Arise into Thy rest
"Lord, remember David, and all his afflictions." Ps 132:1. It is with deepest feeling that
this remarkable song begins.
"A man after My own heart..." This was the
portrait of David given by the Lord. What is also remarkable is that this
description seems to have been given years before David was born.
Saul had been foolish and had run before the Lord. In 1Sa 13:14, the Lord reproves Saul through
Samuel. At the beginning of the same chapter we read that this took place
during Saul’s second year of reign. Paul tells us that Saul reigned forty
years. { Ac 13:21} In 2Sa 5:4 we read,
"David [was] thirty years old when he began to reign." So it seems
that David was not born when Saul showed his unworthiness, and drew this
reproof through Samuel. "But now thy kingdom shall not continue: the LORD
hath sought him a man after his own heart, and the LORD hath commanded him [to
be] captain over his people, because thou hast not kept [that] which the LORD
commanded thee." 1Sa 13:14.
The wonder of divine foreknowledge brought melody into the
life of David. In Ps 139:16, the
thought inspired the words; -"Thine eyes did see my substance, yet being
unperfect; and in thy book all [my members] were written, [which] in
continuance were fashioned, when [as yet there was] none of them."
These are wonderful words, and they relate to the David
class of this age, the members of the Lord’s Anointed, His Christ. The whole
psalm tells of David’s deep experience with his God. Verse one, -How intimately
the Lord had known his every thought. In verse two, the Lord anticipated
David’s response, even before the circumstances that would bring it forth. In
verse five, comes David’s moment of truth. He realises that every step of the
way is beset by the Lord. "Thou hast beset me behind and before, and laid
thine hand upon me." Here the word "beset" means to surround and
to secure. The Lord’s hand was there always upon David. It was there in the
heights of his experiences. It held him tight in the very depths. It led
through green pastures, by still waters. Nor did it forsake him in the valley
of death’s shadow. The Lord’s dealing with His own, those wonderful
overrulings, revealing His many thoughts; how great was the sum of them!
Thus did the Holy Spirit speak of David in the flesh. Thus,
at the same moment, does it speak of the greater David class, The Christ, Head
and Body members, that David was to foreshadow. As with David, even before the
Body members were born, the Lord’s "book" contained it all.
"When as yet there were none of them," their character and fashioning
was prescribed. "After My Own Heart."
Our own existence as human beings illustrates this mystery.
Once I was nothing more than one tiny cell. Yet within that microscopic speck
was a book. This book contained all the directions for my formation and my
development as embryo, to the ultimate moment of birth. Forty weeks the
messages went forth, directing each next stage of growth. "Sentences,
paragraphs, chapters," so have the latest scientific findings described
this wonderful programme in our genes. There were even commas, and full stops!
Every hour the responses were monitored. Each phase was measured, prolonged as
needed, terminated exactly when complete. Were it not so we would have extra
long noses!
How wonderful this miracle of the birth of a babe. This
greatest human experience was used to illustrate for us the way that the Lord
brings forth His New Creation. The messages, directions from the book, -our
responses. Every day of that forty weeks some further development takes place
in the embryo. There are no lulls, no wasted periods. Every day of our
consecrated lives is a day of our change. The Lord looks for our responses,
just as He did with David.
Furthermore, another book has been written called a book of
remembrance of those who fear His Name. So the request at the outset of Ps 132 for the Lord to "remember
David", is a very touching one. Could the Lord forget? The Lord Who had
foreknown this "one after His own heart," could David now have
slipped His mind? Who ordered every step, beset before, behind, and on him laid
His hand, was memory now a problem with the Ancient of days?
What man remembers, how can God forget? Though a mother for
a second forgets her babe, "yet will I not forget thee." The Lord is
"not unrighteous to forget." So how do we understand this plea?
Certainly not as a jogging of the memory of the Lord. Rather was it to exhibit
that deep and close relationship between the desires of David’s heart and the
Desires of the Heart of God.
This psalm is a song about two vows, each a pledge of
deepest love. From verse two we have to vow of David, from verse eleven, the
vow of the Lord God.
