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Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear
no evil: for Thou art with me; Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort mePsalms
23:4.
There is
perhaps no verse in Scripture with which we are more familiar than that
which heads this chapter;no Bible figure which has made a more lasting
and indelible impression. The picture of life, with a dark valley at the
end of it, was hung up long ago, in the halls of memory, when infancy
first learned to repeat or sing the Shepherd-psalm. Other mental scenes
and pictures have come and gone,other Bible symbols may have made
a transient impression,but this remains. And as Luther ever associated
the appearance and scenery of the figurative Death-valley with that of
his own vale of Augsburg, so each Bible reader has doubtless had his own
mental picture suggested by some scene of his youth,perhaps some
dark, lonesome Highland glen, with mist and rain-clouds muffling the mountain-tops,
and a sluggish stream, amid the deepening shades of eventide, wending
below.
We need not stop to inquire or conjecture what spot or locality suggested
to David the world-wide emblem,what his prototype was of that Valley
which, through his inspired lips, has now found enduring place in all
Christian teaching and symbolism. His thoughts may possibly have reverted
to some scene memorable in the days of his boyhood, when he fed his fathers
flocks in the valleys around Bethlehem,some deep gorge among the
mountains of Judah, through which amid gloom and storm he had himself
conducted his fleecy charge. Or if, as some are disposed rather to conjecture,
the psalm were written in his declining years, during the rebellion of
Absalom, when he took refuge beyond Jordon,he may have thought of
some glen amid the fastness of Gilead, through which he had seen a shepherd
conducting his flock out of the pastures of the wilderness. Or in the
same spot of his exile, where the border river frets its way along a tortuous
valley overhung with precipices, he may have seen the patient shepherd
with the sheep slung on his shoulder, and with rod and staff in hand,
fording the impetuous stream. One or all of these familiar incidents may
have presented to his mind the picture of Deathas a dark valley
through which the flock of God have to pass, on their way to the heavenly
fold.
But be this as it may, the image, at all events, has passed into all languages
and all hearts. How many tears has this one verse dried! How many eyes,
when dimmed by the haze of death to other familiar scenes,when the
faces of loved relatives were eclipsed in the gathering darkness,how
many eyes have gazed on this valley, made radiant with a presence and
companionship better than all earthly friends! How often has the ear drunk
in the heavenly music of this sublime soliloquy, or the faltering tongue
lisped it, until the note of the earthly psalm blended with the songs
of the seraphim!
Come and let us gaze on this picture. Let us stand by the mouth of this
Valley, under the solemn conviction that we must one day tread it. Shall
it be with or without the Heavenly Guide? The other expressions of the
psalm may not come home to us. We may, alas! know nothing of The
Lord our Shepherd. We may be strangers to the green pastures
and still waters;the restoring of the backslider; and the
leading in the paths of righteousness and peace. But the valley
of deathshade all must tread. We imagine it, with reference to ourselves,
(and so it is) a solitary valley; but in reality it is ever densely thronged,filled
with a continuous stream of human beings. It is computed, that every hour
upwards of 3000 of our fellow-creatures cross its entrance. 3000 palid
pilgrims are hourly crowding and hurrying along its silent gorges! Let
us visit the place, and ponder whether we be ready to join that band of
silent travelers.
The verse suggests three topics for consideration: The Valley, The Presence,
and The Twofold Prop.
THE VALLEY
The valley of the shadow of death.
