Light at Evening Time by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, October 25, 1857, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.

It shall come to pass that at evening time it shall be light. (Zec 14:7)

1. I shall not stay to notice the particular occasion upon which these words were uttered, or to discover the time to which they more especially refer; I shall rather take the sentence as a rule of the kingdom, as one of the great laws of God’s dispensation of grace, that “at evening time it shall be light.” Whenever philosophers wish to establish a general law, they think it necessary to collect a considerable number of individual instances; these being put together, they then infer from them a general rule. Happily, this need not be done with regard to God. We have no need, when we look abroad in providence, to collect a great number of incidents, and then from them infer the truth; for since God is immutable, one act of his grace is enough to teach us the rule of his conduct. Now, I find in this one place it is recorded that on a certain occasion, during a certain adverse condition of a nation, God promised that “at evening time it should be light.” If I found that in any human writing, I should suppose that the thing might have occurred once, that a blessing was conferred in emergency on a certain occasion, but I could not from it deduce a rule; but when I find this written in the book of God, that on a certain occasion when it was evening time with his people God was pleased to give them light, I feel myself more than justified in deducing from it the rule, that always to his people at evening time there shall be light.

2. This, then, shall be the subject of my present discourse. There are different evening times that happen to the church and to God’s people, and as a rule we may rest quite certain that at evening time there shall be light.

3. God very frequently acts in grace in such a manner that we can find a parallel in nature. For instance, God says, “As the rain comes down and the snow from heaven, and does not return there, even so shall my word be, it shall not return to me void, it shall accomplish that which I please, it shall prosper in the thing where I have sent it.” We find him speaking concerning the coming of Christ, “He shall come down like rain upon the mown grass, as showers that water the earth.” We find him likening the covenant of grace to the covenant which he made with Noah concerning the seasons, and with man concerning the different revolutions of the year—“Seedtime and harvest, and cold and heat, and summer and winter, and day and night shall not cease.” We find that the works of creation are very frequently the mirror of the works of grace, and that we can draw figures from the world of nature to illustrate the great acts of God in the world of his grace towards his people. But sometimes God oversteps nature. In nature after evening time there comes night. The sun has had its hours of journeying; the fiery steeds are weary; they must rest. Lo, they descend the azure steeps and plunge their burning fetlocks1 in the western sea, while night in her ebony chariot follows at their heels. God, however, oversteps the rule of nature. He is pleased to send to his people times when the eye of reason expects to see no more day, but fears that the glorious landscape of God’s mercies will be shrouded in the darkness of his forgetfulness. But instead of it, God overrules nature, and declares that at evening time instead of darkness there shall be light.

4. It is now my business to illustrate this general rule by different particulars. I shall dwell most largely upon the last, that being the principal object of my sermon this morning.

