The March! By C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, March 31, 1861, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At Exeter Hall, Strand.

And it came to pass, when the ark set out, that Moses said, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered, and let those who hate you flee before you.” (Nu 10:35)

1. The people of God in the wilderness were led instrumentally by the wisdom of Moses and his father-in-law Hobab; but really their guiding star was the visible presence of God in the pillar of cloud by day and pillar of fire by night. I suppose that the possession of this pillar as a guide did not remove from them the duty and the necessity of using the judgment of Moses and Hobab concerning to the place where they should camp. You will remember that Moses expressly said to his relative, “You know how to camp in the wilderness, and you shall be our eyes.” They had the guidance of God, yet they were not to neglect the wisdom which God had given to his servants, and the judgment with which he had endowed them. We ought to learn from this, I think, that while we always seek the guidance of God in providence, yet we may frequently find direction and guidance in the use of our own common sense, our own discretion with which the Lord has endowed us. As long as the pillar of cloud did not move, the people always waited. However inconvenient the place might be, if it rested one day, or twenty days, or a month, or a whole year, they stood still; but the moment that cloud moved, whether the fiery column marched through the darkness of the night, or the cloudy pillar mellowed the brightness of the sun, and screened them from its torrid heat, they moved at once. However excellent might be their encampment, they never dared to delay when once the presence of God moved from above them. It was his to lead—it was theirs to follow. Yet, before they began the march, before the standard of Judah was uplifted, and that tribe began to take up its tents to lead the vanguard, the silver trumpet was always blown in the front. It was heard through the entire encampment—the silver trumpet, which seemed to say, “Arise! depart!—this is not your rest. Your God has moved, and you must follow.” Then Moses himself came forward, and stretching out his hands, he cried, “Arise, oh God, and let your enemies be scattered, and let those who hate you flee before you.” When this was done, on marched the mighty host; and when they came to their stopping place again, and the trumpet sounded for the evening rest, up came the king in Jeshurun, the prophet of Horeb, and lifting up his hands, again he cried, “Return to your rest and to the many thousands of Israel,” and the pillar rested above the great encampment, and gave them a bright and flaming light by night, even as it gave them a glorious covering and protection by day. To what use are we to put this prayer of Moses; for no passage of Scripture is of private interpretation. No single text in the word relates simply to the occasion on which it is spoken; but whatever things were written previously were written for our learning. The word of God is a living word; not a word that had life in it in the day of Moses and is now dead, but a word which is as living to us at this hour as when it first came from the prophetic lips of the great Lawgiver. I think I shall be warranted in using the text in three ways this morning. “Rise up, Lord and let your enemies be scattered and let those who hate you flee before you.” We shall use it, first, as the watchword of God’s Israel in every age; secondly, we are warranted by the sixty-eighth Psalm in referring this text, typically and mystically, to the resurrection of our Lord Jesus Christ. And I think, also, the guidance of God’s Spirit will warrant us, in the third place, in using this text personally, for ourselves as individuals, and as a church; and we would offer this prayer now that the ark of God in our midst is about to be moved, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered; and let those who hate you flee before you.”

2. I. First, then, THIS HAS BEEN THE WATCHWORD OF THE CHURCH OF GOD IN ALL AGES.

3. The people of God in the wilderness were the picture of God’s church upon earth. We are strangers and foreigners upon the earth; we are pilgrims and sojourners as all our fathers were. I was struck last evening, on reading for my own instruction the thirty-third chapter of the book of Numbers, with the constant occurrence of verses concerning the moving of the people. “And they moved from Etham, and turned again to Pihahiroth.” “And they journeyed in the wilderness of Etham, and pitched in Marah. And they moved from Marah, and came to Elim.” They went from the place of bitterness to the place of feasting. “And there were in Elim twelve fountains of water, and seventy palm trees; and they pitched there. And they moved from Elim, and camped by the Red Sea. And they moved from the Red Sea, and camped in the wilderness of Sin. And they took their journey out of the wilderness of Sin, and camped in Dophkah. And they departed from Dophkah, and camped in Alush. And they moved from Alush and camped at Rephidim.” And so the whole chapter is a succession of movings and encampings, until at last they ceased to dwell in tents, and came to live in their own walled cities in the land of Canaan. Just such has been the history of the Church—it has always been moving from its place, and such has been the condition of each individual. Here we have no abiding city. “We seek a city which has foundations, whose Builder and Maker is God.” Here we have but an earthly house of our tabernacle which is soon to be dissolved, and we are continually men of the weary foot, who do not rest, but journey onward to the place of rest.

