"He that dwelleth in the
secret place of the Most
High shall abide under the
shadow of the Almighty"
(Psalm 91:1).
To me this is one of the most
beautiful expressions in all the
Bible; beautiful because it is
poetic, but more than that for
the reason that it holds up
before us one of the greatest
privileges that can come to the
children of God.
There is a difference of opinion
as to who the author of the
Psalms may be. We get into the
way of thinking that David wrote
everything in the Psalter, but
Moses is the author here. The
Talmud ascribes not only this
one to him but the nine
preceding as well. The rule is
that all the Psalms without a
name in the title are to be
ascribed to the poet whose name
is given in the nearest
preceding title; but this rule
will not always hold good. This
is the Psalm quoted by the devil
when he was tempting Christ upon
the mountain, and it has ever
been throbbing with comfort for
every troubled soul. Whoever
wrote it, it is beautiful, and
all will agree that the lesson
taught is one touching our
communion with God and our
fellowship with Jesus Christ.
It is very true that all
Christians do not occupy the
same position in this world. All
are saved, and it is by the same
"precious blood of Christ." But
there is so much more to the
Christian life than simply being
saved; that is only the
beginning. The blessings here
offered are given in a very
general way. God is no respecter
of persons, and so it is as if
He had said, any one who will
fulfill the conditions may have
the blessing; and as there is
only the one condition, namely,
that we shall dwell in the
"secret place of the Most High,"
you would think that all would
accept, for the promise is that
we "shall abide under the shadow
of the Almighty." The blessings
here promised are not for all
believers, but only for those
who live in close fellowship
with God. Every child of God
looks toward the inner sanctuary
and the mercy seat, but all do
not dwell there. They run to it
at times and enjoy occasional
glimpses of the face of Him who
is there to be seen; but they do
not continually abide in the
mysterious presence, and this is
possible for every one.
It is with the desire that I
might learn the lesson myself as
well as bring it to you, and
with the almost unutterable
longing that we might know how
to abide in the "secret of His
presence" that I have brought
you the subject. May the Lord
help us every one! I have been
on the mountain tops of
Christian experience, when I
have seemed to see the face of
Him who loved me and gave
Himself for me, and I am sure
that you can say the same; but
the text says that we may abide
there in our thoughts while we
may be all the time in the very
thickest of the fight for God.
I like the verse. Every word is
sweeter than honey in the
honeycomb. It is so restful to
know that there is any place in
the world where we may abide.
There is also something very
winning to me in the fact that
it is a secret place, for that
surely means that God has
something that is just intended
for me, and for me alone. When I
am there, I am away from the
world. It is the place Mrs.
Brown discovered when she wrote
the beautiful hymn,
"I love in solitude to shed
The penitential tear;
And all His promises to plead
When none but God can hear."
There is something about the
word "shadow" that always
interests, for there never has
been a shadow without the light;
thus the "secret place" must be
a place of brightness. It is a
place where God is, for the
nearest of all things to me as I
journey in the sunlight is my
shadow, and he who walks in nay
shadow or rests in it must be
very near to me; so that when I
am in the shadow of God, I can
reach forth my hand and touch
Him; I can lift up mine eyes and
see Him face to face. I know
there is a sense in which God is
always near us. He is in all
things, and He is everywhere.
But there is something about the
"secret of His presence" to
which every one is a stranger
until he has dwelt there.
In the 119th Psalm the psalmist
seems in the first part to be
writing of the presence of God
in a general sort of way. As
another has said, "He had been
beating out the golden ore of
thought through successive
paragraphs of marvelous power
and beauty, when suddenly in the
fifty-first verse he seems to
have become conscious that He of
whom he had been speaking had
drawn near and was bending over
him. The sense of the presence
of God was borne in upon his
inner consciousness, and lifting
up a face on which reverence and
ecstasy met and mingled, he
cried: 'Thou art near, O Lord!'"
