A Sermon Delivered On Thursday Evening, August 27, 1868, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
God loves a cheerful giver. (2 Corinthians 9:7)
1. I am most anxious, dear friends, to make full proof of my ministry, and in this one respect especially, that I may address you upon all parts of God’s word, and not be found guilty of confining myself to one set of topics, for certainly this, although it might be pleasant, would not be profitable for you. I would gladly, if I had my choice, constantly preach upon the doctrine of God’s everlasting and unchanging love. I should delight to preach each Sunday, and indeed in every sermon, upon the simple doctrine of the justification of the sinner in the sight of God by faith in Jesus Christ. But there are other things in Scripture besides these. All things in Scripture are not placed there for our Comfort. All are not promises; all are not words of cheer for feeble minds and disconsolate spirits. There are other words besides those of consolation, words of direction, words of precept. If we should shun these, if these never entered into the course of our ministry at all, some solemn disease might break out among the church, because a part of the “convenient food” for them had been withheld. Therefore I thought it best to speak to you upon this subject tonight, and all the more because there is no collection. You are not asked to give anything, and I shall therefore feel myself the more at liberty to press upon you the instruction of this text. You will see that my simple object is to bring out the teaching of the word to you, not with any ulterior motive, but purely to promote that result which God himself may intend to work by the words before us! words, remember, of undoubted inspiration, and therefore as worthy of all acceptance as any other sentence from the divine mouth.
2. Brethren, in the church of God there are various forms of service. There are some to whom the gift is given of edifying others; these are bound with diligence to instruct their hearers and expound the Scriptures. To others it is given to evangelize, to break up fresh ground, to win the unconverted; these are bound never to slacken their hand, but to sow the seed both morning and evening. Many in the Lord’s family are not enabled either to be the teachers of the church or the winners of souls, but they are called by the duties of a humble, quiet life, to adorn the doctrine of God their Saviour in all things. Such as these should see to it that their conduct is always such as becomes the gospel of Christ and befits the household of faith; and it should be their earnest prayer that what is preached by some may be illustrated by themselves in their daily walk and conduct.
3. A considerable portion of the church of God is called to even harder service, namely, that of suffering. God still receives glory from the fire of affliction, when his people sing his high praises upon their beds. He receives as much honour from the sickbed as from the pulpit, and those of his servants who are called to lie in the hospital are as acceptable soldiers as those whom he commands to the front of the fray. We must all expect to take our turn in tribulation according to the purpose of God. When we are commanded to do so we must take up our cross cheerfully and follow our Lord.
4. To all the church, also, it is given, and to each member in his measure, to serve God by giving. Some are enabled, being made stewards of wealth, to give generously from their substance. They are bound to do so, but they should not give it merely as being bound, but feeling it to be their privilege to give whatever they can to him who gave them their all, and who is their all. The poorest Christian is not exempted from this privilege. If he has only a little, God accepts according to what a man has, and not according to what he does not have, and if he is so poor that he cannot even give the two mites which make a farthing, still he may give to God his time, he may give to God from such ability as he has in the teaching of the young, in the distribution of the printed word, or in some other form of service which shall come conveniently within his reach. But no one must escape from being givers to God in some way, for we are all receivers and should be all dispensers. Give him our prayers, give him our praises, give him such efforts as we can, but let us all be givers, and let us take heed to the text, and be cheerful givers too.
