A Sermon Published on Thursday, November 5, 1914,
Delivered by C.H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington,
On Lord’s-Day Evening, June 18, 1869.
“The king also himself passed over the brook Kedron.” — 2 Samuel 15:23.
THE brook Kedron was an insignificant, but usually a most foul and filthy ditch, outside the walls of Jerusalem. If it was not, as some have called it, the open town-sewer, yet there are reasons for believing that at least the filth of the temple ran into it. The scourings of the sacrificial places went by an under-channel into this brook, and we have one or two instances in Holy Writ where, when houses were purged and cleansed, the filth was thrown into the brook Kedron. The passing, therefore, over that foul and black brook becomes the symbol of a time of deep sorrow and acute distress. The king himself, then, passed over the brook Kedron. The royal road lies over the place of sorrow. The way, even for kings, is by the brook of grief and shame. Let us think over that thought for a while.
I. This Was True Of King David.
David was one of the best of kings; certainly in the long list of his successors we meet with, none did such service to his country as did David, the once shepherd-boy. It was through him, in his youth, that the country was saved from being enslaved by Philistia, and oftentimes in after years that stout heart and brave arm led in the van against the enemies of the Israel of God. He was the patriot-king. If his country became a happy one, it was through his valor that it became so. And yet, good as he was, his subjects disowned him, and turned against him, and, in fear of them, “the king also himself passed over the brook Kedron.” It is an ungrateful world we live in. Those who serve it best will find that at times it gives no rewards, or only gives them grudgingly, and afterwards forgets the good the man has done, because for some moment the tide of popular feeling may set against him. “Cursed is he that trusteth in man, and maketh flesh his arm.” If you live to your fellow-men, even with the largest desires within you, yet if you forget also to live to your God, your cup will be full of wormwood, and your teeth will be broken with the gravelstones of disappointment.
David was also one of the tenderest of fathers. He was never exacting with his children. I do not say he was one of the best of fathers, for correction was much neglected in his house. But he was a tender father, and he had denied to Absolom nothing. And yet this renegade, this ungrateful, this unnatural son, was the very one from whom the sting must come. Marvel not if they who owe their lives to you should seek your life. Marvel not if those who nestled once in your bosoms should wound you to the quick with their unkindness. You must not build upon the love of even the dearest you know. Your God is faithful, and the Well-Beloved never changes, but all others can, and may, and sometimes do. ‘Twas a dark brook Kedron which David passed over when his favourite son, Absalom, was in hot pursuit of him, but the great king, the good monarch, the tender father, was not exempted from this.
Despite the one great stain upon his character in the matter of Bethsheba, David was one of the best and most devout of men. I am sure the older one grows the more one loves his Psalms, and what a history of the man you have there! It is a mercy for us that he was not a better man than he was, or else he could not have written Psalms suitable to such poor creatures as we are. I think I saw the other day in a window, concerning a certain statesman whom I love to honor, that he would be a better statesman if he were a worse man. I think not so, but still David, if he had been a better man, would have been a worse psalmist, for even the faults of his character, inasmuch as they bring him down to our poor level, qualify him to write according to the feelings of our hearts and the emotions of our spirits. But he was a grand man, that David. He had the soldier’s fault, and he fell into the soldier’s sin, but he also had the soldier’s generous spirit, the soldier’s self-sacrificing nobility of heart. He was through and through a man. In him there was no guile; he hated deception, and he loved his God with all his heart; and yet, for all that, he must needs pass over the brook Kedron. Hated by his subjects, despised by his darling child, with all the robes of royalty put aside, bare-footed and with sackcloth on his head, Jerusalem’s best and greatest king makes his way into the wilderness.
