Hudson Taylor
MEDITATIONS ON THE FIRST PSALMINTRODUCTORY
THERE is a prosperity which is not blessed; it comes not from above but
from beneath, and it leads away from, not towards heaven. This prosperity
of the wicked is often a sore perplexity to the servants of GOD; they need to
be reminded of the exhortation, “Fret not thyself because of him who
prospereth in his way, because of the man who bringeth wicked devices to
pass.” Many besides the Psalmist have been envious at the foolish when
seeing the prosperity of the wicked, and have been tempted to ask, “Is there
knowledge in the MOST HIGH?” While Satan remains the God of this
world, and has it in his power to prosper his votaries, this source of
perplexity will always continue to those who do not enter into the sanctuary
and consider the latter end of the worldling. Nor is it the godless only who
are tempted by the offer of a prosperity which comes from beneath. Our
SAVIOR Himself was tempted by the arch-enemy in this way. CHRIST was
told that all that He desired to accomplish for the kingdoms of this world
might be effected by an easier path than the cross — a little compromise
with him who held the power and was able to bestow the kingdoms, and all
should be His own. The lying wiles of the seducer were instantly rejected
by our LORD; not so ineffective are such wiles to many of His people; a little
policy rather than the course for which conscience pleads; a little want of
integrity in business dealings; a little compromise with the ways of the
world, followed by a prosperity which brings no blessing — these prove
often that the enemy’s arts are still the same. But, thank GOD! there is a true
prosperity which comes from Him and leads towards Him. It is not only
consistent with perfect integrity and uncompromising holiness of heart and
life, but it cannot be attained without them, and its enjoyment tends to
deepen them. This divine prosperity is GOD’S purpose for every believer, in
all that he undertakes; in things temporal and in things spiritual, in all the
relations and affairs of 9
this life, as well as in all work for CHRIST and for eternity, it is GOD’S will
for each child of His that “whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.” Yet many of
His children evidently do not enjoy this uniform blessing; some find failure
rather than success the rule of their life; while others, sometimes prospered
and sometimes discouraged, live lives of uncertainty, in which anxiety and
even fear are not infrequent. Shall we not each one at the outset ask, How is
it with me? Is this blessed prosperity my experience? Am I so led by the
SPIRIT in my doings, and so prospered by GOD in their issues, that as His
witness I can bear testimony to His faithfulness to this promise? If it be not
so with me, what is the reason? Which of the necessary conditions have I
failed to fulfill? May our meditations on the First Psalm make these
conditions more clear to our minds, and may faith be enabled to claim
definitely all that is included in this wonderful promise!
THE NEGATIVE CONDITIONS OF BLESSING
“Blessed is the man that walketh not in the counsel of the ungodly.”
More literally, O the blessings, the manifold happinesses of the man whose
character is described in the first and second verses of this Psalm! he is
happy in what he escapes or avoids, and happy and prospered in what he
undertakes.
The first characteristic given us is that he walks not in the counsel of the
ungodly, the wicked. Notice, it does not merely say that he walks not in
wicked counsel; a man of GOD clearly would not do this; but what is said is
that he “walketh not in the counsel of the wicked.” Now the wicked have
often much worldly wisdom, and become noted for their prosperity and
their prudence, but the child of GOD should always be on his guard against
their counsel; however good it may appear, it is full of danger.
On of the principal characteristics of the wicked is that GOD is not in all his
thoughts; he sees everything from the standpoint of self, or, at the highest,
from the standpoint of humanity. His maxim, “Take care of number one,”
would be very good if it were meant that GOD is first, and should always be
put first; but he means it not so; self and not GOD is number one to the
ungodly. The wicked will often counsel to honesty, not on the ground that
honesty is pleasing to GOD, but that it is the best policy; if in any particular
business transaction s more profitable policy appears quite safe, those who
have simply been honest because it pays best, will be very apt to cease to be
so.
The child of GOD has no need of the counsel of the ungodly; if he love and
study GOD’S Word it will make him wiser than all such counselors. If he
seek for and observe all the counsel of GOD, through the guidance of the 10
HOLY SPIRIT, he will not walk in darkness even as to worldly things. The
directions of GOD’S Word may often seem strange and impolite, but in the
measure in which he has faith to obey the directions he finds in the
Scripture, turning not to the right hand nor to the left, will he make his way
prosperous, will he find good success.
