The wicked man is thrown down by his own sin, but the righteous man has a refuge even in death. Sermons I. IN PUBLIC LIFE. 1. Fulness and scantiness of population. (Ver. 28.) The Hebrew had a deep sense of the value of fruitfulness in the wedded life, and of increase in the nation. The majesty of the monarch is the reflection of the greatness of his people, and the decay must represent itself in his feebleness for action. It is our duty as Christian men to study with intelligence political questions, and to support all measures which tend to freedom of commerce and abundance of food. 2. National exaltation and shame. (Ver. 34.) The common ideas of national glory and shame are false. There is no glory in victory over feeble foes, no shame in seeking peace in the interests of humanity. Too often these popular ideas of glory represent the bully and the coward in the nation, rather than its wisdom and honour. There is no other real secret of a nation's exaltation than, in the widest sense, its right dealing, and no other shame for a nation than its vices - such as drunkenness, selfishness, lust for territory. Could Englishmen see the national character in the light in which it often appears to foreigners, it would be a humbling view. 3. Royal favour or disfavour is an index of worth. (Ver. 35.) Not, of course, the only or the truest index; and yet how seldom it happens that a man rises to high position in the service of his sovereign and country without eminent worth of some description or other! Here, again, moral law is exemplified. There is nothing accidental. If it be mere prudence which gains promotion, still prudence is of immense value to the state, and moral law is confirmed by its advancement. II. IN PRIVATE LIFE. 1. Patience and haste of temper. (Ver. 29.) They are branded respectively with the mark of sense and of folly. "The Scripture exhorteth us to possess our souls in patience; whosoever is out of patience is out of possession of his soul." 2. The calm and the seething heart. (Ver. 30.) The first member seems more correctly rendered, "life of the body is a gentle or tranquil mind." Zeal, on the other hand, or envy, is a constant ferment within the soul. Men's minds must either feed upon their own good or others' evil. Inquisitive people are commonly envious; it is a "gadding passion," and an old proverb says that "Envy keeps no holidays." Lord Bacon says it is the vilest passion and the most depraved. Christian humility and love can only sweeten the heart, and dilute or wash away its natural bitterness 3. The violent death and the peaceful end. (Ver. 32.) A sudden death was viewed as a visitation from God (Psalm 36:13; 62:4). It was thought that the wicked could hardly come to any other end. But the righteous has confidence in his death. Considering the great silence of the Old Testament on the future life, it can hardly be honest exegesis to force the meaning of hope of a future life into this passage. Nor is it necessary. It is the consciousness that all is well, the soul being in God's hands, that the future may be left with him who has revealed himself in the past, which sheds peace into the dying soul. 4. Silent wisdom and noisy pretence. (Ver. 33.) The still and quiet wisdom of the sensible man (Proverbs 10:14; Proverbs 12:16, 23) is contrasted with the eager and noisy utterances of what the fool supposes to be wisdom, but in reality is the exposure of his folly. "There is no decaying merchant or inward beggar hath so many tricks to uphold the credit of their wealth as those empty persons have to maintain the credit of their sufficiency." Wisdom and piety are felt and fragrant, like the violet in the hedge, from humble places and silent lives, Let us aim to be, not to seem. - J.
The wicked is driven away in his wickedness; but the righteous hath hope in his death. For the most part, the end of good men is full of peace and comfort, and good hopes of their future condition; but the end of bad men quite contrary, full of anguish and trouble, without peace or comfort, or hope of any good to befall them afterwards. If this be generally true, it is a mighty testimony on the behalf of piety and virtue. It is as good as a demonstration that the religious man is in the right.I. THIS OBSERVATION IS GENERALLY TRUE. It is enough to appeal to the common and daily experience of mankind (Psalm 37:37). When good men come to die, they have commonly a great calm and serenity in their minds, and are full of good hopes of God's mercy and favour. But there are exceptions, both to the peace of the righteous and to the misery of the wicked, in death. Some good men are melancholy and dispirited. They may be naturally of a dark temper. The quiet death of a bad man may be explained by disease; or stupidity, through ignorance or gross sensuality; or the delusion of false principles. II. WHENCE DOES THIS DIFFERENCE PROCEED? It is founded in the true nature and reason of the things themselves; in the nature of religion and virtue, and of impiety and vice. 1. A religious and virtuous life is a real ground of peace and serenity of mind, of comfort and joy, under all the evils and calamities of life, and especially at the hour of death. 2. Impiety and wickedness is a real foundation of guilt and fear, of horror and despair, in the day of adversity and affliction, and more especially in the approaches of death. II. IF THIS BE TRUE, IT IS A DEMONSTRATION ON THE SIDE OF RELIGION. Upon three accounts. 