Love's desire - The Song of Solomon
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best001
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EN
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00:44:12
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The Song of Solomon
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Love's desire - The Song of Solomon
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…
Song of Solomon plays in chapter 1.
Song of Songs, chapter 1, verse 1.
The Song of Songs which is Solomon's.
Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth,
for thy love is better than wine.
Because of the savour of thy good ointments,
thy name is as ointment poured forth.
Therefore do the virgins love thee.
Draw me, we will run after thee.
The king hath brought me into his chambers.
We will be glad and rejoice in thee.
We will remember thy love more than wine.
The upright love thee.
I am black, but comely.
O ye daughters of Jerusalem,
as the tents of Cedar, as the curtains of Solomon.
Look not upon me because I am black,
because the sun hath looked upon me.
My mother's children were angry with me.
They made me the keeper of the vineyards,
but mine own vineyard have I not kept.
Tell me, O thou whom my soul loveth,
where thou feedest,
where thou makest thy flock to rest at noon?
For why should I be as one that turneth aside
by the flocks of thy companions?
If thou know not, O thou fairest among women,
go thy way forth by the footsteps of the flock
and feed thy kids beside the shepherd's tents.
I have compared thee, O my love,
to a company of horses in Pharaoh's chariots.
Thy cheeks are comely with rolls of jewels,
thy neck with chains of gold.
We will make thee borders of gold with studs of silver.
While the king sitteth at his table,
my spikenoid sendeth forth the smell thereof.
A bundle of myrrh is my well-beloved unto me.
It shall lie all night betwixt my breasts.
My beloved is unto me as a cluster of camphire
in the vineyards of Angedea.
Behold thou art fair, my love.
Behold thou art fair, thou hast those eyes.
Behold thou art fair, my beloved, ye are pleasant.
Also our bed is green.
The beams of our house are of cedar
and our rafters of fir.
I am the rose of Sharon
and the lily of the valleys.
As the lily among thorns,
so is my love among the daughters.
As the apple tree among the trees of the wood,
so is my beloved among the suns.
I sat down under his shadow with great delight
and his fruit was sweet to my taste.
He brought me to the banqueting-house
and his banner over me was love.
Stay me with flagons, comfort me with apples,
for I am sick of love.
His left hand is under my head
and his right hand doth embrace me.
I charge you, all ye daughters of Jerusalem,
by the rows and by the hinds of the field,
that ye stir not up, nor awake my love,
till he please.
I've read into chapter two,
because I've read what really is a full section,
what we might say is a song or a canticle in itself.
And you'll find that last verse that we've just read there
repeated again.
In chapter five and verse three,
you will see if you just cast your eye down to that verse,
that it is the same as chapter two and verse seven.
And I think that marks the end of another section,
another verse, another stanza, another song or canticle.
And then if you come into chapter eight and verse four,
you'll read a similar verse there as well,
bringing to an end another section.
If we go to chapter two and verse eight,
the voice of my beloved,
behold he cometh leaping upon the mountains,
skipping upon the hills.
And then in the next verse,
my beloved is like a roe at her young heart.
And then you go to the last verse of the entire song,
you'll find that repeated there as well.
The book is called the Song of Songs.
It doesn't really mean that it's a song made up of songs,
although in a sense maybe that is so.
And some expositors of scripture,
some commentators have tried to tell us how many songs there are,
and I understand that not all are agreed on the exact number,
so I dare not say how many songs there are.
But when we have before us the Song of Songs,
we have an hebrism, an expression that's used in scripture,
in the Old Testament particularly.
And it means the chiefest of songs.
The holy of holies in the tabernacle was the most holy place.
The holy of holies in the temple
was that place which was the holiest of all.
And it's in stark contrast to what we read in the last book,
the book that's before this, the book of Ecclesiastes,
where we read vanity of vanities,
saith the preacher, all is vanity.
There was that which was totally empty,
the emptiest thing of all,
a life without Christ,
a life that doesn't bring God in,
a life that's entirely meaningless and void.
But in this song here, it's the Song of Songs,
which is Solomon's,
but more than Solomon's.
It's a hymn that speaks of David's greatest son,
but greater than Solomon is here.
It's a song that speaks of Christ.