Death is a gloomy experience even to the believer. They are false to the
deepest and truest emotions and sensibilities of humanity, who would venture
to aver otherwise. We must not attempt, even in the case of those who
have gotten the victory over death, falsely to gild the tomb,
and to strew flowers around the sepulcher. Death, as the wages of sin,
even to the Christian, is an enemy. All have a natural dread of deatha
natural shrinking from dissolution. You may get at times some bold, defiant
spiritssome hardened desperadoes in guiltwho, with seared
conscience, can meet their end without a shudder. Such wicked have
no bands in their death, their strength is firm. But these exceptional
cases do not affect the great law of common humanitySkin for
skin, all that a man hath will he give for his life. It must be,
it is a solemn thing, when that which we have often spoken of, thought
of, tried to realize, has really overtaken us. When we feel the dimming
of the eye, the dreamy insensibility, the gathering darkness, the prospect
of severance from all that has long bound us to life; and going on the
long voyage to that strange land, from which no voyager that ever set
sail has returned. It is not poetry, but nature which dictates the wordsIt
is a dread and awful thing to die. But, whilst the believer, as
a member of our common humanitya child of our common natureinstinctively
recoils from death: as a child of God, a child of grace, he can say, I
will fear no evil.
Observe how beautifully and significantly the psalmist speaks of death
while looking to his Covenant-Shepherd. He calls it not the Valley
of death, but the Valley of the shadow of death. The
substance of death is taken away, and the shadow only remains. To the
believer, the King of Terrors is a vanquished enemy. The iron crown has
been plucked from his brow and rolled in the dust. We know not if he who
sang this Shepherd-song knew by prophetic teaching all the wondrous secrets
of that conquest; but we, at least, in taking his words into our lips,
can weave into them a gospel meaning. We can go to the sepulcher of Jesus
and see the grim foe chained as a trophy to the chariot wheel of the conquering
Saviour. Blessed truth! Christ, by dying, has taken the sting of death
and cast it into the flames of His sacrifice. He is sublimely represented,
in the ages of past eternity, as looking down the long vista of the future;
His eye settles on the world loaded in chains, and its millions doomed
to everlasting destruction. In holy ecstasy He exclaims, as longing, if
possible, to annihilate intervening ages, in order that He might complete
the conquest, I will ransom them from the power of the grave; I
will redeem them from death. O death, I will be thy plagues! O grave,
I will be thy destruction! By His vicarious sacrifice and sufferings
as a Surety-Saviour, He has flooded the Valley with light. The dark rolling
mists have resolved themselves into golden clouds. The apostle, in speaking
of the wages of sin, takes no account of temporal deaththe death
of the bodythe crumbling of the outward, perishable, corruptible
framework. That is a mere transient incident in the believers experience;what
the best of the old commentators calls a parenthesis in his being.
With eternal death and deaths Conqueror in his eyes, he exclaims,
Jesus Christ, who hath ABOLISHED DEATH! Can we say in the
prospect of that solemn hour, I will fear no evil? It is seated
at the foot of the cross of Calvary, and entering the Saviours vacant
tomb, that we can echo the same apostles chilling, I am persuaded
that
death shall not separate us from the love of God which is in
Christ Jesus our Lord. Thanks be to God who giveth us the
victory, through our Lord Jesus Christ.
THE SHEPHERDS
PRESENCE Thou art with me.
Here is another element of support in passing through the Valley;not
merely the blessed persuasion that the curse of death, as one of the penal
consequences of the fall, has been removed and cancelled, but there is
the promised assurance of a real companionship in that closing scene.
The Shepherd, who has gone before the flock in the wilderness, will not
forsake them in the swelling Jordan.
And this is no mystical figureno mere poetical or sentimental illusion.
It is a wondrous fact. Thousands who have passed through the Valley can
bear witness to it,the felt nearness of the Saviour. No one who
has had any experience of deathbeds but can testify, that there is often
the sublime consciousness of a PRESENCE thereas if the dying pilgrim
rested on a living Arm, and that Valley became a Peniel, where, like the
patriarch, the wrestling soul saw God face to face!
How can we with sure warrant look forward to a similar experience? It
is by having God as our Shepherd now, if we would have Him as our Shepherd
then. What was it that gave David this confidence in the prospect of treading
the Valley of death? It was the conscious nearnessthe realized presence
of that Shepherd in life. He was even then rejoicing in this companionship
and love. See how near he felt Him to be! Observe the phraseology of the
versethe form of utterance of this sheep of the ancient Hebrew fold.
