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THE GOOD NEWS BULLETIN
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Gen. Smedley Butler: War is a Racket Independent jury's secret power
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JEHOVAH SHAMMAH “The Lord Is There” -By Charles Spurgeon “The name of the city from that day shall be, The Lord is there” EZ.48: 35. These words may be used as a test as well as a
text. They may serve for examination as well as consolation, and at the
beginning of a year they may fulfill useful double purpose. In any case,
they are full of marrow and fatness to those whose spiritual taste is
purified. It is esteem by the prophets to be the highest blessing that
could come upon a city that its name should be, JEHVAH SHAMMAH, The Lord
is there. Even Doubtless many would be greatly pleased if there were no God at all; for in their very hearts they say, “No God.” God is not to them a father, a friend, a trust, a treasure. If they were to speak from their hearts, and could hope for a satisfactory answer, they would ask, “Whither can I flee from His presence?” If a spot could be found wherein there would be no God, what a fine building speculation might be made there! Millions would immigrate to “No God’s land,” and would feel at ease as they trod its godless shore. There they could do just as they liked, without fear of future reckoning. Now, friend, if you would fain escape from the presence of God, your state is clearly revealed by that fact. There can be no heaven for you; for Heaven is where the Lord’s presence is fullness of joy. If you could be happy to be far off from God, I must tell you what your fate will be. You are now going away from God in your heart and desire, and at the last great Judge of all will say to you, “Depart, ye cursed”; and you will then be driven from the presence of the Lord, and from the glory of His power. I know that there is a company who can truly say that they feel happy only when they are conscious that God is with them. The place where they meet the Lord is very dear and precious to them because of His unveilings. The memory of holy convocations is sweet because the Lord was among them. They would not care to go where God is not. If there were a place forsaken of God, however exciting and full of merriment men might think it, they would not be found among its guest. Where we cannot enjoy God’s company we will not go. Our motto is: “With God, anywhere. Without God, nowhere.” In Him we live, and move, and have our being; and, therefore, it would be death to us to be apart from God. Without God we should be without hope. Ah, my dear friend! Whatever your difficulties, and trials, and sorrows, all is well with you if God is your delight, and His presence your joy. But, however high your temporal enjoyments may rise, it is wrong with you if you can rest away from the God of grace. The child must be in a sad state of heart when he doe not care to have his fathers approving smile. Things must be terribly wrong with any creature when it can be content to walk contrary to its Creator. Nothing but the corruption of the heart could permit any man to be at ease away from God. Will you permit these thoughts to saturate you for a little space? I have spoken with the desire that each one of us may ask himself, “Is the presence of God my delight?” If so, I am His, and He will be with me. On the contrary, Is the presence of God a matter of indifference, or even a dread? Then my condition is one of guilt, disease, and danger. May the Lord, of His infinite mercy, set me right! This much may stand as a preface; but it must not be treated as most prefaces are, namely, left unread, or glanced over and forgotten. I pray you, carry it with you all along.` Now kindly notice that, according to our text. The prophet Ezekiel has been telling us many remarkable things, which I shall not attempt to explain to you; and my chief reason for not doing so is the fact that I do not understand them. If I could open up every dark saying, it is not just now the time to go into an explanation of all the sublime mysteries which were seen by the eagle eye of Ezekiel, for I seek present, practical edification; and this we can gain in an easier way. It is clear from the text, that when God shall bless His ancient people, and restore them to their land, and the temple shall be rebuilt, and all the glory of the latter days shall arrive, this will still be the peculiar glory of it all, that “the Lord is there.” The prophet works up a climax, and closes his book of prophecy with these glorious words, “the Lord is there.” What a glorious state this world was in at the very
first, in the age of Alas! That has vanished. Withered are the bowers of In the days when God had called out unto Himself a
chosen nation, He revealed Himself at Sinai, when the mountain was
altogether in a smoke, and even Moses said, “I do exceedingly fear and
quake.” Well might he feel a holy awe, for the Lord was there. I will
not dwell upon the glory of the tabernacle that was pitched in the
wilderness with its costly furniture and its instructive rites, , for
after all, the glory of the tabernacle was that the Lord was there. A
bright light shone between the wings of the cherubim, and so the
Psalmist in after days spoke unto the Lord, saying, “Thou that dwellest
between the cherubim’s shine forth.”
