A Book of Comfort written by
P.B. Power. Introduction. Amongst the many wonderful truths
which are spoken of God in the Bible, one of the most wonderful
and beautiful is that He is a God of comfort. Comfort is such a
soothing word in itself that the moment we hear of it in connection
with God We are led to expect great things, some cheering,
some lifting up, some refreshment, some ease, some lightening of
our trouble, something very good. There are sick beds without God,
and then of course there can be little comfort. No wonder
that the days are long and dreary, and the nights full of blackness.
When a man has to bear his trouble alone, when he has no God to
talk with to him, when, if he does think of God at all, it
is only with fear, lest this illness may bring him into His
presence, or else with discontent, thinking that it is He who has
laid this upon him. These pages are not written for
such as want to have a sickbed without God, except indeed to
show them a more excellent way, Should this little book fall
into the hands of such a one, then it says, Dear friend, you
cannot help being ill, being in bed, or on the sofa, or even
in an armchair. For many people on sofas and
in armchairs are quite as ill, and quite as much to be pitied,
and quite as much in need of comfort as those who cannot stir
from their beds. But you can help being as unhappy
as you are. All these circumstances need
not be comforted-less. They are so only because you
shut God out from them. But what about God being a God
of comfort? Everything depends upon that.
You who do not look to Him, and you who do, are the one as badly
off as the other. unless God be a God of comfort
now for all our sakes the first and best thing to do will be
to see what his word says about him because there first and in
the experiences of his people next we are to find him and if
we find him to be this God of comfort then you have misjudged
him hitherto when you thought him an enemy an unkind and a
judge and an avenger and nothing else now and henceforth be encouraged
to think of him in a new light speak good of his name says the
psalmist that is what I want to do in the forefront of this
little book because if you can be persuaded to think good of
him you shall have all the benefits spoken of here and I should like
every sick one who reads these pages to get all the blessing
to be richly comforted Blessed Lord, this is a book
of comfort, and that it may be so indeed. First, we must be
sure of what Thou art. O Thou most worthy Judge Eternal,
we have no comfort in ourselves, and unless Thou hast revealed
Thyself as a comforting God, we could have had none in Thee.
Thy justice and power and majesty are no comfort to us if they
are alone. For we are only vile earth and
miserable sinners. It is what thou tellest us of
thyself that gives us any joy. We would not presume to look
for comfort in the direction of thyself if thou hadst not
pointed out to us the way. But now that thou hast done this,
from thee and the things concerning thee alone shall come our comfort
and our peace. Yes, from Thee, O Holy Ghost,
the Comforter, by whom the Father's peace pervades the soul, show
Thyself to us as Thou art in Thy Word. Comfort us with the
kindness that there is in Thyself, and speak peace to all the readers
of this book, for the sake of the Great Peacemaker, the Prince
of Peace, Jesus Christ Himself. Amen. Is God a God of comfort at all? Chapter 1. The question at the
head of this chapter must be settled before this little book
can be to its readers what our earnest desire it should be.
That is a book of comfort. For many a sick man will say
The last place where I can seek for comfort is with God. Is not
this the great God who is full of power and majesty? Is not
this the one who made heaven and earth? Why should I think
that he will concern himself about such a small affair as
mine? And even if we think that he will, we are inclined to say,
is not this the one I have offended, whose laws I have broken? whose
calls I have rejected, who is of purer eyes than to behold
inequity. And when I call to mind what
I have been and what I am, surely he is the last one I ought to
go to for comfort. All this is quite reasonable.