If we went back to Ecclesiastes 1 and verse 7,
all the rivers run into the sea,
and yet the sea is not full.
And there's millions that are living lives like that without Christ,
searching for something,
going further and further away from God,
and reaping no satisfaction for their endeavours.
We have, and I think it's agreed on every hand and side in Britain today,
a materialistic society.
People are living for the here and now,
amassing something for an early retirement,
building some wealth in order that they can enjoy themselves.
But it's all empty and void,
and the heart is too big,
because all the treasures of earth built up and can't fill it.
There's no meaning at the end of it all,
for one's existence,
no reason and no purpose to life.
But when we come to the song of songs which is Solomon's,
and we understand that the Scriptures are speaking of Christ,
as the Lord Jesus says in John's Gospel,
then we've got that which is here,
that will cause the heart to overflow.
The heart will not contain him.
The object is too great, if we may speak thus,
rather, we should say, like the house in Exodus chapter 12,
the house all bitter, little for the Lamb.
Our hearts are too small for Christ.
We can't contain all that there is,
and the wonders and the glories of his person.
Just to say, on this line of song of songs,
with this dual aspect,
that we've got a number of songs put together to form one,
but the significance really of that expression, song of songs,
has been the chiefest of Solomon's songs that he wrote,
and we understand from 1 Kings chapter 4,
he wrote a thousand and five of them,
that we get in this first section that we've read,
and no doubt there is more than we can hope to really touch on this afternoon,
we have really, I think, what is set forth as the resulting end
of an exercise of soul and of heart
that brings in the preciousness of Christ as the object to be loved,
and the enjoyment of his love.
When you come into chapter 2 and verse 8,
I suggest that we have the commencement, in a way,
of divine dealings upon the soul that knows Christ in a certain way,
but is to be exercised in order that the enjoyment of his love,
and that he has her love for his enjoyment too.
You find him calling, his voice is heard,
in chapter 2 and towards the rest of the chapter.
And then in chapter 3, we find her seeking,
and then she finds him,
and she holds him with a determination that will not let him go.
It reminds me of Mary Magdalene in John chapter 20, you know.
She finds the Lord on that resurrection morning,
and she's going to take a hold of him.
I know the Lord forbids that because he wants to raise her thoughts
to a higher sphere as he was going into the presence of his father.
But there's such a determination on that woman, having found the Saviour,
and she's determined that she'll have him, and she'll have him for good.
And then you get the verse again about the desire
that that holding power isn't disturbed,
that closeness of communion isn't disrupted in any way.
The next section now, I think there's a waning of that love.
There's a distance that comes in.
But she's made to feel that.
She's described in wonderful terms in chapter 4,
there's a little of that at the end of chapter 1 that we were reading,
but it's developed more in chapter 4.
And he speaks of what he sees in her.
But through exercise of soul,
as he's removed himself to a distance in chapter 5,
we find that she's brought to a point where she really misses him.
That should be a challenge to us now.
The Lord isn't here in this world.
He's being cast out.
We're in the time of his absence.
We're in the place of his rejection.
And perhaps we have to be reminded of this,
and we have to be challenged in our own souls,
do we really miss him?
Are we wanting him to come?
The Spirit and the Bride say,
come, we'll touch a little on that.
But through that exercise,
there's such a deep impression in our own soul now of him,
that we have that lovely description of her beloved
in chapter 5, verses 10 to the end of the chapter.
And while there's been an awakening of love,
as someone has described it in chapter 2,
there's a restoration of love now through this second exercise,
where love is deepened.
And we come to, again, the thought once more in chapter 8,
that there's a desire that that communion of love
is not disturbed or disrupted again.
I say that in the first section that we've read,
and we come back into chapter 1 again,
that we have, in a sense, the point to be reached.
And this is often done in Hebrew writings, in the Scriptures.
Psalm 32, perhaps, is a good example by way of illustration.
In Psalm 32, you've got the happiness,
the blessedness of a forgiven soul.
One whose transgression is forgiven,
one whose sin is covered.
The joy of that, the blessedness of it,
the happiness from the knowledge of that.
But you read the rest of the Psalm,
and you get the deep exercise of soul
that David has gone through
in order to get to the happiness of that forgiven state.
And I think that's what we've got in the Song of Songs here.
The point to be reached we've been reading about.
