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SPURGEON
SERMONS
ON 2 TIMOTHY |
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2 Timothy
1:12
KNOWING AND BELIEVING
NO. 3331
A SERMON PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY, DECEMBER 5TH, 1912,
DELIVERED BY C. H. SPURGEON,
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.
ON LORD’S-DAY EVENING, SEP. 30TH, 1866.
“I know whom I
have believed.” — 2 Timothy 1:12.
THE text is wholly taken up with
three things; namely, with knowing, with believing, and with the person
who is known and believed; and upon both the knowing and the believing
Paul is very decided. He puts in no “if,” no word of change; he does not
say, “I hope so,” or “I trust so,” but “I know I have believed, and I
know whom I have believed.” It is all assurance, and not a shadow of
doubt. Let us imitate the apostle, or ask for grace to be able to imitate
him, that we may shake off the dubious phraseology which is so common
among Christians nowadays, and may be able to speak with apostolic
confidence upon, a matter upon which we ought to be confident if anywhere
at all, namely, our own salvation.
As the text is thus taken up with
knowing and believing, these two matters will be the subject of our
meditation at this time.
My first remark drawn from the text shall be —
—————
I. The Only Religious Knowing And
Believing Which Are Of A Saving Character Concern The Person Of The Lord
Jesus Christ. “I know,” saith the apostle, — not “what “ — but “whom
I have believed.” He does not say, “I know the catechism which I have
believed,” nor “I know the Institutes of Calvin,” nor “I know the body
and system of theology”; but, “I know whom I have believed.” Both the
knowing and the believing centre round the wondrous person who for our
sakes left his starry throne and became a man; knowing whom, is a saving
knowledge, and trusting whom, is saving trust, but of which, all other
knowing and believing falls short.
Observe, then, that all other
knowledge may be useful enough in itself, but if it doth not concern
Christ, it cannot be called saving knowledge. Same person know a great
deal about doctrine. Perhaps they have taken up with the Calvinistic
theology, or even with the hyper-Calvinistic, and they really understand
the system thoroughly well; and they certainly hold it with quite enough
tenacity, if not too much. We know some, who we believe, would very
cheerfully go to the stake in defence of some points of doctrine so
convinced are they of the orthodoxy of what they have received. Others
take up another theory, and go upon, the Arminian principle, and they,
too, know their set of doctrines, and know then well. But, dear friends, I
may know all the doctrines in the Bible, but unless I know Christ, there,
is not one of them that can save me. I may know election, but if I cannot
see myself as chosen in Christ Jesus, election will do me no good. I may
know the doctrine of the final perseverance of the saints, but if I am not
in Christ, I should only persevere in my sins, and such a final
perseverance will be dreadful indeed. It is one thing to know the doctrine
of justification by faith, but it is quite another thing to be justified
by faith, and to have peace with God. You may stand up for imputed
righteousness, and fight for it, and yet the righteousness of Christ may
never to imputed unto you. It is not knowing the creed, though that is
well, that can save the soul; the knowledge that is wanted is to know him
whom Paul believed.
And, again, a man may know something
more than doctrine. He may know a great deal about experience. There is a
class of persons who sneer at doctrine. They call the doctrinal preacher a
mere “letterman;” as far themselves, they talk about deep experience.
They have a consciousness of having a corrupt heart. They have discovered
that they have evil tempers (by the way, other people, too, have
discovered it!) They have discovered that they have defiled natures, and
everybody can see that they are not sinlessly perfect. But, strange
delusion, because they know the disease, they fancy they have been healed.
Because they have perception enough to see they are spiritually bankrupt,
they therefore imagine that their debts are paid. Because they feel
themselves to be in the Slough of Despond, they dream they are on the
rock.
But there is a vast difference
between the two things. A man may think he has an experience of his own
emptiness; nay, he may truly possess it, but if it does not drive him to
Christ, if he does non come and rest on the Lord Jesus, all his
experiences are of no saving value. The foundation of the soul’s salvation
is not experience of any or every kind, but the finished work, the
meritorious blood and righteousness of our Lord and Saviour.
There are some, too, who not only
know experience and doctrine, but, who also know how to talk of them. They
have mingled with Christian people until they can get up their
phraseology, and as some Christians have cant expressions, these people
can “cant” in any quantity and to any extent. They can talk about their
“poor souls,” and about “the dear Lord,” and use all these other
precious phrases of hypocrisy which lard some religious publications, and
which are to be found in the conversation of some people who ought to know
better. They use these expressions, and then when they get in among the
people of God they are received with open arms, and they fancy that
because they can talk as Christians talk it is all well with them. But,
oh, remember that if a parrot could call you “father” it would not, for
all that, have become a child of yours; and that a foreigner may learn the
language of an Englishman but never be an Englishman, but remain a
foreigner still. So, too, you may take up the language of a Christian but
may never have within you the Spirit of God, and therefore be none of his.
You must know him. “Know thyself,” said the heathen philosopher; that is
well, but that knowledge may only lead a man to hell. “Know Christ”;
says the Christian philosopher, “know him, and then you shall know
yourself,” and this shall certainly lead you to heaven, for the knowledge
of Christ Jesus is saving knowledge — ”whom to know is life eternal.”
In addition to these valuable pieces
of information, there are some who know a great deal ABOUT Christ, but
here I must remind you that the text does not sag, “I know about
Christ,” but “I know him.” Ah, dear hearer, you may have heard the
gospel from your youth up, so that the whole history of Christ is at your
fingers ends, but you may not know him, for there is a deal of difference
between knowing about him, and knowing him. You may know about a medicine,
but still die of the disease which the medicine might have cured. The
prisoner may know about liberty, and yet lie and pine in his dungeon
until, as John Bunyan put it, “the moss grows on his eyelids. “The
traveller may know about the home which he hopes to reach, and yet may be
left out at nightfall in the midst of the forest. Many a man of business”
knows about wealth, or even concerning the millions of the Bank of
England, and yet be a bankrupt, or on the verge of poverty. Many a sailor
knows about the port, but his ship drifts upon the rock, and all hands go
down. It is not enough to know about Christ, it is knowing Christ himself
that alone saves the soul.
And, over and above, and in addition
to all this, you may know the Scriptures from youth up. I suppose I have
some — perhaps many — before me, who are well acquainted with almost every
chapter in the. Bible. You could not be questioned upon any part of it so
as to be really nonplussed. You have read the book, and you continue to
read it still, and I approve of your wise choice in so doing, and beg you
ever to continue in so excellent a practice, but remember, if you have not
the Word of God in your heart it is of small use to have it merely in your
head. Oh, to know Christ is our supreme and tragic want! Not to know texts
and Scripture merely, for “the letter killeth, it is only the Spirit that
quickeneth,” and unless you know Christ you do not know the vital Spirit
of the Word of God. The only saving knowledge, then, is knowing Christ.
Well, now, so is it with the exercise of faith. You may know a great deal
about faith, but the only saving faith is belief concerning Christ. “I
know whom I have, believed.” To believe doctrine will not save a man. You
may hold all the creed, and be orthodox, and then be no better than the
devil; for I suppose that the devil is a very sound theologian. He surely
knows that truth. He believes and trembles; but you may know it and not
tremble, and so you may fall short of one virtue which even the devil
possesses. A firm belief in what is preached to you is well enough in its
way, but to believe a doctrine as such cannot save you. Some have a belief
in their minister, and I suppose that is so flattering to us, that you
will hardly expect us to speak against it; but of all vices it is one most
surely to be dreaded because it is so very dangerous. We charge you in the
sight of God, always weigh what we have to say to you, and if it be not
according to Scripture, cast it away as you cast away refuse. Take nothing
merely because we say it, let nothing that we preach be received upon our
ipse dixit, but let it be tried and tested by the Word of God, for
otherwise you may be led by the blind: and “if the blind lead the blind,
they shall both fall into the ditch.” Ah, what multitudes of persons
there are in England who are beginning to get their fellow man to perform
their religion for them! They are too lazy to think: they are too idle to
use whatever brains they have, and then they get some mere simpleton who
thinks that God is pleased with his putting on a white gown or a blue
dress, or a black gown or green dress, a scarlet gown or mauve dress, is
pleased with burning candles in the daylight, and pleased with making a
pungent odour in the church — they get such a creature as this to do their
religion for them, and then they lie down at night to rest, feeling
perfectly satisfied that God is satisfied and they are all right. Oh, I
charge you believe not this delusion! It is not believing in a priest that
will save you. Believing in the priest may be your ruin, but believing in
Christ is the really vital point, the one thing that truly matters. He
that believeth in Christ is saved, but he that believeth even the Pope of
Rome shall find that he believeth to his own eternal ruin.
Then again, it is not believing in
ourselves. Many persons believe thoroughly in themselves. The doctrine of
self-reliance is preached in many quarters now-a-days. I suppose that what
is meant by the term is a good mercantile possession, a business virtue,
but it is a Christian vice as towards spiritual things, and emphatically
towards the soul’s salvation. Self-reliance in this matter always ruins
those who practise it. Rely an self! Let night rely on her darkness to
find a light; let emptiness rely on its insufficiency to find its fulness;
let death rely on the worms to give it immortality; let hell rely upon its
fire to make it into heaven — such trusts as these would be equally strong
with those of the sinner who relies upon himself for salvation. Thy belief
must not be that thou canst force thy way to heaven, but thou must believe
him for aught else is an unsaving faith.
You see, then, that the knowledge
which saves, and the belief which saves, both hang upon the cross; they
both look to the wounds of that dear man, that blessed God, who was there
the propitiation for our sins, and who suffered in our room and stead. My
hearer, are you trusting Christ? Are you hanging upon him as the vessel
hangs upon the nail? Do you know him as a man knoweth his friend? Do you
seek to know more of him? Is he all your salvation and all your desire? If
not, take home the warning solemnly; whatever else you know, you are
ignorant still; and whatever else you believe, you are an unbeliever
still, except you know and believe in him, who is the Saviour of men.
