Solomon's ships had returned in safety, but Jehoshaphat's vessels never reached the land of gold. Providence prospers one,
and frustrates the desires of another, in the same business and at
the same spot, yet the Great Ruler is as good and wise at one time
as another. May we have grace today, in the remembrance of this text,
to bless the Lord for ships broken at Ezion-geber, as well as for
vessels freighted with temporal blessings; let us not envy the more
successful, nor murmur at our losses as though we were singularly
and specially tried. Like Jehoshaphat, we may be precious in the Lord's sight, although our schemes end in disappointment.
The secret cause of Jehoshaphat's loss is well worthy of notice, for it is the root of very much of
the suffering of the Lord's people; it was his alliance with a sinful family, his fellowship
with sinners. In 2 Ch. 20:37,
we are told that the Lord sent a prophet to declare, "Because thou hast
joined thyself with Ahaziah, the Lord hath broken
thy works." This was a fatherly chastisement, which appears to have been
blest
to him; for in the verse which succeeds our morning's text we find him
refusing to allow his servants to sail in the same
vessels with those of the wicked king. Would to God that Jehoshaphat's
experience might be a warning to the rest of the Lord's people, to avoid
being unequally yoked together with unbelievers!
A life of misery is usually the lot of those who are united in marriage,
or in any other way of their own choosing, with the men of the world.
O for such love to Jesus that, like him, we may be holy, harmless,
undefiled, and separate from sinners; for if it be not so with us,
we may expect to hear it often said, "The Lord hath broken thy works."