5. I. To begin, then, “At evening time it shall be light.” The first illustration we take from the history of the church at large. The church at large has had many evening times. If I might derive an example to describe her history from anything in this lower world, I should describe her as being like the sea. At times the abundance of grace has been gloriously shown. Wave upon wave has triumphantly rolled in upon the land, covering the mire of sin, and claiming the earth for the Lord of Hosts. So rapid has been its progress that its course could scarcely be obstructed by the rocks of sin and vice. Complete conquest seemed to be foretold by the continual spread of the truth. The happy church thought that the day of her ultimate triumph had certainly arrived, so potent was her word by her ministers, so glorious was the Lord in the midst of her armies, that nothing could stand against her. She was “fair as the moon, clear as the sun, and terrible as an army with banners.” Heresies and schisms were swept away, false gods and idols lost their thrones; Jehovah Omnipotent was in the midst of his church, and he upon the white horse rode forth conquering and to conquer. Before long, however, if you read history, you find it always has happened that there came an ebb tide. Again the stream of grace seemed to recede, the poor church was driven back either by persecution or by internal decay; instead of gaining upon man’s corruptions it seemed as if man’s corruption gained on her; and where once there had been righteousness like the waves of the sea, there was the black mud and mire of the filthiness of mankind. Mournful tunes the church had to sing, when by the rivers of Babylon she sat down and wept, remembering her former glories, and weeping her present desolation. So has it always been—progressing, retrograding, standing still awhile, and then progressing once more, and falling back again. The whole history of the church has been a history of onward marches, and then of quick retreats—a history which I believe is, on the whole, a history of advance and growth, but which read chapter by chapter, is a mixture of success and repulse, conquest and discouragement. And so I think it will be, even to the last. We shall have our sunrises, our meridian noon, and then the sinking in the west; we shall have our sweet dawnings of better days, our Reformations, our Luthers and our Calvins; we shall have our bright full noontime, when the gospel is fully preached, and the power of God is known; we shall have our sunset of ecclesiastical weakness and decay. But just as sure as the evening tide seems to be drawing over the church, “at evening time it shall be light.” Mark well that truth all through the sacred history of the church. In the day when every lamp of prophecy seemed to have ceased, when he who once thundered in the streets of Rome was burned at the stake and strangled; when Savanarola2 had departed, and his followers had been put to confusion, and the black clouds of Popery seemed to have quenched the sunlight of God’s love and grace upon the world; in those dark dim ages when the gospel seemed to have died out, no doubt Satan whispered in himself; “The church’s sunset is now come.” It is evening time with her. Only a few rays are struggling from the sun of righteousness to cheer the darkness. Satan thought, perhaps the world should lie for ever beneath the darkness of his dragon wing. But lo! at evening time it was light. God brought forth the solitary monk that shook the world; he raised up men to be his assistants and helpers; the sun rose in Germany; it shone in every land, nor have we ever had an eventide so near to darkness since that auspicious time. Yet there have been other times of dark foreboding. There was a time when the church of England was sound asleep, when the various bodies of Dissenters were quite as bad, when religion degenerated into a dead formality, when no life and no power could be found in any pulpit throughout the land, but when an earnest man was so rare that he was almost a miracle. Good men stood over the ruins of our Zion, and said, “Alas, alas, for the slain of the daughter of my people! Where, where are the days of the mighty Puritans who with the banner of the truth in their hand crushed a lie beneath their feet? Oh truth! you trust departed; you have died.” “No,” says God, “it is evening time; and now it shall be light.” There were six young men at Oxford who met together to pray; those six young men were expelled for being too godly; they went abroad throughout our land, and the little leaven leavened the whole lump. Whitfield, Wesley, and their immediate successors flashed over the land like lightning in a dark night, making all men wonder from where they came and who they were; and working so great a work, that both in and out of the Establishment, the gospel came to be preached with power and vigour. At evening time God has always been pleased to send light to his church.

6. We may expect to see darker evening times than have ever been seen. Let us not imagine that our civilisation shall be more enduring than any other that has gone before it, unless the Lord shall preserve it. It may be that the suggestion will be realised which has often been laughed at as folly, that one day men should sit upon the broken arches of London Bridge, and marvel at the civilisation that has departed, just as men walk over the mounds of Nimrud,3 and marvel at cities buried there. It is just possible that all the civilisation of this country may die out in blackest night; it may be that God will repeat again the great story which has been so often told—“I looked, and lo, in the vision I saw a great and terrible beast, and it ruled the nations, but lo, it passed away and was not.” But if ever such things should be—if the world should ever have to return to barbarism and darkness—if instead of what we sometimes hope for, a constant progress to the brightest day, all our hopes should be blasted, let us rest quite satisfied that “at evening time there shall be light,” that the end of the world’s history shall be an end of glory. However red with blood, however black with sin the world may yet be, she shall one day be as pure and perfect as when she was created. The day shall come when this poor planet, shall find herself unrobed of those swaddling bands of darkness that have kept her lustre from breaking forth. God shall yet cause his name to be known from the rising of the sun to the going down of it,

And the shout of jubilee,
Loud as mighty thunders roar,
Or the fulness of the sea
When it breaks upon the shore,
Shall yet be heard the wide world o’er.

“At evening time it shall be light.”

7. II. This rule holds equally good in the little, as well as in the great. We know that in nature the very same law that rules the atom, governs also the starry orbs.

The very law that moulds a tear,
And bids it trickle from its source,
That law preserves the earth a sphere,
And guides the planets in their course.

