An Appeal to Sinners by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Evening, September 14, 1856, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At Exeter Hall, Strand.

Dearly Beloved,

It has pleased the Lord by a painful illness to interrupt for a little while my usual labours. As I was unable to preach last Lord’s day, please accept this week the issue of an old sermon. Thought it has been buried in my publishers’ warehouse for two years, I pray God it may bud afresh and bring forth fruit, even as old grain after having been entombed in Egyptian sepulchres for centuries will often germinate again and yield an abundant crop. You have prayed for me. The Lord has visited me in the chamber of affliction. I am recovering; and God knows “I long to see you, and impart to you some spiritual gift;” and I trust that before long “through your prayers I shall be given to you.”

Yours in much affection,—C. H. S.

This man receives sinners. (Luke 15:2)

1. It was a singular group which had gathered around our Saviour, when these words were uttered; for we are told by the evangelist—“Then all the tax collectors and sinners drew near to him to hear him.” The tax collectors—the very lowest grade, the public oppressors, scorned and hated by the lowliest Jew—these, together with the worst of characters, the scum of the streets and the very riff-raff of the society of Jerusalem, came around this mighty preacher, Jesus Christ, in order to listen to his words. On the outside of the throng there stood a few respectable people, who in those days were called Pharisees and Scribes—men who were highly esteemed in the synagogues as rulers, and governors, and teachers. These looked with scorn upon the Preacher; and watched him with invidious eyes, to find some fault. If they could find none in him personally, yet they could easily find it in his congregation; his deportment towards them shocked their false notion of propriety, and, when they observed that he was affable with the very worst of characters, that he spoke loving words to the most fallen of mankind, they said of him what they meant for a reproach, albeit it highly honoured him: “This man receives sinners.” I believe that our Saviour could not have wished to have had a sentence uttered concerning him, more evidently true or more thoroughly consistent with his sacred commission. It is the exact portrait of his character; the hand of a master artist seems to have depicted him most accurately. He is the man who “receives sinners.” Many a true word has been spoken in jest, and many a true word has been spoken in slander. Men have said sometimes in jest, “There goes a saint;” but it has been true. They have said, “There goes one of your chosen ones, one of your elect;” they meant it as a slander but the doctrine they scandalised was a comfort to the person who believed it; it was his glory and his honour. Now the Scribes and Pharisees wished to slander Christ; but in so doing they outstripped their intentions, and bestowed upon him a title of renown. “This man receives sinners, and eats with them.”

2. This evening I shall divide my observations to you into three parts. First, the doctrine, that Christ receives sinners, which is a doctrine of holy writ. Secondly, the encouragement it affords the sinner; and thirdly, the exhortation naturally springing from it, to the same character.

3. I. First, then, THE DOCTRINE. The doctrine is, not that Christ receives everyone, but that he “receives sinners.” By that term we, in common parlance, understand everyone. It is in the present day quite fashionable for everyone to lie against what he believes, and to say he is a sinner; even when he believes himself to be a very respectable, well-to-do man, and does not conceive that he ever did anything very amiss in his life. It is a sort of orthodox confession for men to make, when they say that they are sinners; though they might just as well use one formula as another, or repeat words in a foreign tongue; for they mean no deep and heartfelt contrition. They have no true apprehension that they are sinners at all. These Scribes and Pharisees did virtually assert, that they were not sinners; they singled out the tax collectors and the prostitutes, and the worthless, and they said, “These are sinners, we are not.” “Very well,” said Christ; “I endorse the distinction you have made. In your own opinion, you are not sinners; well, you shall stand exempt for the time from being called sinners—I endorse your distinction. But I wish to inform you, that I came to save those very people who, in their own estimation and in yours, are considered sinners.” It is my belief that the doctrine of the text is this—that Christ does not receive the self-righteous, nor the good, nor the whole hearted, nor those who dream that they do not need a Saviour; but the broken in spirit, the contrite in heart—those who are ready to confess that they have broken God’s laws, and have merited his displeasure. These and these alone, Christ came to save; and I reassert the subject of last Sunday evening—that Jesus has died for such, and for no one else; that he has shed his blood for those who are ready to confess their sins, and who do seek mercy through the open veins of his wounded body, and he died on the cross for only these.