It is not I will fear no evil, for Thou art to be with me,
nor is it for God is with me, but Thou art with me.
He seems to look up with confiding faith to Him who was even then at his
side. He speaks not of a remote Being, who would meet him at the valley-gates,a
mere guide through the gloom of that strange gorge at the end of life,
but who at other times is unknown and distant. It is the Shepherd of whom
in the opening strain of the song he said, that Shepherd is mine
The Lord is my Shepherd. It is He whose guiding hand had led
him by the green pastures and the still waters, and the paths of righteousness.
Let us not delude ourselves with the thought that a God unknown and unsought
now, will be found at a dying hour; that we can insult our Shepherd by
refusing His guidance and companionship till we reach the very confines
of the Valley, and then give to Him the dregs of a worn lifethe
remnant of a withered love! If we would have peace and comfort in the
thought of that last days journey, let us test ourselves with the
question Can I even now look up to the face of the Lord my
Shepherd and say, Thou ART with me?"
And who is this who is specially the Shepherd and Companion and Guide
of His flock in their journey through the valley-gloom? It is He of whom
we have found it elsewhere said, He goeth before them. Cheering
thought to the dying believerthere is ONE with him who has known
that valley, by having Himself trodden it; One who has experienced far
more terrific shadows than ever can fall upon His people. When He trod
itHe trod the wine-pressHe trod the valleyalone.
No star glimmered on His pathno rainbow gleamed through the misty
storm-clouds. The works awoke only their own lonely echoes,My
God! my God! why hast thou forsaken me? Christ has sanctified that
Valley;He has left in it the print of His footsteps;He has
been there, as elsewhere, a Brother man. He stoops from His throne in
Heaven, and whispers in the ear of every pilgrim of mortality, Fear
not! I am He that liveth and was dead!
Let us pass to the remaining topic.
THE TWOFOLD SUPPORT Thy rod and Thy staff they comfort
me.
Oriental writers tell us that the shepherds of the East have generally
two stavesone for counting the sheep, the other, with a crook at
the end of it, to assist in rescuing them from any perilous position,
if they fall over the precipice or are swept down the stream.
These two props may be taken symbolically to denote the rod of Faith and
the staff of the Promises. As Moses smote the waters of the Red Sea with
his rod, and these divided, so that the people went through dry shod;so
when the believer comes to the typical Jordan in the Dark Valley, Faith
smites with its all-conquering rod the threating waves, and he passes
through.
Let faith exalt her joyful voice,
And thus begin to sing,
O Grave, where is thy triumph now,
And where, O Death, thy sting?
And what is this Faith which thus waves her triumphal rod, and sings her
triumphal song? but just that elevating principle elsewhere spoken of
as the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not
seen; which enables the believer to penetrate the future, and to
regard death and its accompaniments only as a narrow river lying between
him and the true land of Promise?
But besides the Rod of Faith, there is the Staff of the Promises. Without
something to guide us in crossing the muddy, swollen stream, we may cut
the feet on the rugged rocks, or slip on the rounded stones, or sink in
the deceptive hollows. The staff enables us to find sure footing, and
in safety to reach the opposite bank. So it is with the Christian in the
turgid river of death. Without his staff he might be engulfed by the raging
waters. But this staff of Gods promises ensures his safety. He feels
step by step for the solid rock. The Lord upholdeth him with his
right hand.
And here again, let us observe, it was the present leaning on the rod
and the staff which gave David the sure guarantee of comfort at the last.
He does not say, They shall comfort me, as if this rod
and staff were something unknown in the wilderness, which the Angel of
Death gave to help him through the closing scene of all. No. They
comfort me. I am leaning on them every step of my heavenward
way; and the props I so value now, will not fail me then.