I pass on now to a second point, which is this —
—————
II. That Knowledge Without Faith
Is Vain.
This is to try to balance with but
one scale: to run a chariot on one wheel. You have the double, matter
here. “I know whom I have believed.” It is good to know, but knowledge
must be crowned with faith. It has been remarked that Paul does not say,
“I know of whom I have heard.” He does, not say, “I know of whom I have
read;” he does not say, “I know of whom I have preached”; but, “I know
whom I have believed.” Here he hits the nail upon the head. Knowledge is
useful in the bud; mere reading, preaching, too, are well as an exercise,
but believing is the fruit which must grow upon the tree of knowledge or
else the knowledge will be of little use to us.
Now, my dear friends, I know that I
am addressing many of your class, many who know Christ in a certain sense;
know much about him. You know of his nature, you believe him to be true
Deity; you know him to be human like yourselves, and for man’s sake made
man. You know his life. You have often read it. You often like to dwell
upon the incidents of it. It is a genuine and great pleasure to sing of
Bethlehem and its manger, of Cana and its marriage. You have turned over
the pages of that life of lives, and felt enraptured with this matchless
masterpiece of biography. You are well acquainted, too, with his death; it
has often drawn tears to your eyes when you have thought of the shame, and
the spitting and the crown of thorns. You know something concerning his
expiring cries. Your imagination has often pictured to you the wounded
body of that dread Sufferer. You have thought that if you had been there,
you would have wet his feet with your tears so did you sympathise with
him. You know of his burial and of is resurrection, too, and you have
sweetly joined with us when we have been singing —
“Angels, roll the
rock away,
Jesus Christ is risen today;”
and you have not been behind-hand
when, we have been singing of his ascension. You eyes have flushed with
fire when you have heard the words —
“They brought his
chariot from on high,
To bear him to his throne,
Clapped their triumphant wings and cried,
’The glorious work is done.’”
You know that he reigns in heaven.
You know that he has prepared mansions for his people. You know that he
intercedes for sinners. You expect that he will come. You are a believer
in his Second Advent; and when the Te Deum has been sung in your hearing —
”We believe that thou shalt come to be our Judge,” you have said, “Ay!
I do — I do — believe it.” Now, if you know all this, you know that which
it is very important to be known, but if you stop short there, where are
you? Why, I have no doubt there have been hundreds who knew this, but who
have given their bodies and souls to the devil, and have lived in open
sin, day by day. If you could go to the condemned cell to-night, I should
not wonder if the wretch confined there knows all this. If you were to go
into the flaunting gin-palaces, which are scattered to our shame and curse
all over London; where men and women are drinking liquid fire at this very
moment, you would find that half of them know all this, but they do not
drink any the less for it. If you were to go into the lairs of vice, you
would find that the most abandoned know all this, but it does them no
service. And I will add also this: that the lost spirits in hell went
there knowing all this, and the devil himself knows it all, but he remains
a devil still. Ah, my hearer, I charge thee before God, do not sit down
and say, “I know, I know, I know.” Dost thou believe? Dost thou believe?
The common answer given very
frequently to the city missionary is just this: men say to them, “There
is no need for you to come here and tell me anything; I know all about
it.” Ah, but dost thou believe in Jesus? What is the good of thy knowing
except thou believest? I do not think that the most of you who go to
places of worship want so much instruction in divine truth as you want ant
earnest appeal to your hearts not to stop short at instruction. You do
know, and that, indeed, shall be, indeed, part of your damnation, that you
had the light but you would not see, that Jesus came into your street, and
came nigh unto you, but you would not have him. The medicine was there,
but you died because you would not take it. The food was on the table, but
you would sooner perish with hunger than, receive it as the free gift of
heaven. Ah, my hearer, thy knowing should not benefit thee, but shall be a
plague to thee. The poor savage in his kraal in Central Africa who never
heard the name of Jesus, shall die with at least this mitigating
circumstance, that he never rejected a Saviour’s love. The million a month
who die in China, for a million do every month die in China, the million
who die every month in China die with this one solace, at any rate, that
they never sinned against the light of Christianity, nor rejected the
truth as it is in Jesus. This is more than you could say. This is a clout
which will never be held to your armhole. This will never help to make, a
dainty couch for you, when you make your bed in hell. The responsibility
of having known shall add remorse to the whips of accusing conscience, and
make perdition more terrible still. Oh, may God grant that we may not stop
short with knowledge alone, but may know Christ as him whom we have
believed! But still we have in the next place —
—————
III. Faith Without Knowledge Is
But A Bird With One Wing.
The old faith of the fuller is
coming back in some places to-day. You remember what the fuller said,
“Yes, he believed, he believed, what did he believe?” He believed,
“What the Church believed.” And what did the Church believe? “Well, the
Church believed — well, what he believed.” And pray what did he and the
Church together believe? “Why, they both believed the same thing.” Ah,
how many there are of that sort to-day! They say, “We think he ought to
be sincere, you know, and if he is sincere, it does not matter much
whether it is absolutely true. He need not trouble greatly to enquire
whether what he believes is Scriptural or not, or whether it is according
to God’s Revelation: that will take up too much of his time and thought,
and look too much like being obedient to God’s will. Just be sincere, you
know, and then, hit or miss, whatever your mother or father happened to be
in religious character, go at it with all your might and it will be all
right.” Now, unfortunately, that does not happen to be the truth; because
we do not find people in this world getting on in proportion to their
sincerity. I suppose our friends who bought Overend and Gurney’s shares
were sincere enough in their belief that they were buying a good thing,
but I should fancy that their opinions have undergone a change of late. No
doubt there have been persons who have taken prussic acid, sincerely
believing that it would benefit them, but I suppose it has killed them,
notwithstanding their sincerity. If a man should travel due south in order
to get to the Orkney Islands, however sincere he might be, he would
probably discover himself in the Bay of Biscay before long. The fact is,
it is not sincerity alone; it is the studious endeavour to find out what
the right is, and what the truth is, that is the only safe, way for us. We
do not, therefore, ask you to believe without knowing what you are to
believe. It is impossible. Do not think a man can hold in his hands four
or five doctrines and say to you, “Do you believe them?” “Well, but
what are they?” “Never mind; you are a true believer, and you must
believe then without knowing them.” A man who has no power of belief at
all says, “Oh, yes, I believe; I will kiss your feet if necessary, or do
anything you like to tell me.” But the thoughtful man, the man who is:
likely to be saved, says at once, “I find it impossible to believe until
I first know what I am to believe.”
I have sometimes thought when I have
heard addresses from some revival brethren who had kept on saying time
after time, “Believe, believe, believe,” that I should like to have
known for myself what it was we were to believe in order to our salvation.
There is, I fear, a great deal of vagueness and crudeness about this
matter. I have heard it often asserted that, if you believe that Jesus
Christ died for you you will be saved. My dear hearer, do not be deluded
by such an idea. You may believe that Jesus Christ died for you, and may
believe what is not true; you may believe that which will bring you no
sort of good whatever. That is not saving faith. The man who, has saving
faith afterwards attains to the conviction that Christ died for him, but
it is not of the essence of saving faith. Do not get that into your head,
or it will ruin you. Do not say, “I believe that Jesus Christ died for
me,” and because of that feel that you are saved. I pray you to remember
that the genuine faith that saves the soul has for its main element —
trust — absolute rest of the whole soul — on the Lord Jesus Christ to save
me, whether he died in particular or in special to save meet or not, and
relying, as I am, wholly and alone on him, I am saved. Afterwards I come
to perceive that I have a special interest in the Saviour’s blood; but if
I think I have perceived that before I have believed in Christ, then I
have inverted the Scriptural order of things, and I have taken as a fruit
of my faith that which is only to be obtained by rights, by the man who
absolutely trusts in Christ, and Christ alone, to save.
The matter, then, which saves is
this — a man trusts Christ, but he trusts Christ because he knows him.
See! He knows Christ, and therefore he trusts him. How does he come to
know him? Well, he has heard of him, he has read of him, he seeks him in
prayer, and when he has learned his character, he trusts him. Occasionally
young converts will say to us, “Sir, I cannot trust Christ.” I never try
to argue with them about it, but say, “Then you do not know him, because
to know Christ truly is sure to bring trust.” I believe there are some
men in the world whom you have only to know to trust, because they are so
transparently honest, so, clearly truthful, that you must trust them. The
Saviour is such a character as that. Let me tell thee, sinner, God was
made flesh, and dwelt amongst us: dost thou believe that? “Yes.” He
lived a holy life: he died a painful death: the merit of his life and
death is set to the account of every one who trusteth in him, and he
declares that if thou trustiest in him he will save thee. Now, thou canst
trust him surely. You say, “No, I cannot.” Why not? Is he not able? He
is divine, therefore you cannot raise the question. Is he not willing? He
died: that argues willingness surely to do a less; thing, since he has
done the greater. Thou canst not doubt that surely! The life of the Lord
Jesus Christ is an answer to every form of doubt. Do you know, I feel with
regard to Christ myself, that instead of its being any difficulty to trust
him, I find it very difficult not to trust him, if I cannot find any
reason why I should distrust him. I was turning over the other day same
odds and ends of my own brain to see if I could find any reason why Christ
should not receive my soul. Well, I could not find half a one, but I could
think of twenty thousand reasons why I should believe in him to save me,
even if I had a million souls. I feel as if his way of saving is so
magnificent, and the working of it out so divinely generous, that his
offerings were so great, his person is so glorious, that I could not only
cast my one soul on him, but fifty thousand souls if I had them. Why, I
cannot find any reasonable ground for doubting him. Soul, I would to God
that thou wouldest think of him in the same light!
“He is able, he is willing: Doubt no more.”
Thou knowest something of him; oh,
may God give the grace to add to thy knowledge trust, and then shalt thou
have true saving faith.