4. Now, let us remark, beloved, that there is a very wise distinction on the part of God, that he has been pleased thus to choose and call sinners to repentance, and not others. For this reason, no one except these ever do come to him. There has never been such a miracle as a self-righteous man coming to Christ for mercy; no one except those who want a Saviour ever came. It stands to reason, that when men do not consider themselves in need of a Saviour, they never will approach his throne; and surely it is satisfactory enough for all purposes, that Christ should say he receives sinners, seeing that sinners are the only people who will ever come to him for mercy, and therefore it would be useless for him to say that he would receive any except those who most assuredly will come.

5. And note, again, no one except those can come; no man can come to Christ until he truly knows himself to be a sinner. The self-righteous man cannot come to Christ; for what is implied in coming to Christ? Repentance, trust in his mercy, and the denial of all confidence in one’s self. Now, a self-righteous man cannot repent, and yet be self-righteous. He conceives that he has no sin; why, then, should he repent? Tell him to come to Christ with humble penitence, and he exclaims—“Indeed! you insult my dignity. Why should I approach God? How have I sinned? My knee shall not bend to seek for pardon, since I have not offended; this lip shall not seek forgiveness when I do not believe myself to have transgressed against God, I shall not ask for mercy.” The self-righteous man cannot come to God; for his coming to God implies that he ceases to be self-righteous. Nor can a self-righteous man put his trust in Christ: why should he? Shall I trust in a Christ whom I do not require? If I am self-righteous, I do not need any Christ to save me in my own opinion. How, then, can I come with such a confession as this,

Nothing in my hands I bring,

when I have my hands full. How can I say, “Wash me,” when I believe myself to be white? How can I say “Heal me,” when I think that I never was sick? How can I cry, “Give me freedom, give me liberty,” when I believe I never was a slave, and “never in bondage to any man?” It is only the man who knows his slavery by reason of the bondage of sin, and the man who knows himself to be sick even to death by reason of the sense of guilt: it is only the man who feels he cannot save himself; who can with faith rely upon the Saviour. Nor can the self-righteous man renounce himself, and lay hold of Christ; because in the renunciation of himself he would at once become the very character whom Christ he says will receive. He would then put himself in the place of the sinner, when he had cast away his own righteousness. Why, sirs, coming to Christ implies the taking off the polluted robe of our own righteousness, and putting on Christ’s. How can I do that, if I wittingly wrap my own garment about me? and if in order to come to Christ I must forsake my own refuge and all my own hope, how can I do it, if I believe my hope to be good, and my refuge to be secure, and if I suppose that already I am clothed sufficiently to enter into the marriage supper of the Lamb? No, beloved, it is the sinner, and the sinner only, who can come to Christ; the self-righteous man cannot do it; it is quite out of his way—he would not do it if he could. His very self-righteousness fetters his foot, so that he cannot come; palsies his arm, so that he cannot take hold of Christ; and blinds his eye, so that he cannot see the Saviour.

6. Yet another reason: if these people, who are not sinners, would come to Christ, Christ would get no glory from them. When the physician opens his door for those who are sick, let me go there full of health; he can get no thanks from me, because he cannot exert his skill upon me. The benevolent man may distribute all his wealth to the poor, but let someone go to him who has abundance, and he shall win no esteem from him for feeding the hungry, or for clothing the naked; since the applicant is neither hungry nor naked. If Jesus Christ proclaims that he gives his grace to all who come for it, surely it is sufficient, seeing that no one will or can come for it, except those whose pressing necessities prompt them. Indeed! sufficient; it is quite sufficient for his honour. A great sinner brings great glory to Christ when he is saved. A man who is not a sinner, if he could attain to heaven would glorify himself, but he would not glorify Christ. The man who has no stains may plunge into the fountain; but he cannot magnify its cleansing power for he has no stains to wash away. He who has no guilt can never magnify the word “forgiveness.” It is the sinner then, and the sinner only, who can glorify Christ; and hence “this man receives sinners,” but it is not said that he receives anyone else. “He did not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” This is the doctrine of the text.

