
THE SPIRIT COMMITTED TO GOD
Into thine hand I commit my spirit; thou hast redeemed me, O Lord
God of truth - Psalm 31:5.
There
is something peculiarly interesting in these words; they
are the words of the Lord Jesus when he hung upon the cross he
hung upon it for six long hours in bitter agony. The gall and the
vinegar were bitter, but it was nothing to the wrath of God. It
was at the last hour of his agony Christ said, "Into thine hand I
commit my spirit; thou hast redeemed me, O LORD GOD of truth."
The very soul which he had made an offering for sin, he committed
into the hand of God. There is something very precious in being
allowed to use the same expression as Christ. There is something
very pleasant in being allowed to use the words of a departed
friend, and that a beloved friend. There is no friend like
Christ. "This is my beloved, and this is my friend" (Song of
Solomon 5:16). There is something sweet in being allowed to use
the words of Christ, in the 40th Psalm: "Innumerable evils have
compassed me about, and mine iniquities have taken such hold upon
me, that I cannot look up" (verse 12). There is something
pleasant for a sinner to be allowed to use the words of Christ in
the 40th of Isaiah: "My way is hid from the Lord and my judgment
is passed over from my God" (verse 27). In like manner it is
sweet for a poor dying worm to be allowed to use the words before
us.
From these words let us consider: (1) the person that speaks; (2)
the person addressed; (3) the thing committed.
1. The Person That Speaks
it is an afflicted, tempest-tossed soul. Such was David, no
doubt, when he wrote this Psalm. He says in verse 4, "Pull me out
of the net that they have laid privily for me." Or, in verse 8,
"And has not shut me up into the hand of the enemy ..." He was a
poor, afflicted, tempest-tossed man. He felt that Satan and his
own wicked heart were too many for him. "Pull me out of the net
that they have laid privily for me." Such was Christ's, in that
day especially, when he said, "This is your hour, and the power
of the darkness" (Luke 22:53). "Strong bulls of Bashan have beset
me round"(Psalm 22:12). He was an afflicted, tempest-tossed soul.
And, no doubt, there may be such within hearing; if so, these
words are for them. They were used by the Head when he suffered
for them, and he intended that they should be used by the
members. Dear tempest-tossed soul, he can deliver thee. Put up
this prayer, "Into thine hand I commit my spirit; thou hast
redeemed me, O LORD God of truth."
2. The Person Addressed
This is the Redeemer. On the one hand there is a poor,
tempesttossed believer; on the other hand there is the all-sufficient Redeemer. On the ground lies a poor tempest-tossed
man; above him stands the all-sufficient Redeemer. It is to this
mighty Redeemer we must go. When Christ spoke these words, he no
doubt spoke to the Father, "Into thine hand I commit my spirit;
thou hast redeemed me, O LORD God of truth." Some will ask, Did
Christ need to be redeemed? Ah! yes, he had our sins laid upon
him, and on that account needed to be redeemed. And therefore he
said, when he was at the end of the work, "Into thine hand I
commit my spirit; thou hast redeemed me, O LORD God of truth."
The very spirit that had been made an offering for sin. When
Stephen took up the same words, he did not address them to God,
but to the Redeemer; he said, "Lord Jesus, receive my spirit"
(Acts 7:59). Ah! brethren, this is the only hand that can receive
our spirit, none other but him who has redeemed us.
3. What It Is He Commits Into His Hand - "My Spirit".
The soul of man is the most precious part of man. I do not intend
to speak lightly of the body, but it is not to be compared to the
soul. The outer man is the setting, but the soul is the diamond.
It was the spirit that was made in the likeness of God. The body
will go to the dust, but not so the spirit. When free from the
body it will sin no more - I mean the redeemed soul - it will be
clouded no more; sin and it will be for ever separated. It was
this that David committed into the hand of God. It was this that
Christ committed into the hand of his Father. It is this that
every poor tempest-tossed soul will commit to God. "What shall it
profit a man if he should gain the whole world, and lose his own
soul?" How long will the devil deceive you, brethren? How long
will you neglect the unchanging, unsatisfied spirit?
In applying these words, I desire to show you a few of those
times we should commit our spirit to God.
(1) In the time of conversion. It is the first time that ever a
sinner commits his spirit into the hand of God. I think this is
what Paul means when he says to Timothy, "I know in whom I have
believed, and am persuaded that he is able to keep that which I
have committed unto him, against that day" (2 Timothy 1: 12). You
will observe, in the Bible, that conversion is sometimes spoken
of from God's part in it. Again, it is sometimes spoken of from
the sinner's part in it. There is no contradiction in these two.
Conversion begins first on God's part; but the Spirit works on
the sinner; it produces faith in him, draws him to Jesus, and
enables him to forsake sin.
