Cravings: What people rightly want and why they want it

Text Song of Songs 1:2-4 Date 26/01/20 Place Childs Hill Baptist
We began to look last week at Song of Songs or Song of Solomon. We said a number of things by way of introduction. Our main reasons for studying the book are
1. We are surrounded by false images of love and sex and marriage. All of us (single or married, virgins or not, young or old, male or female) need to be clear on this subject.
2. Then there is the matter of intimacy with Jesus Christ. I think this book will be of immense help to believers and unbelievers.
The title Solomon’s Song of Songs tells us at least three things
1. This is a book by or about Solomon. It’s difficult to be sure whether Solomon wrote it but there’s no reason to doubt the tradition. In it he is referred to seven times plus references to the King
2. It’s a song - a pleasant and joyful thing. It is also a useful thing for learning.
3. By song of songs is meant ‘the best of songs’. It’s not only the best Solomon wrote but it is inspired Scripture and so worthy of our careful and diligent study. It has the best subject – Christ.
The song is constructed with two main characters and a sort of chorus. The woman, the Shulamite, the beloved. The man, King Solomon, her lover. From time to time we also have comments from the Friends, the daughters of Jerusalem. In 1:2-4 she speaks of her lover (1-4b) and the friends comment (4b). The verses, perhaps describing the first love between Solomon and the Shulamite, certainly before any marriage, teach us about our approach to love between men and women and to fellowship with the Lord Jesus, the king greater than Solomon whom Solomon foreshadowed.
Sam Goldwyn, the film producer (of MGM fame) apparently once said that a good movie should begin with an earthquake and work to a climax. The Song of Songs is a bit like that. It begins with the woman saying Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth - for your love is more delightful than wine.
Three things then this evening