7. But allow us just to amplify that word: “this man receives sinners.” Now, by that we understand when he receives sinners, he gives them all the benefits which he has purchased for them. If there is a fountain, he receives sinners to wash them in it; if there is medicine for the soul, he receives sinners to heal their diseases; if there is a house for the sick, a hospital, a palliative care facility for the dying, he receives such into that retreat of mercy. All that he has of love, all that he has of mercy, all that he has of atonement, all that he has of sanctification, all that he has of righteousness—all these he applies the sinner. Yes, more; not content with taking him into his house, he receives him into his heart. He takes the black and filthy sinner, and having washed him—“There,” he says, “you are my beloved; my desire is towards you.” And to consummate all of this, at last he receives the saints to heaven. Saints, I said, but I meant those who were sinners, for no one can be truly saints, except those who once were sinners, and have been washed in the blood of Christ, and made white through the sacrifice of the lamb.

8. Observe it then, beloved, that in receiving sinners we mean all of salvation; and this word in my text, “Christ receives sinners,” encompasses in the entire covenant. He receives them to the joys of paradise, to the bliss of the beautified, to the songs of the glorified, to an eternity of happiness for ever. “This man receives sinners;” and I dwell with special emphasis on this point,—he receives no one else. He will have no one else to be saved except those who know themselves to be sinners. Full, free salvation is preached to every sinner in the universe; but I have no salvation to preach to those who will not acknowledge themselves to be sinners. To those I must preach the law, telling them that their righteousness is only like filthy rags, that their goodness shall pass away as the spider’s web, and shall be broken in pieces, even as the egg of the ostrich is broken by the foot of the horse. “This man receives sinners,” and receives no one else.

9. II. Now, then, THE ENCOURAGEMENT. If this man receives sinners, poor sin-sick sinner, what a sweet word this is for you! Surely, then, he will not reject you. Come, let me encourage you this night to come to my Master, to receive his great atonement, and to be clothed with all his righteousness. Note: those whom I address, are the bona fide real, actual sinners; not the complimentary sinners; not those who say they are sinners by way of pacifying, as they suppose, the religionists of the day; but I speak to those who feel their lost, ruined, hopeless condition. All these are now frankly and freely invited to come to Jesus Christ, and to be saved by him. Come, poor sinner, come.

10. Come, because he has said he will receive you; I know your fears; we all felt them once, when we were coming to Christ. I know you say in your heart, “He will reject me. If I present my prayer, he will not hear me; if I cry to him, yet perhaps the heavens will be as brass; I have been so great a sinner that he will never take me into his house to live with him.” Poor sinner! do not say so; he has published the decree. It is enough between man and man usually, if we consider our fellow creatures to be honest, to obtain a promise. Sinner! is this not enough between yourself and the Son of God? He has said, “He who comes I will in nowise cast out.” Will you trust that promise? Will you not go to sea in a ship as staunch as this—he has said it? It has been often and again the only comfort of the saints; on this they have lived, on this they have died: he has said it. What! do you think Christ will lie to you? Would he tell you he will receive you, and yet not do so? Would he say, “My fatlings are killed, come to the supper,” and yet shut the door in your face? No, if he has said he will cast out no one who comes to him; rest assured he cannot, he will not cast you out. Come, then, try his love on this ground, that he has said it.

11. Come, and do not fear, because remember, if you feel yourself to be a sinner, that feeling is God’s gift; and therefore you may very safely come to one who has already done so much to draw you. A stranger calls at my house, he asks for alms, and he tells me at first very plainly, that he never saw me before, that he has no claim upon my generosity, but he throws himself entirely upon any benevolent feeling that I may chance to have in my heart. But if I had done anything for him before, he might say, supposing that I was a rich man, “Sir, you have done so much for me, I think you will not give me up at last; I believe you will not let me starve, after so much love.” Poor sinner! if you feel your need of a Saviour, Christ made you feel it; if you have a wish to come to Christ, Christ gave you that wish; if you have any desire for God, God gave you that desire; if you can sigh after Christ, Christ made you sigh; if you can weep after Christ, Christ made you weep. Indeed, if you can only wish for him with the strong wish of one who fears he never can find, yet hopes he may—if you can only hope for him, he has given you that hope. And oh! will you not come to him? You have some of the king’s bounties with you now; come and plead what he has done, there is no suit that can ever fail with God, when you plead this. Tell him his past mercies urge you to try him in the future. Down on your knees, sinner, down on your knees; tell him this—“Lord, I thank you that I know myself to be a sinner; you have taught me that; I bless you that I do not hide my sin, that I know it, that I feel it; that it is ever before me. Lord, would you make me see my sin, and not let me see my Saviour? What! will you open the wound, and put in the lancet, and yet not heal me? What, Lord! have you said, ‘I kill?’ And have you not said in the same breath, ‘I make alive.’ Have you killed me, and will you not make me alive?” Plead that, poor sinner, and you will find it true, that “this man receives sinners.”