4. Albeit that they had no habitation except their tents, yet it is true of Israel in the wilderness that they always had a habitation. Do you not remember the song of Moses:—“Lord, you have been our dwelling place in all generations.” Wherever they were, God was their dwelling place. As I have said before, by day they were covered with his cloud, and they dwelt under the vast canopy like princes in a pavilion; by night they were covered with its fiery lustre, and they rested under it with a light that only brightened the earth by night for their eyes. God’s wings were always over them; he carried them all the days of old, and they really rested and dwelt in him. Today, in our Father’s house there are many mansions, and it was true of them yesterday that in their Father’s house were many tents; they lived in those tents; but all of them lived in their Father’s house. This, too, is true of the entire Church; always wandering, yet never far from home: unhoused, yet always in palaces; sometimes destitute, afflicted, tormented, and yet always clothed, always rich, always feasting to the full; deserted, yet not alone; forsaken, yet multiplied; left, yet still abiding with him who fills all in all.

5. We might carry the parallel out still further, but it is enough for us to remark this morning that, in another point, the people of God in the wilderness were the picture of the Church of Christ. Wherever they marched, when God went before them, they marched to victory. Lo, the Red Sea rolls in their way; the pillar of cloud moves; they follow; the frightened sea divides, and the Red Sea itself is astonished. What ails you, oh sea, that you were driven back; and you waters, that you stood upright as a heap? It was before the Lord, before the presence of the mighty God of Jacob. They march onward; the Amalekites attack them; they fall upon them suddenly when they are unawares: but God fights for them, Moses’ hands are upheld until the going down of the sun, and Joshua smites the Amalekites, and Jehovah Nissi is all glorious. Then Sihon, king of the Amorites, came out against them, and Og, king of Bashan, and the Moabites attack them, but the Lord is leads the way, and they suffer no harm. Their enemies melt before them as the fat of rams; into smoke do they consume, yes, into smoke do they consume away. Even so it has been with the Church of God in all ages; her march has been that of one who is as fair as the moon, as clear as the sun, and as terrible as an army with banners. Only let her silvery trumpet sound, and the echo shakes the vaults of hell. Only let her warriors unsheathe their sword, and their enemies fly before them like thin clouds before a Biscay gale. Her path is the pathway of a conqueror: her march has been a procession of triumph. Wherever she has put her foot, the Lord has given her that land to be her heritage for ever and ever, and as it was in the beginning, it is now, and ever shall be until this world shall end. Amen.

6. Now, having just touched upon the parallel, let me show how this war cry has really been heard by God and has been fulfilled for all his people. Turn to this book, this book of the wars of the Lord. Wherever his Church has gone and he has risen up, have not his enemies been scattered? Though there were the hundred kings in Canaan, were they not hung upon trees, or speedily put to death with the edge of the sword? Though it was Agag, king of the Amalekites, was he not hewn in pieces? Though it should be the mighty princes of the Philistines, did not their champions lose their heads and their princes quickly scattered? Though it should be the embattled ranks of Syria, did not God strike them in the valleys, and chase them on the hills? Though it was Sennacherib, yet did not God rise up, and did not his enemies at once die before his presence? Did they not fall like the leaves of the forest “when autumn has blown?” Though it was the hosts of Egypt in later times, or the mighty ranks of Babylon, or Media, or Persia, can we not say concerning them all, “Your right hand, oh Lord, your right hand, oh Lord, has dashed in pieces the enemy; your right hand, oh Lord, has done wonderful things, this is known by all the earth?” But when we have read the Bible story through, the book of God’s triumph has only begun. Look at the later battles of the Church. You remember the story of Oliver Cromwell and his men at the battle of Dunbar, when before the battle all of them knelt on the heather and asked the Lord their God to be with them, and then springing up they chanted this old psalm:—

Let God arise, and scattered let all his enemies be,
And let all those that do him hate before his presence flee.
As the smoke is driven, so drive them. As fire melts wax away,
Before God’s face let wicked men, so perish and decay.