If we could only attain unto
this how strong, how happy, how
useful we should be. It is
possible as well for those of us
who are in the very midst of
perplexing cares as for the
priest or the saint; for since
the Master bids us all to abide
in Him, and does not limit
either His meaning or the number
of people who may obey, I am
absolutely certain that it rests
with me and with you to
determine whether we shall take
advantage of our high privilege.
The typical reference must be to
the holy place of the
tabernacle, which the priests
were privileged to enter; but
Peter assures us that we have
become in this new dispensation
"a holy priesthood," so that it
is possible for us to enter on
that ground. If this
interpretation is allowed, then
it is something, too wonderful
almost to describe, to which we
are bidden, for in the
tabernacle just beyond the veil
was the glory cloud, and all the
magnificence that could be
wrought in gold and silver,
purple and fine linen. But I am
persuaded that even that was as
nothing when compared to that
which awaits us when we enter
the secret place of God. The
writer to the Hebrews tells us
just how we may enter. "Having,
therefore, brethren, boldness to
enter into the holiest by the
blood of Jesus, by a new and
living way, which He hath
consecrated for us, through the
veil, that is to say, His
flesh," how easy it all seems
when we look at it in this way!
A Christian is all wrong
according to the text if he
thinks that all the life here
below must be turmoil and
strife, for there is an abiding
even here, and a sweet,
undisturbed communion even in
the midst of the tempest. A
dwelling place is a home, not a
temporary shelter to which one
may run for momentary relief, as
the birds fly to the boughs of
the trees in the midst of the
storm and then leave again when
the storm has passed. It is the
idea of a home. What can be more
restful and comfortable? The
Hebrew for the expression "shall
abide" is "shall pass the
night." Is it not a wonderful
thing that the experiences that
have seemed to us to be Heaven
begun below, but have been as
fleeting as the shadows sweeping
the hillside, may be with us all
the time? What place is so
restful as your home? I know
there is a rest that comes to
one the moment he accepts the
pardon that is offered by the
Redeemer and the burden of sin
is gone. "Come unto me, and I
will give you rest." This is His
promise, and He never has
failed; but immediately
following that expression is
this: "Take my yoke upon you,
and learn of Me, for I am meek
and lowly in heart, and ye shall
find lest unto your souls."
I suppose one might secure the
former and never come to the
latter. Is not that the rest
that comes to us when we are
near enough to learn of Him,
which is only another way of
speaking of the "secret place"?
What place is so comfortable as
the home? There we are free from
the annoyances of the world;
there we have that which seems
to soothe and to quiet. Could
there be anything more
expressive than the words we
find in the fourth verse of the
91st Psalm: "He shall cover thee
with His feathers." It would be
almost a sacrilege for one to
use the words if they were not
in the Bible; but it is the
picture of the mother bird
shielding the little ones. What
so warm, so comfortable, as the
mother's wings, or the nest that
love has made? But listen to
this: if you will only dwell in
the "secret place," you shall
abide under the shadow of the
Almighty; and as if that would
not be tender enough to woo us,
we are told again, "He shall
cover thee with His feathers,
and under His wings thou shalt
trust."
Home is the place for
explanations. There we tell our
secrets. If the people of the
world do not understand us, our
loved ones in our homes do.
In the 27th Psalm, the fourth
verse, David wants to "dwell in
the house of the Lord" that he
may "inquire in His temple."
There were many times when he
was perplexed, when he could not
understand God. One time he
said, "Thy way is in the sea,
and thy path is the great
waters, and thy footsteps are
not known."
And what is so trackless as the
sea? Then he says, "I went into
the sanctuary of God, then
understood I their end." It was
as if God there had made some
special revelation to him; it
was the "secret place," and God
had told him the secret of it
all, for that is God's way. Did
He not walk with Enoch on the
way as friend walks with friend?
Did He not talk with Moses at
Midian and tell him things he
never could repeat? I remember
very well that John was so near
to the blessed Christ that he
leaned his head upon His bosom.
