God said, “Let there be light,” and there was light. 4
God saw that the light was good, and God separated the light from the darkness.
Genesis 1:3-4 Modern English Version (MEV)
The Biblical Illustrator, edited by Joseph S. Exell M.A.
informs us that:
The creation of light
I.
DIVINELY PRODUCED.
1. For the protection of life. Plants could not
live without light; without it, the flowers would soon wither. Even in a brief
night they close their petals, and will only open them again at the gentle
approach of the morning light. Nor could man survive in continued darkness. A
sad depression would rest upon his soul.
2. For the enjoyment of life. Light is one of
God’s best gifts to the world.
(1) It is inexpensive. The world has to pay for the light produced by man; that created by God, we get for nothing. Man has limitations; God has none. Man is selfish; God is beneficent.
(2) It is extensive. It floods the universe. It is the heritage of the poor equally with the rich; it enters the hut as well as the palace.
(3) It is welcome.
3. For the instruction of life. Light is not merely a protection. It is also an instructor. It is an emblem. It is an emblem of God, the Eternal Light. It is an emblem of truth. It is an emblem of goodness. It is an emblem of heaven. It is an emblem of beneficence.
II. DIVINELY APPROVED. “And God saw the light,
that it was good.”
1. It was good in itself. The light was pure. It
was clear. It was not so fierce as to injure. It was not so weak as to be
ineffectual. It was not so loud in its advent as to disturb.
2. It was good because adapted to the purpose
contemplated by it. Nothing else could more efficiently have accomplished its
purpose toward the life of man. Hence it is good because adapted to its
purpose, deep in its meaning, wide in its realm, happy in its influence, and
educational in its tendency.
3. We see here that the Divine Being carefully
scrutinises the work of His hands. When He had created light, He saw that it
was good. May we not learn a lesson here, to pause after our daily toil, to
inspect and review its worth. Every act of life should be followed by
contemplation.
III. DIVINELY PROPORTIONED. “And God called the
light day, and the darkness He called night.”
1. The light was indicative of day. In this light
man was to work. The light ever active would rebuke indolence. By this light
man was to read. In this light man was to order his moral conduct.
2. The removal of light was indicative of night.
In this night man was to rest from the excitement of pleasure, and the anxiety
of toil. Its darkness was to make him feel the need of a Divine protection. (J.
S. Exell, M. A.)
Light and the gospel compared
I. THE APPROPRIATENESS OF THE METAPHOR.
1. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their source and Divine resemblance.
2. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their adaptation to the end designed.
3. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their purity.
4. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their inseparable connection with joy and happiness.
II. THE WILL OF GOD RESPECTING IT.
1. That man should have the light of salvation.
2. That His Church should be the light of the world.
3. That the world should be filled with the light of the gospel of Christ.
(1) Now the gospel is adapted to all the world. It is as much suited to one part of it as to another.
(2) It is expressly said that it is designed for the whole world. “I am the light of the world.” “Go into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.”
(3) The whole world shall finally enjoy its saving rays. “This gospel of the kingdom,” etc. (See Isa_11:9; Isa_60:19, and Hab_2:14.)
APPLICATION.
1. Have you the light of Divine grace in your hearts?
2. Have you this light in your families?
3. Have you this light in your neighbourhood?
4. Are you assisting to enlighten the world? (J. Burns, D. D.)
Genesis of light
I. EXPLANATION OF THE PASSAGE.
1. “God said”: an anthropomorphism.
2. The God-said of Moses the God-word of John.
3. The first light chemical.
4. “And God saw the light, that it was good.” It
is to light that the cloud, the sunset, the rainbow, the diamond, the violet,
owe their exquisite hues. Truly the light is sweet, and a pleasant thing it is
for the eyes to behold the Ecc_11:7). Nay, more: Light is one of the
essential conditions of all life itself--alike vegetal, animal, human, and,
doubtless, angelic. Yes, there is a better curative than allopathy or
homeopathy, hydropathy or aeropathy; it is heliopathy, or light of the sun.
Physicians understand this, and so seek for their patients the sunny side of
hospitals. And so they unconsciously confirm the holy saying, “To you that fear
My name shall the Sun of Righteousness arise with healing in His wings” Mal_4:2).
5. Evening: Morning. Observe the order of the
words: It is not first morning, and then evening; it is first evening, then
morning: “And there was evening, and there was morning, day one.”