1. What people rightly desire
Back in 1914 the people of the quiet, conservative town of Lewes, Sussex, on the south coast, were shocked to discover what was on show at the town hall. It was a marble version of Rodin’s famous statue of Dante’s Paulo and Francesca, The kiss! They were taken aback. What a scandal! Many protested at the disgrace. The virtual bombshell that landed then is not dissimilar to the one that explodes in the abrupt and passionate opening here (1:2) as the Beloved blurts out, Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth.
There's an intensity in the Hebrew (NEB Let him smother me with kisses). She is so intoxicated with him, she doesn't even use his name. Her thoughts are full of him. Who else could him be?
There are kisses of honour, peace, friendship, affection. This kiss has passion, a passion that includes purity. There are kisses on forehead, cheeks, hands, feet, the ground a person treads. This one is on the mouth. Kisses can be from inferiors or equals. She craves a kiss from the King himself
In 1:4 she also says to the King Take me away with you - let us hurry! Let the king bring me into his chambers. She not only wants him to come to her but also for her to go to him. Actually she says ‘The king has brought me …’ but the context suggests a wish rather than its fulfilment.
Today, in the western world, lovers can be seen kissing in public. In the east, it is very unusual. In recent years more than one eastern country has talked of outlawing public displays of affection. She wants them to be in private, therefore, in his chambers, so they may share intimacies.
Throughout the world a kiss on the mouth is seen as a passionate, intimate act. Such a kiss, most agree, should be ardent and affectionate. One writer (C N Bovee) said, helpfully, that ‘the passion that is in a kiss’ is what gives it its sweetness, ‘the affection in a kiss … sanctifies it.’ This type of kiss has been called ‘the very autograph of love’. It has a unique nature and symbolism – it is a thing you cannot give without taking nor take without giving. Ingrid Bergman ‘A lovely trick designed by nature to stop speech when words become superfluous.’
Three things:
1. The woman rightly desires intimacy with the man. Men and women have various emotions or longings. In God’s eyes, these can be right or wrong. Wrong desires or cravings are often perversions of right ones. For example, the inclination to eat or drink is good and necessary. To be drunk or a glutton is neither good nor necessary. Here we discover that what the woman wants is intimacy with the man. She yearns to be with him, near him. She wants to be alone with him. A kiss on the mouth is the most intimate sign of that sort of friendship and this she craves. The king’s chambers are his own private rooms not a public part of his palace. She wants to be with him there.
She is not condemned for such desires. They are perfectly right and proper. It is only when perverted that there is a problem. A conference was once organised on the problem of Internet pornography. Interestingly it was called Searching for intimacy - what most people caught up in such things seek. Desire for intimacy is fine. How some go about seeking it is a major problem.
Creation scientist Henry Morris “... the marvellous phenomena of sexual love and reproduction, with the amazing complex of mechanisms involved, could never have originated by some random evolutionary process. God created it all, and He has, in effect, reminded us of its grandeur by including this beautiful Song in his divinely inspired Scriptures.
Genesis 2:21-25 tells how God put Adam into a deep sleep and from his side made a woman from the rib he'd taken out of the man. He then brought her to the man who declared her to be bone of my bones and flesh of my flesh calling her woman. Led by the Spirit, Moses comments For this reason a man will leave his father and mother and be united to his wife, and they will become one flesh.
At that time, the man and his wife were both naked, and they felt no shame. However, with the advent of sin male female relationships are affected so that pure and holy desires are perverted. The woman, who is under the spotlight in Genesis 3:16, is told, Your desire will be for your husband, and he will rule over you. The idea is of the natural order continuing but with distortions.
Men and women have legitimate cravings for intimacy. God has made us so that we normally enjoy the proximity of others and interaction with them. We desire friendship, company, intimacy, emotional closeness and a sexual relationship with another person. Some Christians have frowned on some of these ideas or tried to pretend such feelings don't exist. This is neither right nor wise.
In 2003, the Church of England Doctrine Commission’s report Being human even suggested that the permissive society is possibly ‘one of the long term consequences of the failure of Christians to maintain a positive Christian view of sexuality as a gift of God in creation’.
The tradition among earlier Christians was pretty much against all sexual desire, even within marriage. With the Reformation there was a return to a biblical understanding and things changed. ‘Luther wanted to liberate the Christian faith from this distortion.’ (Oberman). ‘Whoever is ashamed of marriage’ he wrote ‘is ashamed of being human’. The Puritans believed that ‘it was God who had created people as sexual beings’ (Ryken). A modern writer says ‘The first sexual thought in the universe was God’s not man’s’. Puritans also rightly saw sex as a ‘natural or biological appetite.’ A New England church excommunicated a man for neglecting sexual relations with his wife!
Surely this is a right and biblical approach. We have these longings and although they are often perverted and become sinful, where the desire is for my spouse or, if single, for one particular unmarried person of the opposite sex, they are not in themselves wrong. Desire must not be confused with love, of course, but it is perfectly compatible with it. Paul says to the unmarried and widowed It is good for them to stay unmarried, as I am but is equally clear that it is better to marry than to burn with passion (1 Corinthians 7:8, 9). Passion is acceptable but like fire it is fine if under control but potentially dangerous if not. American Puritan poet Edward Taylor described his desire for his beloved as like ‘a golden ball of pure fire’. That sums up well.
Presbyterian minister William Smith ‘You cannot read the Song of Solomon and believe that love does not involve hot emotions, physical desire and rich romance.’ When interviewing couples who want to marry he asks first ‘Do you love each other with Song of Solomon love?’
Most people want to have someone to be alone with, to talk to, to share with, to be intimate with. Sometimes, such passions are legitimately fulfilled, at least for a period, in this life. Sometimes not. For a single person to want to fulfil those yearnings or for a married person to legitimately gratify those cravings in the marriage bed, is not sinful (1 Cor 7:3-5) but both natural and right.
Now men and women have such desires. The way God has made us is such that we desire friendship, company, intimacy and emotional closeness. Some Christians have frowned on such an idea or have tried to pretend such feelings don’t exist. This is not wise. We have these desires and although they are often perverted and become sinful, the desire is not sinful in itself. Of course, we all want to have someone we can be alone with, someone to talk to, to share with, to be intimate with. Sometimes such desires are fulfilled in part for a period in this life, sometimes they are not.
2. The woman rightly desires the man to take the lead in this intimacy. It is worth remarking that she not only wants intimacy with the man but wants him to take the lead. Her role in the book is central. She's no shrinking violet here. Rather she's something of an initiator. For some writers this is a problem. In the '50s one commented that such initiative from a woman is ‘never the case in secular love’. Would he write like that today? Right or not, it's important to note that she wants him to kiss her not her to kiss him. She wants him to be instigator. She wants him to take her away not her to take him away. She wants him to take her to his chambers not she to hers or to a neutral place.
This is how it should be, biblically. The Bible teaches male headship. It is reflected here. Often under attacked from unbelievers and sometimes even believers, it is plainly taught in Scripture. Right desires will fall into line with this fundamental pattern, not in a way that makes women second class citizens but one that, while leaving plenty of room for female initiative, willingly submits to male headship in the marriage bond.
When we are children, our needs for intimacy are met, or should be, by our parents or those in loco parentis. They kiss us, keep us, care for us, do all sorts for us. Our duty is to honour and obey them. As we grow older, our appetite for intimacy with someone outside our family grows to varying degrees. Such yearnings are lawful and should be met through marriage and what leads up to it.
It is right for a man to want a woman to be intimate with, for a woman to want a man to bring about this intimacy. Marriage can last a short time or long, a lifetime in many cases. No marriage is perfect but provided the man takes the lead and the wife is submissive, according to biblical patterns, one thing it can do very well is to meet our emotional need for intimacy here on earth. For various reasons some stay unmarried so those desires remain, and must remain, largely unfulfilled on a physical level. To have those cravings is nevertheless right and understandable.
3. The one we should all desire – Jesus Christ. Always in Scripture we should be looking to see how it points us to Jesus Christ. Jesus himself says of the Scriptures They testify about me (John 5:39). All roads lead to London and in the Bible all roads lead to Christ. It is surely fair to say then, in light of these verses, that whatever our situation, it is always right and proper, indeed absolutely vital, to desire intimacy with the Lord Jesus Christ. We were made for God – to be with him and serve him. We should covet the kisses of his mouth. We should yearn to be alone with him, face to face. We should long, in Sibbes’ words, ‘that he would reveal himself everyday more and more’. If you truly know him, you'll want that.
One writer likes to tell the story of a seasoned counsellee coming to him for help. She expected him to discuss her sex life and was surprised he wanted to talk about her prayer life. The two are closely connected, he says. Both are about intimacy. He asserts that a deep horizontal relationship involves aspects of sexuality and a profound vertical one involves prayer. The two interconnect.
Any real longing for the consummation of love in heaven will translate to a desire for God’s kisses on earth. Think of 1 Peter 1:8 Though you have not seen him, you love him; and even though you do not see him now, you believe in him and are filled with an inexpressible and glorious joy.
What holds you back from intimacy with Christ? Why do you not want to draw nearer to him? Are you ashamed of him in some way? Is it that you are simply taken up with other things?
Some people never marry and are sorry. They loved and lost or never loved at all. We understand their possible regret. Some marry and, for various sad reasons, the marriage is soon over. To lose out on such intimacies is a loss but a brief and passing one. Far, far more heart-rending is the tragedy of missing out on a relationship with Christ. Nothing can possibly make up for missing out on that. It is a disaster of infinite, eternal proportions. Nothing can compare to intimacy with him. If you've never put your faith in Jesus, do you realise? If you are a believer, are you keeping in mind how precious intimacy with him is? Kiss the Son lest he be angry and you be destroyed in your way, for his wrath can flare up in a moment. Blessed are all who take refuge in him. Psalm 2:12. Can we say with David How lovely is your dwelling-place O LORD Almighty! Do our souls yearn, faint even, for the courts of the LORD. Can we say my heart and my flesh cry out for the living God? Psalm 84:1, 2
If we've tasted and seen the Lord is good, surely we should have what Sibbes calls ‘an insatiable desire for a further taste and assurance of his love’. Isn’t this the nature of true love? When we consider Christ's infinite riches, we know we've only scratched the surface so far. We should labour for a clearer sight of the Lord. This involves turning from all false teaching, laying aside all worldly distractions and with humility and zeal building on what we have so that, slowly but surely, as we prayerfully serve and know his comfort in sorrow, we increasingly sense his sweetness and love.
Pray ‘Take me away with you’ – ‘draw me’ it is. God says I have loved you with an everlasting love; I have drawn you with loving-kindness (Jer 31:3). R Brooks ‘The Lord Jesus Christ is the magnet of redeemed souls’. Pray for greater attraction, for further drawings. ‘Draw me nearer, nearer, nearer blessed Lord to thy precious bleeding side.’
Be earnest. He draws, but we must run. Say to your heart ‘let's hurry!’ Don't hang back for a moment. Say “More about Jesus would I know … More of his saving fullness see More of his love who died for me.” Pray the king will bring me into his chambers. Pray ‘Love divine, all loves excelling, Joy of heaven to earth come down! Fix in us thy humble dwelling’; ‘O Jesus Christ grow thou in me and all things else recede’; ‘Thee will I love, my Strength, my Tower … Thee will I love, till the pure fire fills my whole soul with strong desire’. Pray “Compared with Christ, in all beside No comeliness I see; The one thing needful, dearest Lord, Is to be one with Thee.”
2. Why they desire this The second thing here is why people rightly long for such
Two things
1. Why the woman craves intimacy with the man. The woman explains why she craves intimacy with the man in verse 2b, 3 (assuming she speaks throughout 2-4a. The switch from him to you is common. It is called enallage). Why does she yearn for intimacy with him? for your love is more delightful than wine. Pleasing is the fragrance of your perfumes; your name is like perfume poured out. No wonder the maidens love you! (Delightful/Pleasing - the same word in Hebrew). Note the pattern
For pleasant is your love, more than wine. The fragrance of your perfumes, pleasant it is.
The word for love here may denote lovemaking rather than emotion. For her, there is nothing to compare with his lovemaking or with his caresses! Later (5:16) she says His mouth is sweetness itself; he is altogether lovely. Here she compares receiving his kisses to drinking wine a powerful metaphor that appears several times in the book and a common one in the ancient near east. There is a play on the similarity of the two Hebrew words and the fact wine flowing over the lips, like a kiss, can produce a delightful sensation and more. There is delight in the bouquet of wine or drinking it, or in a similar experience. To know love and intimacy is even more delightful. Perhaps the intoxicating power of wine is in the background. Love can make you giddy or light-headed.
Having spoken of touch (kisses) and taste (wine) she then talks about his beautiful aroma. This may seem a little odd. Is she saying she is drawn to him by the smell of his aftershave? In a hot climate and before modern plumbing, lotions and perfumes were particularly important. In Hebrew, the words for perfume and name are again similar. She uses this as a picture of what his name or his character is like. Cf Ecc 7:1 ‘A good name is better than fine perfume’.
John Owen comments “As the smell of aromatical spices and flowers pleases the natural sense, refreshes the spirits, and delights the person; so do the graces of Christ to his saints. They please their spiritual sense, they refresh their drooping spirits, and give delight to their souls.” He notes that their hearts are ravished in particular by the ‘precious perfume of his death’.
She did not just like how this man looked; everything about his character drew her. Nor was this only her opinion. The maidens, virgins of marriageable age, all admired him too. How right they are to adore you! says the Beloved at the end of 1:4.
A woman today should be able to speak in a similar way of the man she hopes to marry. She shouldn't be the only one to see what a great catch he is. She shouldn't be so infatuated she takes a fool for a genius, Quasimodo for Prince Charming, a rogue for a knight in shining armour.
She, on one hand, must be looking for the right sort of man. He, on the other, should be of good character – not wimps but upright, honest, holy, respectable, entitled to a woman’s love and esteem.
2. Why we should all seek intimacy with the Lord Jesus Christ. As for why we should seek intimacy with Christ, the answer is obvious. No-one compares with him! No-one begins to match him. He has the name above every name. Blessed are those who have learned to acclaim you, who walk in the light of your presence, O LORD. They rejoice in your name all day long; they exult in your righteousness. (Ps 89:15, 16) The Lord’s name is his character, a character that is matchless. The delights of knowing his love are beyond compare.
In John Newton’s famous words “How sweet the name of Jesus sounds In a believer’s ear, It soothes his sorrows, heals his wounds And drives away his fear.” A later hymn says “There is name I love to hear, I love to speak its worth, It sounds like music in my ear, The sweetest name on earth.”
Do you long for the kisses of his mouth? Do you long to be alone with him? If you have any idea of his true worth you surely will. His kisses are for those who, by grace, see his worth, appreciate his significance and value his greatness. Can you say with Asaph (Psalm 73:25) Whom have I in heaven but you? And earth has nothing I desire besides you?
Various writers suggest aspects of Christ’s love that make it superior to wine – it can be enjoyed without fear, brings eternal delight, totally satisfies, is supremely beneficial, absolutely pure. For Christians it's hard to read of wine, etc, without thinking of Jesus Christ and the Lord’s Supper with its wine poured, which speaks so powerfully of his life’s blood spilled on the cross to save sinners.
1 John 4:9, 10 This is how God showed his love among us: He sent his one and only Son into the world that we might live through him. This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as the one who would turn aside his wrath, taking away our sins.
Psalm 45 says of Christ You love righteousness and hate wickedness; therefore God, your God, has set you above your companions by anointing you with the oil of joy. All your robes are fragrant with myrrh and aloes and cassia; from palaces adorned with ivory the music of the strings makes you glad. Our response should be like that in Psalm 63 Because your love is better than life, my lips will glorify you. I will praise you as long as I live, and in your name I will lift up my hands. My soul will be satisfied as with the richest of foods; with singing lips my mouth will praise you.
References to perfume remind us of how pure nard was poured on Jesus in preparation for his burial and suggests the earlier pouring out of the Spirit on Christ, especially when we remember the perfumed quality of sacred anointing oil in OT ritual, symbolic of the Holy Spirit.
3. What should we think of such desires in others?
In 4b is what seems to be a comment from the friends, We rejoice and delight in you; we will praise your love more than wine. We will praise really means ‘we will remember in order to praise’. The friends are delighted at this love match. They're happy with the attitude of the man and woman and think the lovemaking is an excellent thing - better than wine, symbolic of joy and fellowship.
We also should be glad when we see biblically contoured affection blossom between people. We want to encourage it, not hinder it because we are jealous, disdainful or indifferent. Conversely, we will want to discourage desires for intimacy that are not biblically based. This includes perversions such as fornication, adultery, homosexuality, paedophilia, pornography. Some try to argue that such things are acceptable. Nothing in this Song or anywhere else in the Bible supports such views and everything opposes them. Gal 5:19, Heb 12:16, Col 3:5,6 The acts of the sinful nature are obvious: sexual immorality, impurity and debauchery, etc; See that no-one is sexually immoral; Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry. Because of these, the wrath of God is coming.
Those who struggle with such temptations ought not to despair, however, for in Corinth people were converted, it is clear, who had been sexually immoral … adulterers … male prostitutes … homosexual offenders (1 Cor 6:9-11). Many others have been redeemed from similar lives.
Further, we ought to be doing all we can to encourage each other in our love for Christ and in our devotion to him. He should be our joy and delight and whenever we meet someone who loves the Lord, we should be glad. We ought to always speak in the highest terms of what it means to be a Christian. There is nothing better than to know Jesus. What a glorious thing! How marvellous, how wonderful. Nothing greater. What are we doing to promote such things?
Another mention of wine here, especially in the context of remembering (KJV We will remember thy love more than wine) causes believers to think of the Lord’s Supper. Spurgeon once took this text before communion to speak of Christ’s love.
To be a Christian, as intimated, is to relish the character of Christ. It is to identify with words such as these “Jesus, the very thought of Thee With sweetness fills the breast; But sweeter far Thy face to see, And in Thy presence rest.”