I gather from this that there is no extent of sorrow which is not possible to an heir of heaven, and more yet, that there is no degree of shame, of calumny, and of reproach, which may not gather around the best of men. The king also himself passed over Kedron, and you know what happened when he passed over. The faithful soldiery wept as they saw that royal head dishonored, and those bright eyes that had flashed death upon his foes in the day of battle, now red with weeping. But what did Shimel do? He cursed him, and threw dust upon him, and said, “Go up, thou bloody man!” And what did Ahithophel do? He forsook him; seceded to the winning side, and plotted the death of his former friend, even King David himself, with whom he had so often eaten bread and walked to the house of God in company. And what said they all over the nation concerning David, but that God had forsaken him, and therefore they might forsake and attack him, for the David of former days was not the same David now; his God had left him, and the crown was given to his son. Ah! my brethren, we know not what we may come to. We do not know what depths of grief we may yet have to fathom, nor into what deep mire we may yet sink. There is no saying. The best of men may have the worst of characters; the brightest stars may be swallowed up of night; the moon in her brightness may be hidden by the clouds; and the sun himself, beneath the wings of tempest, may be concealed. Shall we, when we see our Christian brethren assailed, forsake them? Shall we join in the common clamor against them? We shall if we are not good men and true, but if we be such as God would have us be, we shall stand up for God’s David as Ittai and his bodyguard did in the day of battle. We shall say, “These are the servants of the Most High God; persecute them as you may; cast the dust of slander upon them; call them fanatics, enthusiasts, disturbers of the peace, and turners of the world upside down; we cast in our lot with them; for better and for worse we take their Master and themselves, and across their Kedron will we go with them, believing that the day shall come when it shall be thought worth men’s while to come back with them after another sort.”
For, brethren, David came again up to Jerusalem. The Lord smote his enemies in their hinder parts, and put them to the rout. He came back again with sound of song and rejoicing. And so shall the righteous do; so shall the best of men, in the day when God lighteth their candle, and putteth every tongue that riseth against them in judgment to eternal condemnation. Stand ye to the right, stand to the true; stand faithful; be willing to suffer; be willing to be rebuked; be willing to be slandered. King David went this way before you, and the day shall come when you, like him, shall come up from the slander and the scorn the better for it all, rejoicing in God, who is the God of your salvation.
Thus much on David. I think there is much of interesting truth to be gathered from David’s history in passing over Kedron, if we had time to bring it out; but I rather suggest a vein of thought than attempt to enlarge upon it. But now, secondly: —
II. A Greater King Than David Passed Over The Brook Kedron, and if, as David passed, all the people wept, let the people weep to-night as they remember how Zion’s greater king passed over that black brook.
There never was such a king as he — so glorious and fair to look upon. His eyes were the suns of heaven, and his presence was the glory thereof. But he came down amongst his creatures, who were fallen, seeking nothing but their good. He raised their dead; he healed their sick; when they were hungry he fed them, and when they were fainting he refreshed them. His words were those of love, and his teachings full of wisdom and of grace. But now they seek his blood; ay, they seek his blood, and in the night they are pursuing him. They will come upon him; they will hail him off to the judgment-seat; they will put him to death. Oh! cruel world, not to know its best benefactor! One of our poets has called Christ “the great philanthropist,” and so he was, only the word falls far short of what he really was, for he loved his people with all his heart. He came unto his own, and his own received him not; yea, his own, the Jews, were fiercest in his destruction.
As the king passed over Kedron on that gloomy night he had with him a band off friends, but what was their friendship worth? They were true in heart, but they were weak and feeble, and when the conflict came they all forsook him and fled. Peter, where art thou? I know thee, I hear thee say, “I know not the man,” as with oaths and cursing thou dost deny him. And John, where art thou? Was not that John, the young man upon whom they laid hands, and he fled and left his garments behind him? Where are any of them? “Then all the disciples forsook him and fled.” In that bitter hour when he passed over Kedron, to make his cup as bitter as it could be, the kiss that betrayed him came from the lip of Judas, the treasurer of his little band. “Friend!” he said, and, betrayed him with a friendly word upon his traitorous tongue.