12. Does this not satisfy you? Then here is another reason. I am sure “this man receives sinners,” because he has received many, many, before you. See, there is Mercy’s door; note how many have been there; you can almost hear the knocks upon the door now, like echoes of the past. You may remember how many way worn travellers have called there for rest, how many famished souls have applied there for bread. Go, knock at Mercy’s door, and ask the porter this question, “Was there ever one who applied to the door that was refused?” I can assure you of the answer: “No, not one.”

No sinner was ever empty sent back,
Who came seeking mercy for Jesus’ sake.

And shall you be the first? Do you think God will forfeit his good name, by turning you away? Mercy’s gate has been open night and day, ever since man sinned; do you think it will be shut in your face for the first time? No, man, go and try it; and if you find it is, come back and say, “You have not read the Bible as you ought to have done;” or else say you have found one promise there which has not been fulfilled—for he said, “he who comes I will in nowise cast out.” I do not believe there ever was in this world one who was allowed by God to say that he sought mercy from him sincerely, and did not find it. No more, I believe that such a being never shall exist, but whoever comes to Christ shall most assuredly find mercy. What greater encouragement do you want? Do you want a salvation for those who will not come to be saved? Do you want blood sprinkled on those who will not come to Christ? You must want it, then; I will not preach it to you. I do not find it in God’s Word, and therefore I dare not preach it.

13. And now, sinner, I have yet another plea to urge upon you why you should believe that Christ will receive all sinners who come to him. It is this, that he calls all such. Now if Christ calls us and bids us come, we may be sure he will not turn us away when we do come. Once a blind man sat by the wayside begging. He heard—for he could not see—he heard the trampling of the many feet that were passing by him. He asked what all this meant: they said that Jesus of Nazareth passed by. Loudly he cried, “Jesus, oh son of David, have mercy on me!” The ear of mercy was apparently deaf, and the Saviour walked on and ignored the prayer. The poor man sat still then, but cried aloud, though he did not move. Yet when the Saviour said, “Come here,” ah! then he did not delay for an instant. They said, “Arise, he calls you;” and, pushing them all aside, he made his way through the crowd, and offered the prayer, “Lord, let me receive my sight.” Well, then, you who feel yourself to be lost and ruined, arise and speak; he calls for you. Convicted sinner, Christ says, “Come;” and that you may be sure he says it, let us quote that Scripture again, “I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance.” You are called, man; then come. If Her Majesty were riding by, you might scarcely presume to speak to her; but if your name were called, and by her own lips, would you not go to her carriage, and what she had to say to you would not you listen to? Now, the King of heaven says, “Come.” Yes, the same lips that will one day say, “Come, you blessed,” say this night, “Come, you poor distressed sinners, come to me, and I will save you.” There is not a distressed soul in this hall, if his distress is the work of God’s Holy Spirit, that shall not find salvation in the wounds of Christ. Believe then, sinner, believe in Jesus, that he is able to save even you to the very uttermost.

14. And now just one more point, to commend this encouragement to you. Indeed, poor souls, I know when you are under a sense of sin it is very hard to believe. We sometimes say, “Only believe;” but believing is just the hardest thing in the world when sin lies heavy on your shoulders. We say, “Sinner, only trust in Christ.” Ah, you do not know what a great “only” that is. It is a work so great, that no man can do it unaided by God; for faith is the gift of God, and he gives it only to his children. But if anything can call faith into exercise, it is this last thing I shall mention. Sinner, remember that Christ is willing to receive you, for he came all the way from heaven to seek you and find you in your wanderings, and to save you and rescue you from your miseries; he has given proof of his hearty interest in your welfare in that he has shed his very heart’s blood to redeem your soul from death and hell. If he had wanted the companionship of saints, he might have stopped in heaven, for there were many there. Abraham, and Isaac, and Jacob were with him there in glory; but he wanted sinners. He had a thirst after perishing sinners. He wanted to make them trophies of his grace. He wanted black souls, to wash them white. He wanted dead souls, to make them alive. His benevolence wanted objects on which to exert itself; and therefore

Down from the shining seats above,
With joyful haste he fled,
Entered the grave in mortal flesh,
And dwelt among the dead.