Psalm 132:1 "LORD, remember David, [and] all his
afflictions: 2 How he sware unto the LORD, [and] vowed unto the mighty [God] of
Jacob;"
We do not know exactly when this psalm was written, nor for
what occasion. There can be no doubt, however, what the Holy Spirit is saying
to us through these words. When the Temple was dedicated, Solomon uttered words
closely resembling this psalm. This may not mean that the psalm was written at
that time, but Solomon found these words most appropriate for the occasion.
_ 2Chr 6:41
"Now therefore arise, O LORD God, into thy resting place, thou, and the
ark of thy strength: let thy priests, O LORD God, be clothed with salvation,
and let thy saints rejoice in goodness. 42 O LORD God, turn not away the face
of thine anointed: remember the mercies of David thy servant."
The dedication of the Temple was a type, foreshadowing this
very special time in which we live today. The saints, the David class of this
age, have nearly finished their course. Even this moment, the Lord is in the
process of making up His jewels. This is a precious moment to the Lord.
"They shall be mine, saith the LORD of hosts, in that
day when I make up my jewels;" { Mal 3:17} We feel we may here detect
great yearning, and in that prospect, a deep satisfaction in the heart of God.
What is it about these people of God that make them, to Him, such a peculiar
treasure? Ps 132:1"LORD, remember
David, [and] all his afflictions:" Remember the David class of this age,
and all their afflictions. The afflictions of the saints throughout the age
have been many. Of some of these we get glimpses in the records of history.
What the historian missed, the Lord remembers. The death of His saints has been
precious in His sight. Each one was faithful unto death, and for each was a
crown of life reserved. But the death that mattered most was the one that took
place long before the last breath. Consecration was in the Jordan of death.
There each devoted soul became dead, dead to all else, but one single desire
represented in this psalm, 132, in the longing heart of David. —To "find a
place" for the Lord.
David himself suffered many things resulting from the
Lord’s call. He was taken from the sheepfold to endure many hard trials in
preparation for the throne. However, this psalm identifies for us the true
nature of the "afflictions" here to be specially borne in mind by the
Lord God. These were David’s self afflictions, the self afflicting of his own
soul. The following verses reveal the earnestness of the intense longing to
build for the Lord a home, a place of rest for the holy ark of God. David
yearned to provide a place worthy of the Lord. It must be holy, and exquisitely
beautiful.
David vowed a vow. He made a solemn promise to His God. He
sealed it with an oath. The language he used in verses 3,4, & 5, revealed a
state of total dedication, and singleness of purpose. To express it simply,
David said-"Surely—I will not go home, or go to bed; I will not fall
asleep, or even close my eyes, until I find a place for the Lord, a home worthy
of the God of Jacob." Ps 132:5
"an habitation for the mighty [God] of Jacob." Here, the word
"habitation" is plural, and in the Hebrew this adds a sense of
quality and majesty. This place must be different from all others, not merely a
place, but a palace truly worthy of so great a God.
Until that Temple is completed, the Holy Presence of God,
represented by the shining light of presence, or "shekinah", from
between the cherubim on the sacred mercy seat. But the ark was housed in a
tent, a temporary abode of frail fabric.
For years the ark had remained at Shiloh, in the area of
Ephraim. Some scriptures equate Ephraim with Ephratah, and this may be the
reference in verse six.
Psalm 132:6 "Lo, we heard of it at Ephratah: we found
it in the fields of the wood."
The fields of Jearim, or Kireath-Jearim, also means
"the city of the wood." Here the ark was found in the early days of
David.
The designed place for the ark was in the holy of holies.
However, during the whole period of David’s life, the ark never resided in the
Tabernacle. Way back in the days of Eli’s sons, the ark had been carried into
the battle field to boost the faltering morale of the Israelites. The
Israelites suffered defeat, and the ark was taken by the enemy. Seven months
later, the Philistines were glad to get rid of the ark. It had brought a
twofold plague, the details of which we shall not go into, save to say that the
Lord smote them where it hurt!
