compass of this promise, we must look for the full
accomplishment of it in the perpetual excellencies of the gospel church, far
exceeding those of the Old-Testament church, and the glorious privileges and
advantages of the Christian religion, which are indeed the joy of many
generations. Two things are here spoken of as her excellency and joy, in
opposition to her having been forsaken and hated:(1.) She shall find herself
countenanced by her neighbours. The nations, and their kings, that are brought
to embrace Christianity, shall lay themselves out for the good of the church,
and maintain its interests with the tenderness and affection that the nurse
shows to the child at her breasts (v. 16):
"Thou shalt suck the milk of
the Gentiles, not suck their blood (that is not the spirit of the gospel);
thou
shalt suck the breast of kings, who shall be to thee as nursing
fathers." (2.) She shall find herself countenanced by her God:
"Thou
shalt know that I the Lord am thy Saviour and thy Redeemer, shalt know it by
experience; for such a salvation, such a redemption, shall be wrought out for
thee as plainly discovers itself to be the work of the Lord, the work of a
mighty one, for it is a great salvation, of the
Mighty One of Jacob, for
it secures the welfare of all those that are Israelites indeed." They
before knew the Lord to be their God; now they know him to be their Saviour,
their Redeemer. Their Holy One now appears their Mighty One.
2. She had been impoverished, but now she shall be enriched, and
every thing shall be changed for the better with her, v. 17. When those who were
raised out of the dust are set among princes, instead of brass money in their
purses they have bold, and instead of iron vessels in their houses they have
silver ones, and other improvements agreeable: so much shall the spiritual glory
of the New-Testament church exceed the external pomp and splendour of the Jewish
economy, which had no glory in comparison with that which quite excels it, 2 Co.
3:10. When we had baptism in the room of circumcision, the Lord's supper in
the room of the passover, and a gospel ministry in the room of a Levitical
priesthood, we had gold instead of brass. Sin turned gold into brass when
Rehoboam made brazen shields instead of the golden ones he had pawned; but God's
favour, when that returns, will turn brass again into gold.
3. She had been oppressed by her own princes, which was sadly
complained of, not only as her sin, but as her misery (ch. 59:14); but now all
the grievances of that kind shall be redressed (v. 17):
"I will make thy
officers peace; men of peace shall be made officers, and shall be indeed
justices, not patrons of injustice, and justices of peace, not instruments of
trouble and vexation. They shall
be peace, that is, they shall sincerely
seek thy welfare and by their means thou shalt enjoy good." They shall be
peace,
for they shall be righteousness; and
then the peace is as a river, when
the righteousness is as the waves of the sea. Even
exactors, whose
business it is to demand the public tribute, though they be exact, must not be
exacting, but must be just to the subject as well as to the prince, and,
according to the instructions John Baptist gave to the publicans must
exact
no more than is appointed them, Lu. 3:13.
4. She had been insulted by her neighbours, invaded, spoiled,
and plundered; but now it shall be so no more (v. 18):
"Violence shall
no more be heard in thy land; neither the threats and triumphs of those that
do violence nor the outcries and complaints of those that suffer violence shall
again be heard, but every man shall peaceably enjoy his own. There shall be no
wasting
nor destruction, either of persons of possessions, any where
within thy
borders; but
thy walls shall be called salvation (they shall be safe,
and means of safety to thee)
and thy gates shall be praise, praise to
thee (every one shall commend thee for the good condition they are kept in), and
praise to thy God,
who strengthens the bars of thy gates," Ps.
147:13. When God's salvation is upon the walls it is fit that his praises
should be in the gates, the places of concourse.
II. As completed in what it shall be. It should seem that in the
close of this chapter we are directed to look further yet, as far forward as to
the glory and happiness of heaven, under the type and figure of the flourishing
state of the church on earth, which yet was never such as to come any thing near
to what is here foretold; and several of the images and expressions here made
use of we find in the description of the
new Jerusalem, Rev. 21:23; 22:5.
As the prophets sometimes insensibly pass from the blessings of the Jewish
church to the spiritual blessings of the Christian church, which are eternal, so
sometimes they rise from the church militant to the church triumphant, where,
and where only, all the promised peace, and joy, and honour will be in
perfection. 1. God shall be all in all in the happiness here promised; so he is
always to true believers (v. 19):
The sun and the moon shall be no more thy
light. God's people, when they enjoy his favour, and walk in the light of
his countenance, make little account of sun and moon, and the other lights of
this world, but could walk comfortably in the light of the Lord though they
should withdraw their shining. In heaven there shall be no occasion for sun or
moon, for it is the inheritance of the saints in light, such light as will
swallow up the light of the sun as easily as the sun does that of a candle.
"Idolaters worshipped the sun and moon (which some have thought the most
ancient and plausible idolatry); but these
shall be no more thy light,
shall no more be idolized, but the Lord shall be to thee a constant light, both
day and night, in the night of adversity as well as in the day of prosperity."
Those that make God their only light shall have him their all-sufficient light,
their
sun and shield. Thy God shall be thy glory. Note, God is the glory
of those whose God he is and will be so to eternity. It is their glory that they
have him for their God, and they glory in it; it is to them instead of beauty.