And was the psalmist deceived? Did the song of life prove a delusion when
the hour of death came? Could he sing it so long as his journey was carpeted
with flowers, and radiant with sunshine? but did his faith forsake him,
and his rod and staff give way, and his song melt into a wail of terror,
when the shadows fell around? We have his last words recorded. We have
the very hymn which this Hebrew minstrel sang, when the valley-gloom was
beginning to darken his path, and the sound of the waters of death fell
on his ear;He hath made with me an everlasting covenant, ordered
and in all things, and sure. This is all my salvation, and all my desire.
And God is still faithful who promised, As thy days, so shall thy
strength be. There is no part of that promise more faithfully fulfilled
than in His giving dying grace for a dying day. Often have we seen those
who, during life, shrank at the thought of the dark valley,who trembled
as they grasped the staff in the prospect of dissolution,through
fear of death, all their lifetime subject to bondage,yet, when the
Valley is reached, the clouds seen in the distance are glorified with
heavenly light; their terrors are at an end; the storm is changed into
a calm; they fall asleep. The fruit drops when it is ripe.
As we have seen it somewhere finely said, God gives a parable in nature
for those who have an unnecessary dread of death. Try to wrench the foliage
off a treestrip it of its verdant leaves when summer is not
yet. They resist your efforts; or, if they be removed, you leave
a gash and wound where the immature unripe leaf has been forced away.
But suffer the same leaves to grow, till autumn has covered them with
golden glory and they have fulfilled their uses, and see how gently they
fall! No rude blast is needed to sweep among the branches of the forest:
at the touch of evenings gentle zephyr they strew the ground. So
it is with believers ripe for heaven, who have finished and fulfilled
their earthly destiny. In lifes autumn evening death comes, but
he comes like a gentle zephyr. The golden leaves drop without effort from
the earthly bough. How gentle that dismissal of the spirit in the silent
changer of dissolution! Our friend Lazarus sleepth. He
was not, for God took him.
We close with two practical thoughts.
1. Ponder our personal interest in the subject. Let each think, That
Dark Valley must be trodden by me! I may not have another inch or
acre in this world I can call my own, but that common heritage shall at
last be mine, the house appointed for all living. Ay, and
not only so; but, in a solemn sense, we have all already entered that
Valley. Life is but a highway leading to death. Sin has severed us heirs
to these gloomy mansions. That infants wailing cry is the first
projected shadow of the Valley. That playful childs tottering steps
are on the way to the Valley. That youth in the pride of early life, if
he had eyes to see it, could decry the Valley in the blue hazy distance,
and, as he proceeds on the journey, it will get nearer and nearer. The
path of honourrichesambitiongloryleads but
to the grave!
And you who have passed lifes mid-day, how befitting especially
that you should often and solemnly meditate on the gradual approach of
that night of darkness! How important now, really to ascertain whether
you have in truth found your Shepherd-Guide: how important to cleave more
closely to Him as the evening shadows are beginning to fall! The sheep,
in broad day and in the open common, fancies itself independent of the
shepherd. But when the sun is set, and the howl of the wolf is heard,
and night dulls the landscape, how needful to keep near his side! So be
it with you. As the shadows of lifes closing day are beginning to
fall, seek to cling more closely to your never failing Protector and Guide.
Have the staff of promises ever nigh at hand; that, when, like aged Jacob,
you come to a dying hour, you may lean on that staff, recounting the Divine
faithfulnessglorying in the Divine presencesaying, I
have waited for thy salvation, O God.