The history of the early Friends in America, who would not take a weapon
to protect themselves against savage Indian tribes, shows how safe it is to
follow the Word of GOD and not to resist evil. And their later experience in
the recent Civil Ware, in which no one of them lost his life, though exposed
to the greatest dangers and hardships because the would not fight, further
confirms the wisdom as well as blessedness of literally obeying the
Scripture. They eyes of the LORD still run to and fro throughout the whole
earth to show Himself strong in behalf of those who put their trust in Him
before the sons of men. The enlightened believer has so much better
counsel that he no more needs than condescends to accept the counsel of the
ungodly.
And, more than this, the wise child of GOD will carefully ascertain the
standpoint of a fellow- believer before he will value his counsel; for he
learns from Scripture and experience that Satan too frequently makes
handles of the people of GOD, as, for instance, in Peter’s case. Little did the
stanched Peter know whence his exhortation to the LORD to pity Himself
came; “Get thee behind me, Satan,” showed that our LORD had traced this
counsel, which did not seek first the Kingdom of GOD, to its true source.
Alas, the counsel of worldly-minded Christians does far more harm than
that of the openly wicked. Whenever the supposed interests of self, or
family, or country, or even of church or mission come first, we may be
quite sure of the true source of that counsel; it is at least earthly or sensual, if
not devilish.
Further, the truly blessed man —
Standeth not in the way of sinners.
Birds of a feather flock together; the way of a sinner no more suits a true
believer than the way of the believer suits the sinner. As a witness for his
MASTER in the hope of saving the lost, he may go to them; but he will not,
like Lot, pitch his tent towards Sodom; lest he be ensnared as Lot was, who
only escaped himself, losing all those he loved best, and all his possessions.
Ah, how many parents who have fluttered moth-like near the flame, have
seen their children destroyed by it, while they themselves have not escaped
unscathed! How many churches and Christian institutions, in the attempt to
attract the unconverted by worldly inducements or amusements, have
themselves forfeited the blessing of GOD; and have so lost spiritual power, 11
that those whom they have thus attracted have been nothing benefited!
Instead of seeing the dead quickened, a state of torpor and death has crept
over themselves.
There is no need of, nor room for, any other attraction than that which
CHRIST Himself gave, when He said, “I, if I be lifted up.... will draw all
men unto Me.” Our MASTER was ever “separate from sinners,” and the
HOLY SPIRIT speaks unmistakably in
<470601>
2 Corinthians 6 “What fellowship
hath righteousness with unrighteousness? and what communion hath light
with darkness?... for ye are the temple of the living GOD; as GOD hath said,
I will dwell in them, and walk in them; and I will be their GOD, and they
shall be my people. Wherefore come out from among them, and be ye
separate.... and touch not the unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will
be a FATHER unto you, and ye shall be my sons and daughters, saith the
LORD Almighty.
“Nor sitteth in the seat of the scornful.”
The seat of the scornful is one of the special dangers of this age. Pride,
presumption, and scorn are closely linked together, and are far indeed from
the mind which was in CHRIST JESUS. This spirit often shows itself in the
present day in the form of irreverent criticism. Those who are spiritually
least qualified for it are to be found sitting in the seat of judgment, rather
than taking the place of the inquirer and the learner. The Bereans of old did
not scornfully reject the, to them, strange teachings of the Apostle Paul, but
searched the Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so. Now,
forsooth, the Scriptures themselves are called in question, and the very
foundation of Christian faith are abandoned by men who would fain be
looked upon as the apostles of modern thought. May GOD preserve His
people from abandoning the faith once for all delivered to the saints, for the
baseless ephemeral fancies of the present day!
THE POSITIVE CONDITIONS OF BLESSING
We have considered the things which are avoided by the truly blessed man.
O, the miseries and the losses of those who fail to avoid them! We have
now to dwell upon the special characteristics of the man of GOD, those
which are at once the source of his strength and his shield of protection.
“His delight is in the law of the LORD;
“And in His law doth he meditate day and night.”
