When Your people go to war against their enemies, wherever You send them, and when they pray to You in the direction of the city You have chosen and the house I have built for Your Name, Sermons
I. THE BURDEN WHICH IS BORNE BY EACH HUMAN HEART. With our complex nature, and our many human relationships, we lie open to many ills and sorrows. These may be: 1. Bodily; pain or weakness, or threatened serious disease. 2. Temporal; some difficulty or danger connected with "our circumstances." 3. Sympathetic; some trouble of heart we are suffering by reason of our strong attachment to others who suffer and are in distress. 4. Spiritual; heart-ache, disappointment, compunction, doubt, anxious inquiry after God. "Every one knows his own sore and his own grief." II. THE APPEAL OF THE SOUL TO THE SUPREME. Trouble does lead men to the God of their life, to the Father of their spirit. "Men say, 'God be pitiful,' who ne'er said, 'God be praised.'" We cannot supply our own need; we find our own "insufficiency for ourselves;" we must look beyond ourselves, and in what direction? Man often fails us. 1. We cannot speak to him, either because we cannot get his ear, or because we do not care to divulge our secret grief to any human heart whatsoever. 2. Or we have tried to secure human sympathy, and have failed; men are too much occupied with their own affairs and their own troubles to make much room in their hearts for ours. 3. Or we cannot discover the human hand that will help us; those that pity cannot serve us, cannot save us. We must have recourse to God. And we bring our grief, our sore, to him. 1. We are sure that he is accessible. He invites our approach; he says, "Call upon me in the time of trouble; I will deliver thee, and thou shalt glorify me." 2. We are sure of his attention. He is our Father, who pities us with parental kindness (Psalm 103:13); he is our Saviour, who has trodden the path of struggle and of sorrow before us, on whose tender sympathy we may confidently count (Hebrews 2:18; Hebrews 4:15, 16; Hebrews 5:2). 3. We may depend on his power. He is able to save, to rescue, to restore, to renew. III. THE DIVINE RESPONSE. 1. It is a question of our spiritual integrity. God answers "according to all our ways;" that is, according to our integrity. We must have the spirit of obedience in us. We may not look for a response if we are "regarding iniquity in our heart;" but, on the other hand, if we are seriously bent on serving the Lord, if "our heart condemn us not," if it acquit us of all insincerity and double-mindedness, "then have we confidence toward God; and whatsoever we ask we receive of him, because we keep his commandments" (1 John 3:21, 22). We may not, we are not able to keep all his precepts in all particulars; but the spirit of filial obedience, the desire to do what is "pleasing in his sight," is dwelling within us and inspiring us, and we are, therefore, of those whose prayer he hears. He forgives our shortcoming ("hear... and forgive"), and he "renders according to our ways." 2. It is a question of Divine knowledge. Who shall tell that this spirit of submission and obedience is within us? Only One can; it is he who "only knows the hearts of the children of men." He looks beneath our words and actions, and sees the motives and the purposes of our hearts. 3. It is a question of our character and the Divine intention. And God's design is so to hear and heed our prayers, so to grant or to withhold the desires of our heart, that we shall "fear God and walk in his ways," shall be "partakers of his holiness." - C.
If Thy people go out to war. I shall take these words as a political maxim and moral precept comprehending these two propositions.I. THAT HERE IS COUCHED A SUPPOSITION, THAT UPON JUST GROUNDS AND LAWFUL CAUSES ANY NATION MAY DECLARE AND MAKE WAR UPON ANOTHER, implied in the expression, "If they go out to war against their enemies, by the way that God should send them." The just grounds of war according to the Laws of Nations and Arms are — 1. Those that concern the maintaining the public faith. 2. Those that respect the vindication of the honour of the Crown. 3. Those that relate to the prevention of the great and apparent dangers that threaten the general peace. II. THE POSITIVE DUTY AND OBLIGATION THAT ALL NATIONS LIE UNDER, IN CASE OF THE DECLARATION OF SUCH A WAR, TO SEEK GOD WITH A SOLEMN HUMILIATION AND REPENTANCE, FOR HIS ASSISTANCE AND SUCCOUR TO MAINTAIN THEIR CAUSE OR RIGHT. 1. Because war is an appeal to God for the justice of a national cause. 2. Because of the great dangers and uncertainties that attend war. How many armies have their designs and themselves ruined by the little advantage of ground, the pass of a river, a sudden surprise, an undermining stratagem, the alteration of the weather, the fall of snow or rain, the misunderstanding of a word given, the spreading a false rumour or alarm; nay, the start of a horse, the mere error of the eye, or the information of a deserter! Which has overturned all policy, made power impotent, and victory unexpected. How many fleets have been dissipated with a mist, broken and sunk with a storm, and blown up with a spark of fire! (Ecclesiastes 9:11; chap, 14:11; Leviticus 26:8). 3. Because it will engage God to be on our side, and to vindicate our cause. 4. Because this solemn invocation of the Divine assistance, joined with a public humiliation and repentance, will be a means to avert those judgments that were otherwise due to our sins, and which we should have reason to fear might prevent the success of our arms, and provoke God to give us up to the will of our enemies. 5. Because prayer is an absolutely necessary and conditional means to success in war. (Henry Sacheverell, D. D.) I. THAT WHEN A PEOPLE ARE ENGAGED IN THE CHASTISEMENT OF THEIR ENEMIES IT IS REQUIRED THAT THEY SHOULD HAVE RECOURSE TO UNITED SUPPLICATION, that their efforts might be crowned with victory. Men are as much bound as ever to make national entreaties for the bestowal of national mercies, and for the successful issue of legitimate national movements. II. THE SPIRIT IN WHICH OUR UNITED SUPPLICATIONS SHOULD BE OFFERED. We should pray, as penitents for pardon; as sinners for salvation; as patriots for our country; and as followers of Him who has taught us to love our enemies, for those enemies themselves. (H. B. Moffat, M.A.) People David, SolomonPlaces Egypt, Holy Place, JerusalemTopics Attackers, Battle, Built, Chosen, Enemies, Faces, Fixed, Hast, Prayed, Prayers, Temple, Towards, Town, Turning, War, Whatever, Whatsoever, Wherever, YoursOutline 1. Solomon, having blessed the people, blessed God12. Solomon's prayer in the consecration of the temple, upon the bronze platform. Dictionary of Bible Themes 2 Chronicles 6:34-35Library December the Eighth Judged by Our Aspirations"Thou didst well, it was in thine heart." --2 CHRONICLES vi. 1-15. And this was a purpose which the man was not permitted to realize. It was a temple built in the substance of dreams, but never established in wood and stone. And God took the shadowy structure and esteemed it as a perfected pile. The sacred intention was regarded as a finished work. The will to build a temple was regarded as a temple built. And hence I discern the preciousness of all hallowed purpose and desire, even though it … John Henry Jowett—My Daily Meditation for the Circling Year "If So be that the Spirit of God Dwell in You. Now if any Man have not the Spirit of Christ, He is None of His. " Eleventh Lesson. Believe that Ye have Received;' Sanctification. Solomon's Temple Spiritualized Entire Sanctification Chronicles Links 2 Chronicles 6:34 NIV2 Chronicles 6:34 NLT 2 Chronicles 6:34 ESV 2 Chronicles 6:34 NASB 2 Chronicles 6:34 KJV 2 Chronicles 6:34 Bible Apps 2 Chronicles 6:34 Parallel 2 Chronicles 6:34 Biblia Paralela 2 Chronicles 6:34 Chinese Bible 2 Chronicles 6:34 French Bible 2 Chronicles 6:34 German Bible 2 Chronicles 6:34 Commentaries Bible Hub |