Clarifications: an introduction to the Song of Songs

Text Song of Songs 1:1 Date 19/01/20 Place Childs Hill Baptist

I'd like us to begin this evening a series of studies in the Old Testament book The Song of Songs also known as The Song of Solomon. As some of you know, I published a commentary on it in 2006, Heavenly love. The book grew from a series of sermons I preached as far back as 2002. We are about due another visit then.
In the second-century Rabbi Aqiba said `In all the world there is nothing to equal the day on which the Song of Songs was given to Israel, for all the Scriptures are holy, but the Song of Songs is the Holy of Holies.' Even if we allow for some hyperbole, the statement contrasts sharply with the attitude of many today, who have little place for this book in their thinking or practice. They hardly ever quote it, read it or reflect on it. It has suffered what has been called 'functional decanonisation'.
Such extremes remind us that the book has sometimes been controversial. Over the years, among both Jews and Christians people have questioned its place in Scripture. However, from ancient times until the present day, I hasten to add, its divine inspiration has never been in serious doubt.
What I want to do in this opening sermon is to re-introduce the book. Over the years many, many people have preached and written on it – Church Fathers, Mediaeval Schoolmen, Reformers, Puritans, others. The Westminster Assembly in the 1640s said there were at least 500 commentaries on it by then but sadly they felt most served rather to obscure the book than to make it clearer! It is certainly not an easy book to study and has often been called the most difficult book to interpret in the Old Testament. Augustine found it a puzzle. Tenth-century rabbi Saadia ben Joseph spoke of the key to its locks being lost. Matthew Henry wrote 'It seems as hard as any scripture to be made a "savour of life unto life".' In 1683 a man called Richard Coore issued a book expounding 'the most difficult texts' in Scripture. It included work on 'the two mystical books of canticles and the revelations'. A modern preacher speaks candidly of 'much furious thought and casting about in my mind to make something of it, and another of being 'stark-raving bonkers' to take it on!
Why is it difficult? Several reasons. It has 470 different Hebrew words. One percent of these (47) are found only in this book. A further 120 are unusual or fairly unusual. One reason for this is that the book is poetry, which can often be difficult anyway. Like the Book of Esther it never explicitly mentions God's name. I guess that is why (also like Esther) the New Testament never quotes it directly.
The other perceived problem with it is its subject matter. Jewish rabbis used to warn against reading it before the age of 30. When recommending Bible books for his friend Paula's daughter to read, Jerome kept this one until last. If you know it, you'll understand why. Should there be a parental advisory sticker on the book? Writing to the Ephesians, Paul certainly warns believers that there must not be even a hint of sexual immorality among them. Perhaps we tend to think of that as a prohibition against thinking about sex at all. In fact, of course, it means that we must keep all our thinking and speaking pure. Rather than hindering us from doing so, the book will help us to do just that, whatever our age or situation.
A former seminary president once claimed that in most situations the Song 'would probably not minister effectively to the entire congregation'. I think he's wrong. As racy as we might feel it is at times, there is no reason not to read it or preach it in public. It will greatly help us to think as we ought to about sexual matters and about our relationship with Christ. Four things tonight then.
1. Should it be in my Bible and if so where will I find it?
As we have said, over the years, some have questioned the book's place in Scripture. An example would be CHurch Father Theodore of Mopsuestia (350-428). Another was Sebastian Castillio who Calvin had to resist in Geneva in the 16th Century. From ancient times until the present day, however, again as we have said, its divine inspiration has been upheld. It should be in the Bible.
Hebrew Bibles are in three parts – Torah, Prophets, Writings (T(or)a(h) Na(vim) kh(etuvim)). The Song is the fourth book (after Psalms, Proverbs, Job) in the Writings. These books are mostly found between 1 Chronicles and Song of Songs in English Bibles. Five books (Song, Ruth, Ecclesiastes, Esther and Lamentations) are traditionally referred to as the Megilloth or scrolls. Modest, apparently insignificant works, they come to prominence at Jewish festivals, the Song being read at the end of Passover.
Following the Greek translation known as the Septuagint, English Bibles place it after Ecclesiastes. Some like that order. They say
Ecclesiastes does a negative, preparatory, convicting work (Everyone who drinks this water will be thirsty again John 4:13)
The Song is more positive, complete and edifying (... but whoever drinks the water I give him will never thirst John 4:14).
These two, with Job, Proverbs and certain psalms, are often spoken of as Wisdom Literature, a genre dealing chiefly with how to apply truth to daily life. One writer (Duane Garrett) says that its wisdom is obvious. It prepares the reader 'for the joy as well as the trauma of love'.
2. Who wrote it and why does it have the title it has?
The title, or superscription in our Bibles is Solomon's Song of Songs. This catchy title reflects the poetry of the original Hebrew. How old the details on this title page are we don't know. However, it seems authentic. It tells us three things.
1. Solomon
This is a book by or about Solomon or at least has something to do with him. It is dedicated to him, in his style, or one that was his favourite. It is difficult to be totally sure who the author was but there is no reason to reject out of hand the tradition it was Solomon. Also called Jedidiah, beloved of the Lord (2 Sam. 12:25), Solomon has sometimes been regarded as an Old Testament Apostle John. Some see the references to him within the book as peripheral but his name is there seven times (1:1,5; 3:7,9,11; 8:11, 12). There are also references to 'the king' (1:4, 12; 7:5). The book seems to come from a time when Israel was peaceful and united. It is worth remembering that in Hebrew the name Solomon (Sh'lomo) is similar to the word Shalom, peace, as is Shulammite (the term used for the woman, 6:13). At the start of the book the idea of peace and fulfilment is in the background.
There is something attractive about the ancient Jewish view that the Song, Proverbs and Ecclesiastes are works, respectively, from Solomon's earlier, middle and later years. Henry Morris takes this view. He argues that here Solomon has in mind his first love and bride, Naamah, an Ammonitess, mother of Rehoboam (2 Chr 12:13), whom Solomon must have married in his late teens. Morris backs up this speculation by noting the reference to Engedi (1:14), just across the Dead Sea from Ammon, and the use of the word pleasant, possibly a diminutive of Naamah (1:16).
The fact Solomon later went astray in the very area of human and divine intimacy, with his many wives and his idolatrous ways, does not of itself undermine the book's value. Indeed, this factor acts as a warning sign discouraging the idea that it is easy to escape such temptations.
If we accept that Solomon is the author, the book dates from somewhere in the middle of the tenth century BC Many who deny this view, on linguistic or other grounds, want to make it much later.
2. Song
It is a song - here a pleasant and joyful thing, as songs usually are, 'to stir up the affections and to heat them' (M Henry). It is poetry, which is good for stirring the emotions but can also be useful for teaching. We all know what it is to have the words of a song in our heads (an earworm) - whether we want it there or not. In English, the book is sometimes known as 'The Song' and sometimes, slightly inaccurately, as 'Canticles' (from Latin Vulgate Canticum Canticorum, Song of Songs).
3. Song of songs
This could mean a song made up of different songs, a collection, a 'best of compilation' even. One song but with various parts. However, the phrase probably means 'the best of songs' and is similar to biblical phrases such as vanity of vanities, King of kings, Holy of holies. The Aramaic Targum says that out of ten Bible songs, including those of Moses, Deborah and Hannah, this is the ninth and best. We learn (1 Kings 4:32) that Solomon spoke three thousand proverbs and his songs numbered a thousand and five. Here we have the very best of them, the most beautiful.
Nick Hornby has written of popular music that 'In the end it's songs about love that endure the best.' This is certainly a song about love. It is not only Solomon's best but inspired Scripture and so doubly worthy of careful and diligent study. It also has, as suggested, the greatest theme of all - Jesus Christ, the one who is love personified.
Puritan James Durham says it deals with
  • The best subject (Christ and his church)
  • In its most glorious aspect (their mutual love)
  • Is an excellent composition with a captivating style, and
  • Comprehensively provides 'an armoury and storehouse of songs' suitable 'for every case' and `for all sorts of believers'.
3. How is it constructed and what is the story here?
Like other Wisdom Literature, the Song, as we have said, is poetry. It uses terse sentences and devices such as parallelism (developing ideas through near repetition), alliteration and assonance (repeating consonants or vowels), simile or metaphor (rhetorical picture language) and refrain. As with most poetry, especially love poetry, the writing is highly imaginative and artistic (`perhaps the largest concentration of imagery anywhere in the Bible' Tremper Longman III).
Some see the Song as a collection not a single literary unit, identifying as few as six, or as many as over 30, different poems. Others argue for a greater unity. The Song may lack the plot one expects from a story but it forms a coherent totality, the result of more than merely assembling an anthology. However the Song was put together, there is a definite cohesion, with the same characters, recurrent phrases and ideas and similar language throughout. Some writers reject the idea of linear development in the book but, while there is no consensus on details, there is some agreement on the broad narrative structure.
The order is:
first, a courtship period, which probably includes formal betrothal (1:1-3:5); second, the wedding (3:6-5:1); third, married life (5:2–8:14).
One writer (S Craig Glickman) says that all commentators accept that `the wedding procession' (3:6-11) forms a unit. He believes the lovemaking sections (4:1-5:1; 7:1-10), are almost as clear-cut. As 4:1-5:1 follows the wedding procession, has the beloved being addressed for the first time as a bride and sees her wearing a veil, it is reasonable to understand it as a wedding-night scene. The section 7:1-10 has its corollary in 7:11-8:3. The section that links 3:6-5:1 and 7:1-8:3 is 5:2-6:13. This is a 'conflict and solution narrative' that can be seen as bridging the gap between the lovemaking of 4:1-5:1 and its more intense parallel in 7:1-10. That leaves the opening and closing sections, l:1-3:5 and 8:4-14. The first is probably a courtship section rather than a flashback, the only such scene occurring near the end of the book, where the climax and resolution appear. The courtship can be split after 2:3, where there is increased intensity. Glickman thus ends up with seven or eight sections: 1:1-2:3; 2:4-3:5; 3:6-11; 4:1-5:1; 5:2-6:13; 7:1-8:4; 8:5-14 (or 8:5-9/10-14).
Some writers are uneasy about the idea that the pair marry before the end. Those who take a `spiritual' view rightly point out that the relationship between Christ and his church is most often seen in terms of betrothal here on earth, marriage in the world to come. However, Puritan Edward Pearse wrote of a threefold marriage between Christ and his people - personal, mystical, heavenly.
Personal - Christ 'the Word made flesh', the incarnation. This is foundational.
Mystical - 'being joined to the Lord and being one spirit with him'. This is our initial participation in Christ.
Heavenly - the glorious union in heaven, the consummation to come. This involves full possession and enjoyment forever. In the Song it is this 'mystical' marriage that is in mind.
So we suggest this outline:

