A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, June 5, 1870, By C. H. Spurgeon At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington. 5/28/2011*6/12/2012
I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of
love: and I was to them as those who take off the yoke
on their jaws, and I gave food to them. (Hosea
11:4)
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1. God, by the mouth of his
prophet, is here expostulating with his people for their
ungrateful rebellion against him. He had not treated
them in a harsh, tyrannical overbearing manner,
otherwise there might have been some excuse for their
revolt; but his rule had always been gentle, tender, and
full of pity; and, therefore, for them to disobey him
was the very height of wanton wickedness. The Lord had
never made his people to suffer hard bondage in mortar
and in brick as Pharaoh did, yet we do not find that
they raised an insurrection against the Egyptian tyrant;
they gave their backs to the burdens, and they bore the
lash of the taskmaster without turning upon the hand
which oppressed them; but when the Lord was gracious to
them, and delivered them out of the house of bondage,
they murmured in the wilderness, and were justly called
by Moses “rebels.” They had no such burdens to bear
under the government of God as those which loaded the
nations under their kings, and yet they wilfully
determined to have a king for themselves. No taxes were
squeezed from them, no servile service was demanded at
their hands, their thank offerings and sacrifices were
not ordained upon a scale of oppression; their liberty
was all but boundless; their lives were spent in peace
and happiness, every man under his own vine and fig
tree, no one making them afraid; yet, since other
nations bowed before the rule of despotic kings, these
foolish people were not content until they had raised up
between them and the divine government a ruler who would
take their daughters to be confectioners in his kitchen,
and their sons to be servants in his court. God endured
their bad manners, and gave them a king in his anger;
and then, even under the reign of kings, how graciously
the Lord their God treated them! If it was necessary for
their punishment to give them up for awhile to foreign
dominion, how he soon took away the affliction when they
cried to him! Though they were chastised, yet
His strokes were fewer than their crimes,
And lighter than their guilt.
The whole dealings of Jehovah with his people Israel were full of matchless tenderness. As a nursing mother with her child, so did God deal gently with his people. Yet, hear, oh heavens, and give ear, oh earth; the Lord has nourished and brought up children, and they have rebelled against him. Did a nation ever cast away her gods, even though they were not gods? Were not the heathen faithful to their idols? However Israel was bent on backsliding; her heart was set upon idolatry, and the God of her fathers was disregarded; Jehovah was despised, and she set herself to destroy his gentle reign and government. This was the complaint against Israel of old.
2. As in water face answers to face, so the heart of man to man. Just as men were in days gone by, so they are now. God has dealt with us who are his people in an unparalleled way of lovingkindness and tender mercy, and I fear that to a great extent the reward we have rendered to him has been very much like the ungrateful return which he received from the seed of Jacob of old. This morning, I shall ask you to think of the tender dealings of God with you, my brothers and sisters, so that you may not be as Israel was, but that feeling the power of the divine gentleness, you may serve your God with a perfect heart, and walk before him as those should who have partaken of such benefits.
3. The first thing we shall have to consider is, the Lords way of leading his people to their duty — “I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of love”; secondly, the Lord’s grace in giving his people rest — “I was to them as those who take off the yoke on their jaws”; and, thirdly, the suitable nourishment which he gives to his chosen, “I gave food to them.”
4. I. First, then, THE LORD’S WAY OF MOTIVATING HIS PEOPLE TO ACTION.
5. We who have believed in Jesus Christ have passed into a new condition with regard to God. We were once, at the very best, only his subjects, and having sinned we were scarcely fit to be called subjects, but rebels, traitors, tainted with high treason. But now since grace has renewed us we are not only his pardoned subjects, but what is far better, wondrous grace has made us his beloved sons and daughters, and we are now not so much subjects of his crown as we are children of his care. We are by grace brought into an entirely different relationship from that of fallen nature, and we are ruled and swayed by motives and regulations altogether unknown to the unregenerate sons of men. The way in which God brings his people to serve him is that to which I now ask for your consideration; it is a way preeminently particular in its tenderness and kindness. The only cords are cords of a man, and the bands are bands of love. In the heroic days when Xerxes led his army into Greece, there was a remarkable contrast between the way in which the Persian soldiers and the Grecian warriors were urged to combat. The unwilling hosts of Persia were driven to the conflict by blows and stripes from their officers; they were either mercenaries or cowards, and they feared close contact with their opponents. They were driven to their duty as beasts are, with rods and goads. On the other side, the armies of Greece were small, but each man was a patriot and a hero, and hence when they marched to the conflict it was with quick and joyous step, with a martial song upon their lips, and when they neared the foe, they rushed upon his ranks with an enthusiasm and a fury which nothing could withstand. No whips were needed for the Spartan men-at-arms, like high spirited chargers they would have resented its touch; they were drawn to battle by the cords of a man, and by the bands of patriotic love, they were bound to hold their posts at all costs. “Spartans,” would their leaders say, “your fathers disdained to number the Persians with the dogs of their flock and will you be their slaves? Do you not say it is better to die as freemen than to live as slaves? What if your foes are many, yet one lion can tear in pieces a far reaching flock of sheep. Use your weapons well today! Avenge your slaughtered fathers, and fill the courts of Shushan with confusion and lamentