THE SHEPHERD, THE STONE OF ISRAEL
'... The mighty God of Jacob. From thence is the
Shepherd, the stone of Israel.' -- GENESIS xlix. 24.
A slight alteration in the rendering will probably
bring out the
meaning of these words more correctly. The last two
clauses should
perhaps not be read as a separate sentence. Striking
out the
supplement 'is,' and letting the previous sentence
run on to the end
of the verse, we get a series of names of God, in
apposition with
each other, as the sources of the strength promised
to the arms of
the hands of the warlike sons of Joseph. From the
hands of the
mighty God of Jacob--from thence, from the Shepherd,
the stone of
Israel--the power will come for conflict and for
conquest. This
exuberant heaping together of names of God is the
mark of the flash
of rapturous confidence which lit up the dying man's
thoughts when
they turned to God. When he begins to think of Him
he cannot stay
his tongue. So many aspects of His character, so
many remembrances
of His deeds, come crowding into his mind; so
familiar and so dear
are they, that he must linger over the words, and
strive by this
triple repetition to express the manifold
preciousness of Him whom
no name, nor crowd of names, can rightly praise. So
earthly love
ever does with its earthly objects, inventing and
reiterating
epithets which are caresses. Such repetitions are
not tautologies,
for each utters some new aspect of the one subject,
and comes from a
new gush of heart's love towards it. And something
of the same
rapture and unwearied recurrence to the Name that is
above every
name should mark the communion of devout souls with
their heavenly
Love. What a wonderful burst of such praise flowed
out from David's
thankful heart, in his day of deliverance, like some
strong current,
with its sevenfold wave, each crested with the
Name--'The Lord is my
rock, and my fortress, and my deliverer; my God, my
strength, in
whom I will trust; my buckler, and the horn of my
salvation, and my
high tower.'
Those three names which we find here are striking
and beautiful in
themselves; in their juxtaposition; in their use on
Jacob's lips.
They seem to have been all coined by him, for, if we
accept this
song as a true prophecy uttered by him, we have here
the earliest
instance of their occurrence. They all have a
history, and appear
again expanded and deepened in the subsequent
revelation. Let us
look at them as they stand.
1. _The Mighty God of Jacob_.--The meaning of such a
name is
clear enough. It is He who has shown Himself mighty
and mine by His
deeds for me all through my life. The dying man's
thoughts are busy
with all that past from the day when he went forth
from the tent of
Isaac, and took of the stones of the field for his
pillow when the
sun went down. A perplexed history it had been, with
many a bitter
sorrow, and many a yet bitterer sin. Passionate
grief and despairing
murmurs he had felt and flung out, while it slowly
unfolded itself.
When the Pharaoh had asked, 'How old art thou?' he
had answered in
words which owe their sombreness partly to
obsequious assumption of
insignificance in such a presence, but have a strong
tinge of
genuine sadness in them too: 'Few and evil have the
days of the
years of my life been.' But lying dying there, with
it all well
behind him, he has become wiser; and now it all
looks to him as one
long showing forth of the might of his God, who had
been with him
all his life long, and had redeemed him from all
evil. He has got
far enough away to see the lie of the land, as he
could not do while
he was toiling along the road. The barren rocks and
white snow glow
with purple as the setting sun touches them. The
struggles with
Laban; the fear of Esau; the weary work of toilsome
years; the sad
day when Rachel died, and left to him the 'son of
her sorrow'; the
heart sickness of the long years of Joseph's
loss--all have faded
away, or been changed into thankful wonder at God's
guidance. The
one thought which the dying man carries out of life
with him is: God
has shown Himself mighty, and He has shown Himself
mine.
For each of us, our own experience should be a
revelation of God.
The things about Him which we read in the Bible are
never living and
real to us till we have verified them in the facts
of our own
history. Many a word lies on the page, or in our
memories, fully
believed and utterly shadowy, until in some soul's
conflict we have
had to grasp it, and found it true. Only so much of
our creed as we
have proved in life is really ours. If we will only
open our eyes
and reflect upon our history as it passes before us,
we shall find
every corner of it filled with the manifestations to
our hearts and
to our minds of a present God. But our folly, our
stupidity, our
impatience, our absorption with the mere outsides of
things, our
self-will, blind us to the Angel with the drawn
sword who resists
us, as well as to the Angel with the lily who would
lead us. So we
waste our days; are deaf to His voice speaking
through all the
clatter of tongues, and blind to His bright presence
shining through
all the dimness of earth; and, for far too many of
us, we never can
see God in the present, but only discern Him when He
has passed by,
like Moses from his cleft. Like this same Jacob, we
have to say:
'Surely God was in this place, and I knew it not.'
Hence we miss the
educational worth of our lives, are tortured with
needless cares,
are beaten by the poorest adversaries, and grope
amidst what seems
to us a chaos of pathless perplexities, when we
might be marching on
assured and strong, with God for our guide, and the
hands of the
Mighty One of Jacob for our defence.
Notice, too, how distinctly the thought comes out in
this name--that
the very vital centre of a man's religion is his
conviction that God
is his. Jacob will not be content with thinking of
God as the God of
his fathers; he will not even be content with
associating himself
with them in the common possession; but he must feel
the full force
of the intensely personal bond that knits him to
God, and God to
him. Of course such a feeling does not ignore the
blessed fellowship
and family who also are held in this bond. The God
of Jacob is to
the patriarch also the God of Abraham, and of Isaac,
and of Jacob.
But that comes second, and this comes first. Each
man for himself
must put forth the hand of his own faith, and grasp
that great hand
for his own guide. '_My_ Lord and _my_ God' is the
true form of the
confession. 'He loved _me_ and gave Himself for
_me_,' is the shape in
which the Gospel of Christ melts the soul. God is
mine because His
love individualises me, and I have a distinct place
in His heart, His
purposes, and His deeds. God is mine, because by my
own individual
act--the most personal which I can perform--I cast
myself on Him, by
my faith appropriate the common salvation, and open
my being to the
inflow of His power. God is mine, and I am His, in
that wonderful
mutual possession, with perpetual interchange of
giving and receiving
not only gifts but selves, which makes the very life
of love, whether
it be love on earth or love in heaven.
Remember, too, the profound use which our Lord made
of this name,
wherein Jacob claims to possess God. Because Moses
at the bush
called God, the God of Abraham, and of Isaac, and of
Jacob, they
cannot have ceased to be. The personal relations,
which subsist
between God and the soul that clasps Him for its
own, demand an
immortal life for their adequate expression, and
make it impossible
that Death's skeleton fingers should have power to
untie such a
bond. Anything is conceivable, rather than that the
soul which can
say 'God is mine' should perish. And that continued
existence
demands, too, a state of being which shall
correspond to itself, in
which its powers shall all be exercised, its desires
fulfilled, its
possibilities made facts. Therefore there must be
the resurrection.
'God is not ashamed to be called their God, for He
hath prepared for
them a city.'
The dying patriarch left to his descendants the
legacy of this great
name, and often, in later times, it was used to
quicken faith by the
remembrance of the great deeds of God in the past.
One instance may
serve as a sample of the whole. 'The Lord of Hosts
is with us, the
God of Jacob is our refuge.' The first of these two
names lays the
foundation of our confidence in the thought of the
boundless power
of Him whom all the forces of the universe, personal
and impersonal,
angels and stars, in their marshalled order, obey
and serve. The
second bids later generations claim as theirs all
that the old
history reveals as having belonged to the 'world's
grey fathers.'
They had no special prerogative of nearness or of
possession. The
arm that guided them is unwearied, and all the past
is true still,
and will for evermore be true for all who love God.
So the venerable
name is full of promise and of hope for us: 'The God
of Jacob is our
refuge.'
2. _The Shepherd_.--How that name sums up the
lessons that
Jacob had learned from the work of himself and of
his sons! 'Thy
servants are shepherds' they said to Pharaoh; 'both
we, and also our
sons.' For fourteen long, weary years he had toiled
at that task.
'In the day the drought consumed me, and the frost
by night; and my
sleep departed from mine eyes,' and his own
sleepless vigilance and
patient endurance seem to him to be but shadows of
the loving care,
the watchful protection, the strong defence, which
'the God, who has
been my Shepherd all my life long,' had extended to
him and his.
Long before the shepherd king, who had been taken
from the
sheepcotes to rule over Israel, sang his immortal
psalm, the same
occupation had suggested the same thought to the
shepherd patriarch.
Happy they whose daily work may picture for them
some aspect of
God's care--or rather, happy they whose eyes are
open to see the dim
likeness of God's care which every man's earthly
relations, and some
part of his work, most certainly present.
There can be no need to draw out at length the
thoughts which that
sweet and familiar emblem has conveyed to so many
generations.
Loving care, wise guidance, fitting food, are
promised by it; and
docile submission, close following at the Shepherd's
heels,
patience, innocence, meekness, trust, are required.
But I may put
emphasis for a moment on the connection between the
thought of 'the
mighty God of Jacob' and that of 'the Shepherd.' The
occupation, as
we see it, does not call for a strong arm, or much
courage, except
now and then to wade through snowdrifts, and dig out
the buried and
half-dead creatures. But the shepherds whom Jacob
knew, had to be
hardy, bold fighters. There were marauders lurking
ready to sweep
away a weakly guarded flock. There were wild beasts
in the gorges of
the hills. There was danger in the sun by day on
these burning
plains, and in the night the wolves prowled round
the flock. We
remember how David's earliest exploits were against
the lion and the
bear, and how he felt that even his duel with the
Philistine bully
was not more formidable than these had been. If we
will read into
our English notions of a shepherd this element of
danger and of
daring, we shall feel that these two clauses are not
to be taken as
giving the contrasted ideas of strength and
gentleness, but the
connected ones of strength, and therefore protection
and security.
We have the same connection in later echoes of this
name. 'Behold,
the Lord God shall come with _strong_ hand; He shall
feed His
flock like a shepherd.' And our Lord's use of the
figure brings into
all but exclusive prominence the good shepherd's
conflict with the
ravening wolves--a conflict in which he must not
hesitate even 'to
lay down his life for the sheep.' As long as the
flock are here,
amidst dangers and foes, and wild weather, the arm
that guides must
be an arm that can guard; and none less mighty than
the Mighty One
of Jacob can be the Shepherd of men. But a higher
fulfilment yet
awaits this venerable emblem, when in other
pastures, where no lion
nor any ravening beast shall come, the 'Lamb, which
is in the midst
of the throne,' and is Shepherd as well as Lamb,
'shall feed them,
and lead them by living fountains of waters.'
3. _The Stone of Israel_.--Here, again, we have a
name, that
after-ages have caught up and cherished, used for
the first time. I
suppose the Stone of Israel means much the same
thing as the Rock.
If so, that symbol, too, which is full of such large
meanings, was
coined by Jacob. It is, perhaps, not fanciful to
suppose that it
owes its origin to the scenery of Palestine. The
wild cliffs of the
eastern region where Peniel lay, or the savage
fastnesses in the
southern wilderness, a day's march from Hebron,
where he lived so
long, came back to his memory amid the flat, clay
land of Egypt; and
their towering height, their immovable firmness,
their cool shade,
their safe shelter, spoke to him of the unalterable
might and
impregnable defence which he had found in God. So
there is in this
name the same devout, reflective laying-hold upon
experience which
we have observed in the preceding.
There is also the same individualising grasp of God
as his very own;
for 'Israel' here is, of course, to be taken not as
the name of the
nation but as his own name, and the intention of the
phrase is
evidently to express what God had been to him
personally.
The general idea of this symbol is perhaps firmness,
solidity. And
that general idea may be followed out in various
details. God is a
rock for a foundation. Build your lives, your
thoughts, your
efforts, your hopes there. The house founded on the
rock will stand
though wind and rain from above smite it, and floods
from beneath
beat on it like battering rams. God is a rock for a
fortress. Flee
to Him to hide, and your defence shall be the
'munitions of rocks,'
which shall laugh to scorn all assault, and never be
stormed by any
foe. God is a rock for shade and refreshment. Come
close to Him from
out of the scorching heat, and you will find
coolness and verdure
and moisture in the clefts, when all outside that
grateful shadow is
parched and dry.
The word of the dying Jacob was caught up by the
great law-giver in
his dying song. 'Ascribe ye greatness to our God. He
is the Rock.'
It reappears in the last words of the shepherd king,
whose grand
prophetic picture of the true King is heralded by
'The Book of
Israel spake to me.' It is heard once more from the
lips of the
greatest of the prophets in his glowing prophecy of
the song of the
final days: 'Trust ye in the Lord for ever; for in
the Lord Jehovah
is the Rock of Ages,' as well as in his solemn
prophecy of the Stone
which God would lay in Zion. We hear it again from
the lips that
cannot lie: 'Did ye never read in the Scriptures,
The Stone which
the builders rejected, the same is become the
headstone of the
corner?' And for the last time the venerable
metaphor which has
cheered so many ages appears in the words of that
Apostle who was
'surnamed Cephas, which is by interpretation a
stone': 'To whom
coming as unto a living Stone, yea also as living
stones are built
up.' As on some rocky site in Palestine, where a
hundred generations
in succession have made their fortresses, one may
see stones with
the bevel that tells of early Jewish masonry, and
above them Roman
work, and higher still masonry of crusading times,
and above it the
building of to-day; so we, each age in our turn,
build on this great
rock foundation, dwell safe there for our little
lives, and are laid
to peaceful rest in a sepulchre in the rock. On
Christ we may build.
In Him we may dwell and rest secure. We may die in
Jesus, and be
gathered to our own people, who, having died, live
in Him. And
though so many generations have reared their
dwellings on that great
rock, there is ample room for us too to build. We
have not to
content ourselves with an uncertain foundation among
the shifting
rubbish of perished dwellings, but can get down to
the firm virgin
rock for ourselves. None that ever builded there
have been
confounded. We clasp hands with all who have gone
before us. At one
end of the long chain this dim figure of the dying
Jacob, amid the
strange vanished life of Egypt, stretches out his
withered hands to
God the Stone of Israel; at the other end, we lift
up ours to Jesus,
and cry:--
'Rock of Ages! cleft for me,
Let me hide myself in Thee.'
The faith is one. One will be the answer and the
reward. May it be
yours and mine!
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