5. You will notice that the
apostle Paul had been speaking about giving all through
the chapter, but he now comes to speak of giving as it
appears in the sight of God, and the great argument
which he uses, the master gun, is, “God loves a cheerful
giver”; from which I learn that when we are speaking
about Christian service, we ought always to view it in
its aspect towards God. He had spoken of what the men at
Achaia had thought of benevolence, and of what the
members of other churches might think of the
Corinthians, since he had previously boasted about them,
but he remembers himself, and says that the true
judgment of a good work is not what may be thought of it
by the church or by the world, but in what esteem God
may hold it. “God,” he says, “loves a cheerful
giver.” That is the point. Beloved hearer, you are a
professed Christian. Do you serve in the church after
this model? You may ask what I mean. It is this. In
coming up to the house of God do you come there so that
you may worship God? When you teach in the Sunday
School, is it merely that you may take your share with
your fellow Christians, or do you teach as to God? You
speak, my brother, in God’s name; do you not sometimes
find yourself preaching otherwise than as to God? You
engage in prayer in the prayer meeting, my dear friend;
do you never raise the question in your mind, “I wonder
whether my prayer is liked by those who listen to it?”
You forget that prayer is to be viewed as to God, and
that all the service of the Christian is not towards
man, nor towards the church, though it has its bearings
in both of these directions, but its main bent and
bearing is towards God, and to do everything as for the
Most High is the most important of duties. To live in
this world—
Careless, myself a dying man,
Of dying men’s esteem.
To ask myself never what Mr. So-and-so thinks of me, “Shall I be commended, or shall I be censured?” but to say, “As I serve my God and not my fellow men, what will the great Master say to me? What will he say of my service? How will it appear in his sight? Will it be gold, silver, precious stones, or will it, like wood, hay, and stubble, be consumed in the fire?” This is the true way in which to work and live. Notice then before I come to the text to enter fully into its teaching, that whether it is service, or teaching, or suffering, or giving, the main point is to perform it as to the Lord, and if the church would see to this she would find her strength; she would serve God after a nobler and more acceptable manner, for he is a Spirit, and those who serve him, serving him in spirit and in truth, would serve him more boldly, more abundantly, and more acceptably through Jesus Christ. This, then, is upon the surface of the text. “God loves a cheerful giver.” We learn that since giving is a part of Christian service, the right way to do it is the way which God will himself accept, and that that way is giving cheerfully. “God loves a cheerful giver.”
6. I do not mean to be very long upon any one point, but first shall notice very briefly what a cheerful giver is; secondly, why the Lord loves such; and then, thirdly, will it be necessary to say even a word or two upon why we who are his people should be such?
7. I. First, WHAT IS MEANT BY A CHEERFUL GIVER?
8. The rest of the verse tells us what is not meant, and so helps us to see what is intended. “Not grudgingly, or of necessity, for God loves a cheerful giver.” “Not grudgingly,” not giving as though you wished you could avoid it, and therefore giving as little as possible, counting the pence, and considering them to be as precious as drops of blood, but giving with an ease, a spontaneousness, a freeness, a pleasure; this is a cheerful giver. To be this, one must give proportionately, for cheerful givers consider how much they should give, how much as good stewards may be expected from their hands. He who has a large income gives grudgingly if he gives no more than one who has only a tenth as much. He who has only a few expenses, and lives frugally, if he gives no more than another man who has a large family and large expenses, cannot be said to give cheerfully. He evidently gives grudgingly if he does not give in proportion. Much has been said about giving the tenth of one’s income to the Lord. I think that is a Christian duty which no one should question for a moment. If it were a duty under the Jewish law, how much more it is so now under the Christian age. But it is a great mistake to suppose that the Jew only gave a tenth. He gave very, very, very much more than that. The tenth was the payment which he must make, but after that came all the free will offerings, all the various gifts at various seasons of the year, so that, perhaps, he gave a third, much more nearly that, certainly, than a tenth. And at this present day, it is a strange thing that the followers of idols, such as the Hindus, still give very nearly that proportion of their substance, and thus utterly shame the stinginess of many who profess to be followers of Jesus Christ. I do not, however, like to lay down any rules for God’s people, for the Lord’s New Testament is not a great book of rules; it is not a book of the letter, for that kills, but it is the book of the Spirit, which teaches us rather the soul of generosity than the body of it, and instead of writing laws upon stones or paper, it writes laws upon the heart. Give, dear friends, as you have purposed in your heart, and give proportionately, as the Lord has prospered you, and do not make your estimate of what you ought to give by what will appear respectable for you, or by what is expected from you by other people, but as in the sight of the Lord, as he loves a cheerful giver; and as a cheerful giver is a proportionate giver, take care that you, like a good steward, keep just accounts towards the great King.
