2 Sam. 6 and 1 Chron. 13
WE are now called to follow David from the scenes of his exile to those of his government. Saul has passed off the stage of history, having met death by the hand of an Amalekite—one of that very nation which he had disobediently spared. Solemn warning! Jonathan, too, had fallen in company with his father Saul, on Mount Gilboa, and David had given utterance to his sublime lament over both. David had ever carried himself towards Saul with the fullest sense of his being the Lord's anointed; nor did he manifest anything bordering upon a spirit of exultation when informed of his death; on the contrary, he wept over him, and called on others to do the same. Neither do we find anything like unbecoming haste to ascend the throne left vacant for him; he waited upon the Lord about it. "David inquired of the Lord, saying, Shall I go up into any of the cities of Judah? And the Lord said unto him, Go up. And David said, Whither shall I go up? And He said, Unto Hebron." This was real dependence. Nature would have been eager to have rushed into the place of honor; but David waited on the Lord, and only moved as directed of Him. Happy would it have been for him had he continued thus to move on in child-like dependence.
But, alas! we have to trace far more of nature in David during the period of his elevation than during the period of his rejection. A time of peace and prosperity tends to develop and bring to maturity many seeds of evil which might be nipped and blighted by the keen blast of adversity; David found the kingdom more thorny and dangerous than the wilderness.
David's first great error, after his accession to the throne of Israel, was in reference to the ark of the Lord. He desired to bring it up to the city of Jerusalem, and set it in its place. This was all right, and most desirable; the only question was, how was it to be done? Now, there were two ways of doing it: one, prescribed by the written word of God; and the other, prescribed by the Philistine priests and diviners. The word of God was exceedingly plain and distinct in reference to this important matter; it pointed out a very simple and a very definite way of carrying the ark of the Lord of Hosts, even upon the shoulders of living men, who had been taken up and set aside for that purpose. (See Num. 3 and 8.) But the Philistines knew nothing of this, and, therefore, devised a way of their own, which, as might be expected, was directly opposed to God's way. Whenever men set about legislating in the things of God, they are sure to make the most fearful mistakes, because "the natural man receiveth not the things of the Spirit of God, neither can he know then, because they are spiritually discerned." And hence, though the plan adopted by the Philistines was very decent and orderly, as men would say, yet it was not of God.
The ministers of the house of Dagon were poorly qualified to arrange the order of the divine service. They thought a wooden cart would do as well as anything else; it might have answered for the service of Dagon, and they knew no difference. They had once trembled at the sight of the ark, but, through the unfaithfulness of Israel, it had lost its solemnity in their eyes, and though it had been most solemnly and impressively vindicated in their view by the destruction of their god, they understood not its deep significance, they knew not its wondrous contents; it was quite beyond them, and therefore they could devise nothing better than a mere lifeless ordinance for conveying it to its place.
But God's thoughts were not as theirs, and David ought to have known those thoughts, and acted upon them at the first; he should not have acted upon the thoughts and traditions of men in the service of God; he should have drawn his directions from a higher source, even from the lucid lines of the book of the law. It is a terrible thing when the children of the kingdom form themselves after the model of the men of the world, and tread in their footsteps. They never can do so without serious damage to their own souls, and a great sacrifice of truth and testimony. The Philistines might construct a cart to carry the ark, and nothing whatever occur to show them the error of so doing, but God would not allow David so to act. And so now, the men of this world may put forth their canons, enact their laws, and decree their ceremonies in religion; but shall the children of God come down from their high position and privileges, as those who are guided by the Holy Ghost, and the blessed word of God, and suffer themselves to be guided and influenced by such things? They may do so, but they shall assuredly suffer loss.
David was made to learn his mistake by bitter experience, for "when they came unto the threshingfloor of Chidon, Uzza put forth his hand to hold the ark; for the oxen stumbled." The wretched weakness, folly, and inconsistency of the whole thing was here fully displayed. The Levites, the ministers of God, had borne the ark from Horeb to Jordan, and yet we have no record of any stumble. No; that was God's way; but the cart and oxen were man's way.
This was the difference. Who would have thought that an Israelite would have deposited the ark of the God of Israel upon a wooden cart, to be drawn by oxen? Yet such is ever the sad effect of departing, in the least degree, from the written word, to follow human traditions. "The oxen stumbled." What else could be expected? The arrangement was unquestionably "weak and beggarly," in the judgment of the Holy Ghost; and the Lord was only making this fully manifest. The ark should never have been in such a dishonoring position; oxen should never have been the bearers of such a burden.