God's people are, upon
this account, an honourable people, that they
have an interest in God as their sin covenant. 2. The happiness here promised
shall know no change, period, or allay (v. 20):
"Thy sun shall no more
go down, but it shall be eternal day, eternal sunshine, with thee; that
shall not be thy sun which is sometimes eclipsed, often clouded, and, though it
shine ever so bright, ever so warm, will certainly set and leave thee in the
dark, in the cold, in a few hours; but
he shall be a sun, a fountain of
light to thee, who is himself the
Father of all lights, with whom there
is
no variableness, nor
shadow of turning," James 1:17. We
read of the sun's standing still once, and not hasting to go down for the
space of a day, and it was a glorious day, never was the like; but what was that
to the day that shall never have a night? Or, if it had, it should be a light
night; for
neither shall thy moon withdraw itself; it shall never wane,
shall never change, but be always at the full. The comforts and joys that are in
heaven, the glories provided for the soul, as the light of the sun, and those
prepared for the glorified body too, as the light of the moon, shall never know
the least cessation or interruption; how should they when
the Lord shall
himself
be thy everlasting lighta light which never wastes nor can
ever be extinguished?
And the days of thy mourning shall be ended, so as
never to return; for
all tears shall be wiped away, and the fountains of
them, sin and affliction, dried up, so that
sorrow and sighing shall flee
away for ever. 3. Those that are entitled to this happiness, being duly
prepared and qualified for it, shall never be put out of the possession of it
(v. 21):
Thy people, that shall inhabit this New Jerusalem,
shall all
be righteous, all justified by the righteousness of the Messiah, all
sanctified by his Spirit; all that people, that Jerusalem, must be righteous,
must have that
holiness without which no man shall see the Lord. They are
all righteous, for we know that
the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom
of God. There are no people on earth that are all righteous; there is a
mixture of some bad in the best societies on this side heaven; but there are no
mixtures there. They shall be
all righteous, that is, they shall be
entirely righteous; as there shall be none corrupt among them, so there shall be
no corruption in them; the
spirits of just men shall there be
made
perfect. And they shall be
all the righteous together who shall
replenish the New Jerusalem; it is called the
congregation of the righteous,
Ps. 1:5. And, because they are
all righteous, therefore
they shall
inherit the land for ever, for nothing but sin can turn them out of it. The
perfection of the saints' holiness secures the perpetuity of their happiness.
4. The glory of the church shall redound to the honour of the church's God:
"They shall appear to be the
branch of my planting, the work of my
hands, and I will own them as such." It was by the grace of God that
they were designed to this happiness; they are
the branch of his planting,
or of his plantations; he broke them off from the wild olive and grafted them
into the good olive, transplanted them out of the field, when they were as
tender branches, into his nursery, that, being now planted in his
garden on
earth, they might shortly be removed to his
paradise in heaven. It
was by his grace likewise that they were prepared and fitted for this happiness;
they
are the work of his hands (Eph. 2:10), are
wrought to the
self-same thing, 2 Co. 5:5. It is a work of time, and, when it shall be
finished, will appear a work of wonder; and God will be glorified, who began it,
and carried it on; for the Lord Jesus will then be
admired in all those that
believe. God will glorify himself in glorifying his chosen. 5. They will
appear the more glorious, and God will be the more glorified in them, if we
compare what they are with what they were, the happiness they have arrived at
with the smallness of their beginnings (v. 22):
"A little one shall
become a thousand and a small one a strong nation." The captives that
returned out of Babylon strangely multiplied, and became a strong nation. The
Christian church was a little one, a very small one at firstthe number of
their names was once but 120; yet it became a thousand. The stone cut out of the
mountain without hands swelled so as to fill the earth. The triumphant church,
and every glorified saint, will be a thousand out of a little one, a strong
nation out of a small one. The grace and peace of the saints were at first like
a
grain of mustard-seed, but they increase and multiply, and make a
little one to become a thousand, the weak to be as David. When they come to
heaven, and look back upon the smallness of their beginning, they will wonder
how they got thither. And so wonderful is all this promise that it needed the
ratification with which it is closed:
I the Lord will hasten it in his timeall
that is here said relating to the Jewish and Christian church, to the militant
and triumphant church, and to every particular believer. (1.) It may seem too
difficult to be brought about, and therefore may be despaired of; but the God of
almighty power has undertaken it:
"I the Lord will do it, who can do
it, and who have determined to do it." It will be done by him whose power
is irresistible and his purposes unalterable. (2.) It may seem to be delayed and
put off so long that we are out of hopes of it; but, as the Lord will do it, so
he will
hasten it, will do it with all convenient speed; though much time
may pass before it is done, no time shall be lost; he will
hasten it in its
time, in the proper time, in the season wherein it will be beautiful; he
will do it in the time appointed by his wisdom, though not in the time
prescribed by our folly. And this is really hastening it; for, though it seem to
tarry, it does not tarry if it come in God's time, for we are sure that that
is the best time, which he that believes will patiently wait for.
Chapter 60:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 Song of Solomon Jeremiah
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