And then, their swords carried the day, and their enemies fled down the hill, and a speedy victory was given. I quote this as a picture and illustration of the history of the entire Church. I think, in a spiritual sense, when Luther first bent his knee, the Church began to chant, “Let God arise, and let his enemies be scattered.” When Knox in Scotland upheld the glory of Jesus’ name, was it not once again, “Oh God arise, let those who hate you flee before you?” When Whitfield and Wesley, seraphic evangelists of Jesus Christ, went through this land, was not this the very song of Israel, “Oh God, arise, and let your enemies be scattered?” And shall it not be ours today? Only let God go out with our arms; only let him speak through our ministers; only let him indwell in our elders, only let him make the bodies of our Church members his temples, and his enemies must be scattered, and they must consume away. I can well conceive, my brethren, that such a prayer as this would well befit the tongue of a minister who lands as the first herald of the cross in some barbarian land. My brother, a solitary missionary in some populous city in China might bend his knee when first he attempts to preach, and say, “Oh Lord, arise, and let your enemies be scattered, and let those who hate you flee before you.” A Williams landing upon Erromanga1 might say, even though his blood stained the wave, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered.” Livingstone and Moffat, toiling in the midst of the thick dense ignorance of central Africa might frequently say from their innermost souls, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered.” Those brave men who risk all for Christ, not counting their lives dear to them so that they might finish their course with joy—I think when they as pioneers for Christ bear the ark in the midst of the wilderness, they could not breath a better prayer for themselves, and you and I cannot do better than raise it for them now, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered; let those who hate you flee before you.”

7. Brethren, this ought to be our prayer today, in anticipation of the Millennial splendour. When it is to come, I do not know. Dr. Cumming may; but I am not so wise as he. This I know, Scripture says he is to come; but I think it says, “He shall come in such an hour as you do not think”—he comes as a thief in the night. Whether he shall come in the year 1866, I do not know; I hope he may; but I had rather that he should come in the year 1861. I should not like to postpone my watchfulness until 1866, but be always looking for him, for whether he shall come in the morning or at cock crow, in midday or midnight, blessed is that servant who when his Lord comes, shall be found watching. Cast your eyes mentally over the world, and look a what a state it is in today. What wonderful changes have taken place, and yet how firm are the roots of evil! How tightly bound around the very granite of earth’s nature are the roots of the great upas2 tree of iniquity. Who can hope to tear it up by the roots, or cut down this towering cedar? See in one land where liberty was boasted of, the slaver driver’s lash still dripping with gouts of gore. See in another land where there is much advancement in many things, the people priest ridden, and borne down beneath the yoke; look at the myriads that have never seen the great light, that sit in darkness and in the valley of the shadow of death. Where is the arm, where is the arm that can put back the world upon its proper pivot? Where is the almighty power that can turn once again the pole, so that earth shall stand no more oblique, but in uprightness roll before the throne of God? Where is the arm that can roll up the clouds as a mantle, and the mists as rags? There is only one. And today our business is to cry, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered; let those who hate you flee before you.” Come quickly, come quickly—come, Lord Jesus. Then shall the world be rid of her tyrants. Then shall slavery cease to be. Then shall your unsuffering kingdom come, the Great Shepherd shall reign, and he shall be extolled everywhere—“to him shall be given of the gold of Sheba; prayer also shall be made for him continually, and daily he shall be praised.”

