CHARLES SPURGEON — SERMON NOTES




75.

HERE is the case of a man who, as far as mortal help was concerned, was a dead man, and yet prayer prevailed for his recovery, and the lengthening of his life.

He records his experience for the glory of God, for his own refreshment, and for our encouragement.

In our deep depressions we have the same God to help us.

Hezekiah sets before us in this verse,—

I. HEALTHFUL BITTERNESS. "For peace I had bitter bitterness" (margin).

1. He had been in peace. Probably this had brought with it a dangerous state, in which the mind became carnally secure, self-contented, stagnant, slumbering, careless, worldly.
2. He underwent a change. It was sudden and surprising — "Behold." It broke up all his peace, and took the place of it.
3. His new state was one of emphatic sorrow — "Bitterness." "Great bitterness." In bodily condition and in mental emotion he tasted the wormwood and the gall. Read previous verses, and see how he mourned.
4. It wrought his health. "So wilt thou recover me" (verse 16).

5. Peace came back again, and with it songs of joy.

If any are now drinking the bitter cup, let them be of good cheer, for there is a cup of salvation in God's hand.

II. DELIVERING LOVE. "In love to my soul thou hast delivered it."

In its first meaning we see recovery from sickness, but it intends much

more: upon the surface lies benefit to his soul.

Let us observe—

1. The deed of love. "Thou hast loved my soul from the pit" (margin).

2. The love which performed the deed.

III. ABSOLUTE PARDON. "Thou hast cast all my sins behind thy back?"

1. This was the cause of his restored peace. He was burdened while sin remained, but when that was gone, peace returned.
2. This removed the whole burden. "Sins"; "my sins"; "all my sins:"
3. This involved effort on God's part. "Thou hast cast?' We remember the more than herculean labors of Jesus, who has hurled our load into the bottomless deep.
4. This is wonderfully described. "Behind thy back"; this is:

Therefore we will tell others our story, as Hezekiah has told us his. Let us seek out one or more who will hear us with attention.

"Therefore we will sing my songs to the stringed instruments" (verse 20). At this hour let us lift up the voice of gratitude.

Enlargements

Thomas Bilney, the martyr, after his submission to the Papacy, being brought again to repentance, was, as Latimer reports, for a time inconsolable. "His friends dared not suffer him to be alone day or night. They comforted him as they could, but no comforts would serve; and as for the comfortable places of Scripture, to bring them to him was as though a man should run him through the heart with a sword?"

Now friend, give me your answer: Is it best to see sin and guilt now, while you may see a Savior also; or to see sin arid a judge hereafter, but no Savior? Sin you shall see, as we say, in spite of your teeth, will you, nil you. Oh, then, let me see sin and guilt now; Oh, now, with a sweet Savior, that I may have this woeful sight past when I come to die. — Giles Firmin

"Thou hast cast," etc. These last words are a borrowed speech, taken from the manner of men, who are wont to cast behind their backs such things as they have no mind to see, regard, or remember. A gracious soul hath always his sins before his face: "I acknowledge my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me"; and therefore no wonder if the Lord cast them behind his back. A father soon forgets and casts behind his back those faults that the child remembers and hath always before his eyes, so cloth the Father of spirits. — Thomas Brooks

I have read somewhere of a great divine (I think it was ficolampadius), who being recovered from a great sickness, said,"I have learned! under this sickness to know sin and God" Did he not know these before? Doubtless he could preach good sermons concerning God and sin; but the Spirit, it seems, in that sickness, taught him these otherwise than he knew them before. — Giles Firmin

Some of the pits referred to in the Bible were prisons; one such I saw at Athens, and another at Rome. To these there were no openings except a hole at the top, which served for both door and window. The bottoms of these pits were necessarily in a filthy and revolting state, and sometimes deep in mud. Isaiah speaks of "the pit of corruptionS' or putrefaction and filth. — John Gadsby

Dr. Watts, from his early infancy to his dying day, scarcely ever knew what health was; but however surprising it may appear, he looked on the affliction as the greatest blessing of his life. The reason he assigned for it was, that, being naturally of a warm temper, and an ambitious disposition, these visitations of divine providence weaned his affections from the world, and brought every passion into subjection to Christ. This he often mentioned to his dear friend, Sir Thomas Abney, in whose house he lived many years. — John Whitecross


CHARLES HADDEN SPURGEON

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