The unregenerate cannot delight in the Law of the LORD. They may be very
religious, and may read the Bible as one of their religious duties. They may
admire much that is in the Bible, and be loud in its praise — for as a mereb12
book it is the most wonderful in the world. nay, they may go much further
than this; and may imagine, as did Saul the persecutor, that their life is
ordered by its teachings, while still they are far from GOD. But when such
become converted, they discover that they have been blind; among the “all
things” that become new, they find that they have got a new Bible; and as
new-born babes they desire the unadulterated milk of the Word that they
may grow thereby. Well is it when young Christians are properly fed from
the Word of GOD, and have not their taste corrupted, and their spiritual
constitution destroyed, by feeding on the imaginations of men rather than
on the verities of GOD.
It is not difficult to discover what a man delights in. “Out of the abundance
of the heart the mouth speaketh.” The mother delights to speak of her babe,
the politician loves to talk of politics, the scientific man of his favorite
science, and the athlete of his sport. In the same way the earnest, happy
Christian manifests his delight in the Word of God; it is his food and
comfort; it is his study and his guide; and as the HOLY SPIRIT throws fresh
light on its precious truths he finds in it a joy and pleasure beyond compare.
Naturally and spontaneously he will often speak of that which is so precious
to his heart.
By regeneration the believer, having become the child of GOD, finds new
interest and instruction in all the works of GOD. His FATHER designed and
created them, upholds and uses them, and for His glory they exist. But this
is peculiarly true of the Word of GOD. Possessing the mind of CHRIST,
instructed by the SPIRIT of CHRIST, he finds in every part of GOD’S Word
testimony to the person and work of his adorable MASTER and FRIEND. The
Bible in a thousand ways endears itself to him, while unfolding the mind
and ways of GOD. His past dealings with His people, and His wonderful
revelations of the future.
While thus studying GOD’S Word the believer becomes conscious of a new
source of delight; not only is that which is revealed precious, but the beauty
and perfection of the revelation itself grows upon him. He has now no need
of external evidence to prove its inspiration; it everywhere bears the impress
of Divinity. And as the microscope which reveals the coarseness and
blemishes of the works of man only shows more fully the perfectness of
GOD’S works, and brings to light new and unimagined beauties, so it is with
the Word of GOD when closely scanned.
In what remarkable contrast does this Book stand to the works of men! The
science of yesterday is worthless today; but history and the discoveries of
our own times only confirm the reliability of these ancient sacred records.
The stronger our faith in the plenary, verbal inspiration of God’s Holy 13
Word, the more fully we make it our guide, and the more implicitly we
follow its teachings, the deeper will be our peace and the more fruitful our
service. “Great peace have they which love Thy law; and nothing shall
offend them.” Becoming more and more convinced of the divine wisdom
of the directions and commands of Scripture, and of the reliability of the
promises, the life of the believer will become increasingly one of obedience
and trust; and thus he will prove for himself how good, acceptable, and
perfect is the will of GOD, and the Bible which reveals it. The words, “the
Law of the LORD,” which we understand to mean the whole Word of GOD,
are very suggestive. They indicate that the Bible is intended to teach us what
GOD would have us to do; that we should not merely seek for the promises,
and try to get all we can from GOD; but should much more earnestly desire
to know what He wants us to be and to do for Him. It is recorded of Ezra,
that he prepared his heart to seek the Law of the LORD, in order that he
might do it, and teach in Israel statutes and judgments. The result was that
the hand of his GOD was upon him for good, the desires of his heart were
largely granted, and he became the channel of blessing to his whole people.
Every one who searches the Scriptures in the same spirit will receive and
communicate the blessing of GOD; he will find in it the guidance he needs
for his own service, and oft-times a word in season for those with whom he
is associated.
But not only will the Bible become the Law of the LORD to him as teaching
and illustrating what GOD would have him to be and to do, but still more as
revealing what GOD Himself is and does. As the law of gravitation gives us
to know how a power, on which we may ever depend, will act under given
circumstances, so the Law of the LORD gives us to know Him, and the
principles of His government, on which we may rely with implicit
confidence.