8. Before I pass from this head, quietly, for the edification of each individual Christian, let me remark that this prayer will suit your personal difficulties. Have you been in conflict lately? Has old Apollyon put you to your wits end? Has he thrown his fiery arrows at you thick as hailstones when they fell on Egypt? Have you been crushed beneath his foot? Can you not deliver yourself? Pray “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered.” Do your doubts prevail? Has your faith suffered an eclipse? Has a darkness that might be felt brooded over you? Say “Rise up, Lord.” All that is needed in the darkest night to clear it away is for the sun to rise. Do not battle with your doubts yourself: Do not wrestle with your own fears. Pray “Rise up, Lord; these doubts of mine are enemies to your honour; enemies to your promise; enemies to your truth. Rise up, Lord, and let them flee before you.” You shall soon find peace and quietness, and in assurance and confidence your souls shall rest. Are you beset today by men who hate you? As a child of God have you acted with such simplicity and integrity that men who do not understand you have imputed to you wrong motives? Have you been slandered and abused? “Do not avenge yourself, but rather give place to wrath. Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord.” Let your prayer be, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered.” Are you serving God in some particular work where many are seeking to undo all that you can accomplish? Are you a City Missionary, and do you labour in the midst of a den of iniquity? Does it seem that what you do in one day is undone in one hour by others? Take it to the throne of grace. Say, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered.” Have you conceived a great purpose within your soul, and does providence seem to stand in the way of its accomplishment? Has the Lord commanded you to some special work, and do friends discourage and enemies abuse you? This prayer may suit you: “Rise up, Lord.” It only needs that God should make bare his arm; his rising up is enough. As Luther said when opposing the Church of Rome—“They are not strong; God can overthrow them with his little finger.” And you say that too. All the foes of the Church with all their battlements behind which they are entrenched are nothing. They only seem to be. They are shadows, emptiness, nothing. Do you in confidence cry to your God—“Lord, only rise; only stand up; only reveal your power in any way whatever, and your enemies are scattered at once, and those who hate you must flee before you for evermore.”

When he makes bare his arm,
What shall his work withstand?
When he his people’s cause defends,
Who, who shall stay his hand?
Let us, in life and death,
Boldly your truth declare;
And publish, with our latest breath,
Your love and guardian care.

9. II. We shall now take the text IN ITS REFERENCE TO CHRIST. Scripture is the best expounder of Scripture. Only a diamond can cut a diamond. One passage in the Word helps to explain another. That book has keys in its own self for all its own locks, and keys that fit every door. The sixty-eighth Psalm informs us that the moving of the ark from the lower place of the city of David was typical of the ascending of Christ into heaven. Ah! I think, my dear brethren, the sorrowing Church when they beheld their Lord dragged by cruel men to judgment, when they heard him accused and slandered, when they saw him mocked and spit upon, must have considered the battle to be lost. The tears must have run from their eyes when they saw that he who was to be the Deliverer of Israel could not deliver himself. How dense must have been the gloom over the fearing hearts of the Church when they saw their King, their Head, dragged away, and nailed ignominiously to the tree; and how dead must all their hopes have been when at last he bowed his head and gave up the ghost, and the soldier pierced him to the heart, and there came out the blood and water! Was it not the day of hell’s triumph, the hour of earth’s despair, the moment of heaven’s defeat? No; just the opposite. That moment when Christ died he gave the death blow to all his enemies. That hour when they thought they were treading on him, he was crushing them, and bruising the serpent’s head. Even when the Master was laid in the tomb, and had to sleep there his three days as Jonah in the whale’s belly, if the Church had had faith, they might have come early on the dawn of the first day in the week, and standing outside the tomb, they might have begun to sing, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered, and let those who hate you flee before you.”