9. But I have said that a cheerful giver is also a willing giver, one who does not need to be “bled,” as we sometimes say, does not need that the lancet should be constantly used upon him; not like the young grape, which must be pressed and squeezed to get the wine out, because it is not ripe, but a cluster bursting with invigorating juice. We ought to be like the honeycomb, dripping spontaneously with virgin honey, all too glad if we may only be accepted in our gifts through him who is the altar, and who renders both the offerer and the offering acceptable to God. We ought not to need to be preached at, to be exhorted, and to be pressed by public appeals and private solicitations. It should be said of us as of the church at Corinth, “Touching the ministering to the saints, it is superfluous for me to write to you.” Be a proportionate giver, then, and a willing giver.
10. A man who gives to God cheerfully has gotten beyond the serf-like, slavish spirit. The slave brings his pittance, which he is obliged to pay, and puts it down at the taskmaster’s feet, and goes his way in misery. But the dear child, so pleased to give his Father what it can, places his little offering into the Father’s treasury, as much as possible unobserved by men, beholds the Father’s smile, and goes his way rejoicing. You are not under the law but under grace; you are not, therefore, to give or to do anything for God by compulsion, as though you heard the old Mosaic whip cracking in your ears. You are not to crouch before the Lord as the child of Hagar the bondwoman, fresh from Arabia and from the tremblings of Sinai; but you are to advance cheerfully as one who has come to Mount Zion, as the child of promise—as Isaac, whose name is laughter; rejoicing that you are enabled, and favoured, and privileged to do anything for him who loved you to the death.
11. The cheerful giver is one who gives very earnestly, and there is a way of giving earnestly, especially when the gift is that of your time or of your service. Some give God their time on the Lord’s day, but they are half asleep. Some give him their efforts in the Sunday School, or the classes, or street preaching, but they never seem to throw their souls into their engagements. What the church needs nowadays is more of cheerful, whole hearted service. Does it not make the skin crawl on your bones to hear some men preach—a word today and another word tomorrow; and the chilly discourse is spoken so softly (when they might speak loudly enough, if they would) that you can see they have not stirred their souls with the theme that they wish to put into your souls? Under such preachers congregations become “small by degrees and beautifully less,” because they are under the conviction that the preacher cannot have anything to say that he thinks is worth saying, or, otherwise, he would speak out in clear, earnest tones. Oh, if all the ministers of Christ, and all the deacons, and elders, and Sunday School teachers, and street preachers, and city missionaries were all on fire, what different men they would be! If the service were all cheerful service in the sense of being intense, full of force, the man’s whole manhood being thrown into it, what bright and happy seasons of revival we might expect, for in this sense “God loves a cheerful giver”; who does not come to his service to do duty, or because it is a matter of routine, or the clock has struck and the people want him, but comes because he loves to tell about Jesus’ love, loves to try to win souls, loves to declare the whole counsel of God, loves to look those dear children in the face, and pray with them, loves to take those lads alone and teach them about the Saviour who bled for sinners. Where there is living soul service there must be a blessing; but if we do not serve our Master cheerfully, and consequently do not do it earnestly, God will not love the service, and nothing will come of it.