It is even so with the laws of grace. “At evening time it shall be light” to the church; “at evening time it shall be light” to every individual. Christian let us descend to lowly things. You have had your bright days in temporal matters: you have sometimes been greatly blessed: you can remember the day when the calf was in the stall, when the olive yielded its fruit, and the fig tree did not deny its harvest; you can remember the years when the barn was almost bursting with the grain, and when the vat overflowed with the oil; you remember when the stream of your life was deep, and your ship floated softly on, without one disturbing billow of trouble to molest it. You said in those days, “I shall see no sorrow; God has hedged me about; he has preserved me; he has kept me; I am the darling of his providence; I know that all things work together for my good, for I can see it is plainly so.” Well, Christian, you have after that had a sunset; the sun which shone so brightly, began to cast its rays in a more oblique manner every moment, until at last the shadows were long, for the sun was setting, and the clouds began to gather; and though the light of God’s countenance tinged those clouds with glory, yet it was waxing dark. Then troubles lowered over you; your family sickened, your wife was dead, your crops were meagre, and your daily income was diminished, your cupboard was no more full, you were wandering for your daily bread; you did not know what should become of you, perhaps you were brought very low; the keel of your vessel grated upon the rocks; there was not enough of bounty to float your ship above the rocks of poverty. “I sink in deep mire,” you said, “where there is no standing; all your waves and your billows have gone over me.” What to do you could not tell; strive as you might, your strivings only made you worse. “Except the Lord build the house, they labour in vain who build it.” You used both industry and economy, and you added to that perseverance; but all in vain. It was in vain that you rose up early, and sat up late and ate the bread of carefulness; you could do nothing to deliver yourself, for all attempts failed. You were ready to die in despair. You thought the night of your life had gathered with eternal blackness. You did not wish to live for ever, but would rather have departed from this vale of tears. Christian! bear witness to the truth of the maxim of the text! Was it not light with you at evening time? The time of your extremity was just the moment of God’s opportunity. When the tide had run out to its very furthest, then it began to turn; your ebb had its flow; your winter had its summer; your sunset had its sunrise; “at evening time it was light.” Suddenly by some strange work of God, as you did think it was then, you were completely delivered. He brought out your righteousness like the light, and your glory as the noonday. The Lord appeared for you in the days of old; he stretched out his hand from above; he drew you out of deep waters; he set you upon a rock and established your goings. Mark, you then, oh heir of heaven! what has been true to you in the years that are past, shall be true to you even until the last. Are you this day exercised with woe, and care, and misery? Be of good cheer! In your “evening time it shall be light.” If God chooses to prolong your sorrow he shall multiply your patience; however, it may be that he will bring you into the deeps, and from there he will lead you up again. Remember your Saviour descended that he might ascend: so must you also stoop to conquer; and if God bids you stoop, should it be to the very lowest hell, remember, if he bade you stoop he will bring you up again. Remember what Jonah said—“Out of the belly of hell I cried, and you heard me.” Oh! exclaim with him of old, who trusted in God when he had nothing else to trust: “Although the fig tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vines; the labour of the olive shall fail and the fields shall yield no meat; the flock shall be cut off from the fold, and there shall be no herd in the stalls: Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation.” (Hab 3:17,18) Do so, and be blessed; for “at evening time it shall be light.”

8. III. But now we seek a third illustration from the spiritual sorrows of God’s own people. God’s children have two kinds of trials, temporal trials and spiritual trials. I shall be brief on this point, and shall borrow an illustration from good John Bunyan. You remember John Bunyan’s description of Apollyon meeting Christian. Bunyan tells it figuratively, but it is no figure: he who has ever met Apollyon will tell you that there is no mistake about the matter, but that there is a dreaded reality in it. Our Christian met Apollyon when he was in the valley of humiliation, and the dragon most fiercely assailed him; with fiery darts he sought to destroy him, and take away his life. The brave Christian stood up to him with all his might, and used his sword and shield very manfully, until his shield became studded with a forest of darts, and his hand did cleave to his sword. You remember how for many an hour that man and that dragon fought together, until at last the dragon gave Christian a horrible fall, and down he went upon the ground; and woe worth the day! at the moment when he fell he dropped his sword! You have only to picture the scene: the dragon drawing up all his might, planting his foot upon the Christian’s neck, and about to hurl the fiery dart into his heart. “Aha! I have you now,” he says, “you are in my power.” Strange to say, “at evening time it was light.” At the very moment when the dragon’s foot was enough to crush the very life out of poor Christian, it is said, he stretched out his hand; he grasped his sword, and giving a desperate thrust at the dragon he cried, “Do not rejoice over me, oh my enemy; for when I fall I shall arise again;” and so desperately he cut the dragon that he spread his wings and flew away, and Christian went on his journey rejoicing in his victory. Now, the Christian understands all that; it is no dream to him. He has been under the dragon’s foot many a time. Ah! and all the world put on a man’s heart at once is not equal in weight to one foot of the devil. When Satan once gets the upper hand of the spirit, he neither needs strength, nor will, nor malice, to torment it. Hard is that man’s lot, that has fallen beneath the hoof of the evil one in his fight with him. But blessed be God, the child of God is always safe as safe beneath the dragon’s foot as he shall be before the throne of God in heaven. “At evening time it shall be light.” And let all the powers of earth and hell, and all the doubts and fears that the Christian ever knew, conspire together to molest a saint, in that darkest moment, lo, God shall arise and his enemies shall be scattered, and he shall gain the victory. Oh for faith to believe that. Oh! for confidence in God never to doubt him, but in the darkest moment of our sorrows, still to feel all is well with us! “At evening time it shall be light.”