1. Clarifications An introduction 1:1
2. Craving What people rightly want and why 1:2-4
3. Courtship Self-perceptions and desires – getting it right 1:5-8
4. Commitment Models of care, devotion and fellowship 1:9-2:2
5. Coming together The nature of true love 2:3-17
6. Crisis A lover lost, a lover sought, a lover found 3:1-5
7. Ceremony Two lovers married – a wedding procession 3:6-11
8. Consummation Praising, wooing and loving 4:1-5:1
9. Coldness Close covenant communion 5:2-8
10. Conciliation True beauty and where it is found 5:9-6:12
11. Completeness True love in its maturity 6:13-8:4
12. Continuing How to continue, commence or conclude a loving covenant relationship 8:5-15

We should also note that the Song is constructed with two main characters and a sort of chorus.
1. The beloved — the woman, the Shulammite. She appears to be a young country girl, possibly from Shunem, Lower Galilee (6:13) or Naamah the Ammonitess. She is betrothed to her lover and marries him. Over half the time she is the one who speaks (55 of 117 verses). She is an active initiator. She corresponds to a woman in betrothal and marriage, God's people in `spiritual' terms.
2. The lover - the man, King Solomon. His speeches take up just under 40% of the book. He exemplifies the role of the man in a male-female relationship and Christ's love for his people.
3. The friends - From time to time we also have comments from 'the friends, the daughters of Jerusalem'. Their contribution is small, just over 5%, although they also act as an audience at some points, a sort of sounding board for the woman's ideas. Who they are is disputed. Are they ladies-in-waiting at Solomon's court, friends of the woman, general onlookers?
The nature of Hebrew is such that, although there is sometimes a doubt, it is usually clear whether a male or a female, a single person or more than one, is speaking.
There is something here, then, not only for men and for women on the matter of courtship, love and marriage, but also for all who look on and see such things happening.
It is useful, finally, to have an idea of the storyline that, I believe, underlies the unfolding of the book. Perhaps `storyline' is too strong a term - this is a song, not a novel or play. Despite the denials of some, however, a plot is detectable. We can debate details but it seems the beloved was part of a family where the father had died, or was no longer on the scene for another reason, and where she was under the authority of her half-brothers. Naturally beautiful, she was a somewhat neglected soul, forced by her guardians to work long hours under a hot sun in the vineyards and in other agricultural pursuits. One day a handsome stranger appears and shows interest in her. This man turns out to be King Solomon. He sees her hidden beauty, wins her heart, betroths her to him, marries her, takes her into his palace. Although there comes a time when she takes his love for granted, so driving him away, they are reconciled and come to a mature love that goes on into the future with no sign of end.
4. How does it apply to me?
A key question to consider is the correct hermeneutical approach. At one extreme are those who want to take it in an entirely spiritual way. It deals exclusively, they say, with the love between God and his people. At the other extreme are those who want to take it in an entirely natural way. For them, it is all about the love between a woman and her lover, and no more.
Across this spectrum are several schools of thought. In his Introduction to the Old Testament, Professor E J Young prefers a more natural approach. It reminds us, he says, 'in particularly beautiful fashion, how pure and noble true love is'. Like others, he then wants to extend the application beyond the purity of human love to include something higher, seeing here not an allegory or even a type of Christ and his church but a subject with a higher meaning.
Without necessarily using Young's word 'parable' to denote the view, it is basically his approach that I think is best. It cuts the Gordian knot and is the approach that provides the best interpretative framework. I believe that, when he wrote, the author had in mind both a natural and a spiritual understanding, and that those who originally received it as Scripture understood it both in terms of human love and intimacy and as a portrait of the loving relationship between God and his people. One writer I read (Raewynne Whiteley) puts it like this 'Song of Songs could be understood as a superb love poem, evocative and rich in imagery. As such it sets forth a high standard for mutual love and encourages the celebration of love and beauty. However, as we understand the further dimension of God's love, it becomes an intimate invitation into a relationship with God, celebrating the goodness of love, the beauty of passion and the tenderness of God.'
But on what basis do we take this view? When we look at Proverbs, another book closely connected with Solomon, we find references to the women Wisdom and Folly and the wiles of the adulteress. It is commonly accepted that such references teach us both about fidelity in marriage and in God's covenant with his people. In a similar way, the Song works on two levels. Passages such as Psalm 45; Isaiah 62:4-5; Hosea 1-3 and Malachi 2:14 do the same. When Paul speaks to husbands and wives in Ephesians 5:22-25, we recall how he immediately moves to the subject of Christ and his church: Wives, submit to your husbands as to the Lord. For the husband is the head of the wife as Christ is the head of the church, his body, of which he is the Saviour. Now as the church submits to Christ, so also wives should submit to their husbands in everything. Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ loved the church and gave himself up for her to make her holy... He adds, This is a profound mystery - but I am talking about Christ and the church. However, each one of you also must love his wife as he loves himself, and the wife must respect her husband.
Here is a clue to a full understanding of the Song. It speaks not only about the important matter of human love between man and woman but also the mysterious intimacy that exists, and that must be cultivated, between true believers and their Lord and Saviour. Surely it is the sort of thing we find in the Song Paul has in mind when he writes for example (2 Cor 11:2) I am jealous for you with a godly jealousy. I promised you to one husband, to Christ, so that I might present you as a pure virgin to him.
For most of us, the areas of sexuality and spirituality are ones we instinctively shy away from having scrutinised but it is good to have these areas exposed to Scripture. A study of this ancient book is crucially needed in our day in both these areas.
First, because in this modern world of mass media, through advertising, cinema, television and the Internet, we are inundated with false mages of love, sex and marriage. We are bombarded with misleading ideas and, even if we keep our minds as pure as we ought, it is still very easy for inaccurate concepts to worm their way in and have their debilitating effect on us. Some have spoken of the 'saturation of virtually all channels of communication by sexual imagery of an increasingly explicit kind'. All of us - virgins or not, single, married, divorced or widowed, celibate or sexually active, young or old, male or female - need to be crystal clear on this vital subject.
Secondly, there is the vital issue of intimacy with Jesus Christ. When first converted, Jonathan Edwards spent a lot of time with the Song because it spoke to him so much of Christ's 'loveliness and beauty'. My other hope is that by looking at the book once again it will prompt a similar reaction in us. The book can helps us to see how lovely the Lord Jesus is, how attractive, how appealing. I want you to fall for him and fall before him. This book can help revive and rekindle our first love for him, where such a renaissance is needed. If we see again something of Christ's beauty and glory, his comeliness and splendour, we will be drawn to him. The Song of Songs can be of tremendous help to us in this direction. Let's pray it will be over the coming weeks.

A wonderul promise for all who pray in Jesus' name

Text John 14:13,14 Date 21/05/08 Place Childs Hill Baptist

I want us to look tonight at another of the great texts of the New TestameT. It is found in John 14:13, 14. Once again Jesus is the speaker. He says to his disciples And I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Son may bring glory to the Father. You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.
The verses concern prayer and so are of interest to practically everyone. You will rarely meet a person who has not at least on one occasion or another prayed. I was walking along Cricklewood Broadway on the Friday before Christmas and I saw a great pile of shoes on the pavement. I wondered why. Muslims were praying nearby. Prayer is speaking to someone (usually in English we mean someone you cannot see) and asking them for something. Even people who are not brought up to do this seem almost instinctively to engage in this sort of activity. All sorts of people pray, even those we may least expect. I am not suggesting that all this praying is right praying or good praying – not at all. I am simply pointing out that people do pray. If you don't believe me, ask around.
Jesus spoke these words on the night he was betrayed. Following the Last Supper, Jesus had many things to say to his disciples and John records a great deal of it in Chapters 14, 15, 16 of his Gospel. Chapter 14 begins with Jesus saying Do not let your hearts be troubled. Trust in God; trust also in me. In my Father's house are many rooms; if it were not so, I would have told you. I am going there to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come back and take you to be with me that you also may be where I am. You know the way to the place where I am going.
This prompts Thomas's objection Lord, we don't know where you are going, so how can we know the way? And Jesus's wonderful answer I am the way and the truth and the life. No one comes to the Father except through me.
He adds If you really knew me, you would know my Father as well. From now on, you do know him and have seen him which leads to Philip's request (8) Lord, show us the Father and that will be enough for us. Jesus responds Don't you know me, Philip, even after I have been among you such a long time? Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father. How can you say, Show us the Father?Don't you believe that I am in the Father, and that the Father is in me? The words I say to you are not just my own. Rather, it is the Father, living in me, who is doing his work. Believe me when I say that I am in the Father and the Father is in me; or at least believe on the evidence of the miracles themselves.
He then says (12) I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these, because I am going to the Father. This is a great promise in itself but one that we have no time to look at tonight. It is trumped by the verses that follow where Jesus adds the even more amazing words that we want to look at tonight (13, 14) And I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Son may bring glory to the Father. You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it.
We want to say four things arising out of these verses.
1. Consider this wonderful promise concerning prayer
So Jesus says I will do whatever you ask. I think we need to ask just two questions to get at what we are being told here.
1. Who is this promise for? Clearly Jesus is speaking to his disciples here and so when he says I will do whatever you ask the you he has in mind are specifically disciples, followers. See verse 12 anyone who has faith in me. This does not mean to say that Jesus will never do anything for anyone else but it does mean to say that he is committing himself only to doing what his own disciples ask and only what those who come to him in faith ask. If I say to someone I will do this or that for you – you only have to ask, then when they phone me or ask me personally for that offered help then I am under an obligation to help them. Of course, with others I have the choice - I can help or I may not do so. So, if you are not a disciple of Jesus you are free to ask Jesus to do something for you and he may well do it. You may be able to give me examples where he has answered your prayers. However, strictly speaking, this promise is only for disciples. It is for people who have already committed themselves to following and serving Jesus. Certainly if we do not come to Jesus in faith then there is no hope of an answer.
2. What does it commit to? Now this is the most striking element here. When I gave an illustration just now you notice that I didn't say “If I say to someone I will do anything you ask ....” rather I said “If I say to someone I will do this or that for you”. That is because I never would and never should say to anyone “I will do anything you ask”. I am not in a position to make such a sweeping promise. I know people say such things. You get it in several popular songs