I should not have a word to say against it, and I myself, instead
of trying to write a comfort book, should have to give myself
up to entire despair, if it were not that God had told me certain
things in his word about himself, which warrant me in making my
comfort book, and in saying to everyone who reads it, it is
all for you, all my dear friend, without any abatement or reservation,
all for you. God wills you to be comforted,
and that comfort he wills you to have, by having himself. so far from God's not willing
you to come to himself for comfort what he speaks most plainly about
is against your going anywhere else he knows you are in need
of comfort one from one cause and another from another every
man's trouble is not the same and even if it were the same
it does not touch on the same point precisely or in the same
way but whatever it is and however it works the cry is that we should
not forsake him the fountain of living waters and who out
for ourselves broken cisterns which can hold no water scripture
tells us that God is a jealous God and he is not only jealous
of a man's worshipping any other God but if he is being put second
in anything and amongst other things in comforting no doubt
there is a comfort to be had from friends and from books and
from the visits of ministers and from many other sources but
they must all be put under God otherwise they will be like Job's
comforters miserable comforters are you y'all they will give
way in some unexpected time and manner and leave us with nothing
because we had not God. But let us see from Holy Scripture
how God himself appears in this matter of comfort. Do we find
him plainly here? Saint Paul tells us very plainly
what God himself is in this way. He had just been wishing grace
and peace two very comfortable things to the Corinthian church
And where were these to come from? From God our Father, and
from the Lord Jesus Christ. Then the Apostle, as though he
could not restrain himself when he came to speak of these good
things as coming from the Father, breaks out into this grand description
of praise to Him. Blessed be God, even the Father
of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of mercies, and the God
of all comfort who comforts us in all our tribulation to Corinthians
chapter 1 verses 2 and 4 then further on in chapter 12
verses 5 and 6 he gives us an example of how God comforted
the comfort came by human hand it came at a most seasonable
time for trials just then were very heavy but it came from God
and Paul distinctly traced God in the way in which his comfort
came I am filled he says with comfort I am exceedingly joyful
in all our tribulation for when we were come into Macedonia our
flesh had no rest but we were troubled on every side without
our fighting within were fierce nevertheless God that comforted
those that are cast down note that phrase it just suits you
comforted us by the coming of Titus God had his own times and
ways of comforting I would now only just draw your attention
to the fact that the Apostle speaks of him as one who is in
the habit of comforting those who are cast down it comes in
quite naturally and not as something strange and wonderful and out
of the way which had happened here that may never happen again
some people speak of God as though there is no comfort in Him at
all and that Jesus is to comfort us by enabling us to escape from
God but the Apostle Paul saw the Father and the Son both one
in this blessed work of comfort and if there is no other verse
in the Bible to comfort a poor soul then the 16th and 17th verses
of the second chapter of 2 Thessalonians ought to do so they ought to
bring a man to God himself for comfort now our Lord Jesus Christ
Himself and God even our Father which has loved us and has given
us everlasting consolation and good hope through grace comfort
your hearts and establish you in every good word and work the psalmist a man as you know
of many troubles found his comfort in God himself not in running
away from him but in coming to him it was upon what God said
that David relied and if that had not been something comfortable
it would have been of no use to him remember the word unto
thy servant unto which thou hast caused me to hope this is my
comfort in my affliction for thy word hath quickened me Psalms
119 49-50 and again he says in verse 76 let I pray thee
thy merciful kindness be for my comfort according to thy word
unto thy servant the 86th Psalm is a great mingling
together of light and darkness there are very deep things there
the soul is spoken of even as being delivered from the lowest
hell. But God is equal to all the need. David asked to have
his soul made to rejoice. And to whom does he look to do
this? To God. And because he did, he found
the help and comfort that he sought. But thou, O Lord, art
a God full of compassion, and gracious, longsuffering, and
plenteous in mercy and truth. O turn unto me, and have mercy
upon me, give thy strength unto thy servant, and save the son
of thine handmaid. Show me a token for good, that
they which hate me may see it and be ashamed, because thou,
Lord, hast opened me and comforted me. When David was utterly perplexed,
he said, in the multitude of my thoughts within me thy comforts
delight my soul Psalms 94 and 19 and when the time of all times
for comfort should come then God as the God of all comfort
would be at hand yea though I walk through the valley of the shadow
of death I will fear no evil for thou art with me thy rod
and thy staff they comfort me. Psalms 23.4 now let us look for a moment
at the prophets for it will be a grand help to us if we have
it firmly grafted in our minds that God himself is the one to
go to in our search after comfort Zion had sinned greatly against
the Lord and according to the usual role of God's dealings
after the sin comes punishment Zion ought never to have known
waste places or a desert or a wilderness and certainly considering what
Jerusalem had done against God he might naturally have been
supposed to be the last quarter in which she should seek for
any comfort but the word which the Lord told the prophet to
speak was a word after his fashion and not after man's for the Lord
shall comfort Zion he shall comfort all her waste places and he shall
make her wilderness like Eden and her desert like the garden
of the Lord joy and gladness shall be found therein thanksgiving
in the voice of melody Isaiah 51.3 observe how God is acting
with the largeness which is becoming to himself whenever there is
a great largeness of blessing we may be sure that it is he
that is at work for his work has a fullness of blessing like
a number and variety of precious stones all set in the one ring
and given to the one person this is God's way of comforting The
angel of the Lord in Zechariah chapter 1 cried to God on behalf
of Jerusalem and said, O LORD of hosts, how long wilt thou
not have mercy on Jerusalem, and on the cities of Judah against
which thou hast had indignation these threescore and ten years?