And if I can set the homework,
going through the rest of the book in private meditation afterwards,
you can perhaps enjoy how this young woman,
who's loved by Solomon,
is exercised through his dealings with her
to win her love,
and to maintain and sustain that love.
Not simply for her joy and pleasure,
but for his own joy and pleasure.
Now the interpretation of this book,
I think really belongs to Jehovah and Israel.
Israel has been loved.
She's been brought out of Egypt.
But in her disobedience,
she's been scattered.
And that's the state in which she's found today.
There's a time coming when God will take up
his dealings with Israel once more.
And his activities will be such
that he will bring in a small part of them,
a remnant that we sometimes say,
a realisation of who Jesus of Nazareth really is.
And there'll be an exercise, a deep exercise amongst them,
that they will be desiring his coming.
And they will be ready to embrace him
and to welcome him in.
We read in Psalm 110,
thy people shall be willing in the day of thy power.
He's absent from this world.
That in a sense judges this world
by its response to him when he came the first time.
And particularly the state of Israel,
who were not at that time very welcoming of him,
and rejected him, and had him cast out.
But there's a time coming
when they will be brought into the blessing
and the millennial kingdom of the Lord Jesus Christ
will be set up here upon earth.
And they will be with him here upon this earth,
enjoying a place of leadership among the nations.
Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth.
My mind goes to Genesis chapter 45.
Joseph's been sent into Egypt in a most terrible way.
And his brethren in need go down to Egypt.
Joseph doesn't make himself known to them immediately.
There's a point when he does that,
there's a point we read in that chapter
where he can't hold himself back anymore.
He can't refrain from opening up to them
who he is and how he feels about them.
But things have to be done rightly.
And therefore they're exercised by Joseph
to bring them to the point where they confess
what they've done and to all their sin
in relation to how they dealt with him.
But Joseph then, when he's caused the Egyptians to go out,
then he kisses his brothers.
And that will be the sense in which this godly remnant
amongst the nation of Israel
in the period of time known as the Great Tribulation
will be exercised in their souls about Christ,
about the Lord Jesus,
and how he was so treated by them
when he came the first time.
And there'll be that recognition of his worth
and of his excellence and of his person,
and there'll be a working by divine grace in their souls
to bring them to a recognition of who he is.
And there'll be that welcome and desire for him to come
and to have his embrace.
But in application today, that's the interpretation.
Someone has said one interpretation in Scripture always,
but many applications,
and we want to get some benefits of it ourselves
in our own souls today.
And so an application could be made, of course,
of Christ and the Church.
Christ loved the Church and gave himself for it.
The difference is this, of course.
There is a settled relationship today
between Christ and the Church.
The Church is the bride of Christ.
As far as the Jewish remnant is concerned,
there's a relationship with them that has to be established.
But that for today with the Church
is an already established fact.
And so we can apply it, in a way,
to Christ and the Church
and see his ways with the Church
and how he wins her for himself and desires her love.
But again, there's an interpretation, I think,
or rather an application that we can make,
and that is in relation to ourselves as individual believers.
The Lord would desire to have our love.
He wants our love.
And these words,
let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth,
I've been thinking, she doesn't really say that.
This is the song of songs which is Solomon's.
This is what he's written.
But this is what he wants her to say.
He's putting these words in her mouth.
He wants her love and he wants her on intimate terms.
And the Lord Jesus Christ loved the Church,
but the Apostle Paul could speak of the Son of God
who loved me and gave himself for me.
And I think that would challenge us
as to where our affections are
in relation to the love of the Saviour
who gave himself for each and every one of us.
The Lord wants our love.
He wants a response.
He's given himself.
He couldn't give anything greater,
and it's not that he's given everything that he has,
but he's given himself.
And the Lord would look for a response of affection from us.
It's more than the fact that he's met us in our sins
and forgiven us, as we were talking about in Psalm 32.
That's assumed to be settled.
The thought here is that there's not now a working
upon our conscience with regard to our sins,
and the settled conscience that we have
that our sins are forgiven.
But it's a work upon our hearts
that would draw from us affection for himself.
And I would say this, although we're not going to touch,
but we're just hinting of what follows in the remainder of the song.
The Lord will deal with us in love and in grace
in order that he might warm our hearts to him
and draw out from us the love that he wants.
Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth,
for thy love is better than wine.
Wine would speak of earthly joy.
In Jotham's parable, in Judges 9,
it's that that cheers God and man.
But that's only a picture.
That's only a type.
This is love that's deeper and more intense
and can bring about a joy
that is nothing that's natural can match.
Thy love is better than wine.
I would contrast it with what he has to say of her love.
In chapter 4 and verse 10, he says,
How much better is thy love than wine?
Much better.
Strange, isn't it?
His love for us.
Who can measure it?
Who can fathom its immensity
and the wonder of it?
And we have to confess
that in that light our love is so small
and perhaps at times questionable.
And yet that small love that we,
through the activities of the Spirit in our lives,
he appreciates it and would say,
Much better.
When maybe we can only say,
Better.
Because of the savour of thy good ointments
thy name is as ointment poured forth.
His name is brought in here.
We gather to the Lord's name
or at least we profess to do so.
I think sometimes words come easy
and we take words upon our lips
and scriptures we use
and by maybe the depth of the meaning
we haven't grasped in reality.
The name is a drawing name.
It's a gathering name in Matthew 18 and verse 20.
There's an attraction in that name.
It says where two or three are gathered.
That's passive.
We don't gather ourselves.
But that name draws
in the power of the Spirit
to the name of Christ.
Because that name
would be fragrant
of himself and who he is.
Thou shalt call his name Jesus
for he shall save his people
from their sins.
One has written,
one has said in ministry,
in a day gone past that's been recorded
in written form,
that's the name that he had
that he had to make good in dying.
He had to die to make that name good.
Thou shalt call his name Jesus,
the Saviour.
To be our Saviour
he had to die.
And there's a sense in which
that name we revere
because we're thinking of one who died for us.
One who expressed his love
in such a way for us.
That name of Jesus is precious
when we think of how he's exhibited
who he is
as the Saviour in what he had to
go through in order that we might
be forgiven and that we might
be his. I think of his
name, God with us,
we're still in Matthew's Gospel there
in chapter 1.
Emmanuel,
God with us.
There's that that's in him that's fragrant
of what is divine.
There's a sense when the Lord
Jesus Christ is among us
when we're gathered to his name
of the divine presence.
We're in the holy presence of God.
And therefore there must be
a sense with
spiritual perception of the
Saviour of that name.
His name,
and this is not a title, you know,
in John's Gospel we're told
of the name of the only begotten
Son of God.
That tells us who he is.
This brings before him,
he brings us before himself
personally by that name,
the Son of God, the only begotten
Son of God.
This brings us into the depths
of the mystery of his being
as to who he is
in the
essence of his person.
His name in the revelation,
the Word of God.
Not only is there an expression
of God in the way
that he speaks, but there's
authority there too as he comes there
to take up his kingdom rights of course
in Revelation chapter 19.
If we think upon his name,
what is coming out in that name
is all the glories and the personal
excellences of the Lord Jesus Christ.
This is not occupation with what he's
done for us merely, but the
occupation with who he is,
the Son of God, the one in whom
the Father finds his delight,
the one whose
mode of existence, if I can put it that way,
is essence
in the bosom of the Father
to give a narration of divine
truth and to unfold to us
the Father.
Therefore do the virgins
love thee. I take it
that in this love there must be purity
in our souls to enjoy it,
nothing that would hinder
or would bring in a sense of distance
between ourselves and our Saviour.
That sweet communion that
we can have with him must
surely be upon
the fact that we're sanctified,
we're cleansed,
not only justified from our sins
that matter of
our guilt is settled,
but we're sanctified in the sense that
the defilement of our sins is gone
in order that we might be on intimate
terms with the one who is holy
and true.
Therefore do the virgins love thee.
Draw me.
We will run after thee.
Notice that, draw me.
We will run after thee.
My mind
goes to John chapter 1
verse 36.
You have the Baptist there and he's
looking upon Jesus as he
walks.
There's a determined
observation by John the Baptist
as he watches the Saviour.
That's good.
It's good to watch the Saviour
in his movements in the Gospels
and to see that here
is someone who's unique
and glorious in his movements.
It's not now
behold the Lamb of God which taketh
away the sin of the world. That was verse
29. There we have the person
and his work, but his work is now done
but the person remains.