Let it be remarked here that in
proportion as our genuine knowledge of Christ increases, so we shall find
that our trust in him will increase, too. The more we know Christ, the
more we shall trust him, because every new piece of knowledge will give
new arguments for immovable confidence in him. Oh, if you have not seen
Christ, I can understand your doubting him, but if you have leaned your
head upon his bosom, if he has ever kissed you with the kisses of his
lips, if he has ever taken you into his banqueting-house, and waved his
banner of love over you, I know you will feel, “Doubt thee, Jesu, doubt
thee? Why, how can I? I know the power of thine arm: I know the love of
thy heart: I know the efficacy of thy blood: I know the glory of thy
person: I know the faithfulness of thy Word: I know the immutability of
thine oath, and I can trust thee, and either sink or swim, my soul casteth
herself upon thee, thou blessed Saviour. And now there may be some present
who are saying, “I cannot say I know whom I have believed.”
—————
IV. “How Can I Know That I May
Believe In Him?
The answer is, search the Word of
God with a desire to find him. Seek out the most Christ-exalting ministry
in your neighbourhood, in whatever denomination thou canst find it, and
listen to it with all thine ears and with all thine heart. Get thee to thy
chamber and there seek the Lord, to illuminate thee in the matter of the
Lord Jesus Christ. Ask him to reveal his son in thee. I tell thee this:
faith cometh by hearing and by hearing the Word of God, and when to these
is added earnest seeking thou shalt not be long without finding him. They
who seek Christ are already being sought of him. You who desire him shall
have him, you who want him shall not be long without him. It is to have
Christ to some degree, to hunger and to thirst after him; and when you
feel that you cannot be content without him, he will not let you be, but
will soon come to you. I believe there are some who will get peace with
Christ to-night. Do you understand it, dear friend? You have nothing to
do; you have nothing to be; you have not even anything to learn, except
that Jesus Christ came into the would to save sinners, and that he is able
to save unto the uttermost them that come unto God by him. You know that.
Now, trust him, and if you do it is all done, and you are saved. If you
have trusted in him whom God has revealed as your Saviour, it is not a
matter of twenty minutes nor a matter much less of months, but, you are
saved at once.
“The moment a
sinner believes,
And trusts in him crucified God;
His pardon at once he receives,
Salvation in full through Christ’s blood.”
When a man once gets into the
life-boat, if it were certain that the lifeboat would never sink, he is
saved as soon as he gets in. Now, the act of faith does, as it were, put
us into the lifeboat of Christ Jesus, and we are saved directly. You may
have many a tossing, but you will get safe to land at last. If you want
faith you must get it, as I have told you, by knowing him, studying the
Word of God, listening to it, and seeking his face; but make use of what
you know, or else what you know will be like the stale manna, and will be
of no use to you. Believe it as you know it; use it up as you get it; and
if you already know Christ to be a sinner’s Saviour, and know that you are
a sinner, then come to-night and put your trust in him, and be of good
cheer, and he will never, never, never cast you away. And now, lastly, I
should like to ask a question, and it is this —
—————
V. How Many Are There Who Do Know
Christ?
We all know something of which we
are a little proud; but, “I know, I know, I know,” is a very poor thing
to say when you do not know Christ. “I know,” say my young friend over
there who has been to Oxford or Cambridge University, “I know
so-and-so.” “I know,” says another, “such and such a special line of
distinguished thinking.” But do you know Christ, my dear friend? “Ah,
thank God,” says one upstairs, and another good soul below, “we can
hardly read, sir, but we do know him.” I would change places with you,
friends, much sooner than I would with the most learned of men who do not
know Christ, because when they come to the gates of death, you know, he
who keeps the gate will not say, “Do you know the classics? Have you read
Horace? Have you studied Homer? Do you know mathematics? Do you understand
logarithms or conic sections?” No, but he will say, “Do you know
Christ?” and if you scarcely even know your own native tongue, yet if you
know Christ the gates of heaven shall fly open to let you in.
Now, do you know Christ? Do let the
question go round to each one, “Do I know Christ?” Well, then, do you
believe Christ? Do you trust Christ? “Yes, thank God!” saith one, “with
all my imperfections I can sing the hymn —
“On Christ the solid rock I stand
All other ground is sinking sand.”
Oh, then, brethren, let us be of good cheer, for, trusting him, he will
never fail us: believing him, he will never leave us: but we shall see his
face in glory. Oh, that the day were come! But when it does, to his name
shall be all the praise! Amen.
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2 Timothy 1:18
“THAT DAY” AND IT’S DISCLOSURES
NO. 3531
PUBLISHED ON THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28TH, 1916,
DELIVERED BY C. H. SPURGEON,
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON.
ON THURSDAY EVENING, 15TH FEB., 1872.
“The Lord grant unto him that He may
find mercy of the Lord in that day.” — 2 Timothy 1:18.
Gratitude is never failing in
Christians. When they have received a benefit, they are sure to
acknowledge it. When Paul was at Rome, Onesiphorus found him out very
diligently, and was not ashamed of his chains, but ministered to his
necessities; and, therefore, Paul felt bound to him and to his family in
perpetual thankfulness. Let none of us ever be accused of ingratitude? it
is one of the worst of sins. Paul, no doubt, would have done all he could
for Onesiphorus in other ways, but he added to all other ways of showing
his gratitude that of praying for him — praying the prayer which we have
here put on record in the Book of Inspiration. Learn hence that if we can
do nothing else for our benefactors? we can bless them by our prayers. Let
us be abundant in pouring out supplications before for all those who in
any way have done us a service. We learn also from the text that the best
of men have need to be prayed for. I cannot doubt but that Onesiphorus was
saved. He seems to have been a most decided follower of Christ for when
others did not know Paul because he was a prisoner, Onesiphorus knew him;
he sought him out; he sought him out diligently; event into the poorest
quarters of that great city or Rome, and hunted him out, though probably
the population at that time? was not less, but perhaps far more than four
millions of people. He found out the Apostle, and he ministered unto his
need. He was a good many and yet Paul prayed for him — prayed for him a
prayer which would be appropriate for a bad man too, “ The Lord grant
that he may find mercy of the Lord in that day! “The best of us needs to
be prayed for. Let us be thankful if we have anybody to pray for us. Let
us count the prayers of the faithful to be our true riches. He is the
happiest man who shall have the most of God’s people lift-up their hearts
in prayer for him.
I call your attention, however,
to-night to none of these surrounding particulars; I want to fix your
minds upon one thing. I desire, anxiously desire, that we may all be led
to look forward to that day of which the Apostle here speaks. And our
first point shall be that day. Then our second point shall be the mercy of
that day. First, then: —
—————
I. “That Day.”
Paul speaks of the day of judgment
here. He does not specify it, because it was so commonly believed in and
expected among Christians, that it was quite sufficient for him to say
“that day.” From the earliest times, wherever there has been divine
light, that day has been expected: Enoch also, the seventh from Adam,
prophesied concerning the coming of the Lord, and his prophecy, though,
very early, was so clear that the Jew, who almost closes the Book of
Inspiration, quotes it — feeling, I suppose, that he could not use words
mode expressive than those which came from that ancient prophet. All along
the pages of Scriptural history you read of men raised up to tell of that
day. Asaph, in the Psalm we read just now, gave a most accurate
description of that day when the Lord shall judge his people. And Daniel,
when he saw the throne set and the Ancient of Days come, perceived that
day for which we also are now looking. Nothing, perhaps, is more often
spoken of in Scripture than that day. The New Testament teems with
allusions to that Day of Judgment, when the Lord shall be revealed with
flaming fire. I say it was so commonly understood, that Paul had no need
to say anything except “that day.” Questions will be asked to-night by
some, “When will that day come?” to which I would answer, it were better
for us to be prepared for it come when it may, than to be anxious to fix
its date. We can give you no information, because “of that day and of
that hour knoweth no man — no, not the angels of heaven.” After trying to
discover what I can of the future, I arrive at this conclusion from
Scripture, that the Lord would have us be in a state of perpetual
vigilance and expectancy, and hence he has studded the Scriptures with
phrases to the effect that he comes quickly. Truly his “quickly” will
not be the same as ours; but methinks the noontide of the world may have
passed, and these are the latter days, and we might to be looking for and
hasting unto the coming of the Son of Man. He may come to-morrow; he may
come to-night. He may delay his coming, but he shall come such an hour as
the mass of men think not, and at an hour when they are not aware. That
day shall overtake them as a thief in the night, and come upon them as
pain upon a woman in travail. Some may curiously ask whether the Day of
Judgment will be a natural day or not. Will it be a day of twenty-four
hours? To which we again reply, we have no information; but we know that
one day is with the Lord as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one
day. It will be a definite period. Whatever its length or brevity, it will
suffice for an accurate judgment, and a judgment of all mankind. Whether
it shall occupy a thousand years or a single day, the work will be done —
done thoroughly, done effectually, done for ever, for all the race of
Adam. Let us rest assured of that. It is far more important for us to know
these things about that day; first, that it will be ushered in as no other
day has been. The day began in Eden with the rising sun; and when the
sun’s first beams had lit up the sky, the birds began to sing right
joyously amongst the trees; but that day shall be ushered in, not by the
rising sun, but by the Sun of Righteousness himself. He shall arise with
all the glory of his Father, and the holy angels shall come with him.