Then, what a wonderful moment that was, when the reapers of
the fields of Bethshemesh looked up from their labours to see the ark
approaching. It was drawn on a cart by milking cows, who, contrary to nature,
had unheeded the cries of their calves to bear their precious load as directed
by the power of the Lord. The ark had returned from the land of the enemy, and
the Philistines, who had followed to observe afar off, watched with great awe.
There was little that happened to that sacred ark that
lacks significance. The scene was of wonder and delight on the one hand, and of
great awe and dread on the other. Surely this was parallelled by the raising of
Jesus from the domain of the enemy, death. Truly does He triumph over
principalities and powers, to make of them an open show of the greater power of
God.
After a brief respite at that place, the ark was taken to
Kireath-Jearim. There it remained for at least seventy years, until David had
taken Jerusalem. There at Jerusalem was to be the permanent abode for which
David longed.
The road from Kireath-Jearim towards Jerusalem is a steep
and rugged ascent as one travels eastward towards the sunrise and Mount Zion.
The first attempt to bring it up met with failure. It was not the Lord’s way.
It was the way of the Philistines, for the ark was placed upon a cart of human
construction to draw it along by oxen. This represented a movement not of the
Lord but of man and Satan. It was doomed to disaster.
The cart jolted over the roughness of the way, and
threatened to off-load its sacred burden. Human hands reached out to support
and steady the ark of God. Oh, how wary we must be of human ways and human
hands in the things of the Lord! The Papacy was a movement based upon the way
of the Philistines. It was a human endeavour to bring in the kingdom. Human
hands attempted to achieve what the Lord had not designed. But Papacy was not
alone in this. Many other examples were to follow.
Why were such things allowed? How it brings home to all the
Lord’s people the unspeakable privilege of that holy walk with God. A holy
walk-We picture the Levites as, in harmony with divine instruction, they bore
the precious weight of divine glory high upon their shoulders. Thus, with
deepest reverence and respect, did they treat this wonderful symbol of the
divine presence.
"Be ye clean that bear the vessels of the Lord."
Many of us, dear brethren, are of the second or third
generation of Truth people. It is not enough that our parents walked with God.
The father of Uzzah had for years tended that ark, and had known the blessing
of the divine presence and favour. This did not save his son. The unspeakable
privileges passed to our generation call for the greatest awe and respect for
the things of God. Everything, we must do His way. It is a holy walk.
Brethren, remember David, and the way he afflicted his
soul. Is it our earnest vow, our chief concern above all else, to find out a
place worthy of the Lord? Does this yearning desire consume us with the zeal of
His house? More than any natural comfort, more than rest of body, does this
longing claim our first attention, and direct our thoughts each day?
The dedication of David; does it describe my own part in
that David class of this age? "He sware unto the LORD, and vowed unto the
mighty [God] of Jacob; Surely I will not come into the tabernacle of my house,
nor go up into my bed; I will not give sleep to mine eyes, or slumber to mine
eyelids, Until I find out a place for the LORD, an habitation [worthy of] the
mighty God of Jacob."
What priceless privilege it is, to know the Lord! What a
blessed company, who walk and dwell with that One Who inhabits eternity, and
Whose Name is Holy! Is my heart a place worthy for such a Being? Can it ever
be? Humanly, it is impossible. Yet the Lord has Himself a desire that it should
be, and He has provided those means of grace.
The man of God is "throughly furnished,"
furnished right through, in ways that are totally pleasing to the Lord of
Glory. The Lord brings His own furniture, but it is the fear of the Lord that
opens the door. There are states and conditions of the humblest heart in which
He is exalted, in which He is given the highest and most welcomed place. The
honour and the glory due to His name is reflected in the wonder and awe of those
who love Him. In such a heart does He find that home of love to which He is
pleased to give His Name. "They shall be mine."
David was that man after God’s own heart. Day after day,
year after year, in his walk with God, he had been laying up the materials of
the permanent abode. In 1Ch 22:5 we
read "the house that is to be builded for the LORD must be exceeding
magnifical, of fame and of glory throughout all countries: I will therefore now
make preparation for it. So David prepared abundantly before his death."