I would do anything for you Anything for you

If I only had you by my side
I would do anything for you Anything for you
If you wave goodbye I'll be waiting for you

If I were a bird I would sing for you if I were a bell I would ring for you

If I were a tear I would cry for you for I would do anything for you

If I were a kite I would fly for you if I were a ship I would sail for you

If I were a heart I would beat for you for I would do anything for you

If I were the day I would dawn for you if I were the sun I would shine for you

If I were a rose I would bloom for you for I would do anything for you

If I were a joke I would laugh for you if I were a ball I would bounce for you

If I were a clown I would dance for you for I would do anything for you

Well, songs are one thing. As a norm we cannot really make such promises. But Jesus can. When he says to his disciples I will do whatever you ask then he means it. It is his commitment. It is his promise.
So that's the first thing. Here is a wonderful promise. It's not for everyone. It's only for disciples – though if that is how Jesus speaks to his disciples then there is hope for us all. If he will do whatever they ask then he must be willing at least to do something for anyone who asks. Take this promise seriously then. Become a disciple of Jesus Christ and believe his promise.
2. Consider this important qualification to the promise
So anyone who is a disciple has this promise I will do whatever you ask. But isn't that dangerous? Isn't it a bit like giving a child the key to the medicine cabinet? Isn't it like letting someone have a blank cheque book? Won't we end up with the lunatics taking over the asylum? It raises all sorts of questions. So if a believer asks Jesus for a million pounds will Jesus give it to him? Can he win the lottery or get a better job or a new car or live until he's a hundred just by asking Jesus? Does it mean that no believer need ever be ill or poor? If he prays to die will Jesus let him die just there and then, even though he might have changed his mind otherwise? Or what if he is having a really bad day and prays for some reason for some terrible thing like death for his enemies or to give in to his temptations and sin? It's beginning to sound more like a nightmare than a wonderful promise. It's starting to sound like a recipe for chaos not a great source of blessing.
Well, it is important, isn't it, to notice those three little words that we have not mentioned yet. What Jesus actually says is I will do whatever you ask in my name. 'Ah' says some one 'I knew it was too good to be true'. Well, yes there is this qualification but it is not a let out as such but a reminder that the true believer will want only to do what is according to the will of the Lord Jesus Christ, what is pleasing to him. Thankfully, it is only that which Jesus commits himself to doing. He will do only what a Christian asks him to do if it is in line with his character and purposes. This is then not a get out clause but a word of reassurance. It is like a safety net, if you will. Yes, in general Jesus will do whatever a believer asks but he will not use that against them. Where their request would clearly run contrary to his own wise character and purposes then he overrides that request. Something like the way a good parent will give his child what it asks for but not in a way that will actually lead to their harm or hurt. Of course, parents can get such judgements wrong but Jesus always makes a right judgement as far as this is concerned.
So when a believer prays he has a great freedom. He is confident that Jesus will do for him whatever he asks as long as it is in his name. This is not a matter of adding on the phrase 'we ask this in Jesus' name' every time he prays but of asking for whatever he feels he ought to ask for but bearing in mind that the answer he gets will not necessarily be what he expects.
So if a believer wants to be rich he can ask for that but it may well be that Christ does not want that for him. Similarly, for the better job or the new car or the long life or the decent wage. As he gets to know what Jesus desires he will not want to win the national lottery or see his enemies die or give in to his temptations.
3. Consider why God answers prayer in Jesus's name
Now the question arises as to why God has arranged things in just this way. It is clear that if Jesus simply gave us whatever we asked for without qualification, then that could be disastrous. Why then does Jesus not simply give us what ever we need without there being any place for prayer at all? Well here Jesus explains the reason - so that the Son may bring glory to the Father. It is as we pray to the Son and through the Son and as the Son answers in accord with his own name that he brings glory to God the Father, which is the whole purpose of everything anyway.
It is important that we remember that this is the purpose of prayer. Otherwise, we will very easily be frustrated and discouraged. If we think that prayer is just about asking for things for ourselves we will misunderstand. If we think it is just about asking for things for anyone who is in need we will still misunderstand. Rather, we must see that it is a way for God the Son to glorify God the Father. Because all prayer is either to be to God the Son or in the name of God the Son then it brings all glory to God the Father. When prayer is made to anyone else or through anyone else or in our own name then it does not bring glory to God. As you know, the Roman Catholic church teaches that prayer can be made through Mary and the other saints not just through Jesus Christ. That is utterly false and all it serves to do is to draw attention away from God the Son and God the Father and to rob God of his glory. We can say the same thing about people who think they can come in their own name and on their own behalf to God. But God himself is clear on this. He will not share his glory with another. No, whenever prayer is made it is to be made in Jesus's name. It is to be made to him or through him and for the glory of the Father. Anything else is false and sinful. We must see this and apply it to ourselves.
4. Hear the promise repeated and confirmed
Verse 14 really just sums up what we are told here - You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it. I really want to urge every one of you to get hold of this truth and to act on it. Jesus stands with arms open as it were and he says to you all, Come to me in faith. Believe in me. Ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it. Do you want to be saved? I'll save you. Do you want to know the truth? I'll show it to you. Do you want to escape from hell? I will save you. Do you want to go to heaven? I will take you there. Do you want to be with God forever and forever? I can bring it about. Go to Jesus I urge you – ask him anything. As long as it is according to his will, he will do it. No questions asked.
This is how to begin to pray. Christians often go to God the Father in prayer but they also pray to God the Son. Stephen is an example of soeon ewho orayed the the Son. An unbeliever cannot really go to God and call him Father but he can go to Jesus believing he is the Son of God and asking him to act for him. I would recommend that as the way to begin to go to God. Whatever praying you may have done before I urge you tonight to go to Jesus and ask in his name for anything you want. Ask him to save you, to change you so that you are what you ought to be for the glory of God. Amen.

What must I do to be saved?

Text Acts 16:30, 31 Date 01/09/13 Place Childs Hill Baptist (Baptism)