There will be sights and sounds on that tremendous morning such as never
were seen or heard by mortal men before. Even Sinai’s tremendous pomp,
which made Moses fear end quake, shall be outdone in that dread day when
the Lord shall descend from heaven with a shout, with the trump of the
archangel, and with the voice of God. It will be a day of days. Its
dreadful surroundings are spoken of in Scripture, but, after all, words
can but feebly describe them. It will be a day especially notable for the
revelation of our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ. As yet he is hidden among
the sons of men. He was as one concealed in incognito. He traveled through
this world, and they counted him a man of sorrows and acquainted with
grief. He has gone into his glory but he is concealed at the right hand of
God from the gaze of men below. They see him not; they know him not; but
in that day he shall sit upon the: clouds of heaven, and every eye shall
see him, and they also which crucified him. Then shall they say that he is
Divine, and no longer shall they dare, to dispute it. Then shall the Jew
see that he is the Messiah that was for to come, and then shall the
Gentile perceive that he is King of Kings and Lord of Lords. The flashings
of his glory shall convince all mankind, and the wicked shall stand
speechless before his judgment-bar. Pilate then shall not ask him, “What
is truth?” for he, alas! too hath, shall perceive it. They shall bring no
accusation against him then, for to their confusion they shall see that he
was no traitor, but a King. Judas shall not sell him then, for he, shall
perceive then that he who sold him was the son of perdition, to perish for
ever. Oh! what a day shall that be when, coming out of his chamber
rejoicing like a strong man to run a race, the Bridegroom of the Church
shall appear, and all his saints shall appear with him. It will be a day
remarkable for its wonderful convictions. There will be a general assembly
held on that day such as never has been held before. For, first, tile Son
of God shall be the center of all cues, and around him shall be his
Father’s angels. Heaven shall send her pomp to swell his train. Isle shall
come, and his saints also shall come with him. The glorified shall come to
sit with him, and then, as in a moment, the dead shall arise. I shall go
into no minute questions or particulars now, but certainly at that moment
there shall stand upon the earth all the dead, both small and great, they
that were on the earth buried in it, and they that were in the sea shall
all arise, and as the trumpet rings out clear and loud the whole multitude
of men that lived and died shall start up from their tombs to see their
God upon his throne, and those that are alive at that time — all shall
come and live again, and the raised bodies of men and the spirits of the
just. There shall come up from the infernal pit lost spirits too, and the
chief foe of God and man, long scarred by Jehovah’s lightings — he shall
come and lift his brazen front once more, and the saints shall judge the
fallen angel who long had persecuted them. He shall receive his final
sentence. and begin the utmost hell which God had reserved for the devil
and his angels, so that there on this poor planet little compared with
greater stars, and yet in God’s sight most glorious of them all, there
shall be a convocation of the three worlds. Heaven, earth and hell shall
meet together, and Christ, in the midst of them all, shall judge the world
in righteousness and the people with equity. Oh! what a day will that day
be! And it will be a day, in addition to the general convocation, of
universal excitement. Next week the day of thanksgiving will move London
from end to end, but there will be tens of thousands to whom it will be or
day of thanksgiving, but perhaps of bitter sorrow. There will be nothing
that could make them thankful in the pageantry of that day. So of all the
days that have ever happened to the sons of men, there have been some
unmoved thereby. Let us speak as though our soul were in every word — some
of our hearers will slumber, or their minds will wander. But on that day
there will be no indifferent spectators of that tremendous pomp. The
wicked shall wake up; their indifference shall have gone, and They shall
be filled with dismay and despair. They shall long for annihilation, they
shall ask the rocks to cover them, and the mountains to conceal them. The
righteous shall not be listless either, for theirs shall be boldness in
the day of judgment, and joy, and triumph, and acclamations of welcome,
with which they shall hail the King of Kings sitting upon his throne.
There will be a general excitement. Hell will howl its loudest howlings,
and heaven will resound with its loftiest songs on that closing day of the
drama of time, that day of which the Apostle speaks. And that will be a
day of wondrous revelations. On that day we shall detect the hypocrite.
See him yonder. The mask has fallen. See the leprosy on his brow. Then
shall we see the men who were misrepresented, who were counted the
offscouring of all things, though of them the world was not worthy. The
filth with which men pelted them in the pillory of scorn shall fall off,
and their garments shall be whiter than any fuller can make them in the
glory of the righteousness which Christ shall put upon them. There will be
a resurrection of reputations in that day. And at the same time there will
be the judgment of mere profession. Perhaps in that hour we shall
understand the providence of God infinitely better than we do now. Then we
shall see the evil of men’s hearts as we never saw it, for every idle word
that man bath spoken shall be published there, and transgressions of
midnight that were covered up with curtains of lies shall suddenly stand
revealed as in the noon-day sun — and the men who scorned the righteous
and were themselves guilty of abominable sin. Oh! what a revealing day!
The housetops then shall ring with secrets that have been hidden in the
closet, and men shall read the writing, as it were, upon the sky, the dark
sayings and the hidden things which were of old. And then when the
revealing shall have come, it will be a day of final judgment. From almost
any court on earth there is an appeal. Even after the judge puts on the
black cap and condemns the criminal, he yet appeals to public opinion and
to the mercy of the nation, and perhaps an unworthy life may yet be
spared. But from that judgment-seat there shall be no appeal. For ever and
for ever fixed is the fate of men whom Christ hath judged. “He that is
filthy, let him be filthy still; and he that is unrighteous let him be
unrighteous still.” No change can take place, and no appeal can ever be
made. ’Tis done, ’tis sealed, ’tis inevitable. ’Tis over for ever and for
ever — for ever saved, or for ever lost. That day, then, ought to be a
matter of personal interest to every one of my hearers, yea, and to every
one beneath the sun. It will be the last day of time. Then there will be
no more counting of rising and setting suns, no reckoning by waxing and
waning moons. Then there will be no revolutions of the year to mark the
period of time, nor will men count by centuries. It shall be eternity, one
ocean of eternity without landmarks by which to say, “Thus far have we
gone, and thus far have we yet to go.” Oh! wondrous day! oh! marvellous
day! last day of time, day for ever to be remembered; remembered by the
wicked in hell, to whom it shall be said, “Son, remember,” and
remembered, methinks, by the righteous in heaven for ever, for they shall
look back to that day when Christ appeared and they were declared to be
the blessed of the Father to inherit the kingdom prepared for them from
before the foundation of the world. 0h! how I blame my tongue and chide
myself that I cannot speak upon this theme as I would, but nevertheless
may the solemn facts make up for my want of speech, and may they tell upon
your souls. Now I must turn to the second point, and speak upon:
—————
II. The Mercy Of That Day.
The mercy which is prayed for in
this verse, “The Lord grant unto him that he may find mercy of the Lord
in that day.” Will that prayer be heard? Will that prayer be heard for
me, for you, each one of you in this area, in these galleries? Will God
have mercy on you in that day? I will tell you.
First, he will have no mercy in that
day upon those who had no mercy upon others. If you cannot forgive,
neither shall you be forgiven. If you cannot kneel down and sincerely
pray, “Forgive us our debts as we forgive them that are indebted to us,”
then the gates of heaven are fast barred against you. If you take your
brother by the throat and say, “Pay me what thou lowest,” the great
Master of us all will commit you to the tormentors, because your great
debt has not been paid. Relentless, malicious, revengeful men, take heed
of that. Lay it on your pillow to-night, and let it pierce your heart — if
ye forgive not every man his brother, your heavenly Father will not
forgive you.
Next, God will have no mercy in that
day upon those who lived and died in wickedness. Here is the proof of it,
“The wicked shall be turned into hell,” and hell means not mercy, but
misery. The men that have lied in the breaking of God’s law from day to
day, from childhood to manhood, perhaps from manhood to old age, and have
died still sinning — for them there shall be no mercy whatsoever.
There shall be no mercy for those
who neglect salvation. Again I give you God’s words for it, “How shall we
escape if we neglect so great salvation?” These people had not done any
particular mischief to anybody else; they had not persecuted Christ; they
had not reviled his gospel; they had not been heretics; they simply
neglected the matter. “How shall ye escape if ye neglect. so great
salvation?” Ye shall not escape at all. If ye neglect his mercy here,
mercy will neglect you for ever.
Then, again, they shall have no
mercy who said they needed none. Are there not some here who fancy that
they want no mercy from God? They do their best; they are excellent in
character; they are well deserving, and they expect to enter into felicity
through their good deeds. You seek no mercy, you shall have none. You
proudly reject it. You trust to your own righteousness; you seek to have
what you merit; you shall have what you merit, but that will be to be
driven for ever from the presence of God. There cannot be mercy to those
who will not confess that they need mercy. There shall be no mercy in that
day for those who sought no mercy here. Prayerless souls? you are
graceless souls, and mercy shall be denied you then. You will pray loudly
enough then. Oh! how they pray in hell! What tears and groans send they up
to heaven! They would fain have mercy there, but Mercy’s day is over;
Justice hath turned the key and hurled that key into the abyss where it
never can be found. They are prisoners for ever beneath the wrath of God.
They that will not ask it deserve not to have it. When mercy is to be had
for the asking, if man turns upon his heel and does refuse to ask, what
shall God do but say, “Because I called and ye refused — I stretched out
my hand and no man regarded; I also will mock at your calamity. I will
laugh when your fear cometh”? There shall be no mercy for those who ask
no mercy.
Further, there shall in that day be
no mercy for those that scoffed at Christ, denied his dignity, railed at
his people, broke his Sabbath, and altogether abhorred his gospel. Oh!
sirs, ye fight a desperate battle against him who made the heavens and the
earth, and who is the darling Son of God! In fighting against Christ, ye,
dash yourselves upon the bosses of Jehovah’s buckler; ye cast yourselves
upon the point of his spear. Be wise and stay your rebellion. “Kiss the
Son lest he be angry, and ye perish from the way when his wrath is kindled
but a little.” How shall the wax contend with the fire, or the tow wage
war with the flames? Yet you are doing this, O you that rebel against
Christ! You shall either break or bow. Bow, I pray you, for if not he
shall break you with a rod of iron; he shall break you in pieces like a
potter’s vessel. Beware, ye that despise him, lest in the day of his
coming he despise your image, and ye utterly perish.