10. I think it will be no great stretch of the imagination if we conceive that the angels did in that hallowed day come down from heaven before the sun had risen, knowing the appointed time, and while one of them rolled away the stone the rest stood waiting on the wing, and chanting, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered, let those who hate you flee before you.” I think I see the champion awaken, he unbinds the napkin from his head, he sees again the light—he rolls off the grave clothes of the tomb, rolls them up and places them by themselves. He has arisen; the stone has been rolled away; he comes out into the fresh air and lives. Oh Hell, how did you shake! Oh Death, how were you plagued! Oh Earth, your sun had risen indeed that day! Heaven, surely you rejoiced, and the song rolled mightily along your streets! He rises, and in that moment sin dies. The resurrection of Christ was God’s acceptance of Christ’s sacrifice. It was all that was needed. The handwriting of ordinances had once been nailed to the cross—it is now for ever blotted out. Once he had borne the burden, but now the burden is removed from his neck. God accepts Christ as being justified, and therefore he rises from the dead, and by that act all his people are justified. “He rose again for our justification.” The last hope of sin was crushed—its last pretence to any claim upon the people of God was hushed for ever—its last arrogant claim to any right to their souls, or to their bodies, was quashed in heaven’s high court when Christ the Risen came out in pure white robes to demand the spotlessness of his people in him because of his resurrection for them. Nor was only sin that day scattered. Did not all the hosts of hell fall before him? How glad they had been! All the demons had exalted themselves with the hope that their reign would now begin. The iron chain should be loosed, the bolts at the pit’s mouth should be broken. Now might they come out, and revel, for the king who was to destroy them had been destroyed himself. But when he arose, blank despair was on the face of every fiend. How could they hope to kill his people? “Because he lives, they shall live also.” How could they hope to condemn his people? “Who shall lay anything to the charge of God’s elect? It is Christ who died, yes rather, who is risen again.” Their hopes were gone, they were scattered indeed. Just as the wax melts before the fire, so did their hopes melt away. Where was the boast of death that day? If Christ remained in the jaws of death—if the Holy One seen corruption?—then the redeemed would have remained the bondslaves of death too; but he lives; he has broken the gates of brass, and cut the bars of iron asunder. Blessed are those who sleep, for they shall rise too. He has led the way, the Breaker has gone up before them, the King ahead of them. He has cleared the gap; they have only to follow and enter into the resurrection and the life. That day I think, all the gods of the heathen fell down. It is a tradition that, at that hour when the veil of the temple was torn in two, all the gods tottered on their thrones; they did so spiritually, if they did not literally. That day slavery began to relax its grasp on its whip; that day the tyrant’s throne began to shake; that day heaven shone with greater splendour, and hell was more murky and dull than it had ever been before, that day Evil heard its own death knell sound in the air, while Good heard the marriage peal of rejoicing saints, while angels shouted over a rising Saviour.

11. Nor was that all. After Christ had thus arisen, you will remember that he rose again. He rose from the grave to earth—he next rose from earth to heaven I think we may again conjecture that the angelic spirits came to meet the Master and they said, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered, and let those who hate you flee before you.” Up he went, dragging sin, death and hell at his chariot wheels, scattering, as he rode along, those gifts which he had received for men. He went up with the sound of trumpet and with shout of archangels. Those near the gates, sing, “Lift up your heads, oh you gates, and be lifted up you everlasting door, so that the King of Glory may come in.” The angelic spirits on the other side chant the song, “Who is the King of Glory?” and once again, in waves of melody, they throw open the pearly gate singing again, “Lift up your heads, oh you gates, and be lifted up you everlasting doors, so that the King of Glory may come in.” On, on he rides; having scattered for ever all his enemies; having put all things under his feet, and being crowned King of kings, and Lord of lords; the Wonderful, the Counsellor; the Mighty God; the Everlasting Father; the Prince of Peace. Glory be to your name; Jesus, my soul warms with your fire! Glory be to you! These hands wish to put the crown upon your head: this voice wishes to sing instead of preach your praise. Blessed be you, God over all; blessed for ever! You have ascended up on high; you have led captivity captive; you have received gifts for men. Rise up, Lord; rise up from the throne of your majesty; come and take the purchased possession; come to claim your own, and these hands shall welcome you with joyful clapping; and this tongue shall welcome you with joyous songs; yes, even these very feet shall dance like David before the ark, if you will only arise, for your enemies shall be scattered, and those who hate you shall flee before you.