1. Because the principles of religion, and the practice of them in a virtuous life, when they come to the last and utmost trial, do hold out, and are a firm and unshaken foundation of peace and comfort to us. 2. That they minister comfort to us in the most needful and desirable time. 3. That when men are commonly more serious and sober and impartial, and when their declarations and words are thought to be of greater weight and credit, they give this testimony to religion and virtue, and against impiety and vice. (J. Tillotson, D.D.) 1. The manner of his passing out of the world. He is "driven away." 2. The state he passeth away into. He dies in a hopeless state. The righteous hath hope in his death. He has the grace of hope, and the well-founded expectation of better things than he ever had in this world. I. HOW, AND IN WHAT SENSE, ARE THE WICKED "DRIVEN AWAY IN THEIR WICKEDNESS AT DEATH." What is meant by their being "driven away"? Three things; they shall be taken away suddenly, violently, and irresistibly. Whence are they driven and whither? They are driven out of this world, where they have sinned, into the other world, where they must be judged. They are driven out of the society of the saints on earth, into the society of the lost in hell. They are driven out of time into eternity. They are driven out of their specious pretences to piety. They are driven away from all means of grace, quite out of all prospect of mercy. In what respects may they be said to be driven away in their wickedness? In respect of their being driven away in their sinful, unconverted state. They die sinning, acting wickedly against God, loaded with the guilt of their sins, and under the absolute power of their wickedness. II. THE HOPELESSNESS OF THE STATE OF UNRENEWED MEN AT THEIR DEATH. Consider four things. 1. Death cuts off their hopes and prospects of peace and pleasure in this life. 2. When death comes, they have no solid ground to hope for eternal happiness. 3. Death roots up their delusive hopes. 4. Death makes their state absolutely and for ever hopeless. Exhortation.(1) Take heed that you entertain no hopes of heaven but what are built on a solid foundation. Beware of hope built upon ground that was never cleared. Beware of that hope which looks bright in the dark, but loses all its lustre when it is set in the light of God's Word. Beware of that hope which stands without being supported by Scriptural evidences.(2) Hasten, O sinners, out of your wickedness, lest you die in your sin.(3) Be concerned for others, lest they be "driven away." III. THE STATE OF THE GODLY IN DEATH IS A HOPEFUL STATE. 1. They have a trusty good Friend before them in the other world. 2. They shall have a safe passage through to the other world. 3. They shall have a joyful entrance into another world. Objection: How comes it to pass that many of the godly, when dying, are full of fears, and have little hope? Answer: The fears are usually consequences of states of bodily health; but they may be due to flagging spiritual life. Improvement: How to prepare for death, so that we may die comfortably. (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) (T. Boston, D.D.) II. THE TRUTH ASSERTED IN THE TEXT. The assertion is true, though there may be some apparent exceptions There is nothing preceding, attending, or following death, which can destroy the foundation of the hope of the righteous. 1. A clear and just sense of their guilt and ill desert in the sight of God cannot destroy their hope in Christ. 2. There is nothing in the thoughts of leaving this world which can destroy their hope. 3. There is nothing in the prospect of having a more constant and realising sense of the Divine presence which can destroy their hope. 4. The prospect of being for ever united with perfectly holy creatures cannot destroy their hope. 5. Nor in the prospect of the holy employment of heaven. 6. Nor in seeing the displays of Divine justice upon the vessels of wrath after death. 7. Nor in seeing all the Divine purposes completely accomplished and unfolded. 8. Nor the prospect of existing for ever. Improvement of the subject:(1) If the righteous have hope in their death, then they are essentially different from the wicked.(2) If only the righteous have hope, then multitudes will be fatally disappointed in their dying hour.(3) The death of the righteous may be peculiarly instructive and beneficial to the living. (N. Emmons.) 1. There is the hope of Divine support in death itself. 2. There is the hope of complete deliverance from the evils incident to a physical existence. 3. There is the hope of introduction to unmingled and permanent good. (James Foster, M.A.) 2. A privilege all must envy. Hope in death. 3. A dispensation all must approve of. The righteous hath hope in his death. (Sketches of Four Hundred Sermons.) 2. Where he is driven to. Out of time into eternity, and from the presence of God. 3. What he carries with him. His wickedness; the accumulated sins of a whole life, and a fixed character of evil. Learn —(1) What "a dreadful view of life and death for the wicked.(2) The greatness of Christ's salvation from the greatness of the ruin from which it saves.(3) The value of the gospel hope from the happiness it secures in life and death. (Sketches of Four Hundred Sermons.) 