Above the sacred tent was the pillar of fire by night and the
pillar of cloud by day, and emblem of the constant presence of God, for
all through the wilderness His glorious marchings were in the center of
the armies of His Israel. The desert sand glowed with the blaze of the
present Deity. No spot on earth was so like to Heaven’s high courts as
the wilderness wherein there was no way, wherein the Lord Himself led
His people like a flock. Holy was Horeb, for the Lord was there. Then
were the days of In You remember how, in after ages, when Solomon was crowned and his reign of peace had been inaugurated, he built for God a temple adorned with gold and precious stones, and all manner of cunning work of the artificer; but it was not the glittering roof, it was not those massive pillars of brass in the forefront, it was not the hecatombs of bullocks whose blood was poured out at the altar which were the glory of the temple of Mount Zion. Beautiful for situation, it was the joy of the whole earth; but its glory lay in this, “God is in the midst of her; she shall not be moved: God shall help her, and that right early.” The excellence of the temple was seen when, on the opening day, the Lord revealed Himself, and “the cloud filled the house of the Lord, so that the priest could not stand to minister because of the cloud: for the glory of the Lord had filled the house of the Lord.” Little remains for man to do when in very deed the Lord dwells in the midst of His saints. Apart from priest and ceremonies, that place is sacred wherein the Lord Most High has His abode. Say of any place “JEHOVAH-SHAMMAH, the Lord is there.” And be it tent or temple, you have spoken glorious things of it. I almost tremble while I remind you of the truest Here I might fitly close. For we can mount no higher; but yet we could not afford to leave out those other dwellings of the Invisible Spirit, who still by His presence makes holy places even in this unholy world. We have to remind you that God is the glory of the most glorious living thing that has been on the face of the earth since our Lord was here. And what is that answer, Jesus is gone; the prophets are gone; and we have no temple, no human priest, no material holy of holies. · Jesus, where’er thy people meet, · There they behold thy mercy seat: · Where’er they seek thee, thou art found, · And every place is hallowed ground.
And yet there is a special place where God dwells among men, and
that is in His Church. He has but And so onward, to this very day, wheresoever the chosen of God lift up holy hands and worship Him, whether it be in a cathedral or in a barn. Beneath the blue sky or beneath a thatched roof, anywhere and everywhere when the heart is right, and the soul adores the living Lord, this is the special glory of the place, that “Jehovah Shammah, the Lord is there. Flying forward, as with a dove’s wing, to the future that is drawing near, we reflect on the truth that there is to be a millennial age, a time of glory, and peace, and joy, and truth, and righteousness. But what is to be the glory of it? Why this, “Jehovah Shammah, the lord is there!” The Lord Jesus Christ will come and begin His personal reign on earth among His ancients. In like manner as He went up into Heaven, and the disciples saw Him, so will He descend a second time to be seen here among men; and His glorious presence shall fashion the golden age, the thousand years of peace. Then shall the nations shout, “The Lord is come.” What hallelujahs will then rise to Heaven! Welcome, welcome, Son of God! How will all His faithful ones rejoice with joy unspeakable and sing and sing again; for now the day of their reward has come, and they shall sing forth as the son in the kingdom of their Father! In all the glory of the latter days everything is wrapped up in this one word, “the Lord is there.” · Oh, come, thou Dayspring, come and cheer · Our spirits by thy advent here; · Disperse the gloomy clouds of night, · And death’s dark shadows put to flight! · Rejoice, Rejoice! Immanuel · Shall come to thee, O Israel! Up yonder, whither many of our beloved ones have already gone; up yonder, within that gate of pearl where eye cannot as yet see. What is it that makes Heaven, with all its supreme delights? Not harps of angels, nor blaze of seraphim; but this one fact, “the Lord is there.” What must it be with God? O soul that loves Him, what will your fullness of pleasure be when you shall dwell with Him for whom your soul is hungering and thirsting! What joy may be “forever with the Lord”! This perfect bliss may be ours this very day. We little know how near we are to our glorification with our Lord. The veil is very thin that parts the sanctified from the glorified. · One gentle sigh, the soul awakes: · We scarce can say “He’s gone,” · Before the ransomed spirit takes · Its mansion near the throne. The joy and glory of those divine mansions is that “the Lord is there.” Heaven’s loftiest peak shines forever in this clear night, The Lord God and the Lamb are the light thereof: ‘the Lord is there.” Enough of this, I have proved my point, that the glory of the most glorious place is that “the Lord is there.” Suffer me for a few minutes to speak to you upon another point: The presence of God is the best privilege of His Church. It is her glory that “the Lord is there.” Note