Oh, sinner, look there, and see that cross. Note that man upon it!

See from his head, his hands, his feet,
Sorrow and love flow mingled down!
Did ever such love and sorrow meet,
Or thorns compose so rich a crown?

Do you see that eye? Can you see languid pity for your soul floating in it? Do you see that side? It is opened that you may hide your sins in it. See those drops of crimson blood; every drop is trickling down for you. Do you hear that death shriek, “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?” That shriek in all its deep toned solemnity is for you. Yes, for you, if you are a sinner; if you say this night to God, “Lord, I know I have offended you; have mercy upon me for Jesus’ sake.” If now, taught by the Spirit, you are led to abhor yourself in dust and ashes, because you have sinned, truly, before God—I tell you in his sight, as his servant, you shall be saved; for Jesus would not die for you and yet let you perish.

15. III. Now the last point is AN EXHORTATION. If it is true that Christ only came to save sinners, my beloved hearers, labour, strive, agonize, to get a sense in your souls of your own sinfulness. One of the most distressing things in the world is to feel yourself to be a sinner; but that is no reason why I should not exhort you to seek it, for it is while distressing, it is only the distress of the bitter medicine which will effectually work the cure. Do not seek to have high ideas about yourself. Seek to have a lost opinion about yourself; do not try to deck yourself with ornaments; do not endeavour to array yourself in gold and silver; do not seek to become good by yourself, but seek to strip yourself; seek to humble yourself. Do not soar high, but sink low. Do not go up, but go down. Ask God to let you see that you are nothing at all. Ask him to bring you to this, that you may have nothing to say but

I the chief of sinners am;

and if God hears your prayer, very likely Satan will tell you that you cannot he saved because you are a sinner. But as Martin Luther said, “Once, when I was racked with pain and sin, Satan said, ‘Luther, you cannot be saved, for you are a sinner.’ ‘No,’ said Martin Luther, ‘I will cut your head off with your own sword. You say I am a sinner; I thank you for it. You are a holy Satan,’ (he said it in mockery no doubt) ‘when you say I am a sinner. Well, then, Satan, Christ died for sinners, therefore he died for me.’ ‘Ah’ said he, "if you can only prove that to me, Satan, I will thank you for it; and so far from groaning, I will begin to sing, for all we need is to know and feel that we are sinners.’” Let us feel that; let us know that, and we may receive this as an undoubted fact of revelation, that we have a right to come to Christ, and to believe on him, and receive him as all our salvation, and all our desire. No doubt Conscience will come and stop you; but do not try to stop the mouth of Conscience; but tell Conscience you are much obliged to him for all that he says “Oh, you have been a desperate fellow; you sinned when you were young; you have sinned even until now. How many sermons have been wasted on you! How many Sabbaths you have broken! How many warnings you have despised! Oh, you are a desperate sinner.” Tell Conscience that you thank him, for the more you can prove yourself to be a sinner, not by outward acts, but in your inmost heart, the more you know yourself to be really guilty, the more reason you have to come to Christ and say, “Lord, I believe you have died for the guilty; I believe you intend to save the worthless. I cast myself on you; Lord, save me!” That does not suit some of you, does it? It is not the kind of doctrine that flatters man very much. No; you would like to be good people, and help Christ a little, you like that theory which some ministers are always proclaiming, “God has done a great deal for you; you do the rest, and then you will be saved.” That is a very popular kind of doctrine; you do one part, and God will do the other part; but that is not God’s truth, it is only a delirious dream; God says, “I will do everything; come and prostrate yourself at my feet; give up your doings; let me undertake for you; afterwards, I will make you live for my glory. Only in order that you may be holy, I desire you to confess that you are unholy; in order that you may be sanctified, you must confess that you are as yet unsanctified.” Oh, do that my hearers. Fall down before the Lord, cast yourselves down. Do not stand up with pride; but fall down before God in humility; tell him you are undone without his sovereign grace; tell him you have nothing, you are nothing, you never will be anything more than nothing, but that you know Christ does not require anything from you, for he will take you just as you are. Do not seek to come to Christ with anything, besides your sin; do not seek to come to Christ with your prayers for a recommendation; do not come to him even with professions of your faith; come to him with your sin, he will give you faith. If you stay away from Christ, and think that you will have faith apart from him, you have made an error. It is Christ who saves us; we must come to Christ for all we need.