12. III. But, thirdly, WHAT MESSAGE HAS THIS TEXT FOR US, AND HOW MAY WE USE IT?

13. In the providence of God we, as a church and people, have had to wander often. This is our third sojourn within these walls. It is now about to close. We have had at all times and seasons a compulsion for moving; sometimes a compulsion of conscience, at other times a compulsion of pleasure, as on this occasion. I am sure that when we first went to the Surrey Music Hall, God went with us. Satan went too, but he fled before us. That frightful calamity, the impression of which can never be erased from my mind, turned out in the providence of God to be one of the most wonderful means of turning public attention to special services; and I do not doubt that it—fearful catastrophe though it was—has been the mother of multitudes of blessings. The Christian world noted the example; they saw its resulting success; they followed it, and to this day, in the theatre and in the cathedral, the word of God is preached where it was never preached before. Never could it be more obviously seen than in that place, that the word of God when preached simply and earnestly is the power of God to salvation for everyone who believes. In each of our movings we have had reason to see the hand of God, and here particularly; for there are very many residents in the West-end, who have in this place come to listen to the Word, who probably might not have taken a journey beyond the river; and here God’s grace has broken the hard heart; here have souls been renewed, and wanderers been reclaimed. Give to the Lord, oh you mighty, give to the Lord glory and strength; give to the Lord the glory that is due to his name. And now we journey to the house which God has in so special a manner given to us; I stand before you now as Moses stood before the people of Israel, and with faith like his, though not with such power and might as belonged to that honoured servant of God, I would pray, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered, and let those who hate you flee before you.”

14. “But what enemies do we have?” you ask. We have multitudes. We shall have to do battle in our new Tabernacle more closely with that old enemy of the church the Scarlet Beast: Rome has built one of its batteries very close to our place, and there is one who styles himself “Archbishop of Southwark.” Well, we shall have to do battle against him, and woe to you, Babylon! woe to you, Babylon! Only let Christ be preached, and where is Antichrist? Let the cross be lifted up and away with your crucifixes. Let the truth be declared, and where are your lies? This one Book, as the old reformers used to say—this Book against all the popes, and cardinals, and priests, and all the demons in hell. You have seen the picture, I dare say, of a pair of scales, in one of which there is a Bible, very heavy, touching the very ground; and in the other there is a pope with his tiara on, and a cardinal with his scarlet cap, and a whole host of priests, and Virgin Marys, and idols piled high, but they are all high up in the air; there is another learned doctor just hooking on to the chains and trying to pull down if he can, but all their combined weight cannot reach anything like the weight of this one blessed Book. Why, a farthing candle of divine truth can set on fire a whole prairie of popish error. It needs no great power in the preacher: he only needs to preach Christ’s truth as he finds it in the Word of God, and he shall find it to be a blast from the nostrils of God to wither up the beauty of this towering cedar. What does it matter to me whether it is a cedar or a fir tree? In the name of God I feel my axe this morning, it is sharp and keen, and shall be laid to the roots of this tree, and if we cannot avail, yet other hands and other arms should wield that very same axe so sharp and keen, and you, towering cedar, whose top is in the stars, but whose roots are in hell, you shall yet come down, and the nations of the earth shall rejoice because of your fall.

15. Then we shall have another enemy. We have very close to us, almost as a next door neighbour, Infidelity. There has been one of its special places for display. Well, well, Infidelity is only a very puny adversary comparatively; it is not half as cunning as Popery, and has nothing like its might. There is something in Romanism that can seize the human mind; but Infidelity is bare, bald, naked, filthy; there are very few who will be overturned by that in an age when men are compelled to come more and more closely to God in the discoveries of nature, and the wondrous findings of science. We are not afraid of you, oh Infidelity. Come forth Goliath, it is only David who meets you, the ministers of Christ are very little compared with your stalking greatness and gigantic might; but the sling and stone of Christ, preached simply, and preached affectionately, shall reach the forehead of your wisdom and hit you and bring you down.