12. One thing I know, that a cheerful giver always wishes that he could give ten times as much. A cheerful doer always wants to have more capacity for doing. A cheerful preacher always wishes that he had a thousand tongues and for not one of them ever to be silent. Beloved, do you never remember wishing that for once you could get out of this dull common life, and climb into the higher spiritual life? Did you never read Henry Martyn’s life, a polished scholar, a man of learning and repute, giving up all for Christ to go to Persia and there to die without having seen a convert, perhaps, and yet content to live, content to die in far off lands for his Master’s sake? Did you never read of Brainerd far away among the Indians, toiling on, and in his old age teaching a poor black child his letters, and thanking God that when he could not preach, he could still teach the child his letters, and so do something for his dear Lord who had done so much for him? Indeed, did you never read and think of even St. Francis Xavier, papist as he was? Yet what a man, how consecrated, how zealous! with all his errors, and all his mistakes, and all his faults, yet traversing land and sea, penetrating forests, and daring death a thousand times, so that he might spread abroad the poor misguided doctrines which he believed. As much as I hate his teaching, I admire his all but miraculous zeal. When I think of some such men; when I would gladly censure their mistakes, I can only censure myself that I cannot even so much as think, or cannot do more than think of living such a life as they lived. Oh that we could learn the secret of entire consecration! Oh that we could receive a vehement panting and longing after the perfect dedication of ourselves to our Lord and Master! Then we should make our daily toil to be lustrous with the glory of holiness. Then we should burn like seraphs while we toiled here below as common men. Then we should teach, and preach, and pray, and work, and give with such a spirit and such a divine unction, that the world would wonder from where we came, and where we had learned these sacred arts. It is this cheerfulness, this heartiness, this whole heartedness, this intenseness, this fire of the soul, which God loves. Oh that we may have it! Oh may we get it, for God loves such doers and such givers.
13. II. Secondly, WHY DOES GOD LOVE A CHEERFUL GIVER?
14. Remember, this is not a sentence directed to all kinds of men. This was addressed to the members of a Christian church. God loves them all, but he has a special satisfaction in those whom by his grace he has taught to be cheerful givers. A cheerful giver who was not a Christian would not at all come under the statement made here. He would still be one with whom God is angry every day. It is concerning saved men, Christian men, men joined to the Christian church, that it is said, “God loves a cheerful giver.”
15. Now observe, first, God loves a cheerful giver, for he made the world on the plan of cheerful giving, and a great artist loves all that is consistent with his plan. I say God has made the whole world on this plan. I will show you. Look at the sun. What an orb of splendour! What a glorious creation of God! Why is it bright? Because it is giving away its light. Why is it glorious? Because it is scattering its beams on all sides. Imagine that it should say, “I will give no more light,” where would its brightness be? If it should say, “I will scatter my beams no more,” where would its lustre be? It is in the magnificent generosity of that great father of the day that his glory consists. It is the grandest of orbs to us because it gives us so much of that vitalizing force which is heat, and light, and life. Behold the moon, the fair queen of the night; why do we rejoice in her? Because what light she receives from the sun she gives again to us. If she were not to give her light, who would speak of her? If she were a selfish orb, absorbing into herself all the sun’s rays, if she were an ungenerous circle bounding up and storing within herself every sunbeam, what would she be? We should not even know of her existence probably except when, as a black speck, she passed between us and some bright luminary. But it is because she scatters her beams over the poverty of midnight that we rejoice and thank God for her wealth of beauty. Even those twinkling stars which seem so small to us, do not their brightness and their radiance consist in their giving? “One star differs from another star in glory,” because one star differs from another star in what it is able to give to us. Just as it is with the heavenly bodies; so it is with terrestrial bodies. Look at this earth beneath our feet; what is its excellence except in what it gives? There are parts of the earth sublimely solitary, such as the Great Sahara—such tracts of land give nothing, and what are they? Deserts. Who commends them? Go over that land once so blessed, Palestine, and tread the