Sermon 1155. The Chariots Of Amminadib

(No. 1155)

DELIVERED BY

C. H. SPURGEON,

AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.

"Before I was even aware, my soul made me like the chariots of Amminadib." Song of Solomon 6:12.

WE cannot be quite sure at this date what these chariots of Amminadib were to which the Inspired poet here refers. Some supposethat he may have alluded to a person of that name who was renowned, like Jehu of old, for his furious driving. Therefore itmight have been familiar at the time and afterwards have become proverbial to speak in metaphor of the chariots of Amminadib.The conjecture seems harmless, still it is only a conjecture, and cannot be verified. It is quite possible, however, thatour translators may have retained as a proper name a conjunction of two words, which, taken separately, are capable of beinginterpreted.

You remember the word "Ammi" as it occurs in the prophet Hosea? "Say unto your brethren, Ammi," which signifies "you are Mypeople," even as before He had said, "Call his name Loammi, for "you are not My people." The one word Ammi, thus stands for"people," and the other word, "Nadib," means "willing," so that the two united may be rendered "willing people"-"like thechariots of a willing people." Or the words may be read, I think, more correctly, "The chariots of the princely people"-theprincely chariots, the chariots of the prince.

Some have understood them to mean the chariots of God, of the people that surround the Great Prince, Himself, that is to say,the chariots of the angels, according as we read, "The chariots of God are twenty thousand, even thousands of angels." Inthis case the figure would be a very striking one-"Before I was even aware, my soul made me like the chariots of the attendantsupon the Great King. I was like the cherubim themselves, all aglow with consecrated fire." In whatever way the critical pointis deciphered, the practical solution appears to be this-the writer's soul was quickened because full of life, full of energy,full of might, full of spirit and full of princely dignity, too. And not only stimulated to a high degree, but also elevated,lifted up from dullness, indifference, and apathy-"Before I was even aware, my soul made me like the chariots of Amminadib."

To whom does this text refer? Probably those of us who would never raise a doubt about the Song being a dialogue between Christand the spouse-a matter we have no intention to canvass just now-as we take it for granted. We might find no small difficultyin determining to which of the two sacred personages this speech belongs, whether it was to Solomon or to Shulamite (the masculineor the feminine variety of the same name)-the Prince the husband, or the princess the spouse-whether, in a word, it was Christor the Church. There is very much to be said for its being Christ Himself that is speaking.

You will notice in this chapter that, from the fourth verse, He has been referring to His Church. "You are beautiful, O Mylove, as Tirzah, comely as Jerusalem, terrible as an army with banners. Turn away your eyes from Me, for they have overcomeMe," and so on. He is speaking of His Church on to the 10th verse. "Who is she that looks forth as the morning, fair as themoon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners?" Then the 11th verse proceeds, "I went down into the gardenof nuts to see the fruits of the valley, and to see whether the vine nourished, and the pomegranates budded. Before I waseven aware, My soul made Me like the chariots of Amminadib." May it not be the Lord Himself who is speaking here?

We may entertain the question for a moment without absolutely fixing upon this as its proper solution. If it refers to Christ,it means just this-that He had been, for a while, away from His people. They had grieved Him and He had hid His face fromthem. Out of very love and faithfulness He felt bound to chasten them, by hiding from them the brightness of His Countenance.But He began to think tenderly of His people-His heart turned towards His Church-and while He was thinking of her, He sawsuch beauties in her that His soul was melted with her charms. Oh, what an extraordinary thing that He should see lovelinessin His poor imperfect Church!

And He saw such a loveliness about her, as her image rose up before His face, that He said, "You have ravished My heart, MySister, My Spouse; you have ravished My heart with one of your eyes." "Turn away your eyes from Me, for they have overcomeMe." And then, musing upon her, still, and coming into her garden and seeing the various Graces like plants and flowers intheir different stages of development, His heart began to grow warm again towards her and all that concerned her. It had neverreally been cold-it only seemed so in the deviation of His accustomed manner. But, like Joseph before his brethren, He couldnot refrain any longer.

