Fountains of Living Water in this Valley of Tears
"Blessed
is the man whose strength is in Thee; in whose heart are the ways of
them. Who passing through the valley of Baca make it a well; the rain
also filleth the pools." -Psalm 84:5, 6 [KJV]
David casts a glimpse here
at those pilgrims who were taking their upward journey to worship God
in Zion. He marks their road, and takes occasion to spiritualize it; for
he says, "In whose heart," in whose experience, in whose soul, "are the
ways" of these pilgrims Zionward.
What are these "ways?" It is
this, that "passing through the valley of Baca, they make it a well."
This valley of Baca appears to have been a very perilous pass, through
which pilgrims journeyed toward Jerusalem; and on account of the
difficulties, dangers, and sufferings that they met with, it was named
"the valley of Baca," or "the valley of weeping," "the vale of tears."
But
the Psalmist says, "Blessed is the man in whose heart are the ways of
them, who passing through the valley of Baca make it a well." Here is
the distinctive character of the true pilgrim. Not that he is journeying
merely through the "valley of Baca;" not that his eyes are drowned in
tears; not that his heart is filled with sorrows; not that his soul is
cut with temptations; not that his mind is tried by suffering. But this
is his distinctive feature—he "makes it a well." This the ungodly know
nothing of; this the professing world, for the most part, are entirely
unacquainted with; but this is the secret which "no fowl knoweth, and
which the vulture's eye hath not seen."
One feature of the
"valley of Baca" was, that the burning sun above, and the parched ground
beneath, at the time of year when the pilgrims travelled, made the
whole valley arid and dry. But "they made it a well." There were wells
dug in this valley of Baca for the pilgrims to slake their thirst at.
And David, looking at these wells dug for the pilgrims, applies them
spiritually to the refreshment that the Lord's people meet with in their
course Zionward. "Make it a well;" that is, there are from time to time
sweet refreshments in this valley of tears; there are bubblings up of
divine consolation; there are fountains of living waters, streams of
heavenly pleasures.
I remember a friend of mine telling me, that
once while journeying through one of the deserts in Asia, he and his
companions came to a well; and their disappointment when they found the
well was dry he said no language could depict; their grief and trouble
when, after hours' travelling, they came at night to encamp by the well,
and found that the sun had dried it up, were indeed most acute. As,
therefore, none but pilgrims through the dry and parched valley could
adequately feel the sweetness of the natural well; so none but spiritual
pilgrims, afflicted, exercised, and harassed, can appreciate the
sweetness of the "pure water of life" with which the Lord at times
refreshes the soul.
-preacher J.C. Philpot (1802–1869 A.D.)
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