this, and mark it well. Brethren, we as a church have grown to great
numbers, and we are not deficient either in gifts or in graces, or in
work for our Lord; but let me solemnly remind you that our chief, our
only strength, must always lie in this, ‘the Lord is there.” If the Lord
should depart from us, as He has gone from churches which are now
apostate, what an abyss opens before us! If He should take His Holy
Spirit from us, even as the glory departed from the temple at If the Lord be among us, the consequence will be, first, the conservation of true doctrine. The true God is not with a lie; He will not give His countenance to falsehood. Those who preach other than according to His Word, abides not under His blessing but are in great danger of His curse. If any man speak another gospel (Which is not another, but there be some that trouble us) God is not with him, and any transient prosperity which he may enjoy will be blown away as the chaff. God is with those who speak the truth faithfully, hold it devoutly, believe it firmly, and live upon it as their daily bread. May it always be said of this church, “the Lord is there,” and therefore they are sound in the faith, reverent towards Holy Scripture, and zealous for the Honor of Christ! Trust-deeds and confessions of are useful in their way, even as laws are useful to society; but as laws cannot secure obedience to themselves, so articles of belief cannot create faith or secure honesty; and to men without conscience, they are not worth the paper they are written upon. No subscription to articles can keep out the unscrupulous. Wolves leap into the fold however carefully you watch the door. The fact is, the most of people say, “Yes, that doctrine is in creed, and is not to be denied; but you need not preach it. Put it on shelf as an ornament, and let us hear no more about it.” Truth must be written on the heart as well as in the book. If the Lord be among His people, they will cling to the eternal verities and love the doctrine of the cross, not by force of law, but because divine truth is the life of their souls. Where God is present, the preservation of purity
will be found. The church is nothing if it is not holy. It is worse, it
is a den of thieves. Setting the seal of its pestilent example upon evil
living, it becomes the servant of Satan and the destroyer of souls. Who
is to keep the church pure? none but God Himself. If the Lord is there,
holiness will abound, and fruits of the Spirit will be seen on all
sides; but if the Lord be once withdrawn, then the flesh and blood will
rule, and bring forth corruption after its own manner; and the church
will become a synagogue of formalists. Pray, my brethren, continually,
that the Lord may dwell in our Where God is, there is the constant renewal of
vitality. A dead church is a reeking When the Lord is there, there is continuing power. With God there is power in the ministry, power in prayer, power in all holy work. We may do a vast deal of work, and yet nothing may come of it ; and on the other hand, we may be only able to do comparatively little, and yet great results may flow there-from for results depend not on the quantity of the machinery but on the presence of the Lord. Do you not know persons who are not peculiarly gifted and yet are eminently useful? You do not remark anything about them that are specially noticeable, and yet their whole career enlists attention by its power. Their words tell for there is character behind them. A consistent life gives force to a plain testimony. It is not so much what is said as who says it. But that is not all; God Himself is at the back of the man who is living for Him. He causes him to speak in His name so that none of his words fall to the ground. Is it not said of the godly, “His leaf also shall not wither; and whatsoever he doeth shall prosper”? This is so with every church where the Lord abides. His presence makes it a power with its children and adherents, a power with the neighborhood, and a power with the age. Its example, its testimony, its effort tells. God uses it, and therefore it answers its end. The power is with God; but the church is the instrument by which that power exercises itself. He uses living people for the display of living power, and He gives to then both life and power, more and more abundantly. As we desire power with which to labor with for God, we must pray that the God of power will remain in our midst. Furthermore, whenever it can be said of an assembly, “the Lord is there,” unity will be created and fostered. Show me a church that quarrels, a church that is split up into cliques, a church that is divided with personal ambitions, contrary doctrines, and