soil which yields so little; is it not thought to be accursed? And why? Because all the elements of fertility that are within it are unused and not brought forth for the good of man. But where are the happy countries? Where are the countries where men rejoice to praise the fatherland? Are they not those fertile hills and plains which laugh with superabundant harvests produced from earth’s stores so that men may make merry and be glad? Which is the land most chosen of our race, the Beulah of the nations? Not the hoarding land; not the thirsty land that will take in everything and give out nothing; not the hungry soil which the farmer tills but which refuses the wheat sheaf and the barley mow. Walk abroad in this world and think for a minute. Thousands of years ago it is probable that there were vast forests waving in the sunbeams, and what were they doing? Giving up themselves to fall and die, and why? Why, to form the vast stores which mother earth held in her cellars so long, until at last when man came he broke the lock, and entered into possession of vast stores of coal which aid our industry and sciences, and make us warm and happy in the depths of winter, so that we rejoice to see how what was stored by generous nature one day is given up tomorrow freely for our use. Why, there is not a tree that grows that is not giving forth perpetually. There is not a flower that blooms but its very sweetness lies in its shedding its fragrance on the air. All the rivers run into the sea, the sea feeds the clouds, the clouds empty out their treasures, the earth gives back the rain in fertility, and so it is an endless chain of giving generosity. Generosity reigns supreme in nature. There is nothing in this world that does not live by giving, except a covetous man, and such a man is a piece of grit in the machinery; he is out of gear with the universe. Man is a wheel running in the opposite direction to the wheels of God’s great engine. He is a jibbing horse in the team. He is one who will not do what all the forces in the world besides are doing. He is a monster; he is not fit for this world at all. He has not realised the motion of the spheres. He does not keep step with the march of the ages. He is out of date; he is out of place; he is out of God’s order altogether. But the cheerful giver is marching to the music of the spheres. He is in order with God’s great natural laws, and God therefore loves him, since he sees his own work in him.
16. Observe, secondly, that God loves a cheerful giver, because grace has placed such a man in harmony with the laws of redemption, as well as the laws of nature. And what are these? We who are called “Calvinists,” delight in asserting that the whole economy of the gospel is that of grace. It is all of free grace from first to last, and not in any measure or degree a matter of debt and reward. Salvation is not a thing to be earned and to be won by men, but is the result and exercise of the free grace of God. If there is election it is free election never springing from any goodness in us. If there is redemption, “thanks be to God for his unspeakable gift.” If there is calling, if there is justification, if there is sanctification, everywhere we see the freeness of the work of the great Giver. Never is anything in God stinted, never churlish, never grudging. He gives liberally and does not withhold in any good thing. God stands in the work of grace as a wondrous giver. Now the Christian man, or the professed Christian man, who is not a giver, or being a giver is not a cheerful giver, is out of harmony with the system which revolves around the covenant of grace and the cross of Christ; he is out of tune with the blood and wounds of Jesus; he is out of order with the eternal purposes of the Most High; he is not running in the current of divine grace at all; he ought to be under the law, though there indeed he does not come up to its letter; but since the spirit of the gospel is all freeness, and grace, and love, and bounty, the man is out of harmony with it, and does not understand it at all. Because, then, the cheerful giver, made so by divine grace, keeps tune with redemption and nature after his own measure and calling, he is commended by the Lord.
17. Again, God loves a cheerful giver, because he loves anything that makes his people happy; and he understands well that the spirit of self-denial, the spirit of love for others, is the surest source of happiness that can be found in the human heart. He who lives for himself must be wretched. He who can only rejoice in what he himself enjoys has only narrow channels for his happiness; but he who delights to make others blessed, and who delights to glorify God, but who can deny his own flesh and his own wishes if he may only honour his Master and bless the world, it is he who is the happy man; and just as God delights in the happiness which is the result, so he delights in the cheerful giving which is the cause.