Dear brethren, I must speak to you seriously, and say that it is
your solemn duty, as well as your sweet privilege, to commit your
soul into the hand of God in conversion. In whose hand have you
placed your spirit? Have you put it into the hand of the world?
Was it crucified for you? Have you committed your soul into the
hand of Satan, as Ahab did? He sold himself to work all manner of
wickedness. What can he do for it? Can he give it peace? Can he
give it joy? Can he fit it for heaven? But there are some who
have committed their soul into the hand of God. There are those
in this congregation who can look up to him against whom the
sword of justice awoke, and say, "Into thine hand I commit my
spirit" - my poor, polluted, tempest-tossed spirit.
I would urge upon you all to commit your spirit to him. If your
spirit be not committed to him, will it be saved? In a little,
your spirit will return to God, who gave it, and if it be not
committed into the hand of him who bore our sins in his own body
on the tree, how will you appear? Ah! but some will say, Will he
receive my spirit? Ah! will he not? Did ever he say, That spirit
is too vile for me - that spirit has lived too long in sin? "This
is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus
Christ came into the world to save sinners; of whom I am chief"
(I Timothy 1: 15). Chief of sinners, commit thy spirit to him.
(2) To those of you who may be tempted believers. I say, a time
of temptation is a time to put up this prayer. There are some
believers who, for a long time after believing, know not what
temptation is. They are like Naphtali, "satisfied with favour,
and full with the blessing of the LORD" (Deuteronomy 33:23). They
have eternal sunshine; but perhaps they fall when temptation
comes, and they feel with Job, "When thou hidest thy face I am
troubled." Then he goes to his knees, but he finds no comfort. He
goes to the Bible, but it is a sealed book. He goes to Christian
friends, but miserable comforters are they all. Now what can he
do? There is hardly such a word he can put up as this - "Into
thine hand I commit my spirit; thou hast redeemed me, O LORD God
of truth" - thou hast paid thine own precious blood to redeem me;
wilt thou shut me up into the hand of mine enemy? "Pull me out of
the net" (Psalm 31:4). "Into thine hand I commit my spirit; thou
hast redeemed me, O LORD God of truth."
There is a ray of hope springs from these words, "LORD God of
truth". Thou hast said, "Thy sheep shall never perish, neither
shall any pluck them out of thy hand" (John 10:28). Thou hast
said, "The very God of peace sanctify thee wholly, and I pray God
your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless until
the coming of Jesus Christ" (I Thessalonians 5:23). Wilt thou not
do all that thou hast said?
(3) To those among you who may be in affliction. Many Christians
know nothing of affliction. They are allowed to sail smoothly on;
no storm comes near their little barque. They do not know what it
is to write "Ichabod" - the glory is departed - on their
dwellings; or like Naomi to say, "Call me not Naomi, call me
Marah, for the LORD hath dealt bitterly with me" (Ruth 1:20-21).
Dear brethren, it is not always that you will have these days.
Days of darkness and disease will come, and what is to be done?
There is only one place you can go to. "Into thine hand I commit
my spirit; thou hast redeemed me, O LORD God of truth."
(4) To those of you who are looking forward to duty. When a
believer first comes to Christ, his time is all taken up about
the gate, not about the way. I have been much struck with young
believers. When they have been hearing a sermon, they say, "How
did you like that sermon?" not, "What am I the better of it?"
But, if you are a believer, you will feel that you have as much
to do with the way as with the gate. Commit thy spirit to him. Oh
brethren, he can carry you! "Even to your old age I am he; and
even to hoar hairs will I carry you" (Isaiah 46:4). There is none
but he can carry you - before duty to guide, in duty to direct,
after duty to accept. Commit thy spirit to his hand; he will
guide you. "Thine ears shall hear a word behind thee, saying,
This is the way, walk ye in it" (Isaiah 30:21).
Last of all, to dying believers. It was our Head that used this
prayer, and it may well suit all the members. It is a solemn
thing to die, because we will have to go alone. It is solemn
because we are going where we never went before; all is strange
and new. When we go to a throne of grace, we have been there
before, and know the way; but to go there is dark, because we go
we know not where. And then it is dark, because it is a final
step. It is a solemn thing to die, because if we die wrong we
cannot come back to die again. These are some of the things that
make up the valley of the shadow of death.
In such a time, what are we to do? Commit thy spirit into his
hand. You must commit your spirit to Christ in the same way as
you did in the converting hour. There is no hand that can reach
across Jordan but his. There is none that can say, "Peace, be
still", but Jesus. "Jesus Christ, the same yesterday, today, and
forever" (Hebrews 13:8).
Dear brethren, are you preparing for death? Do you not know that
soon another voice will be heard here, another voice will lead
the psalm? It is a hard thing for a believer to commit his spirit
into the hand of Christ. What then will you do, you that are
giving your soul to the god of this world? What will you do when
God says, "Go to the gods which you have chosen, commit your
spirit to the world you have loved?" Amen.