There shall in that day be no mercy
for those who refuse the gospel; and I am sorry to say there are some here
of that sort. Those cannot be said to refuse the gospel who do not know
it, but most of you do know it. I was thinking this afternoon, as I prayed
God to let this subject get into my own soul. About some of you who do not
want for light and instruction, who do not need to know more about the way
of salvation, or about the penalty of neglecting it. What you want is a
new heart and a right spirit; you want the will subdued; you want decision
of character; you want to be made thoughtful; you want to be made
prayerful. I cannot do this for you, but I can warn you over and over and
over again that they who go to hell from under the shadow of the pulpit
wherein there is an earnest ministry go there with an emphasis. They that
fall from the heights of privilege fall, indeed, into the lake of fire.
God grant that not a solitary one of the many hearers who gather here may
know what it is to have it said, “It shall be, more tolerable for Tyre
and Sidon in the day of judgment than for you. They would have repented
had they heard the gospel, but you heard it, and repented not.”
I must add to all this that there
shall be no mercy in that day for those who have sold their Lord. “Where
are they?” say you. “Does there live on this earth a miscreant who has
sold his Lord?” God have mercy on the man — he not only lives on earth,
but he is here. He was once a professor, but he found it more profitable
to cease from religion, and he has done so. He once came to the communion
table, but he fell into lustful habits, and he is no member of Christ. He
has defiled the temple of God, and him shall God destroy. Ho could
sometimes pray in public — at the prayer — meeting’ but he dares not pray
now; he has enough conscience left to let him cede from such hypocrisy. He
sold his Lord for pleasure; he sold his Lord for pelf; he sold his Lord
for the fear Of man. “Verily I say unto you, him that is ashamed of me
and my Word, of him will I be ashamed when I shall come in the glory of my
Father and all my holy angels with me.” You know who spoke those words.
They were spoken by him whose hands were pierced. He has said it, and oh!
note, ye apostates, note it well, “He that denieth me before men, him
will I deny before my Father which is in heaven. Verily I say unto you, I
never knew you. Depart from me, ye workers of iniquity.” Oh! where is
this unhappy man? May God have mercy on him to-night, for he will have no
mercy upon him in that day if he dies as he now his.
And I shall close that list by
saying in that day God will have no mercy for false professors. He will
have no mercy upon preachers who could talk glibly, but whose lives were
not consistent with their own teaching. What a condemnation shall await
me, if I be not found in Christ after having preached so continuously to
so many thousands! Oh! whatever a man shall be in hell, may God grant he
may never be an unfaithful minister of Christ, condemned out of his own
mouth. But what shall I say of unfaithful deacons and elders, and church
members? Their condemnation will be as just as it is terrific. Why needed
they to add to their other sins the sin of a false profession? If they
loved not Christ they need not have been traitors. There was no necessity
for them to come forward and be baptized into the Triune name. There was
no demand upon them to come to the table in remembrance of Christ’s death
if they were not his. They voluntarily thrust themselves into a profession
which was a lie, and into the midst of a church with which they were not
akin. Surely if he begins first at the house of God, his judgments will be
most terrible upon false professors. For this chaff there shall be the
fire unquenchable, for it was once upon the Lord’s threshing floor; for
this dross there shall be consuming flames, for it was once in alliance
with the precious gold which the King calls his own. I feel inclined to
stop preaching, and to pray for myself. The Lord have mercy upon me in
that day! and then to take you all by name, if I could know you all one by
one, and kneel here and say, “The Lord have mercy upon this man — this
woman — this child — in that day.” But I beg you pray it for yourselves;
now, in the silence of your souls, let this prayer go up vehemently to
heaven, “O God, have mercy upon me. Have mercy upon me in that day, and
to that end have mercy upon me now.”
I close, but I never like to close a
sermon when it looks like Jeremiah’s roll — written within and without
with lamentations. Let us have a sweet word or two to finish with. We
spoke of that day; for a moment let me speak of this day — of this day.
You have not come to that day yet. To-day it is not judgment, but love
that rules the hour. Now the great white throne is not yet set, neither is
it a trumpet that rings in your ear, but it is an affectionate voice,
which speaks to you and says, “Mercy is to be had yet, mercy is to be had
by false professors, mercy is to be had by apostates, mercy is to be had
by the very chief of sinners.” This is a night, this very night, in which
prayer will be answered. God has said, “Seek and ye shall find.” This is
a night in which Christ waits to be gracious. He is exalted on high on
purpose to give repentance unto Israel, and remission of sins. This is a
night in which sin may be forgiven. You are on praying ground; you are on
pleading terms yet. The sentence is not passed. The wax is still melted,
and it is not stamped and cold. There is hope for you better than that,
there are kind invitations for you; there are loving exhortations. How
long these may stand good I cannot tell. As far as any one of us may be
concerned, the judgment day may come tomorrow. It may come to all mankind;
but as far as the practical fact is concerned, it may come in death to any
one of us to-night. I look round me, now , and I recollect a month ago
certain seats in this place that were occupied by those that are now gone
— gone to their account. If it were right, I think I could point my finger
to some of you that are sitting in the places of dead men. They were their
seats. They used to sit there, some of them, and they rejoiced in every
word they heard. Is a sinner filling a saint’s place? There are some,
again, that are gone out of this company who gave us no evidence of grace.
Alas! is there no sinner sitting in the place where one sat before him who
forgot God? You are all passing away — I am passing with you. Shadows we
are all. We fly like an arrow through the air. We are a wind that passeth,
and it is not. Oh! make sure of eternal things, brethren and sisters.
Whatever you lose, lose not Christ; whatever you miss, miss not salvation.
May God impress you with this thought. May he impress you, moreover, with
this thought — that “to-day is the accepted time; to-day is the day of
salvation”; and may some of you be unable to sleep to-night until you
have found the Savior;
“For should swift
death this night o’ertake you,
And your couch become your tomb,”
then to-morrow, if unregenerate and
unforgiven, you would be shut up where hope can never come to you. Oh!
seek his face to-night! Dare not permit yourselves to feel the image of
death upon you in sleep unless you have felt the scepter of Christ,
touched by faith, communicate life and pardon to you. Seek ye him. Oh!
seek ye him. Seek ye him while he, may be found; call ye upon him while he
is near. The Lord bless you, every one of you, and may we meet in heaven
without exception, for Christ’s sake! Amen and Amen. |
|
2 tIMOTHY 2:2-3
A
GOOD SOLDIER
OF JESUS CHRIST
NO. 938
DELIVERED ON LORD’S-DAY MORNING, JUNE 26TH, 1870,
BY C. H. SPURGEON,
AT THE METROPOLITAN TABERNACLE, NEWINGTON
BY
C. H. SPURGEON
“A good soldier
of Jesus Christ.” — 2 Timothy 2:2
, 3
Many
men, many minds. In reference to what a Christian is
there have been very many and diverse opinions. According to the notions
of some, a Christian is an exquisite of remarkably delicate tastes; he
cannot worship except it be in a place whose architecture is correctly
Gothic, otherwise his dainty soul will be shocked; he is unable to offer
prayer aright unless his devotions are uplifted upon the wings of the
choicest music; and, even then, scarcely will he be successful unless he
be aided by sundry gentlemen, whose pedigree, like that of racehorses, can
be clearly traced, and whose garments the tailor has fashioned according
to the directions of the ecclesiastical fashion book for the various
seasons of the year. If this be to be a Christian in these days, it must
be confessed that Paul has said little concerning this delicate and
artistic sort of creature, unless, indeed, he had reference to it in Galatians 4:9
, 10
, 11
, which read at your
leisure; neither would Paul’s Master acknowledge it.
With some a
Christian is a spiritual gourmand. He attends upon the ministry of the
word for no purpose but to be fed; He strongly denounces every sermon that
is aimed at the conversion of sinners, for he looks even upon the Bible
itself as a book solely intended to yield him personal consolation. The
more any doctrinal teaching promises him a monopoly of good things, and
the more it excludes others, the better he enjoys it, it being to him a
particular part of the sweetness of the feast to believe that but a very
slender company may dare to partake of it. For him to live is to enjoy and
not to serve. To gratify his selfishness he would blot out the free
invitations of the gospel. He is not a hearer only, but certainly he is
not also a doer, be is a hearer and a feeder, in a certain coarse sense,
upon the word of God, and nothing more. That is not Paul’s ideal of a
Christian. He does not picture him with his napkin in his hand, sitting at
a banquet, but rather with a sword girt upon his thigh, ready for the
conflict.
To some the highest
form of Christian is a great reader, a profound student of the best of
books, for the purpose of composing spiritual riddles. He reads for no
practical end. He is a picker out of words, a speller over of syllables, a
magnifier of microscopic points, a proficient in biblical hair-splitting.
The more a passage perplexes others the more sure he is of its meaning. He
cares most for things which have the least practical bearing. He is a
peeper through spiritual spyglasses, fancying that he can interpret what
wiser men leave to God to expound. He is a hunter after spiritual coneys,
which, if caught, would never pay the huntsman for his toil, while the
weightier matters he holds in small esteem. This does not seem to have
been Paul’s conception of a Christian; for the apostle was no lover of
foolish and unlearned questions which gender strife.
And I am afraid I
must add that with some the beau ideal of a Christian is that of a man who
can sleep out his existence in blissful serenity; a man who, having
believed, or professed to believe, in Christ, has settled his life-work
for ever, and henceforth can say, “Soul, take thine ease, thou hast
henceforth much goods laid up for many years in thine own security, eat,
drink, be merry in the gospel; but as for feeding the hungry or clothing
the naked, art thou thy brother’s keeper? What is that to thee? See thou
to thyself, and if thou thyself be right, let fate, or providence, or
sovereignty, take care of the rest.” Paul does not appear to have
pictured true believers as sluggards sound asleep upon the downiest beds;
his description of a Christian in the text is that of a soldier, and that
means something very far different either from a religious fop, whose best
delight is music and millinery, or a theological critic who makes a man an
offender for a word, or a spiritual glutton who cares for nothing but a
lifelong enjoyment of the fat things full of marrow, or an ecclesiastical
slumberer who longs only for peace for himself. He represents him as a
soldier and that, I say, is quite another thing. For what is a soldier? A
soldier is a practical man, a man who has work to do, and hard, stern
work. He may sometimes when he is at his ease wear the fineries of war,
but when he comes to real warfare he cares little enough for them; the
dust and the smoke, and the garments rolled in blood, these are for those
who go a soldiering; and swords all hacked, and dented armor, and bruised
shields, these are the things that mark the good, the practical soldier.