II. MORAL MEANING OF THE STORY.
1. God is light (1Jn_1:5). For aught I
know, the apostle’s message is literally true. Remember that when we are
talking of light we are moving in presence of a very subtile mystery. The
origin and nature of light is still a profound problem. True, we talk learnedly
and correctly about the laws of light; its laws of reflection, refraction,
absorption, dispersion, polarization, etc. But these are only phenomena; they
tell us nothing about the nature or origin of light itself. All we know of
light is merely a knowledge of the mode and laws of its motion. We do not know
the essence of light itself. One thing is certain: light is the nearest known,
sensible approach to immateriality, being classed with its apparent
kindred--heat, electricity, magnetism--among the imponderables. Indeed, the
modern magnificent undulatory theory denies that light is material, and affirms
that it is but a mode of motion. We are accustomed to say that there are but
two things in the universe--spirit and matter--and that the chasm between these
is infinite. Possibly this is one of those assumptions which, did we know more,
we would affirm less. Possibly light is an instance of what the philosophers
call tertium quid--a third something, intermediate between spirit and
matter, ethereally bridging the measureless chasm. Possibly light is God’s
natural expression, outflow, radiation, manifestation, vestment Psa_104:1-2).
Possibly, when the Creator moves in that finite world we call time, He leaves
light as His personal vestige and train. His mantle ripples into light, is
light itself. In view of this possibility, how natural as well as fitting that
the ancient token of God’s personal presence among the Hebrews should have been
the shechinah, or dazzling glory cloud.
2. And as God is light, so also are His children
light. Expressly are they called Sons of Light (Luk_16:8). Expressly is
He called Father of Lights (Jam_1:17). We know that light is latent in
every form of matter; for, when sufficiently heated, it becomes
incandescent--that is to say, self-luminous. What is flame but a mass of
heated, visibly glowing gas? True, it doth not yet appear what we shall be (1Jn_3:2).
Nevertheless, I believe that light is latent within us all, and that by-and-by,
at least in the case of God’s saintly children, it will stream forth; not that
it will be evolved by the action of any heat or chemical force, but that, under
the free, transcendent conditions of the heavenly estate, it will ray forth
spontaneously.
3. Jesus Christ Himself, as Incarnate, is the
shadow of God’s light. Infinite God, Deity as unconditioned and absolute, no
man hath ever seen or can ever see, and live (Exo_33:20). He dwelleth in
light which no man can approach unto (1Ti_6:15), is light itself. “Dark
with excess of light,” we poor finite beings cannot behold Him except through
the softening intervention of some medium. Therefore the Son of God, brightness
of His glory and express image of His person (Heb_1:3), radiance of His
effulgence and character, or impress of His substance, became incarnate, that
in the softer morning star and suffused dayspring of the Incarnation we might
be able to look on the dazzling Father of Lights, and not be dazed into
blindness.
4. Jesus Christ is not only the shadow or tempered
image of God: in the very act of becoming that shadow Jesus Christ also became
the Light of the Joh_8:12). Ah, how much the world needed His
illumination!
5. As Jesus Christ is the Light of the World, so
also is His Church. He, clear as the sun, she, fair as the moon, both together
resplendent as an army with banners (Son_6:10).
In conclusion:
1. A word of cheer for the saint. Ye are sons of
light. Recall now how much light means. It means all that is most bright and
clean, and direct, and open, and unselfish, and spotless, and lovely, and
healthful, and true, and Divine. How exceedingly great, then, your wealth! Oh,
live worthily of your rich estate.
2. A word of entreaty to the sinner. Of what use
is the most abounding light if we persist in keeping our eyes closed? As there
is an eternal day for the sons of light, so there is an eternal night for the
sons of darkness. (G. D.Boardman.)
Light and life
I. THE UPWARD PROGRESS OF NATURE, as created by
God.
II. THE ORDERLY ARRANGEMENT OF NATURE, as settled
by God.
III. THE VARIETY OF LIFE IN NATURE, as filled by
God. LESSONS:
1. Trust in God’s overruling providence.
2. The study of nature should not be separated from religion. (W. S. Smith, B. D.)
Light
I. Light is PURE. Its property repels defilement.
It traverses unstained each medium of uncleanness.
II. Light is BRIGHT. Indeed, what is brightness
but light’s clear shining.
III. Light is LOVELY. Beauty cannot live without
it. So Christ decks all on whom His beams descend.
IV. Light is FREE. The wealth of the wealthy
cannot purchase, nor the poverty of the poor debar from it. Waste not time in
seeking a price for Him, compared with whom an angel’s worth is nothing worth.
V. Light is ALL-REVEALING. By Christ’s rays, sin
is detected, as lurking in every corner of the heart; and the world, which we
so fondled, is unmasked, as a monster whose embrace is filth, and in whose hand
is the cup of death.