1. The difference is real, not imaginary. It is in the inward disposition, as well as in the outward conduct. 2. The difference is manifest. The ruling disposition, which is the life of character, and which is essentially different in both, makes itself known by its fruit. 3. The difference is increasing. These two characters continue to show forth their difference, and to go further from each other for ever. II. IN DEATH. "The wicked is driven away in his wickedness" — 1. As by a storm. He has no foundation to stand upon. He has no hold upon anything real, lasting. 2. As a culprit is led away to his execution. There is no resignation on his part to a superior will than his own. He views the past with remorse, and anticipates the unknown future with gloom and fear. "But the righteous hath hope in his death." This is an indication of strength, not weakness. He hath hope, even in death, when all things that are seen vanish away.Some reasons for his hope: 1. The Bible, as he reads it and believes it; the light which came from heaven drives away the gloom of the dark valley, and reveals the land beyond. 2. He is at peace with God. God is known by him as his Father, Friend, and Saviour. Love to God, in his heart, has put away fear. 3. He is confident that his Redeemer has absolute control over all things; that He is Lord of the future. His hope, therefore, is such that, like Fuller, he is not afraid to plunge into eternity. The text is a proof of a belief in a future state of rewards and punishments in the time of Solomon. (Homiletic Monthly.) 1. The name of the offender. Wicked. 2. The nature of the offence. Malice. 3. The punishment; in three degrees. As begun in this life. Increased at the time of death. Perfected at the day of judgment. II. THE CONCLUSION OF THE RIGHTEOUS. 1. What is a righteous man? 2. What is it to have hope in death? (S. Hieron.) 1. The condition in which he dies. "In his wickedness." He lived careless and indifferent, encased in false hope; or hardened and scoffing, fighting against God. So he dies. Driven away not from, but in his wickedness. Death makes no change of character. "Unjust still." 2. The compulsion under which he dies. "Driven away." Ejected from this life's engagements, enjoyments, and means of improvement. Torn away from possessions, pursuits, pleasures, and prospects here. "This night — thy soul — then whose," etc.? Death takes no bribes. Wishes and protests unheeded. "Driven... chased out," etc. (Job 18:18). II. THE HOPEFUL. Whose, "the righteous" in moral position, principle, practice. What? — Hopeful of — 1. The Divine support in it. (1) (2) (3) 2. Decisive victory over it. Prospective — Grave robbed. "Resurrection of life." 3. Heavenly glory after it. (1) (2) (3) (Homiletic Review.) I. THE OBJECTS. 1. His hope of support in death; of the immortality of the soul; of the resurrection of the body; and of perfect happiness in heaven. II. THE GROUNDS AND EVIDENCES. The foundation of the hope is the free mercy of God, which can be communicated only through Jesus Christ. Evidence of this hope is that the righteous man finds, upon a thorough trial, that the characters which God has declared essentially necessary to salvation do belong to him. III. THE VARIOUS LIMITATIONS AND DEGREES OF A GOOD HOPE IN DEATH. A good hope is always supported by evidence, and according to the degree of evidence is the degree of hope. Different believers, at different times, have different degrees of evidence. Much depends on weakness of body, mind, or heart. But every righteous man has a substantial reason to hope, whether he clearly sees it or not. Good men do, in fact, usually enjoy a comfortable hope. (S. Davies, A.M.) II. THE HOPE OF THE JUST. Hope, always lovely, is then sweetest when it beams from heaven through the gloom that gathers round the grave. (W. Arnot.) 1. He is one who has been convinced of his unrighteousness. 2. One who is made the partaker of righteous principles. 3. One who is righteous and holy in his life. II. THE HOPE OF THE RIGHTEOUS. This hope has for its object future spiritual and eternal blessings. It is called a "good hope through grace," because we are indebted for it to the grace and favour of God; and because it is wrought in us by the gracious influences of the Divine Spirit. Eternal life includes the immortality of the soul — the everlasting, conscious existence of the rational mind; the resurrection of the body; and the enjoyment of eternal happiness. (J. Entwistle.) I. A VERY SOLEMN CHANGE. He is "driven away." 1. Whence?(1) From all existing enjoyments; the beauties of nature, the circles of friendship, the pleasures of literature, etc.(2) From all secular engagements. The farmer, lawyer, statesman, etc.(3) From all means of moral improvement: churches, Bibles, teachers. 