opposing schemes, and I am sure that the Lord is not there. Where there is envyings, jealousies, suspicions, backbitings, and dislikes, I know that the Holy Dove, who hates confusion, has taken His flight. God is love, and He will only dwell where love reigns. He is the God of peace and will not endure strife. The children of God should be knit together. It would indeed be a shameful sight should children of His family fall out, and chide, and fight. Saints who dwell with God love each other “with a pure heart, fervently.” Some professors act as if they hated each other: I may not say, “with a pure heart,” but I will say, fervently.” Where God is present the church is edified in love and grows up, like a building fitly framed together, to be a holy temple in the Lord. Oh, for more of this unity! Where the lord is there is sure to be happiness. What meeting we have when the Lord is here! It is a prayer meeting; but when you have said that, you have not fully described it, for it is far more. It was an unusual meeting for prayer, for, God being there, every prayer was spoken into His ear, and all the desires and petitions of the saints were prompted by His Holy Spirit. Why, the very room was lit up with the glory of the Lord; and whether we were in Heaven or not we could hardly tell. What happy times we have in preaching the Word of the Lord when God’s own presence is realized! His paths drop fatness. What joyous seasons we have frequently enjoyed at the communion table! The provision is but bread and wine; but when, by faith, we perceive the real and spiritual presence of the Lord Jesus Christ, in the breaking of the bread we eat His flesh, and in the fruit of the vine we drink His blood. When we have gathered in the Lord’s presence we have sung- · No beams of cedar or of fir · Can with thy courts on earth compare; · And here we wait, until thy love · Raise us to nobler seats above. At the Master’s table I have often been so blest that I would not exchange places with Gabriel. The Lord was there: what more could I desire? Joy, delight, rapture, ecstasy-what word shall I use? All these have waited around the table of fellowship as musicians at a king’s banquet. If God be there, our Heaven is there. I shall now close by noticing, in the third place, that since this presence of God is the glory of the most glorious place, and the choice privilege of the most privileged, it is our exceeding joy: The presence of our Lord is our delight in every
place. We will think of our own dear homes. What a delightful family we
belong to if it can be said of our house, “Jehovah Shammah , the Lord is
there”! Has it a thatched roof and a stone floor? What matters? The
father of the family lives near to God, and his wife rejoices to be his
fellow-helper in prayer while the children grow up to honest toil and
honorable service. Assuredly that cottage home is dear to God and
becomes a place where angels come and go. Because God is there, every
window looks towards the Here is a Christian who lives alone, apart
altogether from family life. All his dear ones are dead or have moved
away. In his lone chamber, when he bows his knee in secret prayer, or
whenever he takes his walk abroad, if he be indeed a true lover of the
Lord Jesus, “the Lord is there.” Wherever the believer’s lot is cast, if
he lives in fellowship with Christ, he may say of his quiet room, or of
the garden walk, or even of the stable of the loft, “Jehovah Shammah,
the Lord is there.” Many a humble garret is a right royal residence! For
“The Lord is there.” Better Paul’s inner dungeon at Some of us can bear witness that we have had the nearest approaches of God to our souls in times of intolerable pain and even in seasons of intense depression of spirits as to earthly things. “I was brought low, and the Lord helped me.” Said David; and we can say the same. The Lord has said, “When thou passeth through the waters, I will be with thee”; as much as to say, “If I am not with thee anywhere else, I will be with thee then.” In the furnace one like the Son of God was seen. If Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, never had that glorious fourth person in their company before, they had Him when they were cast into the midst of the glowing coals. Jehovah-Shammah makes a seven-times heated furnace a pleasing fire, and of the threshing-floor, and of the oil-press, God has been there. In times of trouble He has been a very present help. One might almost say, “Send me back to my prison again,” as one did say who lost God’s presence after he had gained his liberty, One might well cry, “Ah! Let me have back my pain if I may again overflow with the joy of the Lord’s presence.” Dear friends, I THANK God that you and I know what
it is to enjoy the presence of God in a great many different ways. When
two or three of the people of God meet together, and talk to one another
about the things of God, the Lord is never away. You remember that
blessed text, “They that feared the Lord spoke often one to another.”
