In Rowland Wheatley's sermon titled "Hedged in by God," the preacher explores the theological significance of divine providence as illustrated in Lamentations 3:7-9. Wheatley argues that God's sovereign hand can lead His people into circumstances where they feel trapped and unable to change their situation. He references Jeremiah's lament over the destruction of Jerusalem and the heavy burdens he carried as a result of God's dealing with Israel's sin. The preacher emphasizes that although believers may experience feelings of despair—like prayers that seem unheard or paths obscured by difficulties—these experiences are ultimately under God's control. The sermon stresses the importance of recognizing God's sovereignty and that His purposes, even in suffering, serve a greater good, providing hope and assurance of eventual deliverance through His mercies.
“He hath hedged me about that I cannot get out. He hath made my chain heavy.”
“The Lord is in control. He is doing according to the counsel of his own will, and none can stay his hand.”
“It is in this that I want to open up a bit this evening, but surely we can just, at the very start, just think that there are some points we can glean immediately God will follow through his warnings, won't he?”
“If you, if I am in this path here, hedged about, shut in, a hard path, a heavy path, a path where prayer is not heard, may we be able to look at the benefits and blessings and fall into those dear hands once nailed to the accursed tree.”
Auto-generated transcript • May contain errors
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