When He saw some of His people budding with desires, others bursting into the realization of those desires. When He saw somelike ripe and mellow fruit upon the bough, ready for Heaven. When He saw others just commencing the Divine life, He was charmedto be in the garden of nuts-before He was even aware, He found He must be with His people-He must return in the fullness ofHis love to His Church! Not her beauties only, but the kindling of His own soul began to stir Him. His Free Grace sought freehope-His Infinite love became more than a match for the temporary prudence that had made Him hide His face, and, swift asthe chariots of Amminadib, did He speed back to His people to let them see Him again-to let them enjoy His fellowship again.

There are other Scripture passages where the Savior is spoken of as being like a roe or a young hart upon the mountains ofBether, or division, because He is so willing to come to His people-so willing to make matters up with them-and end the daysin which they mourn because the Bridegroom is absent. When He has hidden His face for a while out of love for them, and outof desire to reveal to them their faults-I say again, He is so willing to blot out their faults once more and to return tothem again with mercies-that His return is compared for swiftness and irresistibleness to the motions of the chariots of Amminadab!

It is a delightful thought that if communion between our souls and Jesus is suspended, it is not because He takes pleasuretherein. His delights are with the sons of men. He a thousand times invites His chosen to abide in Him, to continue in Hislove and to remain in His company. In this Song He cries again and again, "Come with Me, My Spouse." This should encourageus to seek Him for renewed love-tokens, however serious may have been our departures from Him, and however dark our prospectsunder the hiding of His face. If He who is the aggrieved party is eager to be reconciled, the matter is easy and we may atonce rise to the blessed condition from which our sin has cast us down. Jesus longs to embrace us! His arms are opened wide-donot our hearts warm at the sight? Do we not at once rush to His bosom and find a new Heaven in a fresh sense of His boundlesslove? Why hesitate? What possible cause can there be for abiding in darkness? Lord, we fall upon Your bosom and our joy returns!

Not that I intend to adopt that view as the groundwork of our present reflections. It appears to me that without the slightestdegree of twisting the passage, or deviating from an honest interpretation, we may understand that this is the language ofthe Church concerning Christ. If so, Christ's words conclude at the end of the 10th verse and it is the Church that speaksat the eleventh. There is not an instance in the whole Song, so far as I can remember, of the Prince, Himself, speaking inthe first person singular. Therefore, this would be a solitary exception, or else, following the current plan, where the samepronoun is used, the Church is speaking to Christ and telling Him of herself.

"I went down into the garden of nuts, to see the fruits of the valley, and to see whether the vine flourished and the pomegranatesbudded. Before I was even aware, my soul made me like the chariots of Amminadib." Taking the text, then, as referring to theChurch in particular, and more generally to the Lord's people, there will be four observations which we would pointedly makeand prayerfully meditate. May God bless us, now, in fulfilling this purpose!

I. Our first observation shall be this. What is most needed in all religious exercises is THE MOTION, THE EXERCISE OF THESOUL. "Before I was even aware, my soul made me"-or my soul became-"like the chariots of Amminadib." Soul-worship is the soulof worship and if you take away the soul from the worship, you have killed the worship-it becomes dead and barren. Let usturn over that well-known thought.

It may benefit us if we look at the many sides of it. There are professors in this world who are perfectly content if theyhave gone through the mechanical part of public devotion. If they have occupied their seats, joined in the hymns and the prayers,and listened to the preaching, they go away quite content and easy. They would not like to be absent from the solemn assemblyand their conscience would prick them if they neglected the outward ordinances. And having gone through them and compliedwith the accustomed form, they are perfectly content with themselves-and think they have done that which is lawful and right-comelyand excellent.

Now, it is never so with the child of God. If his soul is awakened from the torpor of death, and his sensibilities quickenedinto the vigor of life, he will feel that unless in the song he has really praised God in strains of gratitude with emotionsof thankfulness, he has rather mocked his heavenly Father than acceptably adored Him. He knows that in prayer, if it is notthe soul that speaks with God, it is but the carcass of prayer, destitute of the sweet savor which can find acceptance withGod, and of the sweet satisfaction that can bring refreshment to one's own breast. When he hears the Word preached, he longsto feel it penetrate his heart, even as the rain soaks into the soil. And if he cannot so receive the Truth of the Gospelwhen it breaks on his ears as the engrafted Word that saves his soul, and so feed upon it as the Bread of Life which nourisheshis soul, he goes away sad at heart, deploring that, while others were feasting at the banquet, he was there without appetiteand had not the pleasure or the profit which they derived.