To enter into the griefs of our Lord in Gethsemane is not our business to-night, though we feel as if we must linger amongst those beds of bitter herbs, and stand and look into Kedron’s gloomy stream. But you remember how he suffered even unto the death for us, and what were the agonies by which he purchased our redemption! There is this concerning our Lord, which is not matched by David — he did actually die; he was absolutely slain. The foes who pursued him overtook him; they pierced his hands and his feet, they lifted him up a spectacle of scorn, and there he died. But his cross was his triumph. Calvary was a battlefield, on which he won the victory, and, like David, he came back again into Jerusalem, rising from the grave, no more to suffer or to die; and he returned again to the heaven whence he came, with sound of clarion, and with noise of them that make music and melody for joy of heart — “Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lift up ye everlasting doors, that the King of glory may come in!”
See then, dear brethren, in the person of our Lord, that this is a prophecy and an assurance that the cause right and of truth, that those who espouse that cause and are pure and perfect themselves, may, nevertheless, be brought very low, even to the dust it may be; slandered, and despised, and rejected; and yet for all that, their triumph is not in jeopardy, and neither their cause nor themselves imperilled. Oh! it makes one strong to feel this. There cannot be anything happen to us so severe as has already happened to our King; there cannot be any slander more fierce than the slander poured on him. They have called the Master of the house Beelzebub; what now can they call the men of his household? They must find some lighter name for us. Be encouraged then, ye feeble bands of trembling Christians, encouraged in all your sufferings and griefs for Christ’s sake, for as he yet rose from the dead and led captivity captive, even so shall the feeblest of his followers. And so I shall close by just speaking:
III. A Word Or Two To Ourselves Concerning Our Passing The Brook Kedron.
Ah! we do not like going over Kedron. When it comes to the pinch, how we struggle against suffering, and especially against dishonor and slander! How many there were who would have gone on pilgrimage, but that Mr. Shame proved too much for them; they could not bear to go over the black brook Kedron, could not endure to be made nothing of for the sake of the Lord of glory, but they even turned back.
Now I have these two words to say. First, dear brethren, with regard to the great cause of God throughout the world, we must expect, in following truth, to meet with many brunts, many hardships, and many defeats. I do not think that the Lord’s cause was ever meant to be consecutively triumphant, without intervals of defeat. The sea advances to the flood tide wave by wave; first one wave advances, and then it recedes; then another comes up and recedes again, and sometimes when the tide is coming to the very highest, there will be one of those waves which seems to go back and leave a wider space bare of sea-water than before. And so it is with the cause of Christianity. A great wave rolled up at Pentecost, but it seemed to pause, while under Herod’s persecution. Then came other waves, until the world beheld in some degree the light of Christ in all its corners. But again there was a pausing for a while in those ages, which we call the dark ages. Then came a mighty wave again, which we couple with the name of Luther and of Calvin. Again there seemed to be a drawback, and then again in the days of Whitfield, and Wesley, and Jonathan Edwards, and others, there was another revival, and so it will be, I suppose, right on to the end of the chapter — progress, and then a staying of the work; great success, then temporary defeat. Now are any of you living in districts where, notwithstanding much earnest work, the name of Christ does not seem to win the day? Do not be downcast; do not be dispirited. Rather go to the throne of grace more earnestly, and ask for grace to gird yourselves afresh for the battle. The King passed over Kedron, and so shall his cause in your village, in your street, and the whole cause of God to which you are attached. But the King came back again, and so will he come back to you if you keep up heart and courage, and be steadfast, immovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord. I know how it is in some of your hearts. You seemed to be growing in grace so fast; you thought, “I shall soon reach a high standard of grace”; but now you are discovering your corruption; you are perplexed and cast down because you do not grow as you once did. You are not so happy as you once were. Well, you are passing over your Kedron it may be, but do not be afraid. The King, that has come to dwell in your hearts, though he be driven for a little into the wilderness and be hidden in the dark corners of your spirit, will come up again, and