“And the anger of the Lord was kindled against Uzza, and He smote him, because he put his hand to the ark: and there he died before God. “Truly," judgment must begin at the house of God." The Lord judged David for doing what the Philistines had done without notice. The nearer a man is to God, the more solemnly and speedily will he be judged for any evil. This need not afford any encouragement to the worldling, for, as the apostle says, “If judgment first begin at us, what shall the end be of those that obey not the gospel of God? And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" If God judges His people, what shall become of the poor worldling? This is a startling inquiry. The Philistines, though they escaped the judgment of God in the matter of the cart, had to meet it in another way. God deals with all according to His own holy principles, and the breach upon Uzza was designed to restore David to a right apprehension of the mind of God in reference to the ark of His presence. Yet it did not seem, at first, to produce the proper effect. "David was displeased because the Lord had made a breach upon Uzza: wherefore the name of the place is called Perez Uzza to this day. And David was afraid of God that day, saying, How shall I bring the ark of God home to me?" There is much deep instruction in this. David was doing a right thing in a wrong way, and when God executed judgment upon his way of acting, be despaired of doing the thing at all. This is a very common error. We enter upon some right course of acting in a wrong way, or in a wrong spirit, which God cannot own; and then our spirit, or method of acting, is confounded with the service in which we were engaged. Now, we must ever distinguish between what men do, and how they do it. It was right for David to bring up the ark; it was wrong to put it on a new cart. The Lord approved the former, but disapproved and judged the latter. God will never suffer His children to persist in carrying on His work upon wrong principles. They may go on for a time with much apparent success, as “David and all Israel played before God with all their might, and with singing, and with harps, and with psalteries, and with timbrels, and with cymbals, and with trumpets." This was very imposing. It would have been a difficult matter for anyone to raise an objection to the course of David in this proceeding, The king and all his captains were engaged in it; and the burst of music would have drowned any objection. But, ah! how soon was all this exultation checked!
“The oxen stumbled;"—"Uzza put forth his hand,” vainly imagining that God would suffer the ark of His presence to fall to the ground. He who had maintained the dignity of that ark, even in the dark solitude of the house of Dagon, would surely preserve it from dishonor amid the mistakes and confusion of His people. It was a solemn thing to come near the ark of God—a solemn thing to approach that which was the special symbol of the Divine presence in the midst of His congregation. It is a solemn thing to be the bearer of the name of Jesus, and the depositaries of the truth connected with His holy Person.
We should all feel this solemnity more deeply than we do. We are too apt to regard it as a light thing to put our hand to the ark; but it is not, and all who attempt it will, like Uzza, suffer for their error.
But, it may be asked, has anything been entrusted to the care and keeping of the Church answering to the ark? Yes; the Person of the Son of God answers to the ark of old. His divine and human nature answers to the gold and shittim wood of the ark.
The materials of the ark typified His Person as the God-man; while the purposes of the ark and mercy- seat typified His work, whether in life or in death.
The ark enclosed the tables of testimony; and the Son of God could say, in connection with the body prepared of God for Him, "Thy law is within my heart." (See Psa. 40) Again, the mercy-seat spoke of peace and pardon, of mercy rejoicing against judgment, to the poor sinner; and the apostle says, "He (Christ) is a mercy-seat for our sins." And again, "whom God hath set forth to be a mercy-seat." The word used in Rom. 3 is precisely the same as that used in Ex. 25, viz., ἱλαστηριον (hilasteerion). Thus we perceive what a marked type the ark of the covenant was of Him who magnified the law and made it honorable—even Jesus the Son of God, whose glorious Person should be the special object of the saints' reverend and affectionate guardianship. And, just as Israel's moral power was ever connected with the right acknowledgment and preservation of the ark amongst them, so the Church's power will be found connected with her due maintenance of the doctrine—the great and all-important doctrine of the Son. It is in vain that we exult in the work of our hands, and boast ourselves in our knowledge, our testimony, our assemblies, our gifts, our ministry, our anything. If we are not maintaining the honor of the Son, we are really worthless—we are merely walking in the sparks of our own kindling—sparks which shall speedily be extinguished, when the Lord is obliged, in very faithfulness, to come in and make a breach upon us. "David was displeased" at the breach. It was a grievous check to all the joy and gladness of the occasion; but it was needful. A faithful eye detected the wrong moral condition of soul which was betrayed by the wooden cart; and the breach upon Uzza was designed as a corrective, and it proved an effectual one.