Beloved, in our public services we ought to account nothing truly and rightly done which is not done with the heart. Thatis one reason why in this Tabernacle we have tried to lay aside everything of outward show or external form which might distractthe thoughts or disturb the simplicity of waiting on the Lord. As far as I can, I try to avoid the use of all symbols, exceptthe two which Scripture has ordained-lest the symbol should tempt you to rest satisfied with itself, as I believe it generallydoes-and so prevent your reaching the Lord with your heart. We try to lay aside everything that would at all touch your sensesin the worship-anything which appeals to the ear in the way of sweet music-anything of the aesthetic that would appeal tothe eye.

If you do not worship God with your souls, I hope you will get tired of our fellowship. Yet, be it confessed, I painfullyfeel that it is almost as easy not to worship God with the bald plainness of Quakerism as it is not to worship God with thestudied pomp of Ritualism! In any form, or without any form of worship, the amount of real devotion must be measured by thequantity of soul that is in it-provided the quality is pure, sincere, guileless. If the soul is there in the full exerciseof its powers and passions, knowing what is revealed and feeling what is Inspired, I believe God is gracious to pity and forgivea thousand mistakes in outward fashion and skill of execution.

The preacher's modulation may be faulty and the people's singing may be ill-timed to barbarous tunes without peril of theunpardonable sin. But if the soul is lacking, though you should have worshipped according to the pattern given on the Mountand have never had a word uttered or a sound made but such as, in itself, would be accredited by men and acceptable with Godhad it been quickened by the Spirit, yet without that Divine Spirit, which alone can give force and fervor to the human soul,it is all null and void!

I think every genuine Christian knows it is so and feels it is so. He says, "My heart cries out for God, for the living God!"Nor can he be satisfied unless he finds God and draws near before Him. As in public worship, it is precisely the same in ourown private and personal transactions with the Most High. The religious worldling will say a prayer when he wakes in the morning,and perhaps, unless he is out late, or too sleepy at home, he will have a bit of prayer at night, again, in the way of therepetition of some collect, or something which he has learned by rote. And very likely he has family prayer, too. It is notso much a custom as it was, but there are some who think they cannot go through the day unless they have what they call, "Prayers."

But mark how the Christian prizes private prayers above everything that has to do with the ordering of his daily habits! Andlook how he esteems family prayer to be a necessity of every Christian household! At the same time he is not content becausehe prays for a few minutes unless he draws near to the Lord. He is not satisfied because he gathered his children togetherand read the Scriptures and prayed with them, if, on adding up the sum total of the day, he is compelled to say, "It was heartlessworship. When I awoke it was heartless worship. When I gathered my children and my servants it was the same. And it was sleepy,heartless worship when I knelt by my bedside and professed to seek the Lord

at nightfall."

If it is heartless it is unacceptable! God cannot receive it. If we have not thrown our heart into it, depend upon it, Godwill never take it to His heart and be pleased with it. Only that prayer which comes from our heart can get to God's heart.If we pray only from the lips, or from the throat, and not low down from the very heart of our nature, we shall never reachthe heart of our Father who is in Heaven. Oh, that we may be more and more scrupulous and watchful in these things! In thediary of Oliver Heywood, one of the ejected ministers, he often says, "God helped me in prayer in my chamber and in the family."And once he writes thus-"In my chamber this morning I met with more than ordinary incomings of Divine Grace and outgoingsof heart to God."

I am afraid we may get satisfied with ourselves, especially if we are regular in private Scripture reading, private prayer,family prayer and public prayer. Instead of being satisfied with these exercises we ought to be weeping over them and deploringthe formal and heartless manner in which we are prone to discharge them. Be it always remembered that we do not pray at allunless the soul is drawn out in pleading and beseeching the Lord. Si nil curarem, nil orarem, said Melanchthon, "Were I withoutcares, I should be without prayers."

Now, perhaps you may know a friend of yours who thinks himself a poet. He can make poetry at any time, all the year round!Just pull him by the sleeve and he will make you, very soon, a verse or two at the spur of the moment to show the readinessof his wit and the versatility of his talent. Yet I dare say you think that he is about as far off from being a poet as asparrow is from being an eagle! You know if he were a poet he would not be able to command the glow of imagination at onetime and at another time he would hardly be able to control it. He would sometimes have a Divine melting upon him, as somecall it, and then noble thoughts in appropriate words would flow from his pen. Otherwise he would be just as dull and insipidas ordinary mortals. He would tell you indignantly that he could not write verses to order like those who scribble rhyme toadvertise a tailor's wares. Unless the inspiration comes upon me, he would say, I cannot compose a line!