And on
the other side
of death we might say is
that glorious person.
Still the same as ever he was, but he's
entered now into a new condition of things.
And as we behold him
looking upon the Lord's glory
to use the expression that we have in
2 Corinthians chapter 3.
The Baptist just says,
behold the Lamb of God, probably
words hardly uttered audibly,
but there's two disciples of his and they hear it.
We will run after
thee. There's one that
watches the Saviour,
but his attitude is such,
his impressions are such
that there are those who hear it and
they want for Christ through it.
We will run after
thee.
And they want to know where he dwells.
Where dwellest thou?
He says, come and see.
The King hath brought me
into his chambers.
Of course we know in John chapter 1
he's the one that dwells in the bosom of the
Father. And there in John's
gospel we have an unfolding, a deeper thing
than we have in the song really,
of the Son with the Father.
And the Father's name is declared.
And we're brought into a
sphere where the Father's love is enjoyed.
The Lord goes into the Father's house, he says
in John chapter 14.
And he's opened up by going into
that place himself, a place for us.
That's more than going to heaven when we die.
That's an enjoyment
of a home where a Father's
love is known.
Where dwellest thou?
The King hath brought me into
his chambers. I want to say
that this is being brought onto his side
of things. We're getting some deep things
here right at the commencement of the song
in order that we can see the odd point
to be reached. And that we might be there
willing maybe to go through the
exercises through which the Lord might take us
to bring us into the enjoyment of these
things. Not that we might simply enjoy
them, but that he might have
us with him to enjoy these
things.
He brought me into his
chambers. We will be glad and rejoice
in thee.
We can rejoice in our Saviour because
our sins are forgiven. We can
rejoice in him because he secured for us
a place in heaven. We can rejoice
in what the Saviour gives, and we can
rejoice in what the Lord Jesus Christ has done
for us. But it says
here, we will be glad and rejoice
in thee. This is joy in himself.
This is having an object brought
before us, if I can use that expression
reverently, because the Lord is more
than an object, but I think you'll understand
why we have to say so.
One before
us who captivates our
souls, who really makes a
mark upon our hearts
and who wins us for himself
not simply because of what he's done
for us, that that was necessary
in order that we might be before
him, but in order that he
might unfold to us something of the glories
of his person for the satisfaction
and for the food of our own souls.
We will be glad and rejoice
in thee.
In Habakkuk, things
have fallen into a
bad state in Israel.
Everything has gone,
and yet you come to the end of the third chapter
and he says, I will
rejoice in the Lord, the God
of my salvation. Apostle
Paul takes it up in prison at Philippi.
Rejoice in the Lord always,
and again I say rejoice.
Bad circumstances
there may be, and that's never easy to
adapt to or to
get through.
But even so,
the Lord is the same,
and sometimes maybe these things are brought
to bear upon us in order
that we might
get a better knowledge of him,
a greater appreciation of him,
so that we can be glad
and rejoice in him. We will be
glad and rejoice in thee.
The song
now
turns from
what he is
to her, and our desires
for her have been
opened up and developed
and our affections not only have been
awakened but developed and reawakened
and rekindled, and so
that this sense of the enjoyments
of him in his circle of things
and may I make this point,
it's not the Lord coming into our
circumstances, though he does that,
but it's him bringing
her into his circle
for the enjoyment of his things.
In Revelation chapter 3
the Lord says,
and it's very indicative really
of the present time in which we now
live, the Laodicean lukewarmness,
the Lord says, behold
I stand at the door and knock.
It's outside in
so many areas of our lives.
Outside of church
life might be plenty going on.
Our own lives, we may be doing
things which are done in Christian
service in a sense, but we're getting along
with it fine, and somehow we haven't noticed
the Lord's not with us.
But he says, as
if he's looking for some love from
somewhere, if
any man hear my voice, if anyone,
is there a one?
The Lord is seen.
And then he says, I will come into him,
I'm sought with him.
That's the Lord coming into our circumstances,
taking an interest in us.
Are we up to
things that we could bring the Lord in?
Are there things maybe in
our lives that we would
want the Lord to come
into and to develop those
things with us?
That we might have
his help, but more than that,
that we might have his presence
with us in those things.