18. God delights in a cheerful giver, again, because in such a believer he sees the work of his Spirit. It takes a great deal of grace to make some men cheerful givers. With some the last part of their nature that ever gets sanctified is their wallets. The grace of God works its way into the morality of their business, and into the actions of their home, but they do not appear to recognise that their substance is to be as much consecrated as their hearts. Beloved, I know there are some of the Lord’s people who look upon all they have most sacredly as not being their own, and who, not as a theory but as a matter of daily practice, make money for Christ, and give money to Christ, and are never so happy as when they can do a little more than they were accustomed to do to advance his kingdom according to their ability: but, on the other hand, there are some of quite another temperament, in whom the grace of God has to knock hard before it gets an answer; who know what they ought to do very well, but yet find the purse strings grow tight, and the fingers that are used for giving nearly paralysed; and really, when they do give a shilling, it appears to be as great an effort of self-denial as when others, according to their proportion, have given pounds. But the Lord does not like to see his people hugging this world so. He loves to see that they have outgrown the beggarly elements, that they are getting to love the spiritual above the carnal, to love himself above themselves, and to seek the treasures that are above and not the treasures which are on the earth. I am sure it grieves the Spirit of God when he sees the blood bought as money grasping as those who are of the world. It grieves the Spirit, and he often withdraws his comforting influence when he sees his servants falling down to the dull, dead, brutish level of men of the world whose cry is, “What shall we eat, and what shall we drink, and how shall we be clothed?” He would have his people seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness. He would have them delight themselves in the Lord, and not in the creatures which flesh and blood pine after. He would have them drink from purer streams than the muddy rivers of earth. He would have them covet after better riches than these Egyptian treasures which must perish in the using, and from which we must so soon be taken away.
19. But there is one reason why
God loves a cheerful giver which I must dwell on at some
length, namely, because he is a cheerful giver
himself. Man generally loves what is like himself.
We gratify ourselves in that way. Generally our
affections go after an object that is somewhat congruous
to our own character. Now, the Lord is the most cheerful
of all givers. I want you to think of that for a minute.
“Who did not spare his own Son.” Oh, what a gift was
that! Mothers, could you give your sons? Fathers, could
you spare your children? Well, yes, perhaps you might
for your country, but you could not for your enemies.
But God, the cheerful giver, did not spare his own Son,
but delivered him up for us all, as the word says. And
since then what a cheerful giver he has been! He has
given without our asking. We did not ask him to make the
covenant of grace. We did not ask him to elect us. We
did not ask him to redeem us. These things were done
before we were born. We did not ask him to call us by
his grace, for, alas! we did not know the value of that
call, and we were dead in trespasses and sins, but he
gave to us freely from his unsought, but boundless love.
Anticipatory grace came to us, outrunning all our
desires, and all our wills, and all our prayers. He
first made us pray; he gave us the spirit of
supplication, or else we would never have prayed. He
gave us the will to come to him, or else we would have
remained afar off. He was a cheerful giver to us, then.
And when we went to him with broken hearts, how
cheerfully did he give us pardon! How he ran and had
compassion upon us, and fell upon our neck and kissed
us! How cheerfully he brought us to the banquet with
music and with dancing, because his son who was dead was
alive again, and he who was lost was found!
Many days have passed since then,
Many changes have we seen,
but there has been no change in him: he has still been a cheerful giver. We have needed grace every day, and he gives liberally and did not upbraid. When we have been to him and have asked for an egg, he has never given us a scorpion; we have asked for bread, and he has never given us a stone, but he has given his Holy Spirit to us. Oh, the generosity of God in providence to some of us! Not long ago we were poor enough, but he has been pleased to give us all we can desire. There are some of you here who were on the bed of sickness, and were wondering what would become of that little family of yours for which you were the only bread winner; but God, the cheerful giver, provided for you, raised you up again, and sent you once again in health and strength to your work. Others of you have passed through great straits, but still the everlasting arms have been underneath you, and although the young lions do lack and suffer hunger, yet you, having sought the Lord, have not lacked any good thing. He is a cheerful giver. Ah, poor sinners, you who are not saved, I wish you knew how glad God is to give his mercy. He is the most cheerful giver in the universe. You must not think he will begrudge you. If you come to him for pardon of sin, God is ready to pardon you abundantly. If you seek his face you shall not have to clamour after him as though he were deaf or unwilling to hear you. He will listen to the cries of the penitent; he will listen to the desires of those who would forsake their sins and find Christ. If you will only trust the Lord Jesus, you shall find him the most cheerful giver and the kindest friend whom you have ever dreamed of.