In like manner, a man cannot always pray-and the man who pretends he can, only utters jargon! He never prays at all, as theother never makes poetry at all. Prayer is a Divine art. It is a thing which needs the Inspiration not of the muses, but ofthe Spirit of God, Himself, and it is when the Spirit comes upon us with Divine force and makes our soul like the chariotsof Amminadib that we can pray! And at other times when that Spirit is not with us, we cannot pray as we did before. Everyliving child of God knows this. We must measure our prayers by the state of soul that we were in. Take another illustrationfrom the painter. One person, who thinks himself a painter, can paint any day you like anything you ask him-a mountain, ariver, a horse, an insect, or a flower-it is all the same to him. He takes a brush and soon produces something which ordinarypeople might think to be a picture.

But send that daub of his to the Royal Academy and they will tell you that it may do for a tea tray, but not for the wallsof a gallery. But the man that can paint, how does he mix his colors? The great painter will tell you that he mixes his brainswith his colors-and when he takes his brush and dips it into the paint, he lays it on with his soul. In a great picture, suchas sometimes we have seen by a Titiens, or a Raphael, it is not the color, but the man's heart that has got out onto the canvas.Somehow he has managed to drop his brush into his soul! That is real painting. And so it is with prayer. The most humble manthat prays to God with his soul understands the fine art of prayer. But the man who chants a pompous liturgy, or repeats anextemporaneous effusion has not prayed. He has dashed off what he thinks to be a picture, but it is not a picture, it is nota prayer.

Had it been a prayer it would have had a palpable inspiration in its light and shade. A painting may consist of few lines,but you will see the painter's hand in it. And a prayer may consist of only half a dozen words, but you can see the hand ofGod in it. The formality repels you in the one case-the vitality attracts you in the other. So we will come back to the propositionwith which we started. We can only pray according to the proportion in which our soul puts forth its force and feeling. Andit is the same with praise. We have praised God up to the amount of soul that was in the sense as well as in the sound-beit with an organ or without an organ-with good music or with groans that cannot be uttered. We may have praised God eitherway, but only if our soul has been in full swell. With every kind of religious exercise, the soul is the standard of the wholecompass of worship.

II. We proceed to a second remark. SOMETIMES IT HAPPENS THAT THE HEART IS NOT IN THE BEST

STATE FOR DEVOTION. If religion is a matter of soul, it cannot always be attended to with equal pleasure and advantage. Youcan always grind a barrel organ-it will invariably give you the same discordant noise which people call music-but the humanvoice will not admit of being wound up in the same fashion, nor will it, for the most part, discharge the same monotonousfunctions. The great singer finds that his voice changes and that he cannot always use it with the same freedom. If the voiceis a delicate organ, how much more delicate is the soul! The soul is continually the subject of changes.

Ah, how often it changes because of its contact with the body! If we could be disembodied, oh, how we would praise God andpray to Him! "The spirit truly is willing, but the flesh is weak." I sat among some Brethren the other day who were devout,and I tried to be, but I had a splitting headache. I do not know whether you could pray under so grievous a

disability-let me confess to you that I could not. At another time, not long ago, I was one of a solemn assembly, when variousdisturbances occurred in the room-somebody getting up and others coming in late, as some of you do-and I could not get intoa right frame as I ought to have done. Little things will affect little minds and our minds, many of them, are little. Inthat case I could not pray because my mind was being distracted and my attention was being taken away.

Such distractions frequently happen and they bitterly remind us of our infirmities. The Apostles, themselves, fell to sleepingwhen they ought to have been praying. And under Paul's preaching, Eutychus went to sleep, and Paul never blamed him. He diedas the result of it, but he got raised again from the dead, so I suppose there was no fault in him. We may sometimes, withoutany willfulness on our part, as a necessary result of the weakness of our nature, or the stress of our toil and care, havebrought ourselves into a condition in which we cannot feel like the chariots of Amminadab-and it is no use for us to attemptit! The body affects the soul materially and a thousand outside agencies will tell upon our mental susceptibilities.