But there's more to it than that, because
he then goes on to say,
and he with me.
The Lord takes over. When he comes in
he always has the pre-eminence.
And I think he always moves in a way
that turns it all round
to himself, because
he has the right
and he would desire to
then share with us
his great things.
But now she turns to speak
of herself, I am black, but
calmly are you daughters of Jerusalem
of the tents of Cedar, as the curtains
of Solomon.
You know, we
sometimes think of ourselves
as unworthy sinners, and quite rightly.
But that's not the only thing that can be said of us.
Sometimes said that we're sinners
saved by grace, and that's a wonderful thing.
And it's certainly true, but it's not
the only thing that can be said of us.
She has
this view of herself
which
I think under
a divine movement
in her soul has brought her to recognise
the state of
what she may be naturally.
My thoughts go to Romans 7, the deep
exercise of soul that has gone
through. I know that in me, that is in my
flesh, good does not dwell.
It's absent there.
But that's not the end of that epistle.
Because
we come into Romans chapter 8,
and we find that we're set up rightly
before God in Christ, and that
there is the power, in the power
of the spirit to bring out that which is
of Christ, in the believer's
life. And so there is added
but calmly.
Someone has suggested that she
says I am black, but he interrupts and says
but calmly.
You see, there is a new
creation. Anyone in Christ
new creation. We're created
anew. We're reading the
epistle to the Ephesians.
And there's that divine work that's done
in the soul by the power of the spirit
as our eyes are directed to Christ.
And there's a moral correspondence
that comes in then between Christ
and those who are his.
That's why he can say such things
thou art fair, my love. Thou art
fair. Thou art dove's eyes.
There are things that he sees
in her that are a product
of his own working in the soul
that will bring out features
that match him.
Like Eve that's brought to Adam.
There's the
lesson of Adam looking at the animals
and nothing there that would be suitable
for him. Obviously not, we might
say. But we need to be taught
these things. That if we're suitable
to Christ, then we've got to be brought
out from what Christ
has done at the cross. And we've got
to be formed in moral correspondence
to him as the apostle Paul
writes to the Galatians
who have been diverted from what was truly
Christianity to go back to an old
system of things that have been
terminated in this death at the cross.
And that the apostle
would prevail again
until Christ be
formed in them. And so
there is in her moral
beauties, but they're not there from natural
activity.
They're there as
the fruit of divine
working in the soul.
Deep exercise through which
we have to be taken
in order that features of Christ
might be seen in us. If we're
the bride of Christ in eternity
then there must be
that which is suitable and answers
to him just like Eve
had to answer to Adam.
As the tense
of Kira. Understand
that black skins were put over those
tents. But in contrast
as the curtains of Solomon
and all the materials
in the tabernacle.
They speak of Christ and the perfections
of his person.
But there's that in her
which is immoral correspondence.
Just on verse
six.
The thought
here is of tending to
things of
others and not
attending to our own things.
Sadly it's something we're very good at.
We're very good at pointing
out defects in others.
I think when we look around and there is much
defects amongst us.
But I think very often we've got to
recognize that there are things in
ourselves that have to be judged.
And so she says here
that while she'd been
tending to the vineyards of others
her own vineyard she'd not kept.
But moving very quickly
to verses seven and eight.
The thought has been
of the king and the love
that the king desires
from her as
his consort
in his administration.
The thought now turns to him as
a shepherd. It's the same person
There's so many attributes
that belong to the Lord Jesus Christ
and there's so many ways in which he's
viewed. But the wonder of it all is that
he meets us in whatever circumstance
we find ourselves. He brings
himself in a way that suits our need.
And so there's a need
for leading.
There's a need for feeding.
And she recognizes that.
And so turning to another thought
now, which is probably
more apparent in a way in David than it
ever was in Solomon.
She wants to know where
he feeds, where he makes
the flock to rest at noon.
The heat of the day
would probably
complain about the cold weather at the moment.
We perhaps don't appreciate
what it would like to be in a hot
arid place.
There we're going to need the sense of
shelter from the heat of the
noonday sun. There we're going to need
the refreshment and the sustenance.
It's touched a little in the next chapter.
The apple tree among the trees of the wood.
The shelter that's provided
by the foliage of the tree.
