KenH
Well-Known Member
"I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of love." Hosea 11:4
When God draws his people near unto himself, it is not done in a mechanical way. They are drawn, not with cords of iron, but with the cords of a man; the idea being of something feeling, human, tender, touching; not as if God laid an iron arm upon his people to drag them to himself, whether they wished to come or not. This would not be grace nor the work of the Spirit upon the heart. God does not so act in a way of mechanical force. We therefore read, "Your people shall be willing in the day of your power" (Psalm 110:3). He touches their heart with his gracious finger, like the band of men whom he thus inclined to follow Saul (1 Samuel 10:26). He communicates to their soul both faith and feeling, and he melts, softens, and humbles their hearts by a sense of his goodness and mercy. For it is his goodness, as experimentally felt and realized, which leads to repentance.
If you have ever felt any secret and sacred drawing of your soul upward to heaven, it was not compulsion, not violence, not a mechanical constraint, but an arm of pity and compassion let down into your very heart, which, touching your inmost spirit, drew it up into the bosom of God. It was some such gracious touch as that spoken of in the Song of Solomon, "My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the door, and my bowels were moved for him." (Song of Solomon 5:4) It was some view of his goodness, mercy, and love in the face of a Mediator, with some dropping into your spirit of his pity and compassion towards you, which softened, broke, and melted your heart. You were not driven onward by being flogged and scourged, but blessedly drawn with the cords of a man, which seemed to touch every tender feeling and enter into the very depths of your soul.
And why is this? Because it is as man that our blessed Lord is the Mediator; it is the man Christ Jesus, the man who groaned and sighed in the garden, the man that hung upon the cross, the man who lay in the sepulcher, the man who is now at the right hand of the Father, and yet God-man. For it is through his humanity that we draw near unto God.
His blood was the blood of humanity. His sufferings were the sufferings of humanity. His sacrifice was the sacrifice of humanity, and his death was the death of the humanity. As these are opened up with divine power, they form, so to speak, a medium whereby we may draw near unto God, without terror and without alarm, because God in Christ manifests himself as altogether love.
- J.C. Philpot, Through Baca's Vale, February 12
When God draws his people near unto himself, it is not done in a mechanical way. They are drawn, not with cords of iron, but with the cords of a man; the idea being of something feeling, human, tender, touching; not as if God laid an iron arm upon his people to drag them to himself, whether they wished to come or not. This would not be grace nor the work of the Spirit upon the heart. God does not so act in a way of mechanical force. We therefore read, "Your people shall be willing in the day of your power" (Psalm 110:3). He touches their heart with his gracious finger, like the band of men whom he thus inclined to follow Saul (1 Samuel 10:26). He communicates to their soul both faith and feeling, and he melts, softens, and humbles their hearts by a sense of his goodness and mercy. For it is his goodness, as experimentally felt and realized, which leads to repentance.
If you have ever felt any secret and sacred drawing of your soul upward to heaven, it was not compulsion, not violence, not a mechanical constraint, but an arm of pity and compassion let down into your very heart, which, touching your inmost spirit, drew it up into the bosom of God. It was some such gracious touch as that spoken of in the Song of Solomon, "My beloved put in his hand by the hole of the door, and my bowels were moved for him." (Song of Solomon 5:4) It was some view of his goodness, mercy, and love in the face of a Mediator, with some dropping into your spirit of his pity and compassion towards you, which softened, broke, and melted your heart. You were not driven onward by being flogged and scourged, but blessedly drawn with the cords of a man, which seemed to touch every tender feeling and enter into the very depths of your soul.
And why is this? Because it is as man that our blessed Lord is the Mediator; it is the man Christ Jesus, the man who groaned and sighed in the garden, the man that hung upon the cross, the man who lay in the sepulcher, the man who is now at the right hand of the Father, and yet God-man. For it is through his humanity that we draw near unto God.
His blood was the blood of humanity. His sufferings were the sufferings of humanity. His sacrifice was the sacrifice of humanity, and his death was the death of the humanity. As these are opened up with divine power, they form, so to speak, a medium whereby we may draw near unto God, without terror and without alarm, because God in Christ manifests himself as altogether love.
- J.C. Philpot, Through Baca's Vale, February 12