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Robert Hawker

Deuteronomy 28:58

Deuteronomy 28:58
Robert Hawker May, 1 2016 3 min read
730 Articles 1 Sermon 30 Books
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May, 1 2016
Robert Hawker
Robert Hawker 3 min read
730 articles 1 sermons 30 books
What does the Bible say about fearing the name of God?

The Bible teaches that we should have a reverent fear of the glorious name of the Lord our God, recognizing His immense dignity and the seriousness of His covenant promises.

Deuteronomy 28:58 emphasizes the importance of fearing the glorious and fearful name of the Lord God. This fear is not a cringing dread but a deep reverence acknowledging God's sovereignty and holiness. The text suggests that God's mercies come with sacredness, requiring us to approach Him with humility and awe. The Israelites understood that the very purpose of God's dispensations was to foster a suitable reverence for His name, which signifies His covenantal relationship with His people through Christ.

The name of God is described as glorious due to its representation of divine attributes manifested in His covenant engagements. It is also fearful, recalling God's commitment to judge His enemies and fulfill both His threats and promises. Believers are admonished to meditate on this name with a sense of reverence, aware that their acceptance and redemption are through Christ. As we contemplate the name of the Lord, we are invited to appreciate the gravity of His promises, pledging us a relationship with Him based on Christ's finished work.

Deuteronomy 28:58, Psalm 110:4-5

How do we know God's promises are true?

God's promises are based on His unchanging nature and covenantal oaths, ensuring their certainty and reliability for believers.

The reliability of God's promises stems from His unchanging character and the solemnity with which He binds Himself to His covenant. In Scripture, particularly in Deuteronomy 28:58, we see God's name exalted, underscoring His glorious and fearful attributes. This is linked to His immutable nature, meaning that what God has promised will come to pass because He is faithful to His word.

When God makes an oath, such as those surrounding Christ's priestly office, it guarantees that He will fulfill both His promises and His threats. This dual assurance enhances our confidence in His nature as not only a promise-keeper but also a God who executes justice. Therefore, the believer can rest assured of God's fidelity amidst life’s trials, grounded in the knowledge that He is engaged to fulfill His promises through Christ, our mediator.

Deuteronomy 28:58, Psalm 110:4-5

Why is reverence for God's name important for Christians?

Reverence for God's name fosters a proper relationship with Him, leading to humility and acknowledgment of His holiness.

For Christians, reverence for God's name is fundamental as it shapes our understanding of His character and our relationship with Him. Deuteronomy 28:58 points to the necessity of recognizing the glory and the seriousness of God's name, which reflects His eternal attributes and His work within His covenant. This recognition cultivates a sense of awe that leads to worship, humility, and obedience.

A lack of reverence can lead to a dismissive attitude towards God's nature and directives, potentially resulting in spiritual complacency or confusion. Conversely, when believers approach God’s name with the appropriate fear and respect, it allows them to fully appreciate the magnitude of His love, grace, and righteousness, leading to a blessed relationship rooted in truth and faith. Thus, knowing and fearing the name of the Lord instills a healthy reverence, empowering Christians to seek a deeper relationship with their Creator.

Deuteronomy 28:58

"That thou mayest fear this glorious and fearful name, THE LORD THY GOD."—Deut. xxviii. 58.

— Deuteronomy 28:58

My soul! thy morning meditation, in the opening of a new month, was directed to that soul-reviving subject, the contemplation of the name of Jesus. Oh! what rich stores of unknown, unexplored treasures of mercies are folded in that one name of thy Lord! It will serve to heighten thy study yet more, and tend to endear Jesus as increasingly precious, by pondering over what the man of God taught Israel in the solemn words here proposed to thine evenig meditation. Every thing in Jehovah is solemn. His sweetest mercies come to us with great sacredness. It is impossible to receive them but with the lowliest reverence, even when the soul is made blessed in divine favours. We rejoice indeed, but we rejoice with trembling. And the greater the mercies are, the more will the conscious sense of our undeservings humble the soul to the dust before God. The Israelites were taught by this scripture, that the great design of Jehovah, in all his dispensations, was to induce a suitable and becoming reverence for this glorious and fearful name of THE LORD THEIR GOD. And his sacred name is here put in large letters, by way of intimating its immense dignity and importance. His name is glorious, because it sets forth how that glory of Jehovah is manifested in his covenant engagements by CHRIST; and his name is no less fearful, because it is by virtue of those covenant engagements that the Lord is pledged to bring all the foes of Christ and his redemption under his footstool. There seems to be a reference to the oath of Jehovah, when Christ was introduced into his high priestly office, that the Lord, at Messiah's right hand," would strike through kings in the day of his wrath;" Psalm cx. 4, 5. And it should seem no less evident, that this very name, glorious and fearful as it is, was thus expressly proclaimed to intimate, that, by virtue of this oath, Jehovah is engaged as much, on the one part, to fulfil the threatenings, as, on the other, to make good the promises; both of which were rendered firm and irrevocable by the solemnity of an oath. My soul! ponder over these most sacred things with a reverence suited to them. And in these awful days, in which the church of Jesus is now surrounded with the dreadful delusion of heresy, in those who deny the Lord that bought them, see to it, that thou art strong in the grace which is in Christ Jesus. Oh! the blessedness of "knowing whom thou hast believed, that thou mayest fear this glorious and fearful name, THE LORD THY GOD." Thy Lord, thy God in covenant; in his relation to thee in Christ, thy perfect redemption by Christ, and thy acceptance from Christ, in his finished salvation. Oh! did the sinner of every description and character, but for a moment consider what he is doing, who is looking to this glorious and fearful name of the Lord God, without knowing him as his God, that is, God in Christ, the Mediator, and being accepted in him; what dreadful trembling and apprehension of soul would it induce! Bless thy God, thy Jesus, my soul, who hath thus made a sweet revelation of himself to thee, and not only taught thee, but inclined thee by the teachings and influences of his Holy Spirit, to fear "this glorious and fearful name, the Lord thy God!"

From Poor Man's Evening Portions by Robert Hawker.
Robert Hawker
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