The angel does not hide the fact that the one he cried to is the
one who had in righteous judgment permitted all the trouble. Yet
from that very one comes the comfort. And the Lord answered
the angel that talked with me with good works and comfortable
words. And here, as in the other case, comes the perfusion of
his mercy. Thus said the Lord of hosts,
I am returned to Jerusalem with mercies. My house shall be built
in it, said the Lord of hosts. Thus saith the Lord of hosts,
My cities through prosperity shall yet be spread abroad, and
the Lord shall yet comfort Zion, and shall yet choose Jerusalem. Similarly in Jeremiah he says
of himself, For I will turn their mourning into joy, and will comfort
them. Chapter 31 verse 13, And will
speak comfortably unto her, he says in Hosea, 2.14 I am He that comforteth you he
says in Isaiah 51.12 and in the day of Thanksgiving this is to
be the song Isaiah 12.1 O Lord I will praise Thee though Thou wast angry with me
Thine anger is turned away and Thou comfortest me for the inequity
of his covetousness was I wrought and smote with I hid me and was
wrought and he went on forwardly in the way of his heart I have
seen his ways and I will heal him I will lead him also and
restore comfort unto him and to his mourners Isaiah 57 verses
17 and 18 Many of these texts will meet
again. I desire them now to be of use in this one blessed particular
of bringing us nearer to God Himself. And these three things
I set out in the forefront of my little book. 1. Get firmly
convinced that God, God Himself, God the Father, the Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ, and our Father, is a God of comfort. Read these many declarations
which He has given of Himself over and over again until you
ingrain the idea into your hearts. Believe that comfort is a thing
He thinks about, values, knows the need of it to us. 2. Do not
look anywhere else for your prime and first comfort. I do not deny
that there is much comfort in friends, in happy feelings, in
books, in many of the surrounding circumstances which prove alleviations
in illness. But I want you to gather in your
thoughts and feel that the only sure comfort is with God. 3. Expect comfort from God. Man's
expectation is generally a prelude to God's action. we must first
open our mouth and then he will fill it we must fill the water
pots up to the brim saying that he is going to turn all this
water into the good wine let these texts put you into the
proper attitude of expectation say speak Lord for thy servant
heareth let God know that there is somebody looking to him for
comfort some poor child of his unsatisfied and in want and that
it is you and who knows that even in the very pages of this
little book he may give you all you need chapter 2 hindrances to our believing
that God is a God of comfort When the sun shines brightly,
its warm beams draw up the damp fogs from the earth, and they
often obscure its luster. When a lamp is lit, the brighter
it shines, the more the insects that gather around it. And so
the brighter any truth of God, the more does Satan endeavor
to gather about it such myths as will obscure it. if indeed
he cannot extinguish it altogether. And so we may expect to find
that there are many hindrances to a full belief that God is
a God of comfort. I am not in any wise surprised
that it should be so, and I would be instrumental by God's blessing
in removing them. But before we can remove these
hindrances, we must see them. And what are they? one great hindrance is our sense
of demerit how very unworthy we are of comfort at all and
especially of such and one as God taking it in hand to comfort
us about that unworthiness there cannot be the shadow of a doubt
it is quite right that you should feel that you are not worthy
of anything good from God at all so far from finding fault
with the feeling It is a blessed one to start with. And if unhappily
you had it not, I should have had to say, we cannot advance
even the first step into God's comfort until we get to see and
believe this. For God will not have any man
talk or think of merit. Merit I have none. Only to the
cross I cling. those are the sentiments of such
as are fit for comfort and are sure to get it so now first of
all be very thankful that you feel undeserving of any comfort
or any else that is good that in itself should bring you some
comfort for if you feel this you have not to go through all
the humbling and teaching dealings of God by which he takes pride
out of people if you are already empty God has not to empty you
and let me tell you further that if you had not felt so unworthy
of comfort there is no telling what discipline you might not
have had to go through you might have been made ten times more
uncomfortable than you are now the law of God has broken And
you, as a breaker, might have been shown in such terrible colors