_ 1Chr 29:2
"Now I have prepared with all my might for the house of my God the gold
for things to be made of gold, and the silver for [things] of silver, and the
brass for things of brass, the iron for things of iron, and wood for things of
wood; onyx stones, and stones to be set, glistering stones, and of divers
colours, and all manner of precious stones, and marble stones in
abundance."
Chapter 28: verses 11 & 12, tell us that David’s mind
was filled with the Spirit, giving him a concept of the Lord’s requirements. He
saw in his mind a pattern of that glorious house of God, and in accordance
therewith did he prepare the materials required. With great zeal did he do this
because, {as 1Ch 29:3 states} "I
have set my affection to the house of my God,"
When Jesus encourages us to set our affection on things
above, to seek first the kingdom, to lay up treasures in heaven, He speaks to
the David class of this age. Our stones, He has laid, of "fair
colours," and our foundations of "saphires." { Isa 54:11} This
is the "building of God," of which Paul speaks in 2Co 5: verse 1. "an house not made with
hands, eternal in the heavens."
The Spirit of the Lord gave David a pattern of what was to
be after his death, after the earthly house of David’s tabernacle was
dissolved. In that ancient Temple of God lies also a pattern of the greater
House yet to be. Search with us the accounts of that Temple of the days of
Solomon. View there the answer to all David’s desires, the results, and the
placements of the materials he had so painstakingly gathered together for that
day. Picture in your minds the huge quarries in the twin hills of Jerusalem,
out of which the stones were cut and "curiously wrought in the lowest
parts of the earth." Picture the way in which the high peaks were reduced,
and the low surrounding places raised up, to produce that high and holy place.
A wall of solid masonry stood across the south of this mound as high as the
tallest English church spires. Look up that wall from its base towards the
Temple buildings that crown its top; what a glimpse of the wonderful high
spiritual Temple this affords.
Water supply was stored in vast cisterns hewn out of the
solid rock, one alone holding three million gallons. From what immeasurable
supply shall those waters of life flow from beneath the doors of that Temple of
God to turn the sea of death to sea of life.
There at the great porch one entered between the two
pillars of brass. This is the Way for all mankind, into relationship and
fellowship with God. One great pillar was named "Boaz"; meaning,
"in which is strength"; the "power of God unto salvation."
Undoubtedly Jesus is thus represented here. At His side, the other "pillar
in the house of his God", stands His companion, "Jachin",
meaning, "that which He establishes or sets" at His side. Here do we
not see the Bride of the Lamb. Within the Temple the cedar walls reveal the
inner beauty of those lofty upright trees of Lebanon. They are adorned
throughout with cherubim, palms, carvings of lilies overlaid with gold, and
enriched with precious stones. "The King’s daughter is all glorious
within."
Such was the house prepared by David, the Christ in the
flesh, and brought into realisation by Solomon, representing the Christ in
glory. It was a pattern of that which is greater and more perfect, with divine
dimensions, and eternal permanence. Such was the place that, amid shouts of
rejoicing, sounds of music and singing, and amid the festive dancing bands of
maidens, the ark of God was borne into its rest. And the glory of the Lord
filled the place.
Such was the setting of our psalm. Brethren, the sounds of
that rejoicing have long since died away. Like a flickering shadow it has come
and gone, for that is what it was, a shadow. Even the glory of the Temple of Solomon
was just a shadow, a pattern for that which was to come. Many years after those
joyous scenes of dedication, the Lord said, through Isa 66:1 "Thus saith the LORD, The heaven [is] my throne, and
the earth [is] my footstool: where [is] the house that ye build unto me? and
where [is] the place of my rest? 2 For all those [things] hath mine hand made,
and all those [things] have been, saith the LORD: but to this [man] will I
look, [even] to [him that is] poor and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at
my word."
What precious adornments, in His sight, are humility,
contrition, and holy awe of the things of God. -A heart that counts Him dear,
and precious, "more dear, more intimately nigh than even the sweetest
earthly tie."
_ 1Pet 3:15
"sanctify the Lord God in your hearts:" -Find Him a place worthy of
all that He is. A God of love deserves the very centre of our love, the
uppermost seat, the place of honour and esteem, Who is the source of our
delight. "My son, give Me thine heart."