16. But we have worse enemies than this. We shall have to deal with the indifference of the masses all around us, and with their carelessness concerning Gospel truth—we shall have to deal with prevailing sin and corruption—sin which at night falls from the very steps of that edifice may be seen in all the colours of its prostitution. And how will we deal with it? Will we bring in some Socialist system? Shall we extol some new method of political economy? No! the cross, the old cross is enough. This is the true Jerusalem blade, to cut like that razor of old, with which the Tarquin cut the whetstone.3 We will only preach Christ as the sinner’s Saviour, the Spirit of God as applying Christ’s truth to the soul, and God the Father in his infinite sovereignty saving whom he wills, and in the bounty of his mercy willing to receive the vilest of the vile; and there is no indifference so callous, no ignorance so blind, no iniquity so base,—there is no conscience so seared as not to be made to yield when God wills it, before the might of his strength. “Rise up, Lord; rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered, and let those who hate you flee before you.”

17. But what is to be our prayer? Does it say, “Rise up, preacher; occupy your pulpit?” Truly we may say, “Awake, Barak, awake, and lead your captives captive, you son of Abinoam;” but that is after the battle is fought, not before. “Rise up, Lord! Oh God the Father, rise up! Pluck your right hand out of your bosom, and let your purposes be accomplished! Oh God the Son, rise up; show your wounds, and plead before your Father’s face, and let your blood bought ones be saved! Rise up, oh God the Holy Spirit, with solemn awe, we do invoke you! Let those who have resisted you give way! Come, melt the ice; dissolve the granite; let the adamantine heart give way; cut the iron sinew and bow the stiff neck! Rise up, Lord, Father, Son, and Spirit, we can do nothing without you; but if you will arise, your enemies shall be scattered, and those who hate you shall flee before you.”

18. Will you and I go home and pray this prayer by ourselves, fervently laying hold upon the horns of God’s altar? I charge you, my brothers in Christ, do not neglect this private duty. Go, each one of you, to your bedrooms; shut to your doors; cry to him who hears in secret, and let this be the burden of your cry—“Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered.” And at your altars tonight, when your families are gathered together, still let the same cry ring up to heaven. And then tomorrow, and all the days of the week, and as often as we shall meet together to hear his word and to break bread, cry, “Rise up, Lord, and let your enemies be scattered; and let those who hate you flee before you.” Pray for your children, your neighbours, your families, and your friends, and let your prayer be—“Rise up, Lord; rise up, Lord.” Pray for this neighbourhood; pray for the dense darkness of Southwark, and Walworth, and Lambeth. And oh! if you cannot pray for others because your own needs come so strongly before your mind, remember, sinner, all you need is by faith to look to Christ, and then you may say, “Rise up, Lord; scatter my doubts; kill my unbelief; drown my sins in your blood; let your enemies be scattered; let those who hate you flee before you.”

Footnotes

  1. Erromanga, an island in the southern region of Vanuatu (formerly the New Hebrides) is only 40 kilometres long and 25 kilometres wide, at its widest point. The famous explorer, Captain James Cook, who visited the island in 1774 and ended up having a military skirmish with the islanders, commented afterwards that "no one would ever venture to introduce Christianity into Erromanga because neither fame nor profit would offer the requisite inducement." In November 1839, John Williams, a British missionary who had worked in the eastern Pacific for over twenty years, did attempt to make contact with the people of Erromanga. Williams, who was scouting out potential new mission sites for the London Missionary Society, visited Erromanga on board the Camden. He received what he thought was a cordial reception. On his second excursion on the island further than the beach at Dillon’s Bay, the sheltered anchorage on the north-west part of the island, he and his companion James Harris, a sailor who was seriously considering entering the ministry, were attacked and killed. The news of their deaths shook the missionary community in the southern Pacific and back in Great Britain and in Canada as well.  
  2. Upas: A fabulous tree alleged to have existed in Java, at some distance from Batavia, with properties so poisonous as to destroy all animal and vegetable life to a distance of fifteen or sixteen miles around it. OED.  
  3. During the war between the Romans and the Sabines in about 290 B.C., Tarquin, king of Rome, challenged Attius Navius, a fortuneteller, to read his mind. When Navius declared that Tarquin’s thought would be accomplished, Tarquin revealed that he thought Navius would cut a whetstone in half with a razor, which he did immediately.  

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2010/01/22/march