'THE TERROR OF THE LORD'
Knowing.... the terror of the Lord, we persuade men (2
Corinthians v. 11.)
'The Lord is known by the judgment which He executeth,' (Psalm ix.
16.)
The majesty of God's law can be measured only by the terrors of His
judgments. God is rich in mercy, but He is equally terrible in
wrath. So high as is His mercy, so deep is His wrath. Mercy and
wrath are set over against each other as are the high mountains and
the deep seas. They match each other as do day and night, as do
winter and summer, or right and left, or top and bottom. If we do
not accept mercy, we shall surely be overtaken by wrath.
God's law cannot be broken with impunity. 'The soul that sinneth, it
shall die.' We can no more avoid the judgment of God's violated law
than we can avoid casting a shadow when we stand in the light of the
sun, or than we can avoid being burned if we thrust our hand in the
fire. Judgment follows wrong-doing as night follows day.
This truth should be preached and declared continually and
everywhere. It should not be preached harshly, as though we were
glad of it; nor thoughtlessly, as though we had learned it as a
parrot might learn it; nor lightly, as though it were really of no
importance; but it should be preached soberly, earnestly, tearfully,
intelligently, as a solemn, certain, awful fact to be reckoned with
in everything we think and say and do.
The terrible judgments of God against the Canaanites were but
flashes of His wrath against their terrible sins. People with
superfine sensibilities mock at what they consider the barbarous
ferocity of God's commands against the inhabitants of Canaan, but
let such people read the catalogue of the Canaanites' sins as
recorded in the eighteenth chapter of Leviticus (verses 6-25), and
they will then understand why God's anger waxed so hot. The
Canaanites practiced the most shameless and inconceivable
wickedness, until, as God says, 'the land itself vomiteth out her
inhabitants.'
'Fools make a mock of sin ' wrote Solomon (Proverbs xiv. 9), and
professedly wise men still lead simple souls astray as the serpent
beguiled Eve, saying, 'Ye shall not surely die.' (Genesis iii. 4.)
But men who understand the unchangeable holiness of God's character
and law tremble and fear before Him at the thought of sin. They know
that He is to be feared; 'the terror of the Lord' is before them.
And this is not inconsistent with the perfect love that casteth out
fear. Rather it is inseparably joined with that love, and the man
who is most fully possessed of that love is the one who fears most
-- with that reverential fear that leads him to depart from sin. For
he who is exalted to the greatest heights of divine love and
fellowship in Jesus Christ sees most plainly the awful depths of the
divine wrath against sin and the bottomless pit to which sinners out
of Christ are hastening.
This vision and sense of the exceeding sinfulness of sin and of
God's wrath against wickedness begets not a panicky, slavish fear
that makes a man hide from God, as Adam and Eve hid among the trees
of Eden, but a holy, filial fear that leads the soul to come out
into the open and run to God to seek shelter in His arms, and to be
washed in the Blood of 'the Lamb of God, which taketh away the sin
of the world.'
Lo! on a narrow neck of land, 'Twixt two unbounded seas I stand, Yet
how insensible! A point of time, a moment's space, Removes me to
that heavenly place, Or shuts me up in Hell!
Before me place in dread array The scenes of that tremendous day,
When Thou with clouds shalt come To judge the people at Thy bar; And
tell me, Lord, shall I be there To hear Thee say, 'Well done!
Be this my one great business here, With holy joy and holy fear, To
make my calling sure; Thine utmost counsel to fulfill, To suffer all
Thy righteous will, And to the end endure.
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