take the throne, and reign, and drive out his enemy. Hold on, hold on to Christ’s cross and crown, for the victory will attend them still. Only be patient, for God is in no hurry. Wait, and let him have his time, and the good work around you, and the work within you will prove to be successful after all. Just at this juncture we, who fight for Christ’s crown and seek to set his truth free from the unholy alliance which she has so basely formed, may find, perhaps, that for a while disappointment awaits our banners; but if it does, we shall not for a moment quail in our courage, nor stay in pressing the good cause on to the ultimate and the universal victory. Perhaps ‘tis well that we do wait a while, for we might achieve but one purpose now, but a little pausing will set us on greater designs and on nobler aims. One church set free in Ireland, if it be not done quickly, another shall be set free, and England’s Church be made to know that she hath no right to ride rough-shod over this nation, and liberty and religious equality be proclaimed here as well as there, and that the sooner because of the delay. Let the King’s cause go over Kedron for a while, and the great ones of the earth set themselves in array against Christ and his crown, but the victory will come, and we can afford to wait and tarry till the predestined hour, for perhaps by waiting the vessel shall come back laden the more richly with treasure, to the water’s edge pressed down with costly freight. But back she will come, come certainly and surely, to her Master’s honor, and to the comfort of the Church of God in this our realm. Never let us despair for the truth. Do the just thing and never be afraid, let the earth be removed and the mountains be cast into the midst of the sea. If you do the right and stand up for Christ, you need never fear. What if nations crack like potter’s vessels, and are driven like chaff before the wind by revolution after revolution? The saints of God rejoice that the battle is the Lord’s, and he will deliver every foe into our hands ere long, and if he tarrieth for awhile, we will wait until he cometh, for he will surely bring the victory with him.
Lastly, just this gentle word to any of you who may at this time be greatly suffering. “The King also himself passed over the brook Kedron.” Dear brethren and sisters, we must all pass over Kedron too, but the Prince’s footsteps, the Prince’s footsteps, are all along the road.
“He leads us through no darker rooms
Than he went through before.”
Let us have courage, then, and go through too. You have had a sad bereavement. Yes, I wonder not that your tears fell on that coffin-lid; ‘twas a precious life to lose, but “Jesus wept,” and that handkerchief of yours is perfumed with his sympathy. You had a heavy loss, and you dread poverty. Well, tis an evil to be much dreaded, but the foxes had holes, and the birds of the air had nests, but the Son of Man had not where to lay his head.
Your poverty is gilded with his companionship; he was poorer than you. Oh! but you have lately been slandered. ‘Tis the lot of all the righteous, birds always peck the ripest and the richest fruit the most. But they slandered your Lord, they said he was a drunken man and a wine-bibber. They are only crowning you with the crown of thorns which once was put on his head, and the thorns are not so sharp for you as for him, they were blunted by being put on his head. Ah! but you tell me that with all this a dear friend that you loved has turned against you. Remember Judas, and do not marvel any more. “Ah!” say you, “but even the Church of God thinks evil of me, though I have stood steadfast in the truth.” Remember your Lord was an alien to his mother’s children, and the church of his day was his direct enemy. Courage, dear brethren and fellow-pilgrims to the skies. We must drink this cup; our heavenly Father has decreed it, but then he has mixed it too, and he promises us, if we drink it, that we shall by and bye drink of another cup of the new wine in the kingdom of glory. Submit; nay more, acquiesce; nay more, rejoice that you are counted worthy to suffer with your Lord. Cleave to your King when the many turn aside. Witness that he hath the living Word, and none upon the earth beside, and in the day when the trumpet ringeth out the victory and the King cometh back to his own, you shall come back with him to the ivory palaces and to the abodes of the blessed, where you shall be crowned, and shall dwell for ever.
Dear hearers, are you for Christ or for his enemies? Will you go with a despised Christ to-night? Will you take sides with Christ under the cloud? Will you go with him bare foot through the mire, or do you like a silver-slipper religion? I pray you trust my Lord and Master. Take up his cross. It will be the best thing you ever did, for it will bring you a glory in which the shame shall be forgotten.
The Lord bless each one of you, and may these few words comfort those that are tremblings for Christ’s sake.