2. Connect the Valley with the Heaven to which it leads. That Valley of
the Shadow of Death, is like the Valley of Achor, spoken of in Hosea:It
is a door of hope. Achor was one of the entrance-ravines from
the wilderness to the Promised Land. Death is the valley leading to the
true Canaan: or, to employ a homely illustration, it is like emerging
from some long tunnel, after miles of gloomy darkness, into the bright
sunshine of some festive city, whose bells are ringing their merry peals,
and in whose streets gay groups are gathered. It is the great festive
day of heaventhe city which hath foundation. A moment
before, in closing our eyes on the earthly scene, our ears listened to
stifled sobs; now, we hear the bells of glory ringing the joyous chime,there
shall be no more death, neither sorrow nor crying, neither shall there
be any more pain, for the former things are passed away!
Let us ever view death as the entrance into lifethe exodus of the
soul from its bondage to the true Canaan. Let us not misname death by
calling it dissolution; and the grave, the long home.
Our loved and lost, if they have died in Christ, have only then in truth
begun their real life. Death is to them the birthday of their everlasting
joys. A dying chamber is generally full of tears. To them it is rather
full of angels. We do not call that dying in nature, when we see the beauteous
virgin blossom of early spring fall from the fruit tree. That fruit is
not destroyed. It has not perished. Nay, the dropping of these delicate
blossoms indicates only a step in its further developmenta step
onward in its progress to perfection. So, when loved ones drop their blossoms
in the grave, it is only that they may expand in fuller and nobler portions
in a heavenly world. The blossom of the earthly spring-time are gone.
They lie withering in the ground. But the immortal fruit remains, and
that is imperishable!
Reader, again let me ask, Are you prepared for that solemn hour, which
must sooner or later come, when life with all its opportunities and responsibilities
is at an end;when we shall feel that our moments are numberedthat
the sand-glass has reached its last grainthat the die is about to
be cast, and cast forever? You may not, as yet, have had any startling
warnings on the subject of mortality. Death may have been going his rounds
elsewhere, but your circle is unbroken. Disease has blanched other cheeksthe
arrow from the last enemy has paralyzed other armsbut you are still
strong. Others have been hovering for years at the entrance to the Valley,but
life to you is still blooming with flowers. Deaths dark vale
is in the far horizon. But come it will, come it must. It may be suddenlyit
will be unexpectedly. Do not imagine that, as you get older, you will
be more disposed to think of your preparation for your great change. Alas!
if that preparation be neglected now, we fear with most, as life advances,
there will be a growing disinclination to believe death to be nearer.
They are like men walking backwards to the grave that they may not see
itthat the unwelcome thought may not disturb the dream of the present.
Oh, terrible will it be to tread that Valley with the curse alike of temporal
and eternal death brooding over it. To have the shadow of death and the
reality of death.
Death, denuded of his sting, is still formidable. What must it be to confront
the last enemy with the sting unplucked away:DEATH and what is AFTER
DEATH! Speaking of the wicked, the Psalmist says, (Psa. 94:14) Death
shall feed upon them; [or, as that has been more literally rendered,
Death shall lead them into his pastures. ] Death, which conducts
the believer through the dark Valley to the pastures of the blessed, drives
the ungodly into his own pasturesthe bleak and dreary wastes of
an immortality undone! The Achor, the Valleywhich to the believer
is the door of hope, is to the unbeliever the gloomy portal
of despair. It decides his fate. An infinite future is from that moment
sealed. It is literally the valley of decision. He that is
unjust will remain unjust still, and he that is filthy will
remain filthy still. Be it ours now to flee to Him who hath
vanquished death. Let us be able personally to appropriate the words of
the sweet Psalmist of Israel, Yea, though I walk through the Valley
of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil.
The Valley of the shadow of death! It is the portico of our
Fathers house. As we stand under the porch, the archway over our
heads projects a shadow. We are for a moment out of lifes sunshine.
But the next! the door opens; and better than the blaze of the earthly
sun is ours. The darkness is past, and the true light shineth
O changeO wondrous change!
Burst are the prison bars:
This moment there, so low,
In mortal prayer, and now,
Beyond the stars.
O changestupendous change!
Here lies the senseless clod;
The soul from bondage breaks,
The new immortal wakes,
Awake with God!
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