“David brought not the ark of God home to himself to the city of David, but carried it aside into the house of Obed-edom, the Gittite." This was David's loss; he forfeited much blessing and privilege by thus stopping short, for the ark of God could do naught but bless all who were rightly connected with it, though it was judgment to be connected with it otherwise, as in the case of the men of Beth-shemesh and Uzza. It was a happy time for Obed-edom while the ark was in his house, for "the Lord blessed his house and all that he had." All the time that David was "afraid" and without the ark, Obed-edom was "blessed" with the ark. True, things might not just look so cheering; the blessing, instead of being diffused through the whole nation, as it would have been had all been right, was confined to the immediate circle of him who had the ark in his house. Still the blessing, though contracted, was as real and positive, as pure and truthful, as if the whole nation had been enjoying it. It could not be otherwise, inasmuch as it was the result of the presence of the ark. God will ever be true to His own principles, and will ever make those happy who walk in obedience; and as He blessed Obed-edom during the three months that the ark was in his house, though even king David was "afraid," so will He now bless those who seek to meet in truth and simplicity, in the name of Jesus. "Where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I." This is the great charter of our meeting. Where the presence of Christ is, there must be blessing. Weakness there may be, no doubt, and paucity, but still blessing and comfort, because Jesus is there; and the more we feel our own weakness, emptiness, and nothingness, the more will His presence be prized and loved.
Christians should seek to know more of the presence of Christ in their meetings. We do not want sermons, nor power of eloquence, nor human intellect, nor anything that merely comes from man; we want the presence of Jesus; and without that all is cold, barren, and lifeless. But, oh! who can tell the sweetness of realizing the presence of the Master? Who can give expression to the exquisite feeling known by those on whom the dew of the divine blessing drops? Blessed be God that any know it! Blessed be God that in this day, when the sad effects of human tradition are but too apparent in the Church, there is such a thing as the house of Obed-edom the Gittite, where the presence of the true ark, and the consequent blessing of God, can be known and enjoyed! Let us prize this more and more, amid the shadowy and unsatisfying forms and ceremonies which prevail around us.
We shall now dwell, for a little, upon God's gracious method of restoring the soul of His servant David. The life of faith is little more than a series of falls and restorations, errors and corrections; displaying, on the one hand, the sad weakness of man, and on the other, the grace and power of God. This is abundantly exemplified in David.
There is a considerable difference in the way in which the return of the ark is recorded in Samuel and in Chronicles; in the one we have the simple statement of the facts; in the other, we have the moral training through which the soul of David passed during the time that he was afraid of God, or, in other words, during the time that he was laboring under the effects of his own mistake. In Samuel we read, "And it was told king David, saying, The Lord hath blessed the house of Obed-edom, and all that pertaineth unto him, because of the ark of God.
So, David went and brought up the ark of God from the house of Obed-edom into the city of David with gladness." David learned that so far from standing aloof from the ark through fear, it was really his privilege and blessing to be near it. In 1 Chron. 14, we find David in conflict with the Philistines, and obtaining victory over them. "David inquired of God, saying, Shall I go up against the Philistines? and wilt thou deliver them into mine hand? And the Lord said unto him, Go up; for I will deliver them into thine hand. So they came up to Baal-perazim; and David smote them there. Then David said, God hath broken in upon mine enemies by mine hand, like the breaking forth of waters: therefore they called the name of that place Baalperazim (i. e., a place of breaches)." There is a very great difference between "a breach" and "a place of breaches." God had made a breach upon Israel because of their error in reference to the ark; but as to the Philistines, it was not merely a breach made upon them, they were altogether in a place of breaches; and David might have learned what a poor example he had followed when he made the cart to carry the ark. At least, he learned his mistake, for in chapter 15. we read, "And David made him houses in the city of David, and prepared a place for the ark of God, and pitched for it a tent. Then David said, None ought to carry the ark of God but the Levites; for them bath the Lord chosen to carry the ark of God, and to minister unto Him forever." And again, addressing Vie chief of the fathers of the Levites, he says, "Sanctify yourselves, both ye and your brethren, that ye may bring up the ark of the Lord God of Israel unto the place that I have prepared for it. For because ye did it not at the first, the Lord made a breach upon us, for that we sought Him not after the due order." Thus was David's soul fully restored. He was brought to see that to follow in the current of man's thoughts was contrary to "the due order." None can teach like God. When David was wrong, God made a breach upon him by His own hand. He would not allow the Philistines to do this: no; on the contrary, He allows David to see them in a place of breaches, and enables him to smite them—to break in upon them, like the breaking forth of waters. Thus God taught, and thus David learned, what was "the due order,"—thus he learned, as it were, to remove the ark from the new cart, and place it upon the shoulders of the Levites, whom the Lord had chosen to minister unto Him forever,—thus He was taught to cast aside human traditions, and follow, in simplicity, the written word of God, in which there was not so much as a single word about a cart and oxen. "None ought to carry the ark of God but the Levites." This was very distinct. The entire mistake had arisen from forgetfulness of the word, and following the example of the uncircumcised, who had no capacity to understand the mind of God on any question, much less the solemn and important one of carrying the ark.