Have you ever been in an earthquake? No? Nor me. Well, not a proper one. They tell us every now and again that there has been an earthquake in this country but we hardly notice it. No, I mean a real earthquake. I've talked to people who've experienced such a thing and I've been in a simulated one down at the Science Museum as you may have. Everything shakes. They don't last long but perhaps the worst thing is that you don't know how long it will last or exactly what it will do. They are fairly common in certain parts of the world.
I mention the subject as in Acts 16 we read how the Apostle Paul, along with his fellow worker Silas, was caught up in an earthquake, a really violent one. It happened at dead of night while they were in prison in the city of Philippi, in the most secure part of the jail. The earthquake was pretty strong and shook the prison's foundations. Somehow the earthquake threw all the prison doors open and, we read, everybody's chains came loose. In the midst of this earthquake the jailer and others come to trust in the Lord Jesus Christ. through the witness of Paul and Silas.
Let's backtrack a moment to Paul's arrival in the Roman Colonial City of Philippi in Macedonia. He was on his second missionary journey, you recall, and had been directed through a vision for the first time into Europe. Philippi had no synagogue but there were a group of women who met to pray by the river and so Paul preached to them and first a Gentile God fearer and business woman called Lydia was converted. In Chapter 16, Luke, who was with Paul and the others at this time, tells us how one day, on the way to the place of prayer, a slave girl who had a spirit by which she predicted the future came up to them. This woman earned a great deal of money for her owners by fortune-telling. She followed Paul and the rest of us, Luke says shouting, These men are servants of the Most High God, who are telling you the way to be saved. This went on for several days until Paul became so troubled that he turned around and said to the spirit, In the name of Jesus Christ I command you to come out of her! At that moment the spirit left her. Once the people who owned the girl realised that they couldn't make money out of her any more they seized two of the group Paul and Silas and dragged them into the marketplace to face the authorities. They say to the magistrates These men are Jews, and are throwing our city into an uproar by advocating customs unlawful for us Romans to accept or practice. The crowd join in the attack and so the magistrates order Paul and Silas to be stripped and beaten. After a severe flogging they are thrown into prison. The jailer is commanded to guard them carefully so he puts them in the inner cell and fastens their feet in the stocks.
So come midnight Paul and Silas are stuck in a dark and smelly dungeon far from home. Their backs are bleeding, they are chained hand and foot. And what are they doing? Praying and singing hymns to God, of course. All the other prisoners are listening to them. Who are these people? They have never come across prisoners like this!
Now it is at just this point that the earthquake suddenly comes. Because all the doors swung open and chains fell off, the jailer, who had fallen asleep but has been woken by the earthquake, fears that the prisoners are going to escape and so he draws his sword ready to kill himself. Paul sees what's about to happen so shouts Don't harm yourself! We are all here! The jailer then calls for lights, rushes trembling into the inner cell, where Paul and Silas are, falls before them, and asks the question we will look at in a moment. We only have a brief account of the conversation. The jailer's question Sirs, what must I do to be saved? Their answer Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved - you and your household. We're told (32) that they spoke the word of the Lord to him and to all the others in his house. Clearly the jailer and others were convinced by this message. The jailer then took Paul and Silas and washed their wounds; then immediately he and all his family (or household – may be the other prisoners) were baptised. Obviously they'd become believers. The jailer then brought them to his own house and set a meal before them. He was filled with joy because he had come to believe in God - he and his whole family/household.
On release Paul makes a point of complaining at their unjust flogging then leaves Philippi. He does this so that the authorities will think twice before they attack the infant church Paul left behind.
So what I want to consider is verses 30, 31 He then brought them out and asked, Sirs, what must I do to be saved? They replied, Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved - you and your household. I want us to look then at this great question – and the great answer that Paul and Silas gave.
1. A great question - Consider this vital question and ask it
So first we have the question. It's a great question and one that we all need to ask it and know the answer to it. He (the jailer) then brought them out (Paul and Silas) and asked, Sirs, what must I do to be saved? What must I do to be saved? Let's ask three further questions about that vital question.
1. What prompted it and what may prompt it in us?
Now, what did the jailer mean by his question? We do not know if he had been awake when Paul and Silas were praying and singing. Certainly he had heard and felt the earthquake and had at that very moment contemplated ending his earthly life with his sword. We are told that when he fell before Paul and Silas he was trembling and that is no surprise. In such a situation it would be more of a surprise if he had not been shaking. The earthquake that God had sent at that particular moment had served not only to shake up the jail and the surrounding area but this man too. Any complacency or self-satisfaction was gone. He was afraid.
It is worth noting that without this experience the jailer would never have asked his question. Questions are often prompted by specific situations. A man who gets all his clothes washed by his wife may never ask the question 'How does the washing machine work?' until she is not there one day. If you never want to shoot anything you will probably never ask the question 'How do you use a gun?' If you don't like ratatouille or spaghetti Bolognese you will probably never ask how to cook them.
And so if you are never afraid or fearful then you may well never ask the question what must I do to be saved?
And yet every one of us has reason to be afraid. There is death, which lies ahead for us all. Doesn't that make you afraid? It should do. There is the Devil. He is a snake, a wily serpent. He is like a prowling lion. He is a fiery dragon. Do you know what he can do to people like us? There is such a place as hell. Aren't you afraid of ending up there? What about your propensity to sin? Doesn't it frighten you sometimes, how easily you sin? There is a God, a God with whom we have to do, to whom we will have to give an account one day and with so many sins in our lives, why are we not fearful?
2. What the question is
Whenever you become afraid at any time, when you are brought to your knees, ask this question then What must I do to be saved? How can I escape from this? How can I be healed or made whole? How can I face death? How can I escape the Devil's clutches? How can I be delivered from hell? How can I turn from sin? How can I stand before Almighty God to be judged? Oh how we need to be saved from sin and from Satan and from death and from ourselves! How can we be saved?
3. Who was asked and who should we ask?
We should also notice this. The jailer had never asked this question of anyone before I guess. But now he is desperate. So who does he turn to – not to himself or to his family or to any of the other prisoners but to these two men who have been praying and singing to God in the heart of his jail. Now there's a lesson for us all. When people today get frightened and they want help they turn to all sorts of people. They turn to their friends or to the rescue services or to the National Health or they turn to various non-directive counsellors or to alternative medicine and may be they get some help from these. They turn to astrologers and to religion and to education and to entertainment. But the truth is that the only place we'll find help is in those who pray to God and sing his praise. It is only people like Paul and Silas and their successors that can properly answer the question, what must I do to be saved? If it's a fire you rightly call 999 and ask for the Fire Brigade; if someone has a heart attack you phone 999 and ask for an ambulance; if you're fed up or lonely call a friend, if your hair's in your eyes go to the barber.
However, if you're fearful and your question is What must I do to be saved? Then turn to those like Paul and Silas who know God and who can properly answer your question. Ask me. Don't just listen to the sermons. If you don't understand, be bold and ask to know more. Ask other believers here. They can tell you.
2. A great answer
So this is the great question - what must I do to be saved? What would you have said in that situation? Great questions are easier than great answers, I suppose. What is the great answer that Paul and Silas give to this great question? Perhaps we're best to begin by noticing what they did not say
1. What is not the answer – ignore the wrong answers that abound
They didn't say to him 'It's just an earthquake and it's okay now. You don't need to be saved.' They knew this one local shaking was pointing to the final great shaking that will come at the end.
They didn't urge him to believe in himself either. They didn't say, you just need to know yourself and be at one with yourself.
Nor was it – think positive. Get your attitude right and all will be well.
They didn't urge him to be religious either. They didn't suggest that what he needed was a trip to the prayer meeting or some ritual act.
Nor did they simply tell him to try and be a better person.
Some of you perhaps think in these terms. You feel things are wrong. You are fearful. You think may be what you need is a fresh start, a new religion, etc. I want to urge you not to think in those terms but to listen to what Paul and Silas say here.
2. What is the answer – Hear this important command and obey it
So what did they say? Paul and Silas had no hesitation in giving the answer they did. Verse 31 They replied, Believe in the Lord Jesus. The man had asked what must I do to be saved? There is a sense in which their answer was 'Do? Do nothing. You don't need to do something. You don't need to do anything. What you need is to believe in someone.' Or we could take it in the sense that the thing he had to do concerned a person - the Lord Jesus, and what the jailer needed to do in relation to that person. What they said to him, of course, is the same for us all. Many things have changed since then but not this. So two things.
Focus on the Lord Jesus
He is the only one who can save you. He is called Lord here because he is God. There is no point in thinking we can be saved by any human agency. We need to look to God. He is the only one who can save us. No other can. He alone is our hope. Jesus, of course, means 'he saves'. He is the only Mediator between God and man. There is no way to be saved except through him. He is the one who has come and lived the perfect life that none of us can live. He is the one who has died on the cross in the place of sinners. He is the Saviour of the World.
If you were in need of rescue – say stuck on a desert island, in a dinghy on the ocean or fallen on a mountain – then you know that you would be looking for rescue. You'd be looking for a ship or a helicopter. You wouldn't be thinking of ways to save yourself. You would look carefully every moment. You would be ready. I'm saying to you only Jesus can rescue you. Look out for him.
Are you looking to Jesus then? Do you see him as your one hope, your only hope? Are you eager to know about him so that you may be saved? I urge you to get to know him. Find out all about him that you can. He is the key. Without him you are sunk. We are all sunk.
Believe in him.
Of course, simply reading about the Lord Jesus or knowing about him will not save anyone. The Lord Jesus is the one who the Father loves and delights in. He is the one who has all power and might. What needs to happen then is that we need to be attached to him. We need to be joined to him. That is done by putting our faith in him. It is as you trust in the Lord Jesus that you are saved. Put your confidence there and nowhere else. Lean on him. He is the one you must come to and rest upon.
Are you doing that? Are you putting your trust in Jesus Christ? Many of you are I know. Go on trusting in him. If you have begun to trust, don't stop now. May be you have never realised that you simply need to look to Jesus. You keep thinking it's all sorts of other things but no, trust in Jesus. That's what is needed. Trust in him now. Believe. Just like this Philippian jailer did – just where he was and when he heard that was what he needed to do. Oh what joy was his when he did that. He became a different man. He was still big and gruff, I guess, not the most genteel of men. But God had changed him. No more rough treatment for followers of Jesus or thoughts of killing himself. No, all was changed now.
3. Hear this wonderful promise for all who obey
Let's get the whole sentence then to close Believe on the Lord Jesus and you will be saved - you and your household. Simply by believing a person is saved – saved from hell, from death, from sin, from the devil. This does not mean they will never have any troubles ever again but it does mean that their biggest troubles are over. They are safe. They are going to heaven. They no longer have to sin,. The devil cannot demand anything with regard to them. What applied to the jailer applied to all his family (or perhaps all the other prisoners) - you and your household
Think of our previous illustrations. Once the boat reaches the desert island, once the big yellow helicopter looms in sight, you know you are safe. Once you see Jesus as portrayed in Scripture and put your trust in him, you know all is well.
This is for everyone then. If you truly believe then you will truly be saved. What you do now will have an effect way into eternity.

Fear God, serve faithfully, abandon your idols, obey the Lord

Text Joshua 24 Time 11 07 21 Place Childs Hill Baptist Church (Zoom)