The man of God will also delight to trace GOD in the Word as the great
Worker, and rejoice in the privilege of being a fellow-worker with Him — a
glad, voluntary agent in doing the will of GOD, yet rejoicing in the grace that
has made him willing, and in the mighty, divine power that works through
him. The Bible will also teach him to view himself as but an atom, as it
were, in GOD’S great universe; and to see GOD’S great work as a
magnificent whole, carried on by ten thousand agencies; carried on through
all spheres, in all time, and without possibility of ultimate failure — a
glorious manifestation of the perfections of the great Worker! He himself,
and a thousand more of his fellow-servants, may pass away; but this
thought will not paralyze his efforts, for he knows that whatever has been
wrought in GOD will abide, and that whatever is incomplete when his work
is done the great Worker will in His own time and way bring to completion. 14
He does not expect to understand all about the grand work in which he is
privileged to take a blessed but infinitesimal part; he can afford to await its
completion, and can already by faith rejoice in the certainty that the whole
will be found in every respect worthy of the great Designer and Executor.
Well may his delight be in the Law of the LORD, and well may he meditate
in it day and night.
THE OUTCOME IN BLESSING
We next proceed to notice the remarkable promises in the third verse of this
Psalm — one of the most remarkable and inclusive contained in the
Scriptures: —
“And he shall be like a tree planted by the rivers of water, “That
bringeth forth his fruit in his season; “His leaf also shall not wither;
“And whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.”
If we could offer to the ungodly a worldly plan which would ensure their
prospering in all that they undertake, how eagerly they would embrace it!
And yet when GOD Himself reveals an effectual plan to His people how
few avail themselves of it! Many fail on the negative side and do not come
clearly out from the world; many fail on the positive side and allow other
duties or indulgences to take the time that should be given to reading and
meditation on GOD’S Word. To some it is not at all easy to secure time for
the morning watch, but nothing can make up for the loss of it. But is there
not yet a third class of Christians whose failure lies largely in their not
embracing the promise and claiming it by faith? In each of these three ways
failure may come in and covenant blessings may be lost.
Let us now consider what are the blessings, the manifold happinesses
which faith is to claim when the conditions are fulfilled.
I. Stability — He shall be like a tree (not a mere annual plant), of steady
progressive growth and increasing fruitfulness. A tree planted, and always
to be found in its place, not blown about, the sport of circumstances. The
flowers may bloom and pass away, but the tree abides.
II. Independent Supplies — Planted by the rivers of water. The ordinary
supplies of rain and dew may fail; his deep and hidden supplies cannot. He
shall not be careful in the year of drought, and in the days of famine he shall
be satisfied. His supply is the living water — the SPIRIT of GOD — the
same yesterday, today, and for ever; hence he depends on no intermitting
spring. 15III. Seasonable Fruitfulness — The careful student of Scripture will notice
the parallelism between the teaching of the First Psalm and that of our LORD
in the Gospel of John, where in the sixth chapter we are taught that he who
feeds on CHRIST abides in Him, and in the fifteenth that he who abides
brings forth much fruit. We feed upon CHRIST the incarnate Word through
the written Word. So in this Psalm he who delights in the Law of the LORD,
and meditates upon it day and night, brings forth his fruit in his season.
There is something very beautiful in this. A word spoken in season how
good it is; how even a seasonable look will encourage or restrain, reprove or
comfort! The promise reminds one of those in John about the living water
thirsty ones drink, and are not only refreshed, but become channels through
which rivers of living water are always flowing, so that other thirsty ones in
their hour of need may find seasonable refreshment. But the figure in the
Psalm is not that of water flowing through us as a channel; but that of fruit,
the very outcome of our own transformed life — a life of union with
CHRIST.
It is so gracious of our GOD not to work through us in a mere mechanical
way, but to make us branches of the True Vine, the very organs by which
Its fruit is produced. We are not, therefor, independent workers, for there is
a fundamental difference between fruit and work. Work is the outcome of
effort; fruit, of life. A bad man may do good work, but a bad tree cannot
bear good fruit. The result of work is not reproductive, but fruit has its seed
in itself. The workman has to seek his material and his tools, and often to
set himself with painful perseverance to his task. The fruit of the Vine is the
glad, free, spontaneous outcome of the life within; and it forms and grows
and ripens in its proper season.