But in what a wonderfully gracious way did the Lord teach His servant! He taught him by victory over his enemies! Thus it is the Lord frequently leads His children into the apprehension of His mind, when they vainly seek to follow in the track of the men of this world. He shows them that they should not adopt such models. The breach taught David his mistake; the place of breaches taught him God's due order: by the former he learned the folly of the cart and oxen; by the latter he learned the value of the Levites, and the place which they held in the service of God. God must ever be true to His own principles; He would not allow His people to depart from His prescribed order with impunity. Hence, the ark would have remained to the end in the house of Obed-edom, had David not learned to lay aside his own way of bringing it up, and adopt God's way.
“So the priests and the Levites sanctified themselves to bring up the ark of the Lord God of Israel. And the children of the Levites bare the ark upon their shoulders, with the staves thereon, as Moses commanded, according to the word of the Lord." The Lord was glorified in all this, and He could therefore give real joy and gladness, strength and energy.
There was no more stumbling of oxen—no more human effort to keep the ark from falling; the truth of God was dominant, and the power of God could act. There can be no real power where truth is at all sacrificed. There may be the appearance of it, the assumption of it, but no reality. How can there be? God is the source of power, but God cannot associate Himself with anything which is not in the fullest harmony with His truth. Hence, although "David and all Israel played before God with all their might," there was no appointment of Levites or singers according to the divine order. God was shut out by human arrangement, and all ended in confusion and sorrow. How different is it in chap. 15. There is real joy— real power. "It came to pass, when God helped the Levites that bare the ark of the covenant of the Lord, that they offered seven bullocks, and seven rams. And David was clothed with a robe of fine linen, and all the Levites that bare the ark, and the singers, and Chenaniah the master of the song, with the singers." In a word, this was a scene with which God could consistently connect Himself. He did not help the oxen—He did not help Uzza. Neither the oxen nor Uzza had borne the ark, of old, through the waters of Jordan; neither had they borne it round the walls of Jericho. No; the Levites had carried it then, nor, should any one nor anything have been put in their place. God's order is, after all, the only happy one. It may not always commend itself to human judgment; yet it will ever have the stamp of divine approval, and this is abundantly sufficient for every faithful heart. David was enabled to bear the sneer of contempt from Michal, the daughter of Saul, because HE WAS ACTING BEFORE THE LORD. Hear his fine reply to her reproach. "It was before the Lord, which chose me before thy father, and before all his house, to appoint me ruler over the people of the Lord, over Israel; therefore will I play before the Lord. And I will yet be more vile than thus, and will be base in mine own sight." Precious determination! May it be ours, through grace. Base in our own eyes—happy in God. Humbled to the very dust in the sense of our own vileness—lifted up on high, in the sense of the grace and loving-kindness of our God.
The reader will remark that 1 Chron. 16 is just the development of the spirit breathed in the above quotation. It is the hiding of self and the setting forth the character and ways of God. In short, it is a song of praise, which one has only to read to be refreshed thereby. I would only direct the reader's attention to the last verse, in which he will find the four great characteristics of the people of God fully set forth. "Save us, O God of our salvation, and gather us together, and deliver us from the heathen, that we may give thanks to thy holy name, and glory in thy praise." The Church of God is a saved company. Salvation is the basis of everything. We cannot answer to any of the other characteristics in this copious verse, until we know ourselves as saved 'by the grace of God, through the death and resurrection of Christ.
In the power of this salvation the Church is "gathered together," by the energy of the Holy Ghost sent down from heaven. The true effect of the Spirit's operation will be to lead into fellowship all who submit to His leading. His order is not isolation, but blessed association-association in the truth. But, if there be ignorance as to salvation, our gathering together will not be to the glory of God, but rather for the promotion of our own spiritual interests, as it is termed. Men frequently associate on religious grounds without the assurance of being fully and perfectly saved by the precious blood of Christ. This is not the Spirit's mode of gathering, for He gathers only to Jesus, and on the glorious ground of what He has accomplished. Confession to Christ, as the Son of the living God, is the rock on which the Church is built. It is not agreement in religious views that constitutes Church fellowship, but the possession of a common life, in union with the Head in heaven.
Now, the more this divine association is realized, the more will we enter into the next characteristic presented to us, viz., separation. "Deliver us from among the heathen." The Church is taken out of the world, though called to witness for Christ in it. All within the Church is under the government of the Holy Ghost; all outside, is under the lordship of Satan, the prince of this world. This is what Scripture teaches us about the Church. Hence, when the apostle speaks of excommunicating an offender, he says, "Deliver such an one to Satan." And again, "Whom I have delivered to Satan." Without the precincts of the Church is a wide and dreary domain, over which Satan rules, like that desolate region into which the leper was thrust from the camp of Israel.
Finally, we have the Church presented as a worshipping people. "That we may give thanks to thy holy name." This follows from all that we have been looking at. Salvation, association, separation, and worship are all connected together. The Church, breathing the atmosphere of God's salvation, is led by the Spirit into holy and happy fellowship, and thus being separated unto Jesus, without the camp, presents the fruit of her lips to God, giving thanks to His name.