VI. Light is the PARENT OF FRUITFULNESS. In
Christ’s absence, the heart is rank with every weed, and every noxious berry.
But when His beams enliven, the seeds of grace bud forth, the tree of faith
pours down its golden fruit.
VII. Light is the chariot which CONVEYS HEAT.
Without Christ, the heart is ice. But when He enters, a glow is kindled, which
can never die.
VIII. Light is the HARBINGER OF JOY. Heaven is a
cloudless God. (Dean Law.)
The Word of God
“Let there be.”
1. How the growth of the world points back to the eternal existence of the Word.
2. How the eternal Word is the foundation for the growth of the world. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
Light, a source of life
1. Its good, as existing in its ground.
2. Its beauty, as disclosed in its appearing. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
The creation of light a day’s work of God
1. The first day’s work.
2. A whole day’s work.
3. A continuous day’s work.
4. A day’s work rich in its consequences. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
All the blessings of the light
We, who worship “the Father of lights,” have reason every
day that we live to thank God for life and health, for countless blessings. And
not least among these may be reckoned the free gift of, and the many “blessings
of the light.” For in many ways that we can tell off, at once, upon our
fingers, and in very many more ways that we neither dream of nor think of, does
light minister to our health, wealth, and comfort.
1. The very birds sing at daybreak their glad
welcome to the dawn, and the rising sun. And we all know and feel how cheering
is the power of light. In the sunlight rivers flash, and nature rejoices, and
our hearts are light, and we take a bright view of things.
2. So, too, light comes to revive and restore us.
Darkness is oppressive. In it we are apt to lose heart. We grow anxious, and
full of fears. With the first glimmer of light in the distance, hope awakens,
and we feel a load lifted off our minds.
3. Again, we have often felt the reassuring power
of light. In the darkness, objects that are perfectly harmless take threatening
shapes; the imagination distorts them, and our fancy creates dangers. Light
shows us that we have been alarmed at shadows: quiets and reassures us.
4. Once again, the light comes to us, often, as
nothing less than a deliverer. It reveals dangers hidden and unsuspected; the
deadly reptile; the yawning precipice; the lurking foe.
5. And when, over and above all this, we remember
that light is absolutely essential, not to health only, but to life in every
form, animal and vegetable alike, we shall heartily echo the words of the wise
king in Ecclesiastes: “Truly the light is sweet; and a pleasant thing it is for
the eyes to behold the sun.” (J. B. C. Murphy, B. A.)
The first day
The work begins with light, God said, “Let there be light,” and at once light shone where all before was dark. God says, “Repent ye--the kingdom of heaven is at hand”: then our darkness displeases us, and we are turned to light. Thus of all those blessings hid in Christ from everlasting, and which are predestinated to be accomplished in the creature, light is the first that is bestowed: “God shines in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.” But the “heaven” announced “at hand” is yet unformed. No sun yet shines, no fruits adorn the creature. Many steps remain before the image of God will come, the man created in righteousness, to rule all things. Then at once comes a division between what is of God and what is not; between the natural darkness in the creature and the light which God has made. The light shines in darkness, but the darkness comprehends it not. Two conflicting powers are striving each to gain the day, making the old domain of darkness a continually shifting but ceaseless battle field. Then a name is given by God both to light and darkness; that is, the character of each is learnt according to the mind of God. Now the darkness has a name. What God calls it, we call it. His thoughts are not altogether strange to us. Natural as the darkness may seem to the creature, God calls it “night,” or deviation. It is a turning from the right or straight line. The light is “day,” or movement: there is a disturbance of the darkness. Death rules no longer; life with light is come. Besides, in this name there is a form given to both. Until now light and darkness were unformed, but “day” and “night” intimate order and distribution. Night is darkness put within limits. So with light; it is not “day” till it is arranged and put in form and order. (A. Jukes.)
Light, natural and spiritual
Every saved man is a new creation.
I. THE DIVINE FIAT. “Let there be light.” The work
of grace by which light enters the soul is--
1. A needful work. No heart can be saved without spiritual light, to reveal self and Jesus Christ.
2. An early work. First day.
3. A Divine work.
4. Wrought by the Word. God spake.
5. Unaided by the darkness itself. Darkness cannot help to bring day.
6. It was unsolicited.
7. Instantaneous.
8. Irresistible.
II. DIVINE OBSERVATION.
III. DIVINE APPROBATION. Natural light is good.
Gospel light is good. Spiritual light is good.