as to break you up altogether. You might have been brought into
deeper waters in the way of illness, even than those in which you
are now. I am glad God has not to deal more heavily with you
on that point. He filleth the hungry with good
things, but the rich He sends away empty. this poor man cried
unto the Lord and the Lord delivered him out of all of his troubles
I am no more worthy to be called thy son there was a sense of
demerit in the prodigal and we know how blessedly it ended with
him well if you are the hungry man and the poor man and the
prodigal son so you shall be filled and delivered and received
There is something else which you will be sure to find hindering
you from believing that God can possibly be a God of comfort
to you. You know that you have a depraved,
suspicious nature. As soon as Adam failed, he became
suspicious of God. In all his prosperity have inherited
this suspicion from him. Indeed, suspicion is a part of
the temptation. with which Eve was first assailed
for when Satan told her that God did not know that in the
day she and Adam ate of the tree then their eyes should be opened
and they should be as gods knowing good and evil what is this but
infusing a suspicion into the woman's mind that God grudged
her this knowledge and was afraid of her becoming like himself
this element of suspicion was strong in the first temptation
and it has continued strong ever since therefore it is no wonder
if you suspect God and have hard thoughts of Him now here is an
evil plain and well-defined against which we must fight we must not
be always suspecting God if He says one thing to us we must
not think He means another we must not suppose that He is double-minded
in any of His ways we must say to ourselves he said so and so
and therefore he means it I will take him at his word I will not
go about seeking to put two or three meanings on his plain declarations
what he says I will take in the plain English of it we must not
go about looking for double meanings and limitations and all sorts
of things out of the common. The more we keep in the common
road of speech and meaning with God the better. Now think of
that dear friend and do not suspect God anymore. It is partly because
of this suspicion that we misunderstand God and wherever there is misapprehension
there is confusion and trouble. There is one more hindrance out
of many which I would mention and that is the old bad habit
of not looking to him for what is good this old suspicious and misunderstanding
nature of ours used to make us think that God was the last person
to whom we could look for what was good if we wanted judgment
and anger for sin and punishment and such like things then he
was the quarter in which to look for it, but certainly not for
good things. And yet when he revealed himself
to Moses, what do we read as his glory? When the Israelites
were under the divine hand suffering severely from God himself for
their sin, what, humanly speaking, could be more unlikely than that
from God himself should come their help? Yet see what it is
said in Deuteronomy 4, 27-31. And the Lord shall scatter you
among the nations, and you shall be left few in number among the
heathen. Whither the Lord shall lead you?
And there you shall serve God, the work of man's hand, wood
and stone, which neither see, nor hear, nor eat, nor smell. Now, whence are they to find
help? they are to look to Him for it
but if from thence thou shalt seek the Lord thy God thou shalt
find Him if thou seek Him with all thy heart and with all thy
soul when thou art in tribulation and all these things come upon
thee even in the latter days if thou turn to the Lord thy
God and shall be obedient unto his voice for the Lord thy God
is a merciful God he will not forsake thee neither destroy
thee nor forget the covenant of thy fathers which he swear
unto them what God says as plainly as possible is this you have
offended against me but it is to me you must look O Israel,
said he in Hosea 13.9, thou hast destroyed thyself, but in me
is thy help. But perhaps he say, I never thought
much of God, I never used to look to Him. Well, that has been
very bad in the past. But what we are concerned with
is the present. The past is dead and gone, and
let the dead bury their dead. We cannot alter the bad and foolish
past. It will always remain what it
was. But what we are concerned with
is that it should not carry itself on into the present. That it
should not hurt us now. That it should be indeed a past. Now say to yourself, that this
old habit of mine, not looking to God, I must break with it
altogether. Let him now make all things new
with me. This foolish and ungainful past
has no right to put in a claim upon the present. Sufficient
unto the day is the evil thereof. Now when difficulties arise,
they are very apt to discourage. That is their natural tendency.