They had holy talks about heavenly things. It was such sweet
conversation that the Lord Himself turned eavesdropper and hearkened and
heard. What He heard pleased Him so well that He there and then made a
note of it; yea, and wrote it down, and ordered that “a book of
remembrance” should be preserved “for them that feared the Lord, and
that thought upon His name.” Was not this sure evidence of His most
gracious presence? John Bunyan knew that God was there when he went
about tinkering and came to Yes, but when Christian people go forth to work, when you come to your Sunday School, or go out with your bundle of tracts to change them on your district, or when you join a little band and stand in the street corner yonder and lift up your voice in the name of Jesus, you may expect, if you go with prayer and faith, that it shall be written, “Jehovah-Shammah, the Lord is there.” It is only a young man standing up in a cottage to speak, and he has not much to say; yet thee are penitential tears, and broken hearts; it is so, for God is there. It is only a humble woman speaking to a few persons of her own class, and yet angels are rejoicing over a repenting sinner, yes, because God is there. It is only a little room in one of our back streets, the neighbors called together, and he is talking of Jesus and His love-oh, but if the Lord be there, do not tell me that the missionary is not in the apostolic succession; he need not claim it, he is himself an apostle of God to those poor people. He wants no gorgeous vestment, nor the swell of organ, nor even the thunders of the multitude as they raise the solemn hymn. The few so simple and so poor have God with them, and it is enough. Wherever you are seeking to do good, in prayerful dependence upon the Holy Spirit, it shall be said “the Lord is there.” And now from this time forth beloved, you that fear God and think upon His name, wherever you go, let it be said, “Jehovah-Shammah, the Lord is there.” I often feel sorry when the Sabbath is nearly over and so do many of you. I know you wake on Monday morning and take those shutters down again, or go off to that workshop where you suffer so much ridicule, or return to the ordinary grind of daily labor and mix up with so many of the ungodly; and you do it mournfully. Now, pray that you may keep up the Sabbath tone all week. Make every place, wherever you go, to be the house of God. A dear brother of ours went to a shop where he worked with four ungodly men, but his Lord went with him. It was not long before we had the privilege of baptizing that friend’s master and all his shop-mates, for the Lord was there. The other day there came a fresh man to work who could not bear to hear a word upon religion, but our brother was the means of his conversion, and the new man is coming among us, warm with his first love. Our brother makes up his mind that he is not to be conquered by any scoffers, but on the contrary he is determined to conquer them for Christ. He will not yield to the influences of sin, but he resolves, in the name of the Lord, that evil influences shall yield to the power of truth and to the attractions of the cross. Write across your member-shop, “The Lord is here.” If you cannot do it literally, do it spiritually, “Jehovah-Shammah, the Lord is there.” Do not be found anywhere where you could not say that the Lord was there; but if you are called into the world in the pursuit of your daily vocation, cry unto the Lord, “If thy Spirit go not with me, carry me not up hence.” Determine that you will have the Spirit of God with you and that, be it in city, or be it in the lonesome country while you are hoeing the turnips or attending to a flock of sheep, of every field, and every street, and every room, it shall be said that God is there. Take Jesus with you when you go; and, when you come home, may His Spirit be with you! God grant that it may be so! The Holy Spirit can work you to this self-same thing. What shall I say to those who do not know the Lord, and do not care for Him? O friend, the day will come in which Jesus Christ will say to you, “I never knew you: depart from me, ye workers of iniquity.” Do not let Him say that; but tonight commence an acquaintance with Him. May His Holy Spirit help you do so! I am sure the Lord Jesus Christ could not say to me, “I never knew you.” It is impossible, because I could reply to Him, “Never knew me, Lord? Why. I have been to Thee with so many burdens, I have run to Thee with so many troubles, that I am sure Thou knowest me as one knows a beggar whom he has relieved many times a day.” · Dost thou ask me who I am? · Ah, my Lord! thou knowest my name. Thou rememberest me, for in my despair I cried to thee, and thou didst relieve me of my burden. Thou knowest me, for in my sorrow my broken heart found no comfort but in Thee. Thou hast known me all these years in which I have had to cry to Thee for something to preach about, and for help while preaching. Thou knowest how I have had to come to Thee and confess my failures, and mourn my shortcomings, and lament my sins, and trust in Thy blood cleansing. My lord cannot say that He does not know me, for He has known my soul in adversity. Blessed be His name, I know Him, and lean all my weight upon Him. They that know Him shall be their glory, “Jehovah-Shammah, the Lord is there.” With Him shall dwell, world without end. Amen.
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