I have known persons come into this Tabernacle who have, perhaps, been annoyed with somebody in their pew, or somebody outside.It ought not to be so, but it is so. A little fly buzzing about one's face-as small a thing as that-will disturb one's devotionso that you cannot pray as you would and as you desire. And then, alas, our sins are a much more serious hindrance to ourdevotion. A sense of guilt puts us into such a state that we cannot be bold in our faith and childlike in our confidence whenwe appear before God. Perhaps we have been angry. How can we come before the Lord calmly when our spirit has been just nowtossed with tempest? Probably we have been seeking the world and going after it with all our might. How can we suddenly pullup and put all our strength into a vigorous seeking of the Kingdom of God and His righteousness in a moment?

It is possible, too, that there is a sick child at home, or a wife lying suffering, or serious losses and crosses about businessand domestic affairs. Perhaps one has a very heavy heart to bring before the Lord. Now God's Grace can help us to overcomeall these things and can even make our souls like the chariots of Amminadab! We need Divine Grace for such emergencies. Thesoul, in its different phases and states, has need of help from the sanctuary to which it repairs. "Well," perhaps one herewill say, "I always do what I think right every Sunday in much the same manner. I always pray the same and I don't know butwhat I can always sing God's praises the same." Yes, let me answer our good friend, I have no doubt of your thorough sameness,or of your habitual self-content.

If you were to ask one of the statues in St. Paul's Cathedral how it felt, I have no doubt it would say that it always feltthe same because it never had any feeling. Appeal to anything destitute of life and you will find that it has no change. Butwhere there is life, and that which is intensely delicate-spiritual life-and where it is placed in circumstances so hostileto it as the circumstances which surround us here, there, I say, you will find that not only the revolutions of the seasons,but the variations of the temperature affect it. And every man who has this life in him experiences such changes. We haveread of those who have no changes-and therefore they do not fear God. The fact that a Believer cannot, at all times, drawnear to God as his spirit would desire, becomes accordingly the key which interprets to him the Grace and goodness wherebyhe sometimes gains access after a manner that surprises and delights his spirit.

III. This leads cheerfully up to our third observation-THERE ARE SEASONS WHEN OUR HEART IS SWEETLY MOVED TOWARDS GOD. "BeforeI was even aware, my soul made me like the chariots of Amminadib."

Have you not proved welcome opportunities when all your thoughts have been quickened, enlivened and stimulated to activityin the highest degree about your highest interests? We have ceased to moan-

"Our souls, how heavily they go

To reach eternal joys,"

and we have been all wings, and could soar and mount aloft Like David! We could have danced before the ark of God for veryjoy! And if any had said to us that we might, ourselves, fall by our enthusiasm while we seemed vile by our hilarity, we shouldhave replied that we purposed to be viler still!

All within us was awake-there was not a slumbering faculty. Our memory told us of the goodness of the Lord in days gone byand our hopes were regaled by the mercy which we had not tasted yet, but which was made sure to us by promise and broughtnear to us by faith. Our faith was active and bright of eye. Our love, especially, shed a clear light over all our prospects.Oh, we have had blessed times when our soul has been light and rapid as the chariots of

Amminadib! And at such times we were conscious of great elevation. The chariots of Amminadib were those of a prince. And oh,we were no more mean and low, beggarly and groveling-we saw Christ!-and were made kings and princes and priests with Him!

Then we longed to crown His head. Then we could have performed martyrs' deeds. Then we were no cowards, we were afraid ofno foes. We sat down at the feet of Jesus and thought everything little compared with Him! Suffering for His sake would havebeen a gain! And reproach would have been an honor! We had princely thoughts, then-large, liberal, generous, capacious thoughtsconcerning Christ and His people, His cause and His conquests-our souls were like the chariots of Amminadab! At the same timethey were full of power, for, when the chariots of Amminadib went forth, who could stop them? Who could lay his hand uponthe reins and turn the coursers as they went onward in their mighty tramping? Such was our spirit! We laughed at thoughtsof death and poured contempt upon the trials of life. We were "strong in the Lord and in the power of His might." Oh, whatsplendid times we have had when God has been with us!

Do you remember when you had them? I remember, when newly converted, how full my spirit was of love and holy triumph, likethe chariots of Amminadab! Yours, no doubt, were much like mine. The love of your espousals was upon you. With what pleasingrapture you embraced your Lord and said, "I will never let You go." Stronger is love than death or Hell. You felt it to beso. You flamed and burned and glowed-and though in yourself you were like low brushwood-yet you were like the bush in thedesert that burned with fire because God was in your soul! Do you remember that? Well, since then, in private prayer, youhave sometimes had gracious access, and meditation has been added to prayer, and the love of Christ has come in upon you likea great flood tide and drowned everything in your soul except itself.