20. Brothers and sisters, we shall very soon find God to be a cheerful giver. Some of our friends this week have found him so. They asked, for they were very sick, that he would sustain them, and he made their bed in their sickness, and put underneath them his kind arms; and then they asked that he would give them an abundant entrance into the kingdom of his dear Son, and he did it. He helped them to bear their witness to his faithfulness; he opened before them the gates of pearl; he did not deny them the harps of gold, nor the throne of Christ himself, but as a cheerful giver he welcomed his poor weary people to his own eternal banquet, and he made them sit at his own right hand. So he will do with us, for he is a cheerful giver, and so he likes his people to be, for in those who are like him he sees himself in miniature—as the sun sees itself in every drop of dew, as the skies are mirrored in every pool. Oh that God would grant us grace to be more cheerful givers in the future than we have been in the past!
21. III. I shall close with only a sentence or two concerning WHY WE WHO LOVE THE LORD IN THIS HOUSE ESPECIALLY SHOULD SEEK TO BE CHEERFUL GIVERS WHOM GOD LOVES.
22. There are many reasons, but tonight we need not urge them all. One is, that all we have we owe to him. I have heard of one who failed in business, who in his better times had helped some of his workmen into business and they had prospered. It was said, “Oh, they will help him; he did them such good turns in his day of prosperity, they will help him.” I do not know whether they did or not, but this I know, that he who took us up when we were naked, for so we came into this world, he who took us up when we were more than naked, filthy and defiled, for so we became through our sin and through our original depravity; he who took us from off the dunghill, yes, from out of the fire itself, and made us what we are, and wrapped us up with his righteousness and gave us his mercy, deserves all and more than all that we can give him. Oh, what shall we do to praise our Saviour? What shall we not do? Lord, since everything is due to you, take everything and let us make no reserve.
23. Remember, dear brethren, continually, that you are saved—you, when you might have been damned; you, when you had no will at one time to be saved. You are saved; your sins are blotted out; the righteousness of Christ is your royal apparel. Indeed, you are saved, and the Holy Spirit dwells in you. You are a priest, you are a king to God. You are an heir of heaven; the imperial blood runs in your veins. You are one of the peerage of the skies, a prince of the blood. Oh! will you not live above the lives of others? Will you not seek by these high dignities, these priceless blessings, and these astounding favours, to consecrate yourselves, spirit, soul, and body, to him who is your Father, your heaven, your God?
24. Brethren, you may well be anxious to be cheerful givers, when you remember that the time for giving will soon be over. There is no giving in those skies, at least, God’s choice treasury, which is the poor man’s pocket, will not be held out for you to fill. There will be none of the sons of need there; no cold little feet for lack of shoes, no little hands weak for lack of bread, no starving women and no hungry men; no meeting houses that need building; no missionaries that need sending out; no ships that need to be chartered to bear them beyond the seas; no ministers of Christ standing in need of your aid. You will be beyond all such calls then, and if there could be a regret in heaven it would be that in heaven these duties must for ever cease. Oh give, then, while you can as cheerful givers.