Thou oh Christ, are all I want;
All in All in thee I find:
Raise the fallen, cheer the faint,
Heal the sick, and lead the blind.

Jesus will do so and more also; but you must come as blind, you must come as sick, you must come as lost, or else you cannot and must not come at all.

16. Come then, to Jesus, I beseech you, whatever may up to this time have kept you away. Your doubts would keep you away, but say, “Stand back, Unbelief; Christ he says died for sinners: and I know I am a sinner.”

My faith will on that promise live,
Will on that promise die.

17. And there is one thing I want to say, before I am finished. Do not stay away from Christ, when you know yourself to be a sinner, because you think you do not understand every point of theology. Very often I have young converts with me, and they say, “I do not understand this or that doctrine.” Well, I am very glad, as far as I am able, to explain it to them. But sometimes I have, not young converts, but young convicts, those who are under conviction of sin; and when I am trying to bring them to this, that if they are only sinners they may believe in Christ, they begin with this knotty point, and that knotty point—and they seem to imagine that they cannot be saved until they are thorough theologians. Now, if you expect to understand all theology before you put your faith in Christ, I can only tell you, you never will; for however long you may live, there will be some depths you cannot explore. There are certain unquestionable facts which you must hold; but there will always be some difficulties through which you will not be able to see. The most favoured saint on earth does not understand everything; but you want to understand all things before you come to Christ. One man asks me how sin came into the world, and he will not come to Christ until he knows that. Why, he will be lost beyond hope of recovery, if he waits until he knows it; for no one will ever know it. I have no reason to believe that it is even revealed to those who are in heaven. Another wants to know how it is that men are bidden to come,—and yet we are taught in Scripture that no man can come,—and he must have that cleared up; just as if the poor man who had a withered arm, when Christ said, “Stretch out your arm,” had replied, “Lord, please answer this question first; I want to know how you can tell me to stretch out my arm when it is withered.” Suppose when Christ had said to Lazarus, “Come forth,” Lazarus could have said, “Please answer this question first; how can a dead man come forth?” Why, know this, vain man! when Christ says “Stretch out your arm,” he gives you power to stretch out your arm with the command, and the difficulty is solved in practice; though I believe it never will be solved in theory. If men want to have theology mapped out to them, as they would have a map of England; if they want to have every little village and every hedgerow in the gospel kingdom mapped out for them, they will not find it anywhere but in the Bible; and they will find it so mapped out there that the years of a Methuselah would not suffice to find out every little thing in it. We must come to Christ and learn, not learn and then come to Christ. “Ah! but,” another says, “that is not the ground of my misgivings; I am not perplexed much about by theological points; I have got a worse anxiety than that: I feel I am too bad to be saved.” Well, I believe you are wrong then; that is all I can say in reply to you; for I will believe Christ before I will believe you. You say you are too bad to be saved; Christ says, “He who comes he will in no wise cast out.” Now, who is right? Christ says he will receive the very worst; you say he will not. What then? “Let God be true, and every man a liar.” But there is one matter of counsel I wish you would accept; I desire of God that he may bring you to come and try the Lord Jesus Christ, and see whether he will turn you away. What concern is it to me, that I am so often reproached for making my appeals to the worst of sinners? It is said that I direct my ministry to drunkards, prostitutes, blasphemers, and sinners of the grosser sort. And what if the finger of scorn is pointed at me, or if I shall be accounted as a fool before the public; do you think I shall be deterred by their criticism? Do you think I shall stand abashed at their ungenerous ridicule? Oh, no: like David, when he danced before the ark of the Lord, and Michal, Saul’s daughter, jeered at him and taunted him as a shameless fellow, I shall only reply, if this is vile, I purpose to be more vile yet. While I see the foot tracks of my Master before me, and while I see still more his gracious sanctions following my labours; while I behold his name magnified, his glory increased, and perishing souls saved, (as thanks be to God we have witnessed everyday;) while this gospel warrants me, while the Spirit of God moves me, and while signs following do multiply the seals of my commission,—who am I that I should restrain myself for the sake of man, or resist the Holy Ghost for any flesh that breaths? Oh then, oh chief of sinners, you vilest of the vile, you who are the scum of the city, the refuse of the earth, the dregs of creation, whom no man seek after, you whose characters are destroyed, and whose inmost souls are polluted, so black that no fuller on earth can