There have been periods when a sense of the eternal, immutable, never-ending love of God-His electing sovereign favor, thelove of God in giving His Son for you-have been upon your spirit with a mighty influence that has laid you prostrate for veryjoy! You could not speak because words were too poor to express the emotions of your soul! You had to feel the force of JamesThomson's hymn of the seasons-"Come, then, expressive silence, muse His praise," for you could not speak it. You know it hasbeen so with you. sometimes-and has not it been so, sometimes, under the Word, when you have been ready to stand up and clapyour hands for joy?

Have not I seen gratitude and exultation reflected on your faces, sometimes, when the Lord has been present in the preachingof the Gospel? When the Truth of God has come to you like marrow and fatness from the King's own hands till Dr. Watts hasproved to be a faithful interpreter of the very scene and circumstance that ravished your heart?-

"The King Himself draws near

And feasts His saints today.

Here we may sit and see Him here,

And love, and praise, and pray." Oh, yes, in God's House you have known the days of Heaven upon earth! Might I speak for therest of you I should pronounce the choicest periods of fellowship those we have found at the Lord's Table. When the breadhas been broken and the wine poured out down in the Lecture Hall, He has been with us in the breaking of bread! If ever wehave come near to Christ, surely it has been in that blessed communion!

There are the windows of agate and the gates of carbuncle through which Christ comes to His people in the ordinances He hasordained. By His Grace we will never slight them! We cannot! The Master puts such reality and fullness of joy into them-apartfrom Him they are idols. But with Him, when He is there, when we have the real Presence-not the superstitious presence somespeak about-but the real Presence which His own Spirit imparts and our waiting souls participate-ah, then we have said-

"No beams of cedar or of fir

Can with His courts on earth compare,

As myrrh new bleeding from the tree,

Such is a dying Christ to me."

Not infrequently, too, have I known that the Lord has appeared to His people and warmed their hearts when they have been workingfor Him. Some idle, indolent, sluggish professors who have used the ordinances have not found benefit in the ordinances becausethe Lord has intended to rebuke their sloth.

But when they have got up and gone forth among the poor. When they have gone forth to visit the sick, the sorrowful and thedying, they have heard such delightful expressions from the lips of holy, suffering men and women, or felt their hearts sokindled by a sight of Divine compassion in the midst of desperate poverty and gracious pardon for grievous sin, that a quickeninghas come over them! And whereas they did not seem to care, before, whether souls were lost or saved, they have gone out intothe world with zeal to win fresh trophies for the Messiah! Their hearts have been, by His Grace, like the chariots of Amminadibthrough the benefits they have received from Christian service!

A great many Christian people never will be happy and never fully alive to the destinies that wait on their Redeemer tillthey get something to do to give them an interest in those mighty issues. The rule of the Christian life is, "If any man willnot work, neither shall he eat." If you will not serve God as Christians, you shall not feed upon the sweet things of thekingdom to your own soul's comfort. A little more service and your soul would become like the chariots of Amminadib.

Beloved, there is no need that I should enlarge. I merely say this to bring up your grateful memories that you may thank Godfor what He has done. Remember whatever He has done in the past He will do again in the future. When the Lord has come onceto His people, He says, "I will see you again, I will come to you again, and your hearts shall rejoice." Of everything Hehas ever given you, He has got as much in store-and He is quite as able to give it to you now as He was before. You have nevergone so high in joy but you may go higher yet! You have never drunk such draughts from the well of Bethlehem as left the wellempty-you shall drink of it again.

Do not say, "I had those sweet times when I was young, I shall never have them again." You shall have precious times again!Get back to your first love, dear Brother, dear Sister-go forward to a higher love than ever you had, for God will help yousay, "I look back and think-

"What peaceful hours I once enjoyed!

How sweet their memory still!

But they have left an aching void

The world can never fill."