Truly to serve God, really to exhibit Christian graces, fully to achieve a
life-work for Christ, actually to win souls, this is to bear fruit worthy
of a Christian. A soldier is a man of deeds, and not of words. He has to
contend and fight. In war times his life knows little of luxurious ease.
In the dead of night perhaps the trumpet sounds to boot and saddle, just
at the time when he is most weary, and he must away to the attack just
when he would best prefer to take his rest in sleep. The Christian is a
soldier in an enemy’s country always needing to stand on his watchtower,
constantly to be contending, though not with flesh and blood, with far
worse foes, namely, with spiritual wickednesses in high places.
The Christian is a
self-sacrificing man as the soldier must be. To protect his country the
soldier must expose his own bosom; to serve his king be must be ready to
lay down his life. Surely he is no Christian who never felt the spirit of
self-sacrifice. If I live unto myself I am living unto the flesh, and of
the flesh I shall reap corruption. Only he who lives to his God, to
Christ, to the truth, to the church, and to the good old cause, only he is
the man who can reckon himself at all to be a soldier of Jesus Christ.
A soldier is a
serving man. He does not follow his own pleasure; he is under law and
rule; each hour of the day has its prescribed duty; and he must be
obedient to the word of another and not to his own will and whim. Such is
the Christian. We serve the Lord Jesus Christ. Though no longer the slaves
of man so as to dread his frown, we are servants of Christ who has loosed
our bonds.
The soldier is full
often a suffering man. There are wounds, there are toils, there are
frequent lyings in the hospitals, there may be ghastly cuts which let the
soul out with the blood. Such the Christian soldier must be ready to
suffer, enduring hardness, not looking for pleasure of a worldly kind in
this life, but counting it his pleasure to renounce his pleasure for
Christ’s sake.
Once again, the true
soldier is an ambitious being. He pants for honor, seeks for glory. On the
field of strife he gathers his laurels, and amidst a thousand dangers he
reaps renown. The Christian is fired by higher ambitions than earthly
warrior ever knew. He sees a crown that can never fade; he loves a King
who best of all is worthy to be served; he has a motive within him which
moves him to the noblest deeds, a divine spirit impelling him to the most
self-sacrificing actions. Thus you see the Christian is a soldier, and it
is one of the main things in Christian life, to contend earnestly for the
faith, and to fight valorously against sin.
Paul does not exhort
Timothy to be a common, or ordinary soldier, but to be a “good
soldier of
Jesus Christ;” for all soldiers, and all true soldiers, may not be good
soldiers. There are men who are but just soldiers and nothing more; they
only need sufficient temptation and they readily become cowardly, idle,
useless and worthless; but he is the good soldier who is bravest of the
brave, courageous at all times, who is zealous, does his duty with heart
and earnestness. He is the good soldier of Jesus Christ who, through
grace, aims to make himself as able to serve his Lord as shall be
possible, who tries to grow in grace and to be perfected in every good
word and work, that he may be in his Master’s battles fit for the roughest
and sternest service, and ready to bear the very brunt of the fray. David
had many soldiers, and good soldiers too, but you remember it was said of
many, “These attained not unto the first three.” Now Paul, if I read him
rightly, would have Timothy try to be of the first three, to be a good
soldier. And surely I would this morning say to my dear comrades in the
little army of Christ meeting here, let each one of us try to attain unto
the first three; let us ask to be numbered among the King’s mighties, to
do noble work for him and honorable service, that we may bring to our
Master’s cause fresh glory. Be it ours to covet earnestly the best gifts,
and as we have had much forgiven, let us love much, and prove that love by
signs following.
Before I proceed
fully to open up this metaphor, let me say that though we shall use
military terms this morning, and stirring speech, it should ever be
recollected that we have no war against persons, and that the weapons
which we use are not such as are forged for the deadly conflicts of
mankind. The wars of a Christian are against principles, against sins,
against the miseries of mankind, against that evil one who has led man
astray from his Maker, against the iniquity which keeps man an enemy to
himself; and the weapons that we use are holy arguments and consecrated
lives, devotion and prayer to God, and teaching and example among the sons
of men. Ours is battling for the peace, and fighting for rest. We disturb
the world to make it quiet, and turn it upside down to set it right; we
pull down strongholds that they may not pull down the Zion of God; we dash
down the mighty that the humble and the meek may be established. We have
no sympathy with. any other war, but count it an evil of the direst sort,
let it be disguised as it may. Now with that caution, whatever I shall
seem to say will not sound as though I loved or excused ordinary warfare,
for nothing can be more abhorrent to the Christian man than wholesale
slaughter; nothing can be more desired by us than the promised era, when
men shall beat their swords into ploughshares, and their spears into
pruning hooks. Now let us come to
the work of this morning.
First, we shall describe a good soldier of Jesus
Christ, and when we have done so, we shall exhort you to be such.
—————
I.
First, then,
this morning, we shall endeavor to describe a Good
Soldier Of Jesus Christ .
(1) We must begin with
this fundamental — he must be loyal to his King.
A soldier of Jesus Christ
owns the divine Redeemer as his King, and confesses his sole and undivided
sovereignty in the spiritual kingdom. He abhors Antichrist in all its
forms, and every principle that opposes itself to the reign of the beloved
Prince of Peace. Jesus is to him both Lord and God. The day when he
enlisted, he did as it were put his finger into the print of the nails,
and say with Thomas, “My Lord and my God.” This was his enlistment
declaration, and he remains true to it. “Christ is all,” is his motto,
and to win all men to obedience to Immanuel is his lifework. Till he
sheathes his sword in the last victory, the Crucified is sole monarch of
his soul; for him he lives, for him he would even dare to die. He has
entered into solemn league and covenant, to maintain against all comers
that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father.
Moreover, the
Christian soldier not only acknowledges Jesus to be his King, but his
heart is full of loving devotion to him as such. Nothing can make his
heart leap like the mention of that august, that more than royal name. He
remembers who Jesus is, the Son of God, “the Wonderful, the
Counselor,
the Mighty God.” He remembers what Jesus did, how he loved him, and gave
himself for him; he looks to the cross, and remembers the streams of blood
whereby the elect were redeemed, even when they were enemies to God. He
remembers Christ in heaven, enthroned at the right hand of the Father, he
loves him there, and it ravishes his heart to think that God hath highly
exalted the once-despised and rejected One, and given him a name that is
above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow, of
things in heaven, and things in earth, and things under the earth. He
pants for the time when the Crucified shall come in his glory, and rule
the nations as their liege Lord. He loves Jesus so that he feels he
belongs to him altogether, bought with his blood, redeemed by his power,
and comforted by his presence; he delights to know that he is not his own,
for he is bought with a price. And since he loves his King, and loves him
with an ardor unquenchable, for many waters cannot drown his love, neither
can the floods quench it, he loves all the King’s brethren and servants
for the King’s sake; he hails his brethren in arms with hearty affection;
he loves the grand old banner of the gospel; he prays for the wind of the
Holy Spirit to expand its furls, that all eyes may behold its beauties; he
is steadfast in the faith once delivered to the saints, and rejoices so
much at every doctrine of the gospel that he would gladly lay down his
life to preserve it to the world. Above all, he loves the crown of his
King, and the cause of his Master. Oh, could he set the Captain of his
salvation higher among men, he would be content to die in the ditch of
neglect and scorn; could he but see the King come to his own, and the heir
of all things loyally acknowledged by his revolted provinces, he would be
satisfied whatever might become of himself. His heart is more than loyal,
it is full of personal affection for the chief among ten thousand. I ask
you, brethren, whether it is so with you?
Believing, yea,
knowing that it is so with many, I would to God it were thus with all.
Brethren, I know you love Jesus well, no music sounds to your ears so
sweetly as his charming name; no song of choicest minstrel is half so
sweet. The very thought of him with rapture fills your breasts. Assuredly
you have one of the first marks of good soldiers; go on, I pray you, to
that which lies beyond.
(2)
The next
characteristic of a good soldier is that he is obedient to his captain’s
commands.
He would be no soldier at all who would not take his marching
orders from his leader, but must needs act after his own mind; he would
soon be dismissed the service, if not shot, by order of a court martial,
for crimes which military rule cannot tolerate. Now, without enlarging on
that illustration, let me ask every Christian here, and myself first of
all, are we doing all the Master’s will? Do we wish to know the Master’s
will? I should not like that any part of the Scripture should be
distasteful to me. I would tremble if there were portions of my Lord’s
testimony which I feared to read, or found it convenient to forget. It is
terrible when men are obliged to pass over certain texts, or else to cut
and square them to make them agree with their beliefs. We should not
practice an ordinance merely because our church teaches it, or our parents
believed in it; we must read the scriptures, and search the question for
ourselves, or we are not respectful to our Lord. The soldier who did not
take the trouble to read the orders of his superior, might justly be
suspected of mutinous intentions. Disobedience rankles in any heart where
there is carelessness about knowing the Lord’s will. Be courageous enough
always to look Scripture in the face, it is after all nothing more than
your bare duty. Better for us that we changed our sentiments every day in
order to be right, than that we held to them obstinately while we had some
fear that perhaps we were wrong. To live a life of obedience is a greater
matter than some suppose. Obedience is no second-rate virtue: “to obey is
better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams.” “If ye love
me” — what saith Jesus, “Go to the stake for me,” or, “Preach before
kings for me?” No, neither of these things is expressly selected, but
“If ye love me, keep my commandments,” as though this were the surest
and most accepted test of love. May you thus, then, being loyal to the
King be in the second place obedient to his commands.
(3)
The third matter for
a good soldier to mind is this, if he be indeed a first-class soldier,
worthy of the service - to conquer will be his ruling passion.