How easy for Him to bend His
head and whisper to him the
things He could not even tell
the other disciples, for they
were not near enough; for there
are things that can not be
spoken above a whisper. If they
were, their power would be gone.
One could not thus come near to
Christ without receiving some
special message.
When Paul was caught up into the
heavens, I remember that he
heard certain things that it was
not possible for him to utter,
partly because he had no
language and partly because they
were secrets he had been told.
And one of the best things about
Peter was that he met Christ
after His resurrection. after he
had denied Him with an oath,
after he had forsaken Him; and
when their eyes met and their
hands clasped, the same as in
the other days, except that the
Master's were marked by the
nails, they had an interview.
How tender the message must have
been! I imagine it was the
turning point of Peter's life
for real power. He told Mark
many things about himself, but
of that interview with Christ he
never spoke a word. To me it is
a beautiful reminder of the fact
that Christ is "the same
yesterday, today and forever,"
and if I am only near enough to
Him, I may inquire of Him
concerning all the mysteries of
my life, and He who made known
His ways unto Moses will answer
me in the "secret place" and in
the secret way.
"If I tried I could not utter
What He says when thus we meet."
It would be impossible for one
to read the verses immediately
following the text without being
impressed with the fact that the
most remarkable results will
follow our abiding and dwelling
in the "secret place."
In order that the subject may be
the more practical and helpful I
desire to suggest some things
which will surely be ours when
we fulfill the conditions.
1. In the "secret place" there
is peace. "In the world ye shall
have tribulation," our Master
said, "but in Me ye shall have
peace." I have read that a
certain insect has the power to
surround itself with a film of
air, encompassed in which it
drops into the midst of muddy,
stagnant pools, and remains
unhurt. And the believer may be
thus surrounded by the
atmosphere of God, and while he
is in the midst of the turmoils
of the world he may be filled to
overflowing with the peace of
God, because God is with him.
This is true whatever your
occupation, if it is ever so
menial. The Rev. F. B. Meyer
tells us of Lawrence, the
simple-minded cook, who said
that "for more than sixty years
he never lost the sense of the
presence of God, but was as
conscious of it while performing
the duties of his humble office
as when partaking of the Lord's
Supper." What peace he must have
had!
If you are constantly engaged so
that you have said it was
impossible for you to enjoy your
religion very much because you
were so busy, still you may have
this peace, because you are in
the "secret place." I know that
it is impossible for one to keep
two thoughts in the mind at the
same time and do them both
justice; but there is the heart
as well as the mind, and while
the mind is busy the heart may
be rejoicing in all the fullness
of God. The orator is conscious
of the presence of his audience,
and his heart is touched by
their appreciation while his
mind is busy in presenting the
thoughts that move them. You may
have all your mind taken up with
the book you are reading or
studying, but your heart is
conscious of the presence of the
one you love and who sits by
your side. The mother may be
very busy in one part of the
house; her mind may be greatly
engaged, but her heart is
conscious of the fact that her
little babe is in another part
of the house, and the least cry
will draw her to the child. So
the mind may be occupied to the
very fullest extent, and even be
disturbed by the things about
us, while the heart may be
abiding in sweet communion and
fellowship with Him because we
are dwelling in the "secret
place."
Those were comforting words of
the Master's when He said,
"Peace I leave with you, my
peace I give unto you, not as
the world giveth, give I unto
you. Let not your hearts be
troubled, neither let them be
afraid." So that I may have
peace even when trial comes.
David found this to be true, for
in that beautiful Psalm, the
27th, he says: "In the time of
trouble He will hide me in His
pavilion; in the secret of His
tabernacle will He hide me." The
pavilion was a great tent in the
very center of the camp, and
when he was there nothing could
harm him; he could be at peace
even if he should hear the
sounds of his enemies. But the
expression is even stronger than
that, for David says that if it
were necessary God would even
put him in the "secret of His
tabernacle"; that is the same as
the Holy of Holies; and who
would not have been safe there?
Here is our "secret place"
again, and this is just where
God has given us the privilege
of going. Why should we be
disturbed if troubles are about
us and our enemies rise up to do
us harm?