Thank God for that ache! Bless God for the aching void. If your soul aches for God, He will be to your relief before long.Whenever a soul puts up a flag of distress at the masthead, he may be sure that Christ is on the lookout for just such a soul.He has thrown up the windows of Heaven and wherever He sees a soul that does what is right and longs to find joy and reconciliationwith God, He will come to it-and before long it shall be better for you than even the chariots of Amminadab-and more desirable.

IV. Our last observation is this-SOMETIMES THE SWEET SEASONS COME TO US WHEN WE DO NOT EXPECT THEM. "Before I was even aware,my soul made me like the chariots of Amminadib." Some poor hearts do not reckon ever to have these joys again. They say, "No,no. They are all gone. The last leaf has blown from the tree. The last flower has faded in the garden. My summer is past.It is all over with me!" That is the bitter complaint and the hollow murmuring of unbelief. But the Lord for whom you waitcan suddenly appear-and while you are saying hard things of yourself He can refute them with the beams of His Countenance.

Even at this very moment you may stand like Hannah, a woman of sorrowful spirit, feeling as if you would be sent away empty.Yes, and God's servant, himself, may address you with rough words as Eli did her-and may even tell you that you are drunkwhen it is deep grief that enfeebles your steps and chokes your voice-and all the while the Lord may have in store for yousuch a blessing as you have never dreamed of! And He may say to you, "Go your way, My daughter. I have heard your petition,your soul shall have its desire." Before I was even aware, while my unbelief led me to think such a thing impossible, Youhave made me like the chariots of Amminadab! "Before I was even aware," as if it came upon me almost without my own consent.Glad enough I was when it did come, but it took me by surprise. It led me captive.

Now, is not that the way that the Lord dealt with you when you were not aware of it, when you had no reason to expect Him,when you found and felt yourself to be utterly lost, ruined, and undone? Did He not surprise you with His mercy and preventyou with His lovingkindness? Again, you are diminished and brought low through oppression, affliction and sorrow. There isnothing that leads you to expect a season of joy-you are just as empty and unworthy as you can well be. You feel as if yourheart were of stone and you cannot stir it, and you are saying, "I only wish I could enjoy the freedom that my companionshave, and keep the solemn feasts with their holy gladness. But, alas, for me! I am

afraid I have got to be a mere mechanical Christian without the lively instincts and lofty inspirations of spiritual worship."

Thus you are writing bitter things against yourself. Oh, Beloved, the Lord is looking down upon you now as His son or daughter,as His own dear child! And He is about to surprise you with His infinite love! Let me give you one text to put into your mouthand take home with you. The Lord has said, concerning every one of His people, "You are all fair, My Love; there is no spotin you." "Why, now, I am all covered over with spots and blemishes," you say, "and no beauty!" But the Lord Jesus Christ haswashed you with His blood and covered you with His righteousness! Do you think He can see any imperfection in that? You aremembers of His body, united to Him!

In Christ you are without spot or wrinkle, or any such thing. You are all spots in yourself, but He sees you as He intendsto make you before He has done with you-and He can discern unspeakable beauties in you. "Oh," you say, "does He think that?Surely, then, I see unspeakable beauties in Him! His love to me opens my eyes to see how dear an one He must be. Is He enamoredof me? Has He given His whole heart to me? Did He prove His love to me by bleeding on the Cross? Oh, then, I must love Him,if He will but let me! Shall such a poor worm as I am love Infinite Perfection? Oh, yes, I must, since Infinite Perfectiondeigns to love me! And since the Sun of Righteousness, in all His Glory deigns to shine on my soul!"

You are beginning to warm already, I see you are! Before you are aware, your soul is making you like the chariots of Amminadab!And if you keep on with these holy contemplations, you will leave off all misgivings about your love to Him, so deeply absorbedwill you be in musing on His love to you! You will forget all the while about your sin, while you remember the blood thathas put that sin away-the perfect righteousness that has made you accepted in the Beloved- and the Everlasting Covenant which,through Grace, has put your feet upon a rock and saved your eyes from tears and your feet from falling!

Engaged in such sweet soliloquies, before you are aware, your soul will make you like the chariots of Amminadab! The Lordmake it so! God grant that surprising Grace may come likewise even to sinners, and lead them to Jesus, and constrain themto look to Jesus. Then, while looking, faith will breathe in their spirit so that they will sing-

"Your mercy is more than a match for my heart,

Which wonders to feel its own hardness depart.

Dissolved by Your goodness, I fall to the ground

And weep to the praise of the Glory I've found."