He will bless those who fear the LORD--small and great alike. Sermons
I. LET US LOOK BACK ALONG THE COURSE OF THE OLD YEAR. 1. We affirm our conviction that we all should make thankful confession of the Lord's mindfulness of us. 2. But many will look back in far other ways. (1) Some in self-congratulating spirit, but with no thankfulness to God. They will say to themselves, that what good they have won has been all their own doing. But for their own mindfulness of them selves, there would have been but little to be glad about. (2) Others will deny that the Lord hath been mindful of them; it seems to them that he has forgotten them, if he has not turned against them. They point to their lessened, much lessened, resources. They were ever so much better off at the beginning of the year than they are now. Or here is a widow mourning bitterly the loss of her husband and the father of her now helpless children. Or a husband, whose home is darkened by bereavement of his beloved wife. Or others, who are kept prisoners on beds of weak ness, hopeless disease, or pain. "What!" say these, "hath the Lord been mindful of us? It does not at all seem like it." 3. Well, we reply, if he has not, then it is very unlike him. (1) For his mindfulness of us is certainly not a recent thing; he says to his people that the kingdom has been prepared for them from before the foundation of the world. (2) And all around us are proofs of his loving forethought. See in the history of creation how all our needs were thought of before man was placed on the earth. You cannot do so simple a thing as put some coal on the fire without being reminded of this. Where did that coal come from? Was it not got ready for our use long ere we could need it? (3) And in the kingdom of his grace this mindfulness of us is conspicuously seen. Christ was the Lamb slain from the beginning of the world. God was not taken by surprise when sin entered our world and began to do its deadly work. God had reckoned with it, and had determined that where sin did abound, grace should much more abound. The two arms of Christ's cross embrace - one, all the sinners of the past; the other, all that shall be to the end of time. "The mischief is more than met by the remedy, the malady by the medicine, and the plaster is as wide as the wound" (M. Henry). (4) And it is true also in God's personal dealings with us. Reckon up your mercies - spiritual, temporal, personal, relative - and set them over against your sorrows, and see which are most numerous. (5) And think, too, of what our deservings have been. Then see if you can deny any more that God has been mindful of you. II. LET US LOOK ON THROUGH THE NEW YEAR, AND BE ASSURED THAT GOD WILL HELP US. 1. It is an argument drawn from what has gone before - and it is valid. We reckon, in regard to men, that what has been will be. The law of habit ensures this. And we may reverently say that God himself conforms to this law. Hence we may reason from what he hath done to what he will do. 2. Furthermore, he has known all along what reasons there are why he should not bless us. No one can tell God anything worse of us than he already knows. 3. And we are in Christ by faith in him. Therefore we are accepted in Christ. Shall not, then, God with him freely give us all things? CONCLUSION. 1. We will believe that he will bless us. 2. Inasmuch as his blessing is given into the hands outstretched in prayer and faith, and that move in obedience to him, so shall our hands be, and thus will we confidently expect his blessing. 3. And we will tell others of this. - S.C.
The Lord hath been mindful of us. —I. GRATEFUL ACKNOWLEDGMENT FOR GRACE BESTOWED. Have we not abundant reason, individually and collectively, to say one to another in exhortation, and together in thankful acknowledgment to God, "The Lord hath been mindful of us"? Let us look back and reflect upon the way in which He has led us these many years. Shall we not, like Samuel of old, raise our Ebenezer? And as we travel through the past, until we step from the past into the future, shall net we take encouragement and joyfully exclaim, "Jehovah-jireh"? In creation, in redemption, in providence and in grace, in the fulness of spiritual blessings provided, and in the measure of grace imparted, we have abundant cause for the grateful acknowledgment, "The Lord hath been mindful of us." II. A GRATEFUL SENSE OF PAST MINDFULNESS BEGETS A SURE CONFIDENCE OF FUTURE BLESSING. "He will bless us." To what extent does this promise go? He will bless us in our walk and all our work, and in whatever He calls us to do! His blessing will ever rest upon us for good. His everlasting hand will be beneath us and will keep us from falling. He will guide us with His counsel and afterward receive us to glory. You deserve to perish, you deserve to reap what you have sowed, but God is merciful and kind. You may look to Him in confidence, for He will bless you. He will blot out the past, and He will break the power of sin. I have also a word for the true believer in God, who is sorely tempted and doubtful of the future, who is conscious of weakness, knowing painfully the power of temptation, knowing sadly in recollection the influence of this evil world. Do not think you will prove unfaithful at the last. The Lord hath been mindful of you, and it will be in the future as it has been in the past. Look at the promises which He has given for your comfort in His Word. He hath been mindful of you and He will bless you. (Bishop Pelham.) (A. K. H. Boyd.) People Aaron, PsalmistPlaces JerusalemTopics Alike, Bless, Blesseth, Blessings, Fear, Fearing, WorshippersOutline 1. Because God is truly glorious4. And idols are vanity 9. He exhorts to confidence in God 12. God is to be blessed for his blessing Dictionary of Bible Themes Psalm 115:13Library The Warning"And when they had sung a hymn, they went out into the mount of Olives. And Jesus saith unto them, All ye shall be offended: for it is written, I will smite the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered abroad. Howbeit, after I am raised up, I will go before you into Galilee. But Peter said unto Him, Although all shall be offended, yet will not I. And Jesus saith unto him, Verily I say unto thee, that thou today, even this night, before the cock crow twice, shalt deny me thrice. But he spake exceeding … G. A. Chadwick—The Gospel of St. Mark Letter xxxiv. To Marcella. Christian Graces. Impiety of Attributing a visible Form to God. --The Setting up of Idols a Defection from the True God. Stedfastness in the Old Paths. Messiah Derided Upon the Cross Triumph Over Death and the Grave Divine Support and Protection The Last Supper Psalms Links Psalm 115:13 NIVPsalm 115:13 NLT Psalm 115:13 ESV Psalm 115:13 NASB Psalm 115:13 KJV Psalm 115:13 Bible Apps Psalm 115:13 Parallel Psalm 115:13 Biblia Paralela Psalm 115:13 Chinese Bible Psalm 115:13 French Bible Psalm 115:13 German Bible Psalm 115:13 Commentaries Bible Hub |