9. IV. Bear with me while I just hint at one more particular, and then I will come to that upon which I intend to dwell mainly at the last. This is also a truth to the sinner when coming to Christ. “At evening time it shall be light.” Very often when I am sitting to see enquirers, people have come to me to tell me the story of their spiritual history; and they tell me their little tale with an air of the greatest possible wonder, and ask me as soon as they have told it whether it is not extremely strange. “Do you know, sir, I used to be so happy in the things of the world, but conviction entered into my heart, and I began to seek the Saviour; and do you know that for a long time sir, when I was seeking the Saviour I was so miserable that I could not bear myself? Surely sir, this is a strange thing.” And when I have looked them in the face, and said, “No, it is not strange; do you know I have had a dozen tonight, and they have all told me the same; that is the way all God’s people go to heaven,” they have stared at me, as if they did not think I would tell them an untruth, but as if they thought it the strangest thing in all the world that anyone else should have felt as they have felt. “Now, sit down,” I say sometimes, “and I will tell you what were my feelings when I first sought the Saviour.” “Why, sir,” they say, “that is just how I felt; but I did not think anyone ever went the same path that I have gone.” Ah! well, it is no wonder that when we hold little acquaintance with each other in spiritual things our path should seem to be solitary; but he who knows much of the dealings of God with poor seeking sinners, will know that their experience is always very much alike, and you can generally tell one by another, while they are coming to Christ. Now, whenever the soul is truly seeking Christ it will have to seek him in the dark. When poor Lot ran out of Sodom, he had to run all the way in the twilight. The sun did not rise upon him until he got into Zoar. And so when sinners are running from their sins to the Saviour they have to run in the dark. They have no comfort and no peace, until they are enabled by simple faith to look for all to him who died upon the cross. I have in my presence this morning many poor souls under great distress. Poor heart! my text is a comfort to you. “At evening time it shall be light.” You had a little light once, the light of morality; you thought you could do something for yourself. That hope is all but gone now. Then you had another light: you had the wax taper of ceremonies, and you thought surely that it would illuminate you; but that hope is gone too. Still you thought you could grope your way a little by the remaining twilight of your good works, but all that seems to have gone now. You think “God will utterly destroy such a wretch as I am! Oh sir! Oh sir!

I the chief of sinners am.

There never lived a wretch so vile; or if there ever lived such a one, surely God must have cast him into hell at once; I am certain there is no hope for me. Why, sir, do what I may, I cannot make myself any better. When I try to pray I find I cannot pray as I would like; when I read the Bible it is all black against me; it is no use, when I go to the house of God the minister seems to be like Moses, only preaching the law to me—he never seems to have a word of comfort to my soul.” Well, I am glad of it, poor heart, I am glad of it; far be it from me to rejoice in your miseries as such, but I am glad you are where you are. I remember what the Countess of Huntingdon once said to Mr. Whitfield’s brother. Mr. Whitfield’s brother was under great distress of mind, and one day when sitting at tea, talking of spiritual things, he said, “Your ladyship, I know I am lost, I am certain I am!” Well, they talked to him, and they tried to rally him; but he persisted in it, that he was absolutely undone, that he was a lost man. Her ladyship clapped her hands, and said, “I am glad of it, Mr. Whitfield, I am glad of it.” He thought it was a cruel thing for her to say. He knew better when she explained herself by saying, “For the Son of man came to seek and to save that which was lost; so, then, he came to seek and to save you.” Now, if there are any here who are lost, I can only say, I am glad of it too, for such ones the mighty Shepherd came to rescue. If there are any of you who feel that you are condemned by God’s law, I thank God you are; for those who are condemned by the law in their consciences shall yet be pardoned by the gospel.