whiten you, so debased that you have sunk beyond the hope of any moralist to reclaim you! come—come to Christ. Come by his own invitation. Come, and you shall be surely received with a hearty welcome. My Master said that he received sinners. His enemies said it of him, “This man receives sinners.” In deed and in truth we know of a surety that he does receive sinners, the enemies themselves are witnesses. Come now, and yield the fullest credit to his word, his invitation, his promise. Do you object that it was only during a few days’ grace in the time of his sojourn on earth that he received sinners? No, not so; it is confirmed by all subsequent experience. The apostles of Jesus echoed it after he had ascended into heaven, in terms as unqualified as he himself expressed it when on earth. Will you not believe this: “This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners, of whom I am chief?” You despisers, go away and laugh at this; go away, and scorn the preached gospel if you will; but one day we shall meet each other, face to face, before our Maker, and it may, perhaps, go hard then with all those who have despised Christ, and laughed at his gracious words. Is there is an infidel here who he says shall be well enough off if he shall die the death of annihilation, and shall not live in a future world? Well, my friend, suppose all men die like dogs, I shall be as well off as you are, and I think a little better off, even concerning happiness and peace in this world. But if, (and note you I do not put it so, because I doubt it)—if it is true that there is a world to come, I would not like to stand in your place in the next world. If there is a judgment seat; if there is a hell—(I put it hypothetically, not because I have a doubt about it, but because you tell me you doubt it; though I do not think you really do)—if there is such a place, what will you do then? Why, even now you shake if a leaf falls in the night; you are terrified if the cholera is in the street; you are alarmed if you are a little sick, and you rush to the physician, and anyone can impose upon you with his medicine, because you are afraid of death. What will you do in the swellings of Jordan, when death gets hold on you? If a little pain frightens you now, what will you do when your body shall shake, and your knees shall knock together before your Maker? What will you do, my hearer when his burning eyes shall eat into your very soul? What will you do, when, amid ten thousand thunders, he shall say, “Depart, depart?” I cannot tell you what you will do; but I will tell you one thing that you dare not do; that is, you dare not say, that I have not as simply as possible tried to preach the gospel to the very chief of sinners. Hear it again—“He who believes on the Lord Jesus Christ shall be saved.” To believe is to trust in Christ; to drop into those blessed arms that can catch the heaviest laden sinner that ever breathed; to fall flat on the promise; to let him do all for you, until he has quickened you, and enabled you to work out what he has before worked in you, “your own salvation;” and even this must be “with fear and trembling.” God Almighty grant, that some poor soul may be blessed tonight! You that are on shore, I do not expect to do you any good. If I have a rocket to send across the sea, it is only the stranded vessel, the shipwrecked mariner who will rejoice for the rope. You who think yourselves safe, I have no necessity to preach to you; you are all so perilously good in your own sight, it is no use trying to make you better; you are all so awfully righteous, you can go on your way well enough, without warning from me. You must excuse me, therefore, if I have nothing to say to you except this, “Woe to you Scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites!” and allow me to turn myself to another class of people, the vilest of the vile. I would not care if I had the reputation of the preacher who preached for the basest and the vilest; I would not blush to be reviled like Rowland Hill, as the preacher to the lowest orders; for they need the gospel as much as any creatures under heaven, and if no one else will preach it to them, God helping me, I will endeavour to preach it to them in words that they can understand. And if genteel people do not like preaching in that style, they have the option of leaving it. If they want to hear men preach in intellectual strains, above the capacity of common sinners, let them go and hear them; I must content myself with following my Lord, who “made himself of no reputation,”—to go after out-of-the-way sinners in an out-of-the-way fashion. I would sooner do violence to pulpit decorum, and break through pulpit decency, than not break through hard hearts. I consider that type of preaching to be the right kind, that does reach the heart in someway or other and I am not particular how I do it. I confess, if I could not preach in one way, I would in another; if no one would come to hear me in a black coat, they would be attracted by my wearing a red one. Someway or other, I would make them hear the gospel if I could; and I would labour so to preach, that the lowliest understanding should be able to get hold of this one fact: “This man receives sinners.” God bless you all, for Christ’s sake!
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