2. In the "secret place" there
is purity. If our surroundings
were only better in this world,
our lives would be purer. It is
very easy to be good in the
company of some people we know;
they seem to draw out all the
good in us. To be surrounded by
certain kinds of scenery is to
be lifted near Heaven; to touch
a little child pure as the
angels of God is to receive a
benediction. What could not the
presence of God do for us if
only we were all the time
conscious of it? This is just
what I may have, did I but dwell
in the "secret place." One of
the reasons which David gives
for desiring to dwell in the
house of the Lord was that "he
might behold the beauty of the
Lord." I wish that it might be
possible for me to make plain to
you as I might understand it
myself all the beauty that waits
us in the "secret place." Think
of the gorgeousness of the Holy
of Holies in the ancient
tabernacle, which is a type of
this! The wonderful curtains and
hangings of the place, its blue
and purple, its fine twined
linen and threads of gold. Think
of the beautiful veil with the
cherubim, with the embroidery so
fine that angel fingers must
have wrought them, the table of
pure gold holding the bread, and
the seven-branched candlestick?
Who from the outside looking
upon the badger skin tent would
have imagined how glorious it
was within? So I do not think it
would be possible to make plain
to you all that awaits you in
the "secret place." He who has
dwelt there with God could not
tell his joy if he had an
angel's speech; but this I know,
that if you will but enter in
and dwell there, the very beauty
of the place wilt make you pure,
and you remember that it is only
unto "the pure in heart" that
the vision of God is promised.
I suppose we might have been
with Jacob when in his dream he
saw the heavens opened and
beheld the angels going up and
coming down and heard the voice
of God, and we only should have
seen the dreary mountains round
about. I doubt not but that we
might have been with Paul when
he was caught up to the third
heaven, and we should have seen
nothing but the humble
surroundings of his tent. And I
doubt not but that if Paul were
here today he would see God here
this morning, and he would have
walked on the street with Him
yesterday. Is not the trouble
with ourselves instead of our
surroundings or our times? Every
permitted sin encrusts the
windows of the soul and blinds
our vision; and every victory
over evil clears the vision of
the soul, and we can see Him a
little plainer.
The unholy man could not see God
if he were set down in the midst
of heaven; but men and women
whose hearts are pure see Him in
the very commonest walks of
life. And there is not a place
in the world if it is right that
we should have been there, but
after we have passed by we may
say, "Behold, God was in this
place, and I knew it not." And
if we can not say it, it is
wrong for us to go.
3. In the "secret place" there
is power. Oh! that we might all
of us possess real power! This
is our cry day and night, and
yet there is nothing we may have
easier. There is no promise with
which I am familiar that tells
us that we may have power of
intellect or of human might. But
there is a promise that we shall
have power after that the Holy
Ghost shall come upon us; and in
the olden times He literally
filled to overflowing the Holy
of Holies, so that at one time
it was almost impossible for one
to enter. This will come to us
likewise when we dwell in the
"secret place." In I Chronicles
we read, in the fourth chapter
and twenty-third verse, of
certain men who "dwelt with the
king for his work." There can be
no effective service that is not
the outcome of communion. Our
Lord's Day precedes the week of
work, and this is always the
plan of God. That wonderful
fifteenth chapter of John is
founded on that idea. We must
abide first, and after that we
can not help but bear fruit. Oh!
that we might be so near to Him
that we should be magnetized and
charged with a spiritual force
that the world could neither
gainsay nor resist! I have left
to the very last the most
practical question of all, and
that is: How may I enter into
this "secret place"? Can not
something be said that will make
the way plain? It may all be
summed up in this answer. None
can "know the Father but the
Son, and he to whom the Son will
reveal Him." It is impossible
for any one to enter into the
"secret place" of the Most High
except through Jesus Christ. He
said, "I am the way, I am the
door, by me, if any man will, he
shall enter in."