The fruit, the sustenance,
the sweetness of it,
that will maintain us
despite the heat
that blows over us
in our lives.
But why should I be as one that turns aside
by the flocks of thy companions?
There's his flock that's mentioned
in the next chapter.
Go thy way forth by the
footsteps of the flock.
One flock. My mind goes
very quickly to John chapter
ten. One flock,
one shepherd.
We are set in a sense to hold these things
and sometimes we try to hold things
together ourselves. That will always
be an ending failure.
There always has to be a drawing
to the good shepherd, to the
great shepherd, to the chief shepherd.
He is the one who will
maintain and who will
feed us and will keep us
and it is his hand
that holds us and holds us
for good. For why should
I be as one that turneth aside by the
flocks of thy companions?
Peter was
encouraged to feed the flock of Christ
ten to his lambs.
But he could never
take the place of Christ.
And as we profess together
to the Lord's name,
as we seek to act
on the truth of the oneness of his people
at the present time,
despite the scattering,
there has to be really
a due recognition of the rights
of Christ. There has to
be a due sense as
to the preeminence that
he has. That
everything is secured in his hand
and we have to entrust ourselves
to him. Which
touch now just very quickly on verses nine
and ten. The rest we leave
but we can continue privately on our
meditations upon the
rest of this. He turns
to her, a company
of horses in Pharaoh's
chariots. Sometimes
we speak of the church militant.
Being
active for Christ,
his interests, our
object, our pursuit.
The cheeks comely with
rolls of jewels, thy neck with chains
of gold.
Proverbs
chapter one and verse nine.
We have there, brought
before us about the instruction of a father
and the law of a mother.
We have the instruction
of the father about his son in John's
gospel and in other scriptures too.
We have the law of
a mother. Not the
earth in Jerusalem, in Galatians, but that
which is from above, that system of grace.
And that would form us.
The apostle Paul speaks of
Christ formed in you,
but he also speaks about God
revealing his son
in me.
And there's the instruction of the father that
would bring out a correspondence in a
spiritual way in the believers.
And these
borders of gold and studs of
silver would suggest that the gold would speak
of divine righteousness.
The studs of silver would speak
upon the ground on which that can be
subjected to us. And that is
on the ground of redemption.
Just being justified freely through
the redemption that
is in Christ Jesus.
In Romans and chapter three.
I've come just to the end to say
in this settled condition of
things,
and if we've enjoyed it, we will not
want it to be disturbed.
His left hand under my head,
his support, his right hand
embracing us, an intimacy
and an earness.
It's what
the Lord would want from us.
It's what he wants
in response to
his love. And he would
challenge us in this day,
when perhaps so many things are
called, the atmosphere of
lukewarmness that abounds on every hand and side.
The Lord would call again,
he would make the knock, and he would
desire his voice to be heard.
And he would want some response
to his love.
He would want us quietly
in his presence, so
that he can open up to us
something of the glories of his person
to satisfy us.
But the response toward
him, that will be to the satisfaction
of his heart.
We've touched a little
on some of the verses, some we've had to
skip for the sake of time.
But they would say that there are exercises
through which the Lord is taking us
in order to bring these things about
for his own glory, for his own pleasure
and for his own joy.
But that too, that he might be that object
wonderful in the
glory of his own person
that will bring real satisfaction to our
souls. So that we're not like the sea
with the rivers never filling it, and
having to cry in despair
and vanity of vanities all is vanity.
But that we might be singing the song
of songs of the Saviour
and the wonders of Christ
and the glories of his person.
The only begotten of the Father's
love. May the Lord bless his word.
The hymn
364, please.
364.
This was written by a man who had
just been married
and he wondered whether
his love for his wife would rival
that of his affection for Christ.
I understand it's the
background to the writings
in this hymn that we're about to sing.
I would say, just
in that remark
that that's a wonderful relationship
and
man would seek to spoil it at the
present time. Things are taken up
very lightly and very, in a frivolous
way. But you know, what we take up
in these ways, God holds us
to them. And God I'm sure
gives us grace and we need it.
The enemy is very, very
subtle. Have I an object, Lord,
below that would divide
my heart from thee,
which would divide it
even flaw
in answer to thy
constancy, or teach me quickly to
return and cause my heart afresh
to burn. 364. …