We come this week to the final chapter of Joshua, what we call Joshua 24. Most of the chapter is taken up with a final speech to the people by Joshua before his death at the age of 110. The speech is in verses 1-28 and includes the responses of the people. Then we have a final footnote rounding off the whole book in verses 29-33. Joshua's speech was given in very different circumstances to ours today but I do not think it is difficult, if we are Christians, to see obvious parallels between what Joshua said to the people then and what Jesus says to his people here today.
So Joshua assembles all the tribes of Israel at Shechem. No doubt this means representatives of all the tribes. He summoned the elders, leaders, judges and officials of Israel, and they presented themselves before God. He then said to all the people, This is what the LORD, the God of Israel, says and proceeded to speak the Word of God.
We can divide up what he says into two parts. First, he summarises their history, which is also our history as believers, in verses 1-13. Then in verses 14-24 he urges them to fear the LORD, to serve him faithfully and to abandon all forms of idolatry. There is some dialogue here as Joshua does not merely want them to say they will serve the LORD. He is looking for a genuine commitment from them. Thirdly, verses 25-28 tell us how Joshua formally made a covenant for them and set up a stone of witness. Covenants are important in the Bible and here once again we have reference to an agreement between God and his people. Finally, we have a historical footnote that also has things to teach us about serving the LORD.
1. Believer, do not forget your history
Joshua begins by summarising their history, going back as far as Abraham and his call. He gives the history in four parts.
1. From the call of Abraham to slavery in Egypt
Joshua goes right back to the time Long ago when their ancestors, including Terah the father of Abraham and Nahor, lived beyond the Euphrates River and worshiped other gods. Joshua wants them to remember their godless and pagan beginnings.
We ought to remind ourselves of that from time to time too. Even if we were brought up in Christian homes that was our background by nature.
3 But God says I took your father Abraham from the land beyond the Euphrates and led him throughout Canaan and gave him many descendants. It all began with the call of Abraham. I gave him Isaac, says the LORD and to Isaac I gave Jacob and Esau. I assigned the hill country of Seir to Esau, but Jacob and his family went down to Egypt. As Abraham's family grew, God's hand was on them guiding them and that included their going down to Egypt, which was at first, you recall, because there was famine in Canaan. So with us when we heard God's call it wasn't one that took us straight to the Promised Land in many cases. First, there was what we might call a sojourn in Egypt.
2. From slavery in Egypt to life in the wilderness
Joshua continues speaking for God Then I sent Moses and Aaron, and I afflicted the Egyptians by what I did there, remember the ten plagues and I brought you out. Then came the crossing of the Red Sea When I brought your people out of Egypt, you came to the sea, and the Egyptians pursued them with chariots and horsemen as far as the Red Sea. But they cried to the LORD for help, and he put darkness between you and the Egyptians; he brought the sea over them and covered them. You saw with your own eyes what I did to the Egyptians. Then you lived in the wilderness for a long time. God miraculously brought them through the Red Sea and drowned the Egyptians just as for every believer, he has converted them and defeated all their enemies. He has delivered us from slavery. Remember that.
3. From life in the wilderness to the conquest of the land east of the Jordan
We read then (8-10) of how God brought them to the land of the Amorites who lived east of the Jordan. They fought against you, but I gave them into your hands. I destroyed them from before you, and you took possession of their land. There is also a reminder of how Balak son of Zippor, the king of Moab, prepared to fight against Israel and sent for Balaam son of Beor to put a curse on them. But God refused to listen to Balaam, so he blessed them again and again, and God delivered them out of his hand.
4. From the conquest of the land east of the Jordan to the conquest of the rest of the Promised Land
Finally (11, 12) they crossed the Jordan and came to Jericho. The citizens of Jericho fought against them, as did also the Amorites, Perizzites, Canaanites, Hittites, Girgashites, Hivites and Jebusites, but God says I gave them into your hands. I sent the hornet ahead of you, which drove them out before you - also the two Amorite kings. You did not do it with your own sword and bow. And (13) So God gave them a land on which they did not toil and cities they did not build; so that at that very time they were living in them and eat(ing) from vineyards and olive groves that they did not plant.
We too, thanks to conversion, are enjoying many wonderful things in life - good things from God. what blessings are ours in Christ. Never forget them.
As Paul writes to the Ephesians (2:1-10) As for you, you were dead in your transgressions and sins, in which you used to live when you followed the ways of this world and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air, ... All of us also lived among them at one time, gratifying the cravings of our flesh and following its desires and thoughts. Like the rest, we were by nature deserving of wrath. But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in transgressions - it is by grace you have been saved. And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus, in order that in the coming ages he might show the incomparable riches of his grace, expressed in his kindness to us in Christ Jesus. For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith - and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God - not by works, so that no one can boast. For we are God's handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
Believer, never forget how God has brought you from being dead in your transgressions and sins to being created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.
2. Fear the LORD, serve him faithfully and abandon your idols - no easy task
Having rehearsed this history, Joshua now calls on the Israelites to act in the light of it. He says Now fear the LORD and serve him with all faithfulness. Throw away the gods your ancestors worshiped beyond the Euphrates River and in Egypt, and serve the LORD.
Three things are required - fear of the LORD, faithful service and the abandonment of idols. He is a little sarcastic, it seems, when he comes to this third requirement. He says (15) But if serving the LORD seems undesirable to you, then choose for yourselves this day whom you will serve, whether the gods your ancestors served beyond the Euphrates, or the gods of the Amorites, in whose land you are living. If you're not going to serve the LORD then choose. Are you going to serve the old gods or the new ones? But as for me and my household, he asserts we will serve the LORD.
A dialogue then follows
The people say (16-18) Far be it from us to forsake the LORD to serve other gods! It was the LORD our God himself who brought us and our parents up out of Egypt, from that land of slavery, and performed those great signs before our eyes. He protected us on our entire journey and among all the nations through which we traveled. And the LORD drove out before us all the nations, including the Amorites, who lived in the land. We too will serve the LORD, because he is our God. Given all that the LORD has done for them why would they bother with false gods?
But Joshua pushes them further (19, 20) You are not able to serve the LORD. He is a holy God; he is a jealous God. He will not forgive your rebellion and your sins. If you forsake the LORD and serve foreign gods, he will turn and bring disaster on you and make an end of you, after he has been good to you. Do you know what you are doing asks Joshua. It is dangerous to turn to God if you are then going to turn away. He is holy. He is jealous. Aren't you in danger of raising his ire?
But the people are sure (21) No! We will serve the LORD.
And so Joshua says (22) You are witnesses against yourselves that you have chosen to serve the LORD.
"Yes, we are witnesses," they replied.
And so Joshua says very practically Now then ... throw away the foreign gods that are among you and yield your hearts to the LORD, the God of Israel.
24 And the people said to Joshua, "We will serve the LORD our God and obey him.
Is that our response too? Are we determined to serve God and obey him, well aware of the consequences of a failure to do so? Yes, we ought to doubt ourselves but still we must act and do what is right. Search out the idols that remain and remove them.
3. Solemnly commit yourselves to serving the LORD and obeying him
We read next (25) that On that day Joshua made a covenant for the people, and there at Shechem where Abraham had met with God so long ago and where Jacob returning from the east had urged his family to bury their household gods, he reaffirmed for them decrees and laws. Other religions did not feature covenants but the LORD was a Gd who made covenants with his people. There was a sacrifice and Joshua also (26-28) recorded these things in the Book of the Law of God. Hence the record of it that we have here. He also took a large stone and set it up there under the oak near the holy place of the LORD. "See!" he said to all the people. "This stone will be a witness against us. It has heard all the words the LORD has said to us. It will be a witness against you if you are untrue to your God." Then Joshua dismissed the people, each to their own inheritance.
This is a reminder to us that there ought to be solemn moments when we dedicate ourselves to serving and obeying God. This is a solemn moment now - let's dedicate ourselves now to the Lord.
There was a preacher in Wales towards the end of the 18th century called Christmas Evans. At one point his preaching was blighted by a way of thinking that was popular at the time called Sandemanianism - a dry way of looking at the gospel that had little place for experience. He wrote
The Sandemanian heresy affected me so far as to quench the spirit of prayer for the conversion of sinners and it induced in my mind a greater regard for the smaller things of the kingdom of heaven than for the greater. I lost the strength which clothed my mind with zeal, confidence and earnestness in the pulpit for the conversion of souls to Christ. My heart retrograded in a manner and I could not realise the testimony of a good conscience. On Sabbath nights after having been in the day exposing and vilifying with all bitterness the errors that prevailed, my conscience felt displeased and reproached me that I had lost nearness to, and walking with God. It had disastrous results among the churches. I lost in Anglesey nearly all my old hearers and we thus almost entirely took down what had taken 15 years to raise.
Evans met and began to read the writings of Andrew Fuller and that set him thinking. He alsop heard a sermon by one Thomas Jones, who preached against the heresy. On his way home from this service, Evans had a remarkable experience of God that got Sandemanianism out of his system for ever. It was one of those solemn moments we are thinking about. He relates the story himself,
I was weary of a cold heart towards Christ and his sacrifice and the work of his Spirit; of a cold heart in the pulpit, in secret and in the study. For 15 years previously I had felt my heart burning within as if going to Emmaus with Jesus. On a day ever to be remembered by me, as I was going from Dolgellau to Machynlleth, climbing up towards Cader Idris, I considered it to be incumbent upon me to pray, however hard I felt in my heart and however worldly the frame of my spirit was. Having begun in the name of Jesus, I soon felt as it were, the fetters loosening and the old hardness of heart softening, and, as I thought, mountains of frost and snow dissolving and melting within me. This engendered confidence in my soul in the promise of the Holy Ghost. I felt my whole mind relieved from some great bondage. Tears flowed copiously and I was constrained to cry out for the gracious visits of God, by restoring to my soul the joys of his salvation and to visit the churches in Anglesey that were under my care. I embraced in my supplications all the churches of the saints and nearly all the ministries in the principality by their names. This struggle lasted for three hours. It rose again and again, like one wave after another, or a high, flowing tide driven by a strong wind, till my nature became faint by weeping and crying. I resigned myself to Christ, body and soul, gifts and labours, every hour of every day that remained for me and all my cares I committed to Christ. The road was mountainous and lonely and I was wholly alone and suffered no interruption in my wrestling with God.
After this his old pulpit power returned to him. A new spirit of prayer came on the believers in Anglesey and within two years, 600 people were added to the Churches.
Pray for times like that.
4. Consider this final historical note and the final call for faithfulness
The book finishes with these footnotes about Joshua, the people, Joseph's bones and the High Priest Eleazar
Joshua 29, 30 After these things, Joshua son of Nun, the servant of the LORD, died at the age of a hundred and ten. And they buried him in the land of his inheritance, at Timnath Serah in the hill country of Ephraim, north of Mount Gaash.
The people. In verse 31 we are told that Israel served the LORD throughout the lifetime of Joshua and of the elders who outlived him and who had experienced everything the LORD had done for Israel.
Joseph's bones 32 And Joseph's bones, which the Israelites had brought up from Egypt, were buried at Shechem in the tract of land that Jacob bought for a hundred pieces of silver from the sons of Hamor, the father of Shechem. This became the inheritance of Joseph's descendants.
Eleazar 33 And Eleazar son of Aaron died and was buried at Gibeah, which had been allotted to his son Phinehas in the hill country of Ephraim.

