Menu

April 19

Evenings With Jesus

Thy law do I love. - Psalms 119:113.

LET us consider two things,-the object of the Psalmist’s attachment and the attachment itself. There are some who say they have nothing to do with the law; but let them take heed, or the law will have something to do with them by-and-by. And what do they mean by this antinomian sentiment? What is the law of God, that they thus view freedom from it as a very desirable privilege? Why, according to our Saviour, the law consists entirely in love,-loving God supremely, and loving our neighbours as ourselves.

Can we ever be free from obligation to this? Can any man, in a right temper of mind, deem it a privilege to have nothing to do with this? How is it with a real Christian? It is true he is often complaining: but then he complains not of the Master, but of the servant; he complains not of the strictness of the law, but of the baseness of the observance. He does not wish to bring down the perfection of God’s law to his imperfection, but wishes to be raised up, and brought to a state of conformity to its highest excellencies; and he knows he cannot be entirely happy till he is entirely holy, and that he can never be entirely holy till God establishes this blessed law in all the powers of his soul.

The word “law” here means the Scriptures, or the word of God at large. We cannot but observe, in reading this psalm, how many terms David employs to express it:-his “commands,” “precepts,” “statutes,” “judgments,” “testimonies,” “law.” And the word “law” is not unusually employed in other places. Isaiah says, “To the law and to the testimony: if they speak not according to this word, it is because there is no light in them;” where, we see, the law of God clearly means his word, and his “word” is used as explanatory of it. So in the nineteenth psalm:-“The law of the Lord is perfect, converting the soul.”

It is not the moral law which converts, but it is the gospel which converts. Paul speaks of “the spirit of life, which makes us free from the law of sin and death;” and James calls it “the perfect law of liberty.” The difference between the law and the gospel does not consist in this:-that the one commands and the other does not; but in the difference of the things commanded. The language of the one is, “Believe on the Lord Jesus Christ, and thou shalt be saved;” the language of the other is, “Do this and live.” And therefore the Apostle John says, “This is his commandment,”-his grand, peculiar commandment:-“ That we should believe on the name of his Son Jesus Christ, and love one another, as he gave us commandment.”

Now, we shall do well to take this view of this precept. It will afford us encouragement and relieve us from distress. We may question our right to a promise, but we cannot question our right to obey a divine command. We never ask, May we love one another? We know that he has commanded it. Why then do we ask, “May I trust in Christ? may I believe in him?” when in the very same passage, in the very same words, it is equally commanded?

Now, as to his attachment to this law, we see the Psalmist here makes profession of it unto God himself, and makes God the witness of it. He could say, in sincerity and truth, “I hate vain thoughts, but thy law do I love.”

Everything we make is available for free because of a generous community of supporters.

Donate