Episode Four: God Save the King
Andrews on Being in Want for a King in Judges 17:6
August 1, 2020
Sermon 8 of Lancelot Andrewes’ Certain Sermons Preached at Sundry Times upon Several Occasions before the King’s Majesty at Whitehall on March 24, 1606 roughly 4 months after the Gunpowder Plot to blow up King James I attempted on November 5, 1605
A copy can be found in Lancelot Andrewes Works, Sermons, Volume Five, pp.169-185, or on The Project Canterbury Website.
Sermon Summary:
Looking at the historical point of God’s people in which it became most clear of both their need for a king and God’s desire to establish one, Bishop Andrewes examines both the negative effects produced in the lives of men in women who are without a king (such as encouraging their propensity for misusing religion, liberty, and behavior), as well as the positive effects provided by having a king (especially in preventing idolatry and cultural syncretism). His outline is simple:
- Introduction
- Opening acknowledgements of both the blessing of now having a king, and the painful realization of their necessity when their seat in not filled
- Judges 17:6 and the others like it (18:1; 19:1; 21:25) begin to build anticipation in the mind of the reader for the Books of Kings
- Andrewes shows how kings were always a part of God’s perfect plan for His people (Deut.17:14-20)
- The Effects of Being in Want of a King
- Upon the eye (when individual perception is king)
- Upon the hand (no restraint but will and strength)
- Confusion wrought when both work together in rebellion (any man doing any thing)
- Remedy: 1) eye salve; 2) led by the hand; and then 3) hand restraint
- The Cause: Being in Want of a King
- No king to keep religion from idolatry, lives & goods in safety, and vessels in honor
- No king in Israel to keep the LORD’s Israel from becoming like the world’s Babel
- No kingly rule to govern and maintain the love of God and love of neighbor
- Conclusion
- Seven reasons to be thankful for having a King: 1) a King, 2) a singular King, 3) a local, non-foreign King, 4) a Christian King, 5) a wise King, 6) a King of peace, and 7) a King with a successor
Music & Sound Attributions:
Music in this episode by Blue Dot Sessions “Lost Shoe” (www.sessions.blue). Sounds used are as follows: “Beer Can Opening” recorded by Mike Koening found at (http://soundbible.com/216-Beer-Can-Opening.html), “Pouring Drink” recorded by Mike Koenig found at (http://soundbible.com/2115-Pouring-Drink.html), and “Time Warp” recorded by Mike Koenig found at (http://soundbible.com/978-Time-Warp.html)