Past blessings point to future ones for all who look to God

Text Joshua 23 Time 04 07 21 Place Childs Hill Baptist Church (Zoom)
We have now reached the last but one chapter of Joshua. Both of the final chapters preserve speeches given by Joshua towards the end of his life. In Chapter 23 Joshua reminds Israel of the blessings that they have already received from God since entering the Promised Land. These blessings are to be an incentive to them to go on and complete the work of conquering that has so largely been completed.
If we are Christians today we can identify with what Joshua has to say. We too have known many, many blessings from God. Like the people under Joshua who were brought into Canaan under Joshua and who had by this time won many victories over the Canaanites, in becoming Christians we have been brought into a wonderful promised land under Jesus. In his speech Joshua wants the people now to look to the future and to be strong and obedient and to love God and not simply to fall into Canaanite ways and so be lost. If they do not do so, what terrible times they will face. We who have been Christians for any length of time are in a similar situation. We have entered the Promised Land of the Christian life under Jesus but there is still a lot of ground to cover. We need to be strong and obedient and to love God and to fight against remaining sin in our lives.
Four things then this evening
1. God who gave his people past victories can be expected to give them future ones too
We read first in verses 1 and 2 that After a long time had passed and the LORD had given Israel rest from all their enemies around them, Joshua, by then a very old man, summoned all Israel - their elders, leaders, judges and officials - and said to them ... So a good deal of time has passed since the beginning of the book, how long is not clear but in that time the LORD had given Israel rest from all their enemies around them. The job was more or less done but there was still work to do, Joshua was aware. And so near the end of his life he makes this important speech to Israel, to their elders, leaders, judges and officials.
From the opening of his speech we can pick out three important things to notice
1. Here is a reminder that we have seen the LORD fight for us in the past
Joshua begins I am very old. You yourselves have seen everything the LORD your God has done to all these nations for your sake; it was the LORD your God who fought for you. It is important that as Christians we remember all that God has done for us. These people had seen the Canaanites defeated and Joshua is reminding them of the fact and especially of the fact that it was the LORD your God who fought for you. They did not bring about the victories solely by themselves. It was Gd who had done it. This is often acknowledged in Scripture. So for example in Psalm 44:2, 3 we read of God
With your hand you drove out the nations and planted our ancestors; you crushed the peoples and made our ancestors flourish. It was not by their sword that they won the land, nor did their arm bring them victory; it was your right hand, your arm, and the light of your face, for you loved them.
We have not saved ourselves if we are Christians. No, God has done it. He has saved us from our sins and we ought to acknowledge it.
2. Here is a reminder that there is still ground to be won
Joshua goes on (4) Remember how I have allotted as an inheritance for your tribes all the land of the nations that remain - the nations I conquered - between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea in the west. Yes, there have been many victories and much land has been taken but do not forget, says Joshua, that all the land between the Jordan and the Mediterranean Sea has been allotted to the tribes as their inheritance and it all must be taken. In a similar way - Yes, God has saved you and that is reason for rejoicing but you are not yet the man or woman God intends you to be. There is plenty of room for improvement - sins to be put to death and good deeds to be done.
3. Here is an assurance that, as promised, the LORD will drive out our remaining enemies
Then comes the repeated promise in verse 5 The LORD your God himself will push them out their remaining enemies for your sake. He will drive them out before you, and you will take possession of their land, as the LORD your God promised you. As God has promised they can look forward to further blessings. More land will be taken, more victories will be known. And so for the believer, we can be confident that God will continue to work in our lives. As Paul said to the Philippians in Philippians 1:6 he who began a good work in you will carry it on to completion until the day of Christ Jesus. God has not finished with you yet. He will continue to work in you until you are the person he wants you ultimately to be. Past victories are bound to give way to future ones in Christ.
When I was a young boy my father was not very good at taking me to see the football games I wanted to see. He was much more a lover of grass roots football and so he took me to games like the local factory team or under 21 internationals. My dad liked to spot the players who were going to become big names in the future. He himself had played football alongside a man who went on to be a professional player with Ipswich Town in the period when Ipswich were working their way up the leagues to eventually be Division One champions in 1961-62. My dad knew then that the most ordinary players could improve and rise to the heights. We ought to think something like that with regard to the Christian life - we begin as young believers but we can make progress. Indeed, who knows how far we may go, by the grace of God, if we keep looking to him.
2. God will give victory to those who are strong, obedient, set apart to him and who love him
In verses 6-11 Joshua then begins to exhort the people. He doesn't take the view, of course they will know further victories under God. He sees that this is not absolutely guaranteed. Certain things need to happen if the people are to go on in the right direction and know further victories. He calls for five things
1. Be very strong
He begins Be very strong. If this is going to happen they need courage, they need to be strong, very strong. Be brave, he says.
There are many examples of bravery in the history of God's people. Those stories should encourage us to be strong in our own day. In the sixteenth century one of the greatest preachers of his day was Hugh Latimer. On one occasion he was to preach before the king, Henry VIII. As he thought about what to preach he realised that what he had to say would not go down very well with the king.
As he began his sermon he said, “Latimer! Latimer! Do you remember that you are speaking before the high and mighty King Henry VIII; who has power to command you to be sent to prison, and who can have your head cut off, if it please him? Will you not take care to say nothing that will offend royal ears?”
He then paused and continued, “Latimer! Latimer! Do you not remember that you are speaking before the King of kings and Lord of lords; before him, at whose throne Henry VIII will stand; before him, to whom one day you will have to give account yourself? Latimer! Latimer! Be faithful to your Master, and declare all of God’s Word.”
Latimer eventually died in the reign of Henry’s daughter, Queen Mary but he had already begun on the right road long before. Be very strong.
2. Be careful to obey
Then it goes on be careful to obey all that is written in the Book of the Law of Moses, without turning aside to the right or to the left. At the same time we must walk the narrow road of obedience that leads to God. Yes, we are not saved by our obedience but if we truly belong to the Lord then we will be careful to obey him.
3. Practice separation
7 Do not associate with these nations that remain among you; do not invoke the names of their gods or swear by them. You must not serve them or bow down to them. It is hard to imagine now what a pressure was on the Israelites to conform to the idolatry all around them but it was as real as that on us today to conform to the society in which we live. We must not conform. We must rather be separate - in the world but not part of it. Separated to God. As we sometimes put it - the boat in the water but keeping the water out of the boat.
4. Hold fast to the LORD, remembering his blessings
8-10 But you are to hold fast to the LORD your God, as you have until now. The LORD has driven out before you great and powerful nations; to this day no one has been able to withstand you. One of you routs a thousand, because the LORD your God fights for you, just as he promised.
Up until now they had held fast to the LORD. They must now go on in the same way. They had known great success as the LORD had promised and that should encourage them to go on.
It is the same for us. Hold fast to the LORD right to the end.
5. Be careful to love the LORD
The final thing is in verse 11 So be very careful to love the LORD your God. Never give up loving the LORD.
3. God will not accept compromise with the enemy so be warned of its fatal consequences
That is all very positive but in verses 12 and 13 it is put in a more negative way. Three things
1. Recognise the danger of turning away and being joined to the enemy
12 But if you turn away and ally yourselves with the survivors of these nations that remain among you and if you intermarry with them and associate with them ... that was a real danger and they needed to face up to it. It is important that you know that there are people who profess to be Christians but then they begin to live as unbelievers again. It is foolish to simply think that will never happen to me. It is a real danger.
Following the severe flood events of 1998 and 2000, the UK Environment Agency prioritised the need to increase public flood risk awareness. And so they produced a report drawing on data collected during research undertaken for the Environment Agency. A paper was produced contributing to understanding one aspect of flood awareness: people’s recognition that their property is in an area that is potentially at risk of flooding. They called the paper "It'll never happen to me". The title reflected the way so many people assumed that they would never be flooded even though they were living on a flood plain. Let's not make that mistake. It could happen to you.
2. The result of such an action would be dire
Verse 13 spells out what would happen if they did turn away then you may be sure that the LORD your God will no longer drive out these nations before you. Instead, they will become snares and traps for you, whips on your backs and thorns in your eyes. To fail to separate would be totally counter-productive. The remaining people would become snares and traps for them, whips on their backs and thorns in their eyes. It is the same for us today. We know we should put remaining sin to death but sometimes we fail to do that. Does it bring us any pleasure or blessing? Not in the end. How miserable it is for us. Be warned.
3. Such an action may even result in destruction
Verse 13 carries on ... until you perish from this good land, which the LORD your God has given you. It may come to that, which it did with the exile many years later. Don't forget how far a person may fall once God lets go.
4. God's promises never fail nor do his threats so to violate the covenant will mean destruction
Finally, in verses 14-16, we have reminders that God's promises never fail but then nor do his threats. To violate the covenant must mean destruction.
1 God's promises never fail
14 Now I am about to go the way of all the earth. Joshua is about to die and so he speaks with great solemnity. You know with all your heart and soul that not one of all the good promises the LORD your God gave you has failed. Every promise has been fulfilled; not one has failed. This has been said before but here it is again. Not one promise has been allowed to fall. They have all been fulfilled. Never forget that.
2. His threats don't fail either
But if his promises do not fail nor do his threats. 15 But just as all the good things the LORD your God has promised you have come to you, so he will bring on you all the evil things he has threatened, until the LORD your God has destroyed you from this good land he has given you. We are happy to believe what the Bible says about heaven but we must be equally willing to believe what it says about hell. Yes, those who continue with the Lord can be sure that he will bring them safely to heaven but those who fail to continue, they can only expect judgement.
3. To violate the covenant is to invite God's wrath
16 If you violate the covenant of the LORD your God, which he commanded you, and go and serve other gods and bow down to them, the LORD's anger will burn against you, and you will quickly perish from the good land he has given you. Nothing could be plainer. To turn from the Lord is to invite his wrath. it is to court great danger. Do not make that mistake.
On 10 March 1997 there was a multiple-vehicle collision on the M42 motorway near Bromsgrove in Worcestershire. Three people were killed and more than 60 others were injured in the crash. It happened in dense fog during the early morning rush hour.
At around 6:20 am a lorry came on to the M42 from a slip-road at a speed of 56 mph and, after slowing to 32 mph rammed into the rear of a tanker, which then struck a car in front and exploded. The ensuing pile-up involved 160 vehicles on a 400-yard stretch of the motorway, including 30 on the opposite carriageway 20 minutes later.
Five air ambulances and 25 ambulances ferried injured drivers and passengers from the scene to three hospitals. Several cars and lorries were burnt to a shell and more than 30 occupants had to be cut free from their vehicles by firefighters.
You see what happened then. People continued to drive blindly forward not realising the danger that was just ahead until it was too late. Wisdom demands that we rather be ready for danger. Recognise the danger that faces us all and avoid it by looking to God.