THE writer has been pointing to the patriarch Enoch as the second of
these examples of the power of faith in the Old Covenant; and it occurs
to him that there is nothing said in Genesis about Enoch’s faith, so he
set about showing that he must have had faith, because he ‘walked with
God,’ and pleased Him, and no man could thus walk with God, and please
Him, unless he had come to Him, and no man could come to a God in whom
he did not believe, and whom he did not believe to be waiting to help
and bless him, when he did come. So the facts of Enoch’s life show that
there must have been in him an underlying faith. That is all that I need
to say about the context of the words before us. I am not going to
speak of the writer’s argument, but only of this one aspect of the
divine character which is brought out here. ‘He is a rewarder of them
that diligently seek Him.’
I. Now a word about the seeking.
Seek?’
Do we need to seek? Not in the way in which people go in quest of a
thing that they have lost and do not know where to find. We do not need
to search; we do not need to seek.
The
beginning of all our seeking is that God has sought us in Jesus Christ,
and so we have done for ever with: ‘Oh! that I knew where I might find
Him.’ We have done for ever with ‘feeling after Him, if haply we might
find Him.’ That is all past. We have to seek, but let us never forget
that we must have been found of Him, before we seek Him. That is to say,
He must have revealed Himself to us in the fulness and reality and
solid certainty of His existence and character, before there can be
kindled in any heart or mind the desire to possess Him. He must have
flashed His light upon the eye before the eye beholds; and He must have
stimulated the desire by the revelation of Himself which comes before
all desires, ere any of us will stir ourselves up to lay hold upon God.
Ours, then, is not to be a doubtful search, hut a certain seeking, that
goes straight to the place whore it knows that its treasure is, just as a
migratory bird will set out from the foggy and ice-bound shores of the
north, and go straight through the mists and the night, over continents
and oceans, to a place where it never was before, but to which it is led
- God only knows how - by some deep instinct, too deep to be an error,
and too persistent not to find its resting-place. That is how we are to
seek. We are to seek as the flower turns its opening petals to the
sunshine, making no mistake as to the quarter of the heaven in which the
radiance is lodged. We have to seek, as the rootlet goes straight to
the river, knowing where the water is, from which life and sap will
come. Thus we have to seek where and what we know. Our quest is no
doubtful and miserable hunting about for a possible good, but an earnest
desire for a certain and a solid blessing. That is the seeking.
Let
us put it into two or three plain words. The prime requisite of the
Christian’s seeking after God is as the writer here says, faith, I need
not dwell upon that. ‘Must believe that He is’ - yes; of course. We do
not seek after negations or hypotheses; we seek after a living Being.
‘And that He is the Rewarder of them that diligently seek Him’ - yes; if
we were not cure that we should find what we wanted, we should never go
to look for it. But, beyond all that, let me put three things as
included in, and necessary to, the Christian seeking - desire, effort,
prayer. We seek what we desire. But too many of us do not wish God, and
would not know what to do with Him if we had Him, and would be very much
embarrassed if it were possible for the full blessings which come along
with Him, to be entrusted to our slack hands and unloving .hearts.
Brethren, we call ourselves Christians; let us be honest with ourselves,
and rigid in the investigation of the thoughts of our own hearts. Is
there a wish for God there? Is there an aching void in His absence, or
do we shovel cartloads of earthly rubbish into our hearts, and thus dull
desires that can be satisfied only with Him? These are not questions to
which any one has a right to expect an answer from another; they are
not questions that any Christian man can safely shirk answering to
himself and to God. The measure of our seeking is actually settled by
the measure of our desire.
Then effort, of
course, follows desire as surely as the shadow comes after the
substance, because the only purpose of our desires, in the constitution
of our nature, is to supply the driving power for effort. They are the
steam in the boiler intended to whirl round the wheels. And so for a man
to desire a thing that he can do nothing whatever to bring about, is
misery and folly. But for a man to desire, and not to. work towards
fulfilling his desire, is greater misery and greater stupidity. One
cannot believe in the genuineness of those devout aspirations that one
hears in people’s prayers, who get up and wipe the dust off their knees,
and go out into the world, and do nothing to bring about the fulfilment
of their prayers. There is a great deal of that sort of desire amongst
professing Christians in all churches, conventional utterances which are
backed up and verified by no corresponding conduct. If we are seeking
after God, we shall not let all the seeking effervesce in pious
aspirations; it will get consolidated into corresponding action, and
operate to keep thought and love directed towards Him, even amidst the
trivialities, and legitimate duties, and great things of life. There
will be effort to bring Him into connection with all our work; effort to
keep by Him as we go about our daily tasks, if we are truly seeking
after God.