1. Because of its source.
2. Because of its likeness. God is light.
3. Because of its effects.
4. It glorifies God.
IV. DIVINE SEPARATION. The Christian man has light
and darkness contending within him; also contending forces without him.
V. DIVINE NOMINATION. We must call things by their
right names. (C. H.Spurgeon.)
Light and its laws
I. The light God has made, and His mind concerning
it.
1. Physical light--good; light, sweet; pleasant. Sun, the emblem of many things; cheerful revealing.
2. Mental light--good. Hence in some parts an idiot is called “dark.”
3. Gospel light--good; the light of the story of God; light that shined out of darkness to enlighten Gentiles; Christ, the Light of the world, the Sun of Righteousness.
4. Spiritual light--good.
5. Essential light--light of heaven from the Father of lights.
II. The law by which it is governed.
1. Not mixed, but separated.
2. Sons of light must have no communion with darkness.
3. Churches should be lights in the world.
4. Truth not to be mixed with error.
Learn:
1. Love the light.
2. Walk in it.
3. Enforce the law concerning it. (J. C. Gray.)
The ceaseless act of the Almighty
I. THE THINGS SPOKEN OF IN THE TEXT, LIGHT AND
DARKNESS. To each of these terms there are different significations. There is
what we term natural light; there are also mental and moral light (the
illumination of the understanding and of the heart); there are also
providential, spiritual, and eternal light: each of these has its opposite
state of darkness. It is true that our text speaks only of light natural; yet,
as the works of God in nature are often typical of His works of grace, we may
follow the example of Scripture, and in tracing out the truths it teaches, may
endeavour to prove, that in the whole economy of nature, providence, and grace,
it is the practice and prerogative of God to divide the light from the
darkness. Is it darkness with any of the Lord’s people present? Are His
dealings mysterious? Are their state and prospects full of gloom and obscurity?
Child of sorrow, strive to bow with submission to the will of your Heavenly
Father. “Let patience have her perfect work.” “Light is sown for the righteous,
and gladness for the upright in heart.” “Why art thou cast down, oh my soul!
and why art thou disquieted within me?” “Hope in God, for thou shalt yet praise
Him who is the health of thy countenance.” “At evening time it shall be light.”
Yes, then, when you are expecting the darkness to increase--when the sun of
enjoyment seems to have set forever,--then, “at evening time it shall be
light.” “Who is among you that feareth the Lord and obeyeth the voice of His
servant: that walketh in darkness and hath no light; let him trust in the name
of the Lord, and stay upon his God.” “Unto the upright there ariseth light in
darkness.” There are also spiritual and eternal lights, with their opposite
states of darkness. “With Thee is the fountain of life,” said the sacred
writer, and “in Thy light shall we see light.” While we are in the darkness of
natural corruption and alienation from God, we know nothing aright, nothing of
the evils of sin, nothing of the astonishing love of Jesus, we have no just
conceptions of the amazing and stupendous work of redemption, or of the work of
the Holy Spirit upon the soul of man. But when in infinite compassion Jehovah
enlightens the understanding and touches the heart, we see and feel the reality
and vast importance of eternal things--we see at what an awful distance sin has
placed us from a God of spotless purity--we feel how deeply we are steeped in
the poison and pollution of iniquity--we adore the infinite wisdom manifested
in the plan of redemption, that stupendous plan, which while it redeems,
pardons, and sanctifies the sinner, satisfies also the high claims of Divine
justice, magnifies the Divine perfections, and brings “Glory to God in the
highest.”
II. We have now to consider WHAT MAY BE AFFIRMED
CONCERNING THE OBJECTS HERE SET BEFORE US:
GOD DIVIDES THE LIGHT FROM THE DARKNESS. He is accomplishing this upon earth by a mysterious but infinitely wise process. Much light and darkness dwells in the minds of individuals--in the various religious sects throughout the land, and among the different nations of the world. Whatever true light is in the world, it is of God. He is its Author. By nature all are under the dominion of the prince of darkness, and are enslaved by Him. But a stronger than he comes upon him, and delivers the captive from the dark dungeons of iniquity. Jesus came to be a light to them that sit in darkness; He sends His Spirit with His Word to subdue the rebellious heart, to awaken the insensible heart--to pour the light of celestial day upon the benighted spirit--to show the sinner to himself, and to reveal the saving mercy, of God in Christ--to reveal the dangers that lie in his pathway to eternity--to give him right views of every essential truth connected with salvation and eternal life--to teach him everything it is requisite he should know and experience ere he can inhabit the realms of light above--in short, to separate the light from the darkness. Hitherto the very light had been darkness; there had been light in the intellect perhaps, but darkness in the soul (for in many an unrenewed character the one is strangely mixed with the other). There may even possibly exist a theoretic knowledge of Divine things where blackest crimes dwell in the heart and are perpetrated in the life. But where Jesus shines forth in mercy--where the Holy Spirit exerts His power, the light is separated from the darkness: there is no longer that heterogeneous mixture of knowledge and sin, of Divine truth in the intellect and sin in the life, which formerly existed. Jehovah has wrought His wondrous work, has divided the light from the darkness, has separated the sinner from his sins, “and behold all things become new.” To conclude: The day of final separation is hastening on, then, forever and at once, God will divide “the light from the darkness,” truth from error, holiness from iniquity, the righteous from the wicked. Truth and righteousness shall dwell in heaven, error and iniquity shall sink to hell. The wicked will then be all darkness, the righteous will then be all light. (W. Burgess.)