The fight is
on, and the soldier’s blood is up, and now he feels “I must drive the
enemy from his entrenchment, I must take yonder redoubt. I must plant our
conquering standard on the castle of the foe, or I must die. Accursed be
the sun if he go down this day and see me turn my back upon the enemy.”
He is resolved that he will win or lie cold and stark upon the battle
field. The Christian man, in order that he may win for Christ the souls of
others, may make known Christ’s truth, may establish Christ’s church on
fresh ground, is quite as ready to suffer or die as is the boldest member
of the most renowned regiment. To do this he disentangles himself as much
as he can from all other ambitions and aims, “for be that warreth
entangleth not himself with the affairs of this life.” With a good
soldier of Christ the master passion is to spread the gospel, to save
souls from perishing, and he would sooner do this and be poor than be rich
and neglect it; he would sooner be useful and live unknown than rank among
the great ones of the earth and be useless to his Lord. A truly good
soldier of Jesus Christ knows nothing about difficulties except as things
to be surmounted. If his Master bids him perform exploits too hard for
him, he draws upon the resources of omnipotence, and achieves
impossibilities. Wellington sent word to his troops one night, “Ciudad
Rodrigo must be taken to-night.” And what do you think was the commentary
of the British soldiers appointed for the attack? “Then,” said they all,
“we will do it.” So when our great Captain sends round, as he doth to
us, the word of command, “Go ye into all the world and preach the gospel
to every creature,” if we were all good soldiers of the cross, we should
say at once, “We will do it.” However hard the task, since God himself
is with us to be our Captain, and Jesus the Priest of the Most High is
with us to sound the trumpet, we will do it in Jehovah’s name. May such
dauntless resolution fire your breasts, my brethren and sisters, and may
you thus prove yourselves “good soldiers of Jesus Christ.”
The passion for
victory with the soldier often makes him forget everything else. Before
the battle of Waterloo, Picton had had two of his ribs smashed in at
Quartre Bras, but he concealed this serious injury, and, though suffering
intensest agony, he rode at the head of his troop, and led one of the
great charges which decided the fortunes of the day. He never left his
post, but rode on till a ball crushed in his skull and penetrated to the
brains. Then in the hot fight the hero fell. How few among us could thus
endure hardness for Jesus. O that we felt we could suffer anything sooner
than be turned aside from accomplishing our lifework for him we love. In
that same battle one of our lieutenants, in the early part of the day, had
his left fore-arm broken by a shot; he could not, therefore, hold the
reins in his hand, but he seized them with his mouth, and fought on till
another shot broke the upper part of the arm to splinters, and it had to
be amputated; but within two days there he was, with his arm still
bleeding, and the wound all raw, riding at the head of his division.
Brave things have been done amongst the soldiers of our country — O that
such brave things were common among the armed men of the church militant!
Would to God, that in the teeth of suffering we could all persevere in
living the holy life he bids us live, and in zealously spreading abroad
that glorious gospel which has saved our souls and which will save the
souls of others. Great Master, by thine own example inspire us with this
valor. I desire to see in this our beloved church more of you who are
resolved that Christ’s gospel shall conquer this South of London, that it
shall conquer the world, that Christ shall see of the travail of his soul
and be satisfied. I long to witness more of that dogged perseverance
amongst Christians which would make them work on and on, even without
success, and persevere under every discouragement, until at last their
Master shall give them their reward on earth, or else take them away to
their reward in heaven. To be a good soldier of Jesus Christ, there
must be a passion for victory, an insatiable greed for setting up the
throne of Jesus in the souls of men.
(4)
Fourthly, a good
soldier is very brave at a charge.
When the time comes
and the orders are given for the good soldier to advance to the attack, he
does not wish himself away; though a perfect hail of hurtling shot
whistles all around, and the ranks of the army are thinned, he is glad to
be there, for he feels the stern joy that flushes the face in the light of
battle, and he only wants to be within arm’s length of the foe and to come
to close quarters with him. So is it with the genuine Christian when his
heart is right with God. If he be bidden to advance, let the danger be
what it may, he feels he is honored by having such a service allotted to
him. But are we all such? I fear not. How many of us are silent about
Jesus Christ in private conversation, how little do we show forth our
light before men. If we were good soldiers, such as we ought to be, we
should select every favorable opportunity in private as well as in public
intercourse with our fellow men, and prudently but yet zealously press the
claims of Jesus Christ and his gospel upon them. Oh, do you this, beloved,
and good will come of it. We should each one be seeking to have his own
special work for Jesus, and if no one else were attempting the task we
should, like the brave men who rush in to the storming of a battery, carry
the flag first and plant it, knowing that there are hundreds of others who
will follow the first brave man, who might not be able perhaps to lead the
way themselves. My beloved, may you and I be ready for anything, and bold
to bear witness for Christ before a scoffing world. In the pulpits where
we preach, in the workshops where we labor, in the markets where we trade,
in every company amidst which we are called to move; wherever we may be,
may we be brave enough to own our Lord and to uphold his cause. But this
is not all that goes to make a good soldier.
(5)
A good soldier is like a rock under attack.
So British soldiers have
been; they have stood in solid squares against the enemies’ cavalry until
their foes have dashed upon them madly, gnashed their teeth, fired in
their faces, thrown their guns at them, and yet might just as well have
ridden against granite rocks; for our soldiers did not know how to yield,
and would not retreat; as fast as one fell another filled up the gap, and
there stood the square of iron defying the rush of the foe. We want this
kind of fixed, resolved, persevering Godliness in our churches, and we
shall have it if we are good soldiers of Jesus Christ.
Alas! too many are
exhausted by the zeal at first exhibited; for a time they can reach the
highest point, but to continue on, and on, and on, this is too difficult a
task for them. How many young people will join the church, and for awhile
seem very zealous and then grow cold! Alas! it is not always the young,
there be some among yourselves who were once most diligent in your various
forms of service; what doth hinder you that you are not diligent in your
Master’s business now? Has Christ given you leave to retire into
inglorious ease? Does he exempt you from service? Take heed lest you are
also exempt from reward. No, we must through life still maintain our
integrity, still resist temptation, still tread the separated path, and,
withal, still seek the souls of men with undying ardor, with indefatigable
earnestness, still wrestling with God for men and with men for God. Oh,
for more of this stern determination to stand, and having done all to
stand!
(5) The last mark of a
really good soldier of Jesus Christ is that he derives his strength from
on high.
This has been true even of some common soldiers, for religious
men when they have sought strength from God have been all the braver in
the day of conflict. I like the story of Frederick the Great; when he
overheard his favourite general engaged in prayer, and was about to utter
a sneering remark, the fine old man, who never feared a foe, and did not
even fear his majesty’s jest, said, “Your Majesty, I have just been
asking aid from your Majesty’s great ally.” He had been waiting upon God.
This is how Christians get the victory; they seek it from the church’s
great ally, and then go to the conflict sure that they shall win the day.
He is the best Christian who is the best intercessor, he shall do the most
who shall pray the best. In the battle of Salamanca, when Wellington bade
one of his officers advance with his troops, and occupy a gap, which the
Duke perceived in the lines of the French, the general rode up to him, and
said, “My lord, I will do the work, but first give me a grasp of that
conquering right hand of yours.” He received a hearty grip, and away he
rode to the deadly encounter. Often has my soul said to her Captain, “My
Lord, I will do that work if thou wilt give me a grip of thy conquering
right hand.” Oh, what power it puts into a man when he gets a grip of
Christ, and Christ gets a grip of him! Fellowship with Christ is the
fountain of the church’s strength. Her power did never lie in her wealth,
nor in the eloquence of her preachers, nor in aught that comes of man; the
strength of the church is divine, and if she fails to draw strength from
the everlasting hills, she becomes weak as water. Good soldiers of Jesus
Christ, watch unto prayer, “praying in the Holy Ghost,” for so shall you
be strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might.
—————
II.
Thus I have in
a very poor way described a good soldier of Jesus Christ. Give me a few
minutes while I
Exhort You To Be Such ; and, mark you I shall
speak especially to the members of this Christian church.
(1)
I exhort you, dear
brethren, who are soldiers of Christ, to be good soldiers, because many of
you have been so.
Paul was wont to commend the churches when he could, and
I feel I may honestly and from my heart commend many of you, for you have
served your Lord and Master well. I know you have nothing whereof to
glory, for when you have done all, you are unprofitable servants; but
still I do rejoice, and will rejoice when I see the work of the Holy
Spirit in you; and I will venture to say that I have seen here instances
of apostolic ardor and self-sacrifice such as I have read of in ancient
records, but hardly ever expected to see. There are those in this house
this day who will shine as stars for ever and ever, for they have turned
many to righteousness. Dishonor not your past, I beseech you, fall not
from your high standing. “Forward” be your motto; never think of
declining but rather advance in love to God, and in the ardor of your
zeal. Be good soldiers still, and depart not from your first love. I am
sure there is greater need of good soldiering now than ever. Ten years ago
or sixteen years ago, when first I addressed you, the power of popery in
this land was nothing to what it is now. In those days the Church of
England was more generally Protestant, now it is so frequently popish that
I may broadly say that now we are afflicted with two popish churches, that
of Rome and that of Oxford, the second not one whit better than the first,
only more crafty and insidious, inasmuch as it attracts to itself a number
of godly and gracious men, who protect the villains who bear a Protestant
name and who are doing the Pope’s work. I grieve to know that the
evangelical clergy of England, by their continued union with the Church of
England are acting as a shield to the ritualistic or popish party, and
giving them every opportunity to work out their schemes for leading the
nation back to popery en masse. Around this very spot a battle will have to
be fought between the sacramentarians and the lovers of the gospel. At
your very doors the battle is come at last; it was not so till but lately,
but here it is, and ye that are men must show your colors, and serve your
Master against innumerable and constantly active foes. Ye have never
failed me, ye have always been bold and steadfast, and laborious, and so
let it be, for the time requires it. I can see on all hands that many of
your young men are being attracted by the worldly amusements which
surround us, for our dangers are not only those of popery, but those of
the world, the flesh, and the devil. There must be greater earnestness and
a deeper-toned piety among you, or the next generation will become
unworthy of yourselves, your grief and not your joy. I pray you see to
this.