A discouraged man is always a weak man. this Satan knows very well
and therefore he puts all sorts of discouragements in the way
of our going to God for comfort if you find one reason after
another rising up in your mind why you should not look to God
to comfort you instead of being downhearted say this is the most
natural thing in the world precisely what I might have expected this
is part of the old bad way which I am abandoning I think Satan
must see I am in earnest in looking to God by his raising up so many
obstacles in my path I have no doubt my friend that you have
a great many discouragements was ever anything great in abiding
brought about without them? there are the very atmosphere
in which what is great and good and enduring is perfected. Draw
courage from discouragement. Say, Satan sees I am on the right
road now and is trying to hinder me all he can. Straight is my
gate and narrow is my way and that is a good sign that the
end of that way is right. You must not simply condemn yourself. You have done that once. Let
it be once and for all. If you spend all your time condemning
yourself, you will have none to spend in finding God. I do
not believe that God is well pleased with a man spending all
his time in self-condemnation. He wills him to live in the spirit
of self-condemnation. How indeed can he live in anything
else? to be always moaning and condemning himself I cannot think
is what he wills as his people's lot I think God might well say
to us what? all looking at self and never
a look at me what? look at me and never a bit of
comfort out of it are your sins of more importance than my grace? Are they to occupy all the ground,
in no room to be left for me to act in comfort and blessing,
the way in which I love to act? Be sure of this, something more
than your sins must be manifested if God is to be glorified. He
will be more glorified by your being comforted, than by your
continually refusing to be comforted, or crying out that you are unworthy
to be comforted. Self-condemnation is very good
in its place, but it's very bad out of its place. And it is out
of its place when we make it so big that it can blot out the
comfort of God. We may put a penny piece so close
to our eyes as to hide out the sun itself. And we may put our
little selves into such a position as to blot out God. Moreover,
you must not give up in this matter of comfort, or in any
point of the divine life, because you do not seem to get on. Often
we are getting on, when we do not know that we are. God never
changes, nor are His mercies dependent upon our getting on.
This is a measuring of ourselves by ourselves, and such is not
the measure of the Lord. Nor must you give way to low
and desponding thoughts because you do not experience any spiritual
ecstasies. There are many children of God
who have never known anything approaching to spiritual ecstasy
at all, nor attaining to anything beyond a calm and peaceful trust
in Him. They still lay on their beds
in peace. They believed in the glory to be revealed. They believed
in a future and were content to wait for it. Ecstasies might
be very bad for us here. Some of the most favoured servants
of God and most consistent Christians never had any ecstasy in their
lives. And some who had gone up very
high in ecstasies have gone down very low in despondencies. Do not court ecstasies. Do not
look upon them as signs. Do not consider them in any way
as essential to the Christian life or the comfort thereof.
If God gives them, it needs that He give grace with them. And who knows but that it needs
that He give discipline too. Paul was caught up into the third
heaven. and heard words which it was
not lawful to utter. And to make that ecstasy safe,
he had to receive a thorn in the flesh, which, though he prayed
thrice for its removal, was not taken away. Lay your account
for being a hindered man, and when clouds come between you
and God, often say, Ah, that is a hindrance. It does not change
God. It does not change my position
toward God. But it is a hindrance. And it's
doing a hinderer's work. And when the hindrances come,
let them not daunt us. Let us say, these are what we
are to expect. But they have no power as against
the Lord. Millions of hindered men have
passed out of their clothes in sorrows. Millions have entered
the land where there are hindrances no more. How could I expect that
Satan would allow me to have any good thing unmolested? I
must carry on the Christian warfare on my bed, the same as if I were
in the world. Sooner or later I too shall have
my full triumph and shall shout thanks be to God which giveth
me the victory through my Lord Jesus Christ chapter 3 helps
to our believing that God is a God of comfort it would be
a poor comfort to point out the existence of hindrances unless
we believe that they could be overcome and also could show
how this might be done. Alas, the poor tried man might
say, I know my hindrances only too well. Help me to put them
out of the way, and then you will confer on me a favor indeed. This is what I should like now
to do. This is a fitting part of a comfort
book. Now, One of the most effectual
ways of getting rid of these hindrances is to track them out
and ascertain whence they came. I have no doubt many of them
come from certain depraved thinking about God and consequently the
help should come from thinking also only of the right kind. We must keep close to thoughts
of God. We must meet Satan's dark thoughts
and suggestions about God. with bright thoughts about Him
for if we do not He will always be able to bring God up terribly
against us however we may divert our minds the evil one will always
keep saying but ah what about God all is not right with Him
and what is more all never can be but if we have gone to God
and have well assured thoughts of Him then God can never come
before us as a dark shadow but as light we shall know him as
the Father indeed and if Satan comes to vex us with thoughts
about him we shall say we know who he is our Father who is in
heaven I consider then God's character as my great help to
believing him to be a God of comfort and first of all from the mere
fact of his being generous we may judge that he is very likely
to be a God of comfort everywhere in scripture he is represented
to us as a large hearted God he is one that has no pleasure
in the death of a sinner but would rather that he turned from
his inequity and lived he says open thy mouth wide and I will
fill it The sins and inequities of my people I will remember
no more. How much more generous God is
than man! We have remarkably set before
us in what he says to the Prophet Jeremiah, Hast thou seen what
backsliding Israel hath done? She is gone upon every high mountain,
and under every green tree, and there hath played the harlot.