There is nothing cheap or tarnishable in the dwelling place
of God, nothing paltry or unworthy. It is a place of delight, our delight, and
His, in Whose presence is fulness of joy. All His delight is in His saints, and
all their delight is in Him. Oh, to find in our hearts today a place worthy of
Our God. -Before we close our eyes tonight in sleep.
David was enacting a beautiful type when he danced before
the Lord. It was a wonderful display of the sheer joy and exuberance of spirit
of one whose chief desire centred in the ark, the sacred presence of his God.
It was a steep ascent, but each step drew nearer to that goal, the full
realisation of the earnest longings of his heart. David’s joy in the Lord
overflowed. He lost sight of self, lost sight of everything, but this one
absorbing prospect. He danced with joy before the Lord.
Each step upward was a step of sacrifice, a continual
sacrifice of praise. 2Sa 6:13 "And
it was so, that when they that bare the ark of the LORD had gone six paces, he
sacrificed oxen and fatlings. v14] And David danced before the LORD with all
his might; and David was girded with a linen ephod." Not from constraint,
but with delight, did David offer before the Lord. Could the Lord be other than
moved by this sight?
If that was but type, then is the reality even more
precious in the sight of our God. Was that, indeed, but a foreshadowing of my
own walk with God? The joy of the Lord, is it mine? Most precious evidence of
the Spirit’s anointing, it cannot be fabricated. It rises as incense from a
heart enlarged, a heart touched with that deep sense of the fulness of God.
The delight of the Lord is with such. He loves dearly those
Who have come to know and to love Him dearly. The fragrance stems from Jesus
their Head, and identifies with Him. "I do only those things that please
My Father." Such is holiness. It is the continual ascent of the sweet
savour of Christ. It is a consuming, the smoke of burnt offering, our whole
being ascending in thankful gratitude to our God. The age behind us was
sweetened by such offerings of devotion and love. The age before us will bring
forth further such offerings, whole bullocks, from a grateful world of mankind.
This moment in time is graced by the last of the offerings of His saints. This
is a precious moment to the Lord.
Psalm 132:7, "We will go into his tabernacles: we will
worship at his footstool." That verse, sums up David’s song of praise
recorded in 1Ch 16: verses 8 & 9,
"Give thanks unto the LORD, call upon his name, make known his deeds among
the people. Sing unto him, sing psalms unto him, talk ye of all his wondrous
works." This was on the occasion of the bearing of the ark to Mt Zion in
the days of David.
It is as though we have two viewpoints of this sacred
event. David, represents the Christ still here in the flesh. This is how we are
privileged to realise what today is taking place beyond the veil. When the
Temple is dedicated under Solomon, a further viewpoint is illustrated, that of
the saints beyond the veil. Theirs is the sight of the true glory of that final
abode. These two occasions, separated in time, nevertheless may be seen to
synchronise in their reality.
When the Ark was brought to Mount Zion by David, the
offerings of praise ascended high from many lips. It was a time of feasting for
the Lord’s people. 1Ch 16:3, "And
he dealt to every one of Israel, both man and woman, to everyone a loaf of
bread, and a good piece of flesh, and a flagon of wine." And the harps,
and the cymbals, and the trumpets filled the air with sounds of great
jubilation.
And that, Brethren, that was just the shadow. To this very
special moment in the whole of history, the time in which we now live, belongs
the reality.
Psalm 132:8,9. "Arise, O LORD, into thy rest; thou,
and the ark of thy strength. Let thy priests be clothed with righteousness; and
let thy saints shout for joy."
It is happening now, as we speak. The ark of God, the
vehicle of the Divine presence with His people throughout the ages, is entering
into its eternal abode, His finished Sanctuary. The Temple of the Lord is all
but complete. The last consignments of gold, silver, precious stones are all
but laid up in heaven. The sound of the mason’s tools in the quarry grows less,
soon to completely die away. Amid sounds of greatest rejoicing the Lord surveys
His finished work, and enters into His eternal abode, His rest forever, with
His saints.
"Arise, O LORD, into thy rest; thou, and the ark of
thy strength. Let thy priests be clothed with righteousness; and let thy saints
shout for joy."