Come, guilty souls, and flee away
To Christ, and heal your wounds;
This is the glorious gospel day,
When free grace abounds.

No, this very hour, when you have no day in your heart, when you think the evening time has come, and you must perish for ever—now is the time when God will reveal himself to you. While you have a rag of your own you shall never have Christ; while you have a farthing of your own righteousness, you shall never have him; but when you are nothing, Christ is yours; when you have nothing of yourself to trust in, Jesus Christ in the gospel is your complete Saviour; he bids me tell you he came to seek and to save such as you are.

10. V. And now I am about to close, dwelling rather more largely upon the last particular—“At evening time it shall be light.” If our sun does not go down before it is noon, then all of us may expect to have an evening time of life. Either we shall be taken from this world by death, or else, if God should spare us, before long we shall arrive at the evening of life. In a few more years, the sere and yellow leaf will be the fit companion of every man and every woman. Is there anything melancholy in that? I think not. The time of old age, with all its infirmities, seems to me to be a time of peculiar blessedness and privilege to the Christian. To the worldly sinner, whose zest for pleasure has been removed by the debility of his powers and the decay of his strength, old age must be a time of tedium and pain; but to the veteran soldier of the cross, old age must assuredly be a time of great joy and blessedness. I was thinking the other evening, while riding in a delightful country, how similar to evening time old age is. The sun of hot care has gone down; that sun which shone upon that early piety of ours, which had not much depth of root, and which scorched it so that it died—that sun which scorched our next true godliness, and often made it almost wither, and would have withered it, had it not been planted by the rivers of water—that sun is now set. The good old man has no particular care now in all the world. He says to business, to the hum and noise and strife of the age in which he lives, “You are nothing to me; to make my calling and election sure, to hold firmly my confidence, and wait until my change comes, this is all my employment; with all your worldly pleasures and cares I have no connection.” The toil of his life is all done, he has no more need to be sweating and toiling now, as he had in his youth and manhood; his family have grown up, and are no more dependent upon him; it may be, God has blessed him, and he has sufficient for the needs of his old age, or it may be that in some rustic alms house he breathes out the last few years of his existence. How calm and quiet! Like the labourer, who, when he returns from the field at evening time casts himself upon his couch, so does the old man rest from his labours. And at evening time we gather into families, the fire is kindled, the curtains are drawn, and we sit around the family fire, to think no more of the things of the great rumbling world; and even so in old age, the family and not the world are the engrossing topic.