And I said, after she had done all these things, Turn thou unto
me. Jeremiah 3, 6 and 7. Others would have said, Be gone.
But God said, Return. That was generosity indeed. In
the first verse of this chapter, God shows that man's way of treating
a person under similar circumstances would be very different. But
then he is God and not man. And his ways and thoughts are
not like our ways and thoughts. His generosity is altogether
beyond ours. Happening to open the concordance
this moment, I came upon five texts. One after another where
God is spoken of as being entreated with the success After that God
was entreated for the land. 2 Samuel 24 14 The Lord was entreated
for the land and the plague was stayed. 2 Samuel 24 25 They cried
and He was entreated of them. 1 Chronicles 5 20 Manasseh prayed
and God was entreated of him. 2 Chronicles 33 13 We besought
God and He was entreated of us. God is long-suffering, plenteous
in goodness and mercy. And in the parable of the prodigal
son, generous dealing is shown to the very full. The father
receives the wretched sinner just as he is, and reproaching
him not, restores him to favor, and clothes him in the best robe,
and kills for him the fatted calf now if I want anything it
is a great encouragement to me in going to ask for it that I
know I have to deal with a generous person I feel he will be predisposed
to help me and to deal liberally with me and to do me good and
let this thought comfort you there is not one my good word
about God in all the Bible you will be sure to get from him
simply because he is what he is whatever he has promised to
bestow and if God be generous then he will be self-communicative
that is he will be always outputting good God is not content with
simply having his goodness and keeping it to himself his spirit
not his only son but freely gave him up for all of us and how
shall he not with him also freely give us all things if we had
to go to a person for anything who is actually wanting to give
away the very things we needed what wonderful spirit it would
put into us to go to him for what we required now can God
have all that would make us happy and comfortable and bestow never
a taste on us certainly not therefore if you want he will communicate
himself to you and what he communicates must be himself must be like
himself and therefore it must be good it will be the giving
of himself to you as you are and if you're particular want
He will pour his streams into all your hollow places, all your
dry wells, and only parched lands, and empty watercourses, where
you are driest and most in want is the place where he will most
surely come. Then we may take great comfort
from considering that God stands to us in the relation of a father,
and for as much as he must from his very nature do everything
in the best and most perfect manner, and to the fullest extent
also, we may be sure he will be to us better than ever any
earthly father has been to a son. This Reformation audio track
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in defending the Reformation's regulative principle of worship,
or what is sometimes called the scriptural law of worship, commenting
on the words of God, which I commanded them not, neither came into my
heart. From his commentary on Jeremiah
731, writes, God here cuts off from men every occasion for making
evasions, since he condemns by this one phrase, I have not commanded
them, whatever the Jews devise. There is then no other argument
needed to condemn superstitions than that they are not commanded
by God. For when men allow themselves to worship God according to their
own fancies, and attend not to His commands, they pervert true
religion. And if this principle was adopted
by the Papists, all those fictitious modes of worship in which they
absurdly exercise themselves would fall to the ground. It
is indeed a horrible thing for the Papists to seek to discharge
their duties towards God, by performing their own superstitions.
There is an immense number of them, as it is well known, and
as it manifestly appears. Were they to admit this principle,
that we cannot rightly worship God except by obeying His word,
they would be delivered from their deep abyss of error. The
prophet's words, then, are very important, when he says that
God had commanded no such thing, and that it never came to his
mind. As though he had said, That men assume too much wisdom,
When they devise what he never required, Nay, what he never
knew.