25. And, last of all, we have need of a giving God, and therefore let us be cheerful givers. Remember that story which Mrs. Stowe has so well written. I am afraid I cannot tell it again, certainly not in her words, but it is something to this effect. There was a merchant, she says, who had prospered a great deal in business. He had built a house in the country, and he had enlarged it, and had laid out his grounds at great expense. When he went to his office he was called upon by a collector for some society, and he replied to his requests, “I really cannot afford to give anything; I have so many calls, I cannot do it.” Well, he was a man who had usually been very generous, and it touched his conscience a little afterwards to think that he should begin to stint in what he gave to his Lord. At night, when the wife and family had retired to rest, he sat by the fireside meditating, and he said to himself, “I really do not know whether I was wise to build this house; it has brought a great deal of expense; new furniture is needed; I have been introduced into a new class of society, expenses have increased, the girls need more for clothes; everything is on a more lavish scale, and yet I have been stinting the Lord. I fear I have done amiss; I do not feel easy about it at all.” As he was so thinking it is supposed that he fell asleep, but if so it was well for him that he did so, for suddenly the door opened, and there came into the room a very meek and lowly stranger, who advancing to him said, “Sir, I have called upon you to ask your help for a society which sends the gospel to the heathen; they are perishing, perishing for lack of knowledge; you are wealthy, will you give me help to send them the word of life?” He said, “You must excuse me, really; my expenses are so great, and I must curtail them; I am quite unable to give you anything; I must decline.” The stranger looked at him with a mournful glance and said, “Perhaps you think that the work is too far away, and you do not give because the money is to be sent beyond the seas; I will then tell you that there is a Ragged School (a) down in a part of the city near your place of business, and it is about to be closed for lack of funds, and there are the poor little ragged children, the vagabonds of your streets, ignorant of the right way, will you give me a donation to that object?” The merchant was a little vexed to be asked again, and he said, “Forbear to trouble me; I cannot afford it, I cannot give you anything.” The stranger brushed a tear from his eye, and he said, “Well, then, I must ask you at least for something for the Bible Society; that, you see, lies at the root of everything; it gives away the word of God, and surely if you cannot afford it for the Missionary Society, or the Ragged School, you will give it for the word of God itself.” “No,” he said, “I have told you I cannot do it,” and then—and then the visage of the stranger seemed to change, and though he still was meek and lowly, yet as well his countenance became majestic. There was a glory in his face, and yet there were lines of grief, and he said, softly and very sternly, “Five years ago that little daughter of yours, with the fair ringlets, lay sick with the fever, and you prayed in the bitterness of your soul that the darling of your heart might not be taken from you, but that you might be spared that heavy stroke. Who heard that prayer, and gave you back your child?” The merchant covered his face with his hands, and felt ashamed. “Ten years ago,” said the same voice, “you were in great difficulties; unpaid bills piled up; you were on the verge of bankruptcy; your hair seemed as if it would turn grey with care. To whom did you apply in the hour of trouble, and who heard you, and who found you friends who tided you over your difficulties when other businesses were failing, and wealthier men than you were failing on every side? Who did that for you? Once more,” said the stranger, “fifteen years ago you felt the burden of your sins, you went up and down the world wringing your hands with fear, and crying, ‘God have mercy upon me!’ your heart was overwhelmed within you; who in that hour spoke the forgiving word which cancelled all your sins? Who took all your iniquities upon himself?” The merchant sobbed aloud and trembled much, when the voice said, “If you will never ask anything of me again I will never ask anything of you.” The man fell on his face before the august visitor, and said, “Take all, my blessed Lord; forgive my shameful ingratitude to you, and help me never in the future to deny you anything.” Whether it was a dream or not, it is certain that that merchant became one of the Christian princes of America, and gave to the cause of Christ as few had ever done before.
26. “God loves a cheerful
giver,” and you see his claims upon you. Go your ways,
merchants, and give generously as God gives to you. Go
your ways, you businessmen, and scatter as you can, for
God first gives you the means. Go your ways, you working
men and toiling women, and give according to your
ability. Give, you rich, because you are rich, and give,
you poor, because you cannot afford to get poorer, and
you are likely to do so unless you offer God his
portion. Only have you first given him your heart? Have
you put your trust in Jesus? If not, this sermon is not
for you; but if your hearts belong to my Lord, and have
been washed in his precious blood, let my text sink
deeply into your ears, and deeper still into your
hearts—“God loves a cheerful giver.”
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon—2
Corinthians 9; 11:18-33]
(a) Ragged School: A free school for children of the poorest class. OED
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2011/07/28/cheerful-giver