ZEPHANIAH 117
Vol. 2

May Be

Zephaniah 2:3

Seek you the Lord, all you meek of the earth, which have wrought his judgment; seek righteousness, seek meekness: it may be you shall be hid in the day of the Lord's anger.

There is a “may be” about all temporal things; and in pleading for them we ask with much diffidence.

Yet we may plead confidently when our appeal is made to God in the day of his anger. Then our need is pressing: it is for our life that we are pleading, and the Lord is very gracious in our extremities.

In spiritual things we may draw encouragement from the faintest sign of hope when it proceeds from God: “it may be you shall be hid.”

The seeking for refuge, here commanded, is directed only to the meek and righteous; but it is our joy to proclaim a hiding-place for the guilty, and to bid them seek the Lord even on the least encouragement.

The three seekings commanded are:—

“Seek the Lord;” or, repent, and trust in Jehovah.

“Seek righteousness.” Directed as it is in the text to those who are already righteous, it bids them persevere in righteousness.

“Seek meekness.” Spoken to the meek, it bids them bow even more humbly before the chastening hand of God.

But our point is this: that we may seek the Lord upon the faintest encouragement. There are strong inducements and large promises; but if we cannot grasp these we may come even with a “may be.”

I. IN MANY A RECORDED INSTANCE “MAY BE” HAS PROMPTED AND JUSTIFIED A RIGHT ACTION.

From the cases which we will mention lessons may be learned.

  1. A “may be” led Jonathan to attack the garrison of the Philistines. 1 Samuel 14:6. “It may be that the Lord will work for us: for there is no restraint to the Lord to save by many or by few.” This should nerve saints for holy enterprises.

  2. A “may be” cheered David when Absalom rebelled, and Shimei cursed. 2 Samuel 16:12. “It may be that the Lord will look on mine affliction.” Let us hope in God in our darkest hours.

  3. A “may be” induced the lepers to visit the Syrian camp. 2 Kings 7:4. Their desperate venture should be laid to heart by those who are in like condition. They can but perish in any case; let them seek the Lord, and try whether he does not save.

  4. A “may be,” diluted with an “if so be,” moved the afflicted to humble himself. See Jeremiah’s Lamentations 3:29. Let no tried soul refuse the like hope.

  5. A “may be,” in the form of “Who can tell?” brought all Nineveh to repentance. Jonah 3:9.

    • If others have acted so vigorously upon such slender encouragement, may not we, when dreading the ruin of our souls, act with like decision and hopefulness? If we fly to Jesus by childlike faith, there is more than a “may be” that the result will be happy.

II. IN THE INSTANCE OF A SINCERE SEEKER THE “MAY BE” IS OF UNUSUAL STRENGTH.

There is every probability of the penitent obtaining salvation if we—

  1. Consider the gracious nature of our God. Micah 7:18.

  2. Consider the glorious work of Christ for sinners. 1 Timothy 1:15.

  3. Consider the mercy they have already received. “It is of the Lord’s mercies that we are not consumed”: Lamentations 3:22.

  4. Consider the number and character of those who have been saved. Revelation 5:9, 7:9. 1 Corinthians 6:11.

  5. Consider the omnipotence of the Holy Spirit. John 3:8.

  6. Consider the glory which is to be the Lord’s at the last: surely it will come by saving souls, and saving many of them.

III. BUT IN THE SEEKER’S CASE HE HAS FAR MORE TO GO UPON THAN A MERE “MAY BE.”

There are innumerable sure promises in the Word of God, and these are made to—

Repentance. Proverbs 28:13. Isaiah 55:7.

Faith. Mark 16:16. John 3:18. Acts 16:31.

Prayer. Matthew 7:7. Acts 2:21.

Let these promises be studied, and their encouragement accepted by immediate compliance with their requirements.

Consider that God foresaw all events when he made these promises, and accordingly he has not made them in error.

Consider that he cannot withdraw his promise.

Consider that he is the same as when he made the promise, and so in effect makes it again every day.

Consider that it will be a crime to doubt the Lord our God, and an act of reverence to believe him. Venture now upon the bare promise of God, who cannot lie. Titus 1:2.

O sinner, seek the Lord!

He comes to you in Christ Jesus. Look to him at once, and live.

Cheering Words

Possibly you may be hid from punishment, probably you shall escape sorrow: but pardon of sin you shall be sure of; mitigation also of sorrow, if not prevention of it. Saved you shall be, or more gently handled, or so inwardly calmed, that you shall be able to call your souls to rest when others are at their wits’ ends. You shall be safe under the cover of God’s wings, and in the hollow of his hand; when others, that are without God in the world, shall be as a naked man in a storm, as an unarmed man in the field of battle, or as a ship at sea without an anchor, subject to dash and split against rocks and quicksands.—Trapp.

Dr. John Duncan was once heard thus addressing a beggar-woman in Edinburgh:—“Now, you’ll promise me that you’ll seek: but mind, seeking will not save you, yet it is your duty; and if you seek you’ll find, and finding will save you.”

Our hope is not hung upon such untwisted thread as “I imagine so”, or, ‘it is likely”; but the cable, the strong rope of our fastened anchor, is the oath and promise of him who is eternal verity; our salvation is fastened with God’s own hand, and Christ’s own strength, to the strong stake of God’s unchanging nature.—Rutherford.

How long a beggar will wait, and how eagerly he will plead, although he has no promise of an alms, but only the bare chance of winning a penny from a passer-by! How laboriously will fishers cast their nets again and again, though nothing has been taken as yet, and their only encouragement is the possibility that fish may come that way! How desperately will men dive into the sea with the expectation of finding pearls in oyster-shells, encountering fierce monsters of the deep with the uncertain hope of being enriched! And will not men draw near to God when their outlook is so much more bright, their expectation so much more justifiable? As for me, I will lay down my sick soul at Christ’s feet, in sure and certain belief that he will heal me, and then I will follow him wherever he goes, in calm assurance that he will lead me to his eternal kingdom and glory.—C. H. S.

Ecclesiastes to Malachi · All notes