(2)
Be good soldiers,
for much depends upon it.
Your country will be blest in proportion as you
are earnest. Nonconformity in England will lose all its power if it loses
its godliness. I do not care much for our political strength — I was about
to say I am almost indifferent to our political rights — I care for them,
but only so much as to occupy a very minor place in my consideration; but
our spirituality is the main matter, it is this alone that can make us a
blessing to our country. Sons of the Puritans, ye must walk with God, or
your day is past, ye will be swept away as Esther would have been, who
came to the kingdom for the salvation of her nation, if she had not
fulfilled the office for which God had exalted her. You have grown in
numbers, grown in strength, O that you may grow in grace, love the gospel
better, and love Christ better, for your country needs it, your children
need it, yourselves need it. The times are perilous, and yet they are
hopeful; by their peril, and by their hopefulness, I beseech you be good
soldiers of Jesus Christ. Good soldiers we ought to be, for it is a grand
old cause that is at stake. It is the kingdom of God, it is the church of
Christ, it is the word, the truth, the doctrine of the gospel, the crown
of Jesus, that are all at stake. I grant you that none shall ever shake
the throne of Jesus, for though “the heathen rage, and the people imagine
a vain thing,” yet shall his throne be established. But we now speak
according to the manner of men. God has been pleased to leave this matter
to his church, which is the pillar and ground of the truth. Oh then, stand
up manfully, and fight earnestly when so much rests upon it! God grant
that you may not be as the children of Ephraim, who being armed and
carrying bows turned their backs in the day of battle.
(3)
I implore you, my
brethren, and mostly myself, to be good soldiers of Jesus, when you
consider the fame that has preceded you.
A soldier when he receives his
colors finds certain words embroidered on them, to remind him of the
former victories of the regiment in which he serves. Look at the eleventh
chapter of Hebrews, and see the long list of the triumphs of the faithful.
Remember how prophets and apostles served God; recollect how martyrs
joyfully laid down their lives; look at the long line of the reformers and
the confessors; remember your martyred sires and covenanting fathers, and
by the grace of God I beseech you walk not unworthy of your noble lineage.
(4)
Be good soldiers
because of the victory which awaits you.
Oh, it will be a grand thing to
share in the ultimate triumph of Christ, for triumph he will; when all his
soldiers shall come back from the war, and the King himself at their head
with the spoils of the victory, when they shall come back to the
metropolitan city, to the ivory palaces of the great Captain, when the
song is heard, “Lift up your heads, O ye gates, and be ye lifted up, ye
everlasting doors,” when the question shall be answered, “Who is the
King of glory?” by the reply, “The Lord of Hosts, the Lord mighty in
battle, he is the King of glory;” it will be a glorious thing to have
shared the fight, for so surely you shall share the honors of that
coronation day. A crown is prepared for that head though it be now made to
ache with care for the cause, a palm branch for that hand which now toils
in the fight, silver sandals for those feet which have now to march over
weary miles for Christ’s sake, honor and immortality not to be imagined
till they are enjoyed, await every faithful soldier of the cross.
(5)
Besides, and lastly
if I want another argument to make you good soldiers, remember your
Captain, the Captain whose wounded hands and pierced feet are tokens of
his love to you.
Redeemed from going down to the pit, what can you do
sufficiently to show your gratitude? Assured of eternal glory by-and-by,
bow can you sufficiently prove that you feel your indebtedness? Up, I pray
you now. By him whose eyes are like a flame of fire, and yet were wet with
tears, by him on whose head are many crowns, and who yet wore the crown of
thorns, by him who is King of kings and Lord of lords, and yet bowed his
head to death for you, resolve that to life’s latest breath you will spend
and be spent for as praise. The Lord grant that there may be many such in
this church-good soldiers of Jesus Christ.
Two or three words
and I will close.
At this present time I contemplate exhorting you to
engage in fresh efforts for Christ. I do not know that you are relaxing,
neither have I complaints to make of any, but I would wish that we would
commence with renewed vigor this day, if God so wills it. As I myself
commence a new year of Sabbaths as to my own age, I desire to see a new
era of greater exertion in the cause of Jesus Christ; and, in order that
it may be successful, let not a single man or woman on the church-roll be
missing from his or her post in the spiritual conflict. It is a remarkable
fact that on the eve of a great battle in the Peninsular war the officers
read the muster-roll, and noted that “not a man was missing.” They had
all good stomach for the fight, and were all there. You that are in the
Sabbath school, you that distribute your tracts, you that preach in the
street, every man to his post; and if you have no post as yet, find one —
let there not be one idler, not one single loiterer, for a single sluggard
may mar the work.
Then if we are to be successful let nothing divide us.
The motto of one of our most famous regiments embroidered on their banner
is, “Quis separavit.” Who shall separate us? We are but mortals, and,
therefore, little jealousies may spring up, and among us there may be
little causes of personal pique, but brave warriors in the olden times who
had fallen out have been known to come together on the eve of battle and
say, Come, let us be reconciled, we may die to-morrow; besides, we join in
common hatred of the foe and love to the king.” Let your peace be
unbroken, your union indissoluble, and God will bless you.
To help us to
succeed now, let us lay down this one rule, let no low standard of work,
or virtue, or spiritual attainment, content any one of us; let us resolve
to be as good Christians as can be beneath the stars, as fond of Christ as
human hearts can be, doing and giving as much for Christ as we can do or
give, consistently with other duties. Let us spare nothing, and keep back
no part of the price; let there be no Ananias and Sapphira among us, but
all be as John, who loved his Lord; and Paul, who counted all things but
loss for the excellency of Christ Jesus his Lord.
Next, let me say,
let the present moment be seized. I should like to saturate this district
with a mass of tracts simply teaching the gospel and protesting against
the bastard popery around us. Heaven and earth are being raised around us
just now; our poor are being bribed, the houses of our members are being
systematically visited with the view of decoying them from our worship. We
are told that a certain small building used by the Episcopal body is the
parish church, and we ought to attend it. I might far more truthfully
assert this to be the church of the parish by the choice of a far more
numerous body, but I care not to make pretensions which prove nothing. The
true question is — do we follow Christ, and uphold the teachings of
Scripture, and if so, our standing is unassailable. Doubtless the word has
gone forth that Dissent must be crushed, but if we live near to God, and
maintain our zeal, Dissent will rise invincible from every attack.
Foreseeing the gathering storm, it is our consolation that we know where
he dwells who is Master of the tempest, and can walk the waters for our
help, and calm the sea around the weather-beaten bark. It becomes us now
at this present moment to be indefatigable, to put forth all our strength
for the truth, even the Lord’s pure word in doctrine and in ordinance. Let
no man’s heart fail him. There is no fear of defeat. Lo, these many years
the Lord of Hosts has been with us as a church, and he will be still our
helper. We have seen the rise and fall of many who blazed for awhile, but
are now quenched in darkness, while we have increased from a handful to
this mass; and God who has been our trust, and is still our stay, will not
forsake us now. He has not drawn you together, and held you in one body by
cords of love, that after all you may prove to be a powerless unwieldly
mass of associated Christians; he intends to direct and strengthen you for
nobler ends and purposes God, even our own God, will bless us. Immanuel,
God with us, leads the van. The truth, like the virgin daughter of Zion,
shakes her head at boastful error, and laughs it to scorn. Let falsehood
put on her tawdry garments, and think herself a queen, and say that she
shall sit alone, and see no sorrow; let error come forth in her panoply
and wave her flaunting banner before the sun. She draws near her end. Her
armor — what is it? It is but pasteboard, and the lance of truth shall
pierce it through and through. Her banner, what is it but a foul rag of
the Roman harlot? It shall be laid in the dust. Nay, let error bring forth
all her hosts, and let them stand in their serried ranks, and through them
the faithful soldiers of Jesus will ride and bow the columns like reeds in
the wind. In these days, the doctrines and traditions of men compass us
about, yea, like bees they compass us about, but in the name of the Lord
will we destroy them. Only let us have confidence in God, and the victory
is sure. As for the thought of turning back, that can never be endured. A
message came to Sir Colin Campbell at the Alma, that Her Majesty’s Guards
were falling thick and fast beneath the shot, had they not better retire
for a little while into safe quarters? The answer was, “It were better,
sir, that every one of Her Majesty’s Guards should lie dead on this battle
field than turn their backs on the enemy.” And it is so. Let us die, yea,
it were to be devoutly wished rather than that we lived a coward’s life!
Let the preacher first of all be carried to his grave, let him never live
to see the shame of this Israel. Let these eyes be sealed in death rather
than behold “Ichabod” written on these walls. No, brethren, it shall not
be; you will serve Jesus, you will love him, and “Onward to victory”
shall be your watchword from to-day. Be more in prayer, for this is the
great matter. Seek out each one your own sphere of action; give yourselves
wholly to it; and if any grow cold or careless, let him remember Jesus
saith, “I stand at the door, and knock: if any man hear my voice, and
open the door, I will come in to him, and will sup with him, and be with
me.” This blessed supping with Jesus will restore you; though you be like
Laodicea, “neither cold nor hot.” Fellowship with Jesus will renew the
love of your espousals. Oh, then, my brethren, in Jesus’ name I bid you be
strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might.
I have not preached
to sinners, but you will do that if you catch the spirit of this sermon;
there will be many thousands of words to sinners spoken as the result of
this exhortation, if God, the Holy Spirit, make it answer my design. Only
this word to those who are not soldiers of Jesus Christ; trust him now,
come now and kiss his silver scepter of grace; he will forgive the rebel,
and take him to be his servant. God bless you. Amen
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