11. Did you ever notice how venerable grandsires when they write a letter fill it full of news concerning their children? “John is well,” “Mary is ill,” “all our family are in health.” Very likely some business friend writes to say, “Stocks are down,” or, “the rate or interest is up;” but you never find that in any good old man’s letters; he writes about his family, his recently married daughters, and all that. Just what we do at evening time; we only think of the family circle and forget the world. That is what the gray headed old man does. He thinks of his children and forgets all beside. Well, then, how sweet it is to think that for such an old man there is light in the darkness! “At evening time it shall be light.” Do not dread your days of weariness, do not dread your hours of decay, oh soldier of the cross; new lights shall burn when the old lights are quenched; new candles shall be lit when the lamps of life are dim. Do not fear! The night of your decay may be coming on; but “at evening time it shall be light.” At evening time the Christian has many lights that he never had before; lit by the Holy Spirit and shining by his light. There is the light of a bright experience. He can look back, and he can raise his Ebenezer saying, “Here by your help I have come.” He can look back at his old Bible, the light of his youth, and he can say, “This promise has been proven to me, this covenant has been proven true. I have thumbed my Bible many a year; I have never yet thumbed a broken promise. The promises have all been kept to me; ‘not one good thing has failed.’” And then if he has served God he has another light to cheer him: he has the light of the remembrance of what good God has enabled him to do. Some of his spiritual children come in and talk about times when God blessed his conversation to their souls. He looks upon his children, and his children’s children, rising up to call the Redeemer blessed; at evening time he has a light. But at the last the night comes in real earnest: he has lived long enough, and he must die. The old man is on his bed; the sun is going down, and he has no more light. “Open up the windows, let me look for the last time into the open sky,” says the old man. The sun has gone down; I cannot see the mountains over there; they are all a mass of mist; my eyes are dim, and the world is dim too. Suddenly a light shoots across his face, and he cries, “Oh daughter! daughter, here! I can see another sun rising. Did you not tell me that the sun went down just now? Lo, I see another; and where those hills used to be in the landscape, those hills that were lost in darkness, daughter, I can see hills that seem like burning brass; and I think upon that summit I can see a city bright as jasper. Yes, and I see a gate opening, and spirits coming out. What is that they say? Oh they sing! they sing! Is this death?” And before he has asked the question, he has gone where he does not need to answer it, for death is all unknown. Yes, he has passed the gates of pearl; his feet are on the streets of gold; his head is bedecked with the crown of immortality; the palm branch of eternal victory is in his hand. God has accepted him in the beloved.

Far from a world of grief and sin,
With God eternally shut in,

he is numbered with the saints in light, and the promise is fulfilled, “At evening time it shall be light.”

12. And now, my gray headed hearer, will it be so with you? I remember the venerable Mr. Jay once in Cambridge, when preaching, reaching out his hand to an old man who sat just as some of you are sitting there, and saying, “I wonder whether those grey hairs are a crown of glory or a fool’s cap; they are one or the other.” For a man to be unconverted at the age to which some of you have attained is indeed to have a fool’s cap made of grey hairs; but if you have a heart consecrated to Christ, to be his children now, with the full belief that you shall be his for ever, is to have a crown of glory upon your brows.

13. And now, young men and maidens, we shall soon be old. In a little time our youthful frame shall totter; we shall need a staff by and by. Years are short things; they seem to us to get shorter, as each one of them runs over our head. My brother, you are young as I am; say, have you a hope that your eventide shall be light? No, you have begun in drunkenness; and the drunkards eventide is darkness made more dark, and after it damnation. No, young man; you have begun your life with profanity, and the swearer’s eventide has no light, except the lurid flame of hell. Beware of such an eventide as that! No, you have begun in gaiety; take care lest that which begins in gaiety ends in eternal sadness. Would God we had all begun with Christ! Would that you would choose wisdom; for “her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace.” Some religious men are miserable; but religion does not make them so. True religion is a happy thing. I never knew what the hearty laugh and what the happy face meant, until I knew Christ; but knowing him I trust I can live in this world like one who is not of it, but who is happy in it. If keeping my eye upward to the Saviour, I can say with David, “Bless the Lord, oh my soul, and all that is within me bless his holy name,” and bless him most of all for this, that I know how to bless him. Ah! and if you in your prime, in the days of your youth, have been enabled by the Holy Spirit to consecrate yourselves to God, you will, when you come to the end, look back with some degree of sorrow upon your infirmities, but with a far greater degree of joy upon the grace which began with you in childhood, which preserved you in manhood, which matured you for your old age, and which at last gathered you like a shock of grain fully ripe into the garner. May the great God and Master bless these words to each of us, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.

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Footnotes

  1. Fetlock: That part of a horse’s leg where the tuft of hair grows behind the pastern-joint; the tuft itself. OED.
  2. Girolamo Savonarola (September 21, 1452-May 23, 1498), was an Italian Dominican priest and leader of Florence from 1494 until his execution in 1498. He was known for his book burning, destruction of what he considered immoral art, and hostility to the Renaissance. He vehemently preached against the moral corruption of much of the clergy at the time, and his main opponent was Pope Alexander VI (Rodrigo Borgia).b
  3. Nimrud is an ancient Assyrian city located south of Nineveh on the river Tigris. In ancient times the city was called Kalhu. The Arabs called the city Nimrud after Nimrod, a legendary hunting hero. The city covered an area of around 16 square miles. Ruins of the city are found in modern day Iraq, some 19 miles southeast of Mosul.  

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