It is just what Paul meant when
he said, "But now in Christ
Jesus ye who sometimes were afar
off are made nigh by the blood
of Christ."
There are some places in the
Bible where the way seems plain.
"He that eateth my flesh and
drinketh my blood dwelleth in
me, and I in him." And whatever
else is meant by this feeding on
Christ, this certainly is true
-- we are to set apart daily
periods of time when we may have
communion with the Saviour. Is
it not because we are too
hurried that our vision of
Christ is blurred and
indistinct? It is only when the
water is still that you can see
the pebbly beach below. You
could not go alone with Christ
half an hour each day, or even a
less time, and sitting still,
look up into His face, by faith
talk to Him and let Him talk to
you, without feeling that for a
little part of the day you had
been in heaven, when in fact it
was only the "secret place" of
the Most High. Christ would be
in you and you would be in
Christ, even as in the southern
sea the sponges may be seen
beneath the waves, the sponge in
the sea and the sea in the
sponge. Then we could say with
Paul: "I live, and yet not I but
Christ liveth in me." Again I
have read in the Bible these
words: "He that keepeth His
commandments dwelleth in Him,
and He in him." And I have found
that I have only to go the way I
think Christ wants me to go and
to do the things I think He
wants me to do to be able to
stand on the very mountain top
of Christian experience; and
that is only another way of
speaking of the "secret place."
You could not go where Christ
has bidden you without meeting
Him, and you could not meet Him
without a blessing coming with
the meeting.
After all this has been known, I
have been told that the vision
still tarries. Sometimes that is
to try our faith; but He will
come if you wait, for He has
promised. If, however, after
long waiting still He should
tarry, take up this old Book,
turn its pages with a prayer
that God might open your eyes so
that you might see Him. This is
the garden where he walks; press
on, you will meet Him face to
face. This is the temple where
He dwells; stand knocking at the
door, even while you wait it may
swing noiselessly on its hinges,
and He will lead you Himself
into the "secret place."
Did you ever cultivate the habit
of talking aloud to God? Sit
down this very day and with
upturned face and open eyes talk
to Him as to your father, as to
the dearest friend you have, one
to whom you can tell your most
secret thoughts; tell them to
Him. The very room where you sit
will seem to be filled with
angels; but best of all God will
be there, for one could not long
talk to Him without feeling Him
to be near. After such an
experience some one has written:
"Suddenly there came upon my
soul a something I had never
known before. It was as if some
one Infinite and Almighty,
knowing everything, full of the
deepest, tenderest interest in
myself, made known to me that He
loved me. My eye saw no one, but
I knew assuredly that the One
whom I knew not and had never
met had met me for the first
time and made known to me that
we were together." God give us
all such an experience. Come
into the "secret place." Come
in!
After the Lord Jesus Christ had
entered the heart of a girl in
India, one who was of the higher
caste, she was so transformed by
His presence that out of the
fullness of her love to Him she
put on paper a little verse for
which I shall never cease to
thank God. Will you go with me
and with her into the "secret
place" of the Most High that we
may abide under the shadow of
the Almighty?
"In the secret of His presence
how my soul delights to hide;
Oh! how precious are the lessons
which I learn at Jesus' side!
Earthly cares can never vex me,
neither trials lay me low,
For when Satan comes to tempt
me, to the 'secret place' I go.
When my soul is faint and
thirsty, 'neath the shadow of
His wings
There is cool and pleasant
shelter and refreshing crystal
springs.
And my Saviour rests beside me
as we hold communion sweet;
If I tried, I could not utter
what He says when thus we meet.
Only this I know, I tell Him all
my doubts, my griefs and fears.
Oh! how patiently He listens,
and my drooping soul He cheers.
Do you think He ne'er reproves
me? What a false friend He would
be
If He never, never told me of
the sins which He must see.
Would you like to know the
sweetness of the secret of the
Lord?
Go and hide beneath His shadow;
this shall then be your reward;
And whene'er you leave the
silence of that happy meeting
place
You must mind and bear the image
of the Master in your face."
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