And then, desire and effort
being pre-supposed, there will come honest prayers, genuine prayers.
‘Seek ye the Lord while He may be found,’ says the prophet, and
immediately goes on to exhort us to ‘call upon Him while He is near,’ as
one and the chief way of seeking Him. He is always near, closer to us
than friends and lovers, closer to us than our eyes and hands, near in
His Son and the Spirit, near to hear and to bless, near and desiring to
be nearer, yea to be blended with our being and to dwell in us and we in
Him. We have not only to desire His gift, and to work towards it, but
to ask for it. Then, if we exercise these three activities of desire,
effort, petition, we may truly say: ‘When Thou saidst, "Seek ye My
face," my heart said unto Thee, "Thy face, Lord! will I seek,"‘ and may
go on, as the psalmist did, to offer the consequent prayer: ‘Hide not
Thy face from me,’ in full assurance that He is found by every seeking
soul So much for the seeking.
II. Now a word about the diligence in seeking.
The
writer uses a very strong expression, one word in the original, which
is here adequately rendered, ‘them that diligently seek Him.’
Half-hearted seeking finds nothing. You sometimes say to your children,
when you have set them to look for anything, and they come back and say
they have not been able to find it, ‘You do not know how to seek.’ And
that is true about a great many of us. Half and half desire, so that one
eye is turned on earth, and the other lifted up now and then to heaven,
does not bring us much. It will bring a little, but not the fulness of
blessing which follows on whole- hearted, continuous, persevering
seeking. If you hold a cup below a tap, in an unsteady hand, sometimes
it is under the whole rush of the water, and sometimes is on one side,
and it will be a long time before you get it filled. There will be much
of the water spilled. God pours Himself upon us, and we hold our vessels
with unsteady hands, and twitch them away sometimes, and the bright
blessing falls on the ground and cannot be gathered up, and our cup is
empty, and our lips parched. Interrupted seeking will find little;
perfunctory seeking will find less. Conventional religion brings very
little blessing, very little consciousness of the presence of God; and
that is why so many who call themselves Christians, and are so, in a
measure and in a sense, know so little of the joy of being found of God.
They have sought but not sought diligently.
Now
let us take the rebuke to ourselves, if we need it, and we all need it
more or less. It is a very threadbare piece of Christian counsel, to be
earnest in our seeking after God, but it is none the less needed because
it is threadbare, and it would not be threadbare if it had not been so
much needed. ‘They that search diligently’ - which is the real meaning
of the words in the Book of Proverbs rendered, ‘they that seek Me early’
-’shall find Me.’
III. So this brings me to the last thing here, the Rewarder and the reward.
‘He
is the rewarder of them that diligently seek Him.’ The best reward of
seeking is to find the thing that you are looking for. So the best
reward that God, the Rewarder, gives is when He gives Himself. There are
a great many other good things that come to the diligently seeking
Christian soul, but the best thing is that God draws near. Enoch sought
God, came to God, and so he walked with God. The reward of his coming
was continuous, calm communion, which gave him a companion in solitude,
and one to walk at his side all through the darkness and the
roughnesses, as well as the joys and the smoothnesses, of daily life.
Ah,
brethren! there is no reward comparable to the felt presence in our own
quiet hearts of the God who has found us, and whom we have found. And
if we have that, then He becomes, here and now, the reward of the
diligent search, and the reward of it to, day carries in itself the
assurance of the perfect reward of the coming time. ‘He walked with God,
and... God took him.’ That will be true of all of us. There is only one
seeking in life that is sure to result in the finding of what we seek.
All other search - the quest after the chief good - if it runs in any
other direction, is resultless and barren. But there is one course, and
one only, in which the result is solid and certain. ‘I have never said
to any of the seed of Jacob, seek ye My face in vain.’ If we seek He
will be found of us, and so be our Rewarder and our reward.
Hebrews 11:6
And
without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes
to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who
earnestly seek him.
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