"He shall drink of the brook in the way; therefore shall he lift up the head." - Ps. cx. 7.
The brook of Kedron was a black brook (for so the word Kedron
signifies) into which all the filth from the sacrifices was thrown; it
was the brook over which the Son of God passed in the night that he
entered the garden of Gethsemane. Now, as the whole Psalm from which
this portion is taken, refers to the person of Jesus, nothing can be
more plain than that David, by the spirit of prophecy, is here
describing the deep sufferings of Christ, and the glory that should
follow. By the expression, drinking of this black brook, it is intended
to convey an idea of the "cup of trembling" put into the Lord Jesus's
hands, when he sustained all the sins and filth of his people, and in
consequence as their surety, all the Father's wrath against sin. Hence
the Lord said, "The cup that my Father giveth me, shall I not drink
it?" My soul! pause, and ask thyself, doth not this sweet but solemn
verse give thee precious instruction, when thou considerest that all
thy filth, and all thy defilements, were imputed, by the Father
himself, unto the person of thy glorious surety? Is it not blessed thus
to see, that by Christ's drinking "of the brook in the way," he took
all thy transgressions, and was made both "sin and a curse for thee,
that thou mightest be made the righteousness of God in him?" And
though, in himself, he was "holy, harmless, undefiled, separate from
sinners, and made higher than the heavens," yet, as the surety of his
people, he was made black with sin and suffering; "his visage was
marred more than any man, and his form more than the sons of men."
Precious Jesus! may I never lose sight of Gethsemane, the mount of
Olives, and the brook Kedron! Here, by faith, let my soul frequently
take her evening station, and behold thee "pouring out thy soul unto
death, numbered with the transgressors," drinking "of the brook in the
way," that thy sacred head might be lifted up, first on the cross in
suffering, and then with thy crown in glory!
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