Darkness before light
And do you think, children, that you were first light and
then became dark? or that you were first dark and then became light? Because
when you were a baby boy or girl you did not know much; it was very dark: now I
hope that the light of the Sun of Righteousness is upon you, that the evening
has become the morning. The morning star has risen, I hope. It is light! light!
(J. Vaughan, M. A.)
Night a necessity
A remarkable effect was mentioned by Mr. Robert Hunt (to
whom the public are indebted for much valuable information on solar and other
phenomena) to the present writer. In the course of his early experiments on the
active power of the sun’s rays, he subjected a metal plate to its operation,
and, of course, received upon it a picture of the objects within its range. He
now rubbed this off, making the surface clear and fresh as at first;
photographed a different picture, and then effaced this as he had done the
former. In this way he proceeded some ten or twelve times, now receiving, and
now rubbing off the traces of the sunlight, when the question arose in his
mind, “What would be the result were I to transmit an electrical current
through this plate?” To determine it, he caused a current to pass through it
diagonally, when, to his astonishment, the various objects that had been, as he
supposed, effaced from the surface, rushed to it confusedly together, so that
he could detect there a medley of them all; thus proving that there had not
been merely a superficial action of the light, but that it had produced a
molecular disturbance throughout the plate. Only let, therefore, the sunbeams
play uninterruptedly on the iron, the brass, or the granite, and they will
crumble into dust under an irresistible power; the falling over them of the
mantle of night alone prevents the occurrence of a catastrophe. (C.
Williams.)
It was good
The first day of creation
1. Man’s fallen nature is a very
chaos, “without form and void,” with darkness thick and sevenfold covering all.
The Lord begins His work upon man by the visitation of the Spirit, who enters
the soul mysteriously, and broods over it, even as of old He moved upon the
face of the waters. He is the quickener of the dead soul.
2. In connection with the presence of the Holy
Spirit the Lord sends into the soul, as His first blessing, light. The Lord
appeals to man’s understanding and enlightens it by the gospel.
3. If you keep your eye upon the chapter you will
observe that the light came into the world at first by the Word “God said, ‘Let
there be light.’” It is through the Word of God contained in this book, the
Bible, that light comes into the soul. This is that true light which lighteth
every man that cometh into the world.
4. The light which broke in upon the primeval
darkness was of a very mysterious kind, and came not according to ordinary
laws, for as yet neither sun nor moon had been set as lights in the firmament.
Can we tell how spiritual light first dawns on nature’s night? How He removes
darkness from the understanding, and illuminates the intellect, is a secret
reserved for Himself alone.
5. The light came instantaneously. Six days were
occupied in furnishing the earth, but a moment sufficed for illuminating it.
God works rapidly in the operation of regeneration: as with a flash He darts
light and life into the soul. The operations of grace are gradual, but its
entrance is instantaneous. Although instantaneous, it is not, however, shallow
and short lived.
I. THE LORD SEES WHATEVER HE CREATES. “The Lord
saw the light.”
1. He was the sole observer of it. Neither eye of
man, nor bird, nor beast was there to behold the golden glory; but God saw the
light. Newly enlightened one, it may be you are pained because you have no
Christian companion to observe your change of heart: cease from your sorrow,
for God beholds you.
2. That light had come into the world in a
noiseless manner, yet the Lord saw it. The entrance of God’s Word which giveth
light is effected in “solemn silence of the mind.” If men make an illumination,
we can hear the crackling of their fireworks over all the city; but when God
illuminates the earth with the sun, the orb of day arises without a sound.