And what is the fruit which the believer should bear? May it not be
expressed by one word — Christliness? It is interesting to notice that the
Scripture does not speak of the fruits of the SPIRIT, in the plural, as though
we might take our choice among the graces named, but of the fruit, in the
singular, which is a rich cluster composed of love, joy, peace, long-suffering,
etc. How blessed to bring forth such fruit in its season!
IV. Continuous Vigor — “His leaf also shall not wither.” In our own
climate many trees are able to maintain their life through the winter, but
unable to retain their leaves. The hardy evergreen, however, not only lives,
but manifests its life, and all the more conspicuously because of the naked
branches around. The life within is too strong to fear the shortened day, the
cold blast, or the falling snow. So with the man of GOD whose life is
maintained by hidden communion through the Word; adversity only brings
out the strength and the reality of the life within. 16
The leaf of the tree is no mere adornment. If the root suggests to us
receptive power in that it draws from the soil the stimulating sap, without
which life could not be maintained, the leaves no less remind us of the grace
of giving, and of purifying. They impart to the atmosphere a grateful
moisture; they provide for the traveler a refreshing shade, and they purify
the air poisoned by the breathings of animal life.
Well, too, is the tree repaid for all that it gives out through its leaves. The
thin stimulating sap that comes from the root, which could not of itself
build up the tree, thickens in giving out its moisture, and through the leaves
possesses itself of carbon from the atmosphere. Thus enriched, the sap goes
back through the tree, building it up until the tiniest rootlets are as much
nourished by the leaves as the latter are fed by the roots. Keep a tree
despoiled of its leaves sufficiently long and it will surely die. So unless the
believer is giving as well as receiving, purifying by his life and influence, he
cannot grow nor properly maintain his own vitality. But he who delights in
the Law of the LORD, and meditates in it day and night — his leaf shall not
wither.
V. Uniform Prosperity — “Whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.” Could any
promise go beyond this? It is the privilege of a child of GOD to see the hand
of GOD in all his circumstances and surroundings, and to serve GOD in all
his avocations and duties. Whether he eat or drink, work or rest, speak or be
silent; in all his occupations, spiritual, domestic, or secular, he is alike the
servant of GOD. Nothing lawful to him is too small to afford an opportunity
of glorifying GOD; duties in themselves trivial or wearisome become
exalted and glorified when the believer recognizes his power through them
to gladden and satisfy the loving heart of his ever-observant MASTER. And
he who in all things recognizes himself as the servant of GOD may count on
a sufficiency from GOD for all manner of need, and look with confident
expectation to GOD to really prosper him in whatever he does.
But this prosperity will not always be apparent, except to the eye of faith.
When Chorazin and Bethsaida rejected our LORD’S message, it needed the
eye of faith to rejoice in spirit and say, “EVEN SO, FATHER; for so it seemed
good in Thy sight.” Doubtless the legions of hell rejoiced when they saw
the LORD of Glory nailed to the accursed tree; yet we know that never was
our blessed LORD more prospered than when, as our High Priest, He
offered Himself as our atoning sacrifice, and bore our sins in His own body
on the tree. As then, so now, the path of real prosperity will often lie
through deepest suffering; followers of CHRIST may well be content with
the path which He trod. 17
But though this prosperity may not always be immediately apparent, it will
always be real, and should always be claimed by faith. The minister in his
church, the missionary among the heathen, the merchant at his desk, the
mother in her home, the workman in his labor, each may alike claim it. Not
in vain is it written, “Whatsoever he doeth shall prosper.”
VI. Finally, let us notice that these promises are all in the indicative mood,
and, provided the conditions are fulfilled, are absolute. There is no “may
be” about them. And further, they are made to individual believers. If other
believers fail, he who accepts them will not; the word is, “Whatsoever he
doeth shall prosper.”
THE CONTRAST
“The ungodly are not so.”
IT IS not necessary to dwell at any length upon the contrast. The ungodly
cannot enjoy the happinesses of the child of GOD, for they cannot carry out
the conditions. They neither can, nor desire to, avoid the counsel, the
society, or the ways of their own fellows; and the lack that spiritual insight
which is essential to delighting in GOD’S Word. Instead of being full of life,
like the tender grain, they become hard and dry; and the same sun that
ripens the one prepares the other for destruction. Instead of being “planted,”
the wind drives them away; and He who delights in the way of His people,
causes the way of the ungodly to perish.