At this wonderful moment, our thoughts turn towards the
Lord. He has waited so long. What are His thoughts at this hour? What deep
divine emotions fill His heart? "Arise, O LORD, into thy rest;" Could
we but fathom the depths of feeling confided in such language, words that
poured forth by the prompting of His Own Spirit! Revelations lie here of the
holy mind of God. These words are now put into our lips, who have been touched
with a sense of that deep yearning of a Father’s love. It is the cry of our
hearts unto our God, at this sacred moment of His eternal existence.
"Thou, and the ark of Thy strength."
This expression is to be found only in this psalm and in
Solomon’s use of the substance of this psalm at the dedication of the Temple.
Christ, the power of God, and the wisdom of God. Herein, in the ark of God, the
Christ, lies the basis of His covenant. Herein lies the means of its
accomplishment. Here embodied, the principles of its permanent establishment
within the heart of each creature brought into oneness with His God. The power
of God unto salvation, lies within the completed Christ. These are the Lord’s
executors, who, now fully prepared, will carry forward the great majestic
purpose of God to its full blessed fruition.
Psalm 132:8 "Arise, O LORD, into thy rest; thou, and
the ark of thy strength. 9 Let thy priests be clothed with righteousness; and
let thy saints shout for joy. 10 For thy servant David’s sake turn not away the
face of thine anointed."
With what poignant language is the blessed truth conveyed
in such words. Between these precious sons and the Father so much love has
passed. Every experience of the way was designed to bring them closer. Every
step was to prepare them for the glorious goal and object of the course. They
know, and the Father knows, that there is no possibility, not even the remotest
chance, having brought His Christ through suffering to glory, to now withdraw
from this most blessed climax of the whole redemptive purpose. The plea, to
turn not away the face of His Christ, is the most touching poetic language to
express the certainty of fulfilment of His whole blessed design. "For this
cause", Jesus came into this world. "For this cause", were
called the followers of the Lamb.
And now the hour has come! The drama of the ages reaches
fruition. The great wheels of divine purpose have come full turn, and with
sense of blessed certainty we enter the final phase.
The Christ in glory stands poised for the blessed work
ahead, the joy set before them in wondrous array. The ark of His strength is
now entering, with the great God it enthrones, into that last permanent stage
of perfect union, and glorious oneness.
What is the Father’s response to the cry of His saints? In
verse 11, the earnest vow of the David class is met by the solemn oath of the
Lord. Ps 132:11 "The LORD hath
sworn [in] truth unto David; he will not turn from it;"
So long has He waited for this hour. We now approach that
moment when there is "time no more."
Lord, remember David, and all his afflictions: [2] How he
sware unto the Lord, and vowed unto the mighty God of Jacob; [3] Surely I will
not come into the tabernacle of my house, nor go up into my bed; [4] I will not
give sleep to mine eyes, or slumber to mine eyelids, [5] Until I find out a
place for the Lord, an habitation for the mighty God of Jacob. [6] Lo, we heard
of it at Ephratah: we found it in the fields of the wood. [7] We will go into
his tabernacles: we will worship at his footstool. [8] Arise, O Lord, into thy
rest; thou, and the ark of thy strength. [9] Let thy priests be clothed with
righteousness; and let thy saints shout for joy. [10] For thy servant David’s
sake turn not away the face of thine anointed. [11] The Lord hath sworn in
truth unto David; he will not turn from it; Of the fruit of thy body will I set
upon thy throne. [12] If thy children will keep my covenant and my testimony
that I shall teach them, their children shall also sit upon thy throne for
evermore. [13] For the Lord hath chosen Zion; he hath desired it for his
habitation. [14] This is my rest for ever: here will I dwell; for I have
desired it. [15] I will abundantly bless her provision: I will satisfy her poor
with bread. [16] I will also clothe her priests with salvation: and her saints
shall shout aloud for joy. [17] There will I make the horn of David to bud: I
have ordained a lamp for mine anointed. [18] His enemies will I clothe with
shame: but upon himself shall his crown flourish.
Ps 132