Although the work in your soul has been so quiet, so hidden from the eyes of
men, so unremarkable and commonplace, yet take comfort from the text, “The Lord
saw the light.” No trumpet proclaimed it, but the Lord saw it; no voice went
forth concerning it, but the Lord saw it and it was enough; and in your case it
is the same.
3. The earth itself could not recognize the light,
yet the Lord saw it. How often do we mourn that we have scarcely more light
than suffices to reveal our darkness and make us pine for more. Oh, troubled
one, lay this home to your soul, the Lord saw the light when earth herself
could not perceive it.
4. Let us not forget that besides the light there
was no other beauty. The earth, according to the Hebrew, was “tohu and bohu,”
which, in order to come near both to the sense and sound at the same time, I
will render “anyhow and nohow.” Even so your experience may seem to be a chaos,
nohow and anyhow, exactly what it should not be, a mass of unformed
conceptions, and half-formed desires, and ill-formed prayers, but yet there is
grace in you, and God sees it, even amid the dire confusion and huge uproar of
your spirit.
5. Remember, too, that when the light came it had
to contend with darkness, but God saw it none the less. So, also, in your soul
there still remains the darkness of inbred corruption, ignorance, infirmity,
and tendency to sin, and these cause a conflict, but the light is not thereby
hidden from the eyes of God.
6. For many reasons the Lord sees the light, but
chiefly He sees it because He made it, and He forsakes not the work of His own
hands.
II. THE LORD APPROVES OF WHAT HE CREATES. “God saw
the light that it was good.” He took pleasure in it.
1. Now, as far as this world was concerned, light
was but young and new: and so in some of you grace is quite a novelty. You were
only converted a very little while ago, and you have had no time to try
yourselves or to develope graces, yet the Lord delights in your newborn life.
Light is good at dawn as well as at noon: the grace of God is good though but
newly received; it will work out for you greater things by-and-by, and make you
more happy and more holy, but even now all the elements of excellence are in
it, and its first day has the Divine blessing upon it.
2. Here we must mention again that it was
struggling light, yet none the less for that approved of by the Lord. We do not
understand how it was that the light and the darkness were together until God
divided them, as this verse intimates; but as John Bunyan says, “No doubt
darkness and light here began their quarrel,” for what communion hath light
with darkness. My brethren, I am sure you are no strangers to this conflict,
nor is it to you altogether a thing of the past. You are in the conflict still.
Still grace and sin are warring in you, and will do so till you are taken home.
Let this help you, O ye who are perplexed; remember that struggling as the
light is, God approves of it, and calls it good.
3. As yet the light had not been divided from the
darkness, and the bounds of day and night were not fixed. And so in young
beginners; they hardly know which is grace and which is nature, what is of
themselves and what is of Christ, and they make a great many mistakes. Yet the
Lord does not mistake, but approves of that which His grace has placed in them.
4. As yet the light and darkness had not been
named: it was afterwards that the Lord called the light “day,” and the darkness
“night,” yet He saw the light that it was good. And so, though you do not know
the names of things, God knows your name.
5. The light of the first day could not reveal
much of beauty, for there was none, and so the light within does not yet reveal
much to you; and what it, does reveal is uncomely, but the light itself is
good, whatever it may make manifest.
6. But why did God say that light was good?
(1) I suppose it was because its creation
displayed His attributes.
(2) He loves the light, too, because it is like
Himself, for “God is light, and in Him is no darkness at all.”
(3) Light is eminently good, for the Lord spent a
whole day in creating and arranging it--a whole day out of six. This shows that
He attaches great importance to it. Moreover, he gave it the front rank by
occupying the first day of creation’s week upon it. Even thus the plan of grace
was early in the mind of God; it was and is His masterpiece, and He has never
yet placed it in the background.
(4) I suppose that the Lord approved of the light
because it was a seasonable thing. It was what was wanted to begin with. Not
but what God could work in the dark, for, as to natural light, in that respect
darkness and light are both alike to Him; but we can all see that the works of
His creating skill needed light, for how could plants, animals, and men live
without it?
III. THE LORD QUICKLY DISCERNS ALL THE GOODNESS
AND BEAUTY WHICH EXISTS IN WHAT HE CREATES. The Lord did not merely feel
approbation for the light, but He perceived reason for it: He saw that it was
good. He could see goodness in it where, perhaps, no one else would have been
able to do so.
1. Let us note, then, that light is good in
itself; and so is Divine grace. What a wonderful thing light is! Just think of
it! How simple it is, and yet how complex. Light, too, how common it is! We see
it everywhere, and all the year round. Light, too, how feeble and yet how
strong! Its beams would not detain us one-half so forcibly as a cobweb; yet how
mighty it is, and how supreme! Scarcely is there a force in the universe of God
which is more potent. The grace of God in the same manner is contemptible in
the eyes of man, and yet the majesty of omnipotence is in it, and it is more
than conqueror.
2. Light is good, not only in itself, but in its
warfare. The light contended with darkness, and it was good for darkness to be
battled with. Grace has come unto you, and it will fight with your sin, and it
ought to be fought with, and to be overcome.
3. The light which came from God was good in its
measure. There was neither too much of it nor too little. If the Lord had sent
a little more light into the world we might all have been dazzled into
blindness, and if He had sent less we might have groped in gloom. God sends
into the newborn Christian just as much grace as he can bear; He does not give
him the maturity of after years, for it would be out of place.
4. Light was good as a preparation for God’s other
works. He knew that light, though it was but the beginning, was necessary to
the completion of His work. Light was needful, that the eye of man might
rejoice in the works of God, and so God saw the light that it was good, in
connection with what was to be. And, oh, I charge you who have to deal with
young people, look at the grace they have in them in relation to what will be
in them.
5. What a mass of thought one might raise from
this one truth of the goodness of light and the goodness of grace, as to their
results. Light produces the beauty which adorns the world, for without it all
the world were uncomely blackness. Light’s pencil paints the whole, and even so
all beauty of character is the result of grace. Light sustains life, for life
in due time would dwindle and die out without it, and thus grace alone sustains
the virtues and graces of the believer; without daily grace we should be
spiritually dead. Light heals many sicknesses, and grace brings healing in its
wings. Light is comfort, light is joy, the prisoner in his darkness knows it to
be so; and so the grace of God produces joy and peace wherever it is shed
abroad. Light reveals and so does grace, for without it we could not see the
glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.
IV. GOD RECORDED HIS ESTIMATE OF THIS FIRST DAY’S
PRODUCT. “God saw the light that it was good.”
1. This leads me to say to the young Christian,
the Lord would have you encouraged.
2. My last word is to older Christian people. If
the Lord says that His work in the first day is good, I want you to say so too.
Do not wait till you see the second, third, fourth, fifth, or sixth day before
you feel confidence in the convert and offer Him fellowship. If God speaks
encouragingly so soon, I want you to do the same. (C. H. Spurgeon.)
Genesis 1:3-4 Modern English Version (MEV)
DIVINELY PRODUCED.
(1) It is inexpensive. The world has to pay for the light produced by man; that created by God, we get for nothing. Man has limitations; God has none. Man is selfish; God is beneficent.
(2) It is extensive. It floods the universe. It is the heritage of the poor equally with the rich; it enters the hut as well as the palace.
(3) It is welcome.
3. For the instruction of life. Light is not merely a protection. It is also an instructor. It is an emblem. It is an emblem of God, the Eternal Light. It is an emblem of truth. It is an emblem of goodness. It is an emblem of heaven. It is an emblem of beneficence.
Light and the gospel compared
1. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their source and Divine resemblance.
2. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their adaptation to the end designed.
3. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their purity.
4. Light and the gospel resemble each other in their inseparable connection with joy and happiness.
2. That His Church should be the light of the world.
3. That the world should be filled with the light of the gospel of Christ.
(1) Now the gospel is adapted to all the world. It is as much suited to one part of it as to another.
(2) It is expressly said that it is designed for the whole world. “I am the light of the world.” “Go into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature.”
(3) The whole world shall finally enjoy its saving rays. “This gospel of the kingdom,” etc. (See Isa_11:9; Isa_60:19, and Hab_2:14.)
1. Have you the light of Divine grace in your hearts?
2. Have you this light in your families?
3. Have you this light in your neighbourhood?
4. Are you assisting to enlighten the world? (J. Burns, D. D.)
Genesis of light
Light and life
1. Trust in God’s overruling providence.
2. The study of nature should not be separated from religion. (W. S. Smith, B. D.)
Light
The Word of God
“Let there be.”