2. Whither? To the grave as to his body, to eternal retribution as to his soul. The death of the wicked implies — II. A GREAT PERSONAL RELUCTANCE. He does not go away, he is not drawn away; he is "driven away." 1. All the sympathies of his nature are centred in this life. They are all twined around earthly objects, as the ivy around the old castle. They are all more deeply rooted in the earth than the oak of centuries. He is in the world, and the world is everything to him. 2. The future world is terribly repulsive to him. Not a ray of hope breaks through his tremendous gloom; it is one dense mass of starless thunder-cloud. This being the case, with what tenacity he clings to life! He will not go, he cannot go, he must be "driven." His death is not like the gentle fall of the ripened fruit from its old branch in autumn, but like the oak, uprooted, and dashed into the air, by a mighty whirlwind. It is not like a vessel gliding to its chosen haven, but like a bark driven by a furious wind to a shore it shrinks from with horror. "Driven away!" The death of the wicked, as here indicated, implies — III. A TERRIBLE RETENTION OF CHARACTER. He is "driven away" in his wickedness. He carries his wickedness with him. This is the worst part of the whole. He carries his vile thoughts, his corrupt passions, his sinful purposes, his depraved habits, his accumulated guilt, with him. He will leave everything else behind but this — this adheres to him. He can no more flee from it than from himself. This wickedness will be the millstone to press him downward into deeper, darker depths for ever; the poison that will rankle in the veins for ever; the fuel that will feed the flames for ever. O sinner, lay down this wickedness at the foot of the atoning and soul-renovating Cross! (Homilist.) I. DESCRIBES THE DREADFUL TERMINATION OF A COURSE OF IRRELIGION AND OF SIN. 1. Who are the wicked? The term is generally restricted to "sinners of the baser sort" — those whose lives are grossly sensual. But Scripture regards it as the appropriate designation of all who are in an unregenerate state; all who are destitute of the fear and love of God, who habitually transgress His law, and practically disregard His gospel. 2. What will be the issue of their career? Note the manner in which he dies. Reluctantly. Unavoidably. The condition in which he dies. In his sins, with all his guilt on his head, and all his depravity in his heart. II. DESCRIBES THE BLESSINGS OF THOSE WHO DIE IN THE LORD. 1. Who is righteous? Not simply believers, but regenerated and converted sinners. 2. What is the privilege of the righteous? He has hope in his death. That hope is glorious in its object. It is sure in its foundation. It is felicitating in its influence. (J. Corney.) ( Matthew Henry.) II. THERE IS THE HOPE OF COMPLETE DELIVERANCE FROM THE EVILS INCIDENT TO A PHYSICAL EXISTENCE. In this life the soul is imprisoned. Its heavenly and spiritual tendency is retarded by its companion of dust. Spiritual life has its thought, feeling, and expression limited and baffled by physical boundaries. A prolonged mental exercise is followed by fatigue and reaction, so is it with spiritual exercises and pleasures. Death sets the righteous free from all these evils. It takes down the decaying, exposed, and inferior tabernacle, that the guest within may come forth to light and liberty. It introduces the soul to perfection of being, activity, and enjoyment. III. THERE IS THE HOPE OF INTRODUCTION TO UNMINGLED AND PERMANENT GOOD. (Jas. Foster, M.A.) ( G. Whitefield.) (R. Scriver.) (J. Vaughan, M.A.) 1. Wicked men are taken out of the world against their will, and by a power which they cannot withstand. 2. They die with their souls unrenewed and their characters unchanged. 3. They go to receive the punish- ment of their sins. II. THE RIGHTEOUS HATH HOPE IN HIS DEATH. Though they may not be able to express themselves in the language of assurance and exultation, yet will there be a believing dependence on the mercy and faithfulness of God. And even though all hope should seem gone, and the manifestations of the Divine presence be withdrawn, yet even then would the declaration of our text be true. For as, on the one hand, the real certainty of our salvation is not augmented or diminished by our present feelings, however the evidence of it to ourselves may be affected, so, on the other, the position — the righteous have hope in their death — is not to be limited merely to express the feelings which the righteous may experience at death, but expresses also the security of their state. The foundation, as well as the objects of hope, remain firm and immutable. It is in the weakness of nature that the supporting energy of grace is most apparent, and the power of the Saviour is most conspicuously displayed. And how often hath it happened that, in the midst of utmost exhaustion, when all further utterance had ceased, the soul has seemed to catch a glimpse of future glory, and, reanimating the almost lifeless body, hath proclaimed its assurance of the Divine love and mercy and protection, and ascended to heaven in a song of holy triumph! (Alex. Fisher.) (W. Spring.) 5481 proverb Hollow Laughter, Solid Joy Satisfied from Self Sin the Mocker How a Man's Conduct Comes Home to Him Godly Fear and Its Goodly Consequence "Boast not Thyself of to Morrow, for Thou Knowest not what a Day May Bring Forth. " Work The Backslider in Heart. Have Read the Letter which You in Your Wisdom have Written Me. You Inveigh against Me Epistle Lxix. To Brunichild, Queen of the Franks. Epistle xxx. To Eulogius, Bishop of Alexandria. The Intercession of Christ Some Helps to Mourning Epistle Xlii. To Eulogius, Patriarch of Alexandria. How the Kindly-Disposed and the Envious are to be Admonished. A Believer's Privilege at Death "And These Things Write we unto You, that Your Joy May be Full. " Spiritual Hunger Shall be Satisfied The Royal Marriage Feast. "Now the God of Hope Fill You with all Joy and Peace in Believing," &C. How Christ is the Way in General, "I am the Way. " |