1. How the growth of the world points back to the eternal existence of the Word.
2. How the eternal Word is the foundation for the growth of the world. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
Light, a source of life
1. Its good, as existing in its ground.
2. Its beauty, as disclosed in its appearing. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
The creation of light a day’s work of God
1. The first day’s work.
2. A whole day’s work.
3. A continuous day’s work.
4. A day’s work rich in its consequences. (J. P. Lange, D. D.)
All the blessings of the light
The first day
The work begins with light, God said, “Let there be light,” and at once light shone where all before was dark. God says, “Repent ye--the kingdom of heaven is at hand”: then our darkness displeases us, and we are turned to light. Thus of all those blessings hid in Christ from everlasting, and which are predestinated to be accomplished in the creature, light is the first that is bestowed: “God shines in our hearts to give the light of the knowledge of the glory of God in the face of Jesus Christ.” But the “heaven” announced “at hand” is yet unformed. No sun yet shines, no fruits adorn the creature. Many steps remain before the image of God will come, the man created in righteousness, to rule all things. Then at once comes a division between what is of God and what is not; between the natural darkness in the creature and the light which God has made. The light shines in darkness, but the darkness comprehends it not. Two conflicting powers are striving each to gain the day, making the old domain of darkness a continually shifting but ceaseless battle field. Then a name is given by God both to light and darkness; that is, the character of each is learnt according to the mind of God. Now the darkness has a name. What God calls it, we call it. His thoughts are not altogether strange to us. Natural as the darkness may seem to the creature, God calls it “night,” or deviation. It is a turning from the right or straight line. The light is “day,” or movement: there is a disturbance of the darkness. Death rules no longer; life with light is come. Besides, in this name there is a form given to both. Until now light and darkness were unformed, but “day” and “night” intimate order and distribution. Night is darkness put within limits. So with light; it is not “day” till it is arranged and put in form and order. (A. Jukes.)
Light, natural and spiritual
Every saved man is a new creation.
1. A needful work. No heart can be saved without spiritual light, to reveal self and Jesus Christ.
2. An early work. First day.
3. A Divine work.
4. Wrought by the Word. God spake.
5. Unaided by the darkness itself. Darkness cannot help to bring day.
6. It was unsolicited.
7. Instantaneous.
8. Irresistible.
1. Because of its source.
2. Because of its likeness. God is light.
3. Because of its effects.
4. It glorifies God.
Light and its laws
1. Physical light--good; light, sweet; pleasant. Sun, the emblem of many things; cheerful revealing.
2. Mental light--good. Hence in some parts an idiot is called “dark.”
3. Gospel light--good; the light of the story of God; light that shined out of darkness to enlighten Gentiles; Christ, the Light of the world, the Sun of Righteousness.
4. Spiritual light--good.
5. Essential light--light of heaven from the Father of lights.
1. Not mixed, but separated.
2. Sons of light must have no communion with darkness.
3. Churches should be lights in the world.
4. Truth not to be mixed with error.
Learn:
1. Love the light.
2. Walk in it.
3. Enforce the law concerning it. (J. C. Gray.)
The ceaseless act of the Almighty
GOD DIVIDES THE LIGHT FROM THE DARKNESS. He is accomplishing this upon earth by a mysterious but infinitely wise process. Much light and darkness dwells in the minds of individuals--in the various religious sects throughout the land, and among the different nations of the world. Whatever true light is in the world, it is of God. He is its Author. By nature all are under the dominion of the prince of darkness, and are enslaved by Him. But a stronger than he comes upon him, and delivers the captive from the dark dungeons of iniquity. Jesus came to be a light to them that sit in darkness; He sends His Spirit with His Word to subdue the rebellious heart, to awaken the insensible heart--to pour the light of celestial day upon the benighted spirit--to show the sinner to himself, and to reveal the saving mercy, of God in Christ--to reveal the dangers that lie in his pathway to eternity--to give him right views of every essential truth connected with salvation and eternal life--to teach him everything it is requisite he should know and experience ere he can inhabit the realms of light above--in short, to separate the light from the darkness. Hitherto the very light had been darkness; there had been light in the intellect perhaps, but darkness in the soul (for in many an unrenewed character the one is strangely mixed with the other). There may even possibly exist a theoretic knowledge of Divine things where blackest crimes dwell in the heart and are perpetrated in the life. But where Jesus shines forth in mercy--where the Holy Spirit exerts His power, the light is separated from the darkness: there is no longer that heterogeneous mixture of knowledge and sin, of Divine truth in the intellect and sin in the life, which formerly existed. Jehovah has wrought His wondrous work, has divided the light from the darkness, has separated the sinner from his sins, “and behold all things become new.” To conclude: The day of final separation is hastening on, then, forever and at once, God will divide “the light from the darkness,” truth from error, holiness from iniquity, the righteous from the wicked. Truth and righteousness shall dwell in heaven, error and iniquity shall sink to hell. The wicked will then be all darkness, the righteous will then be all light. (W. Burgess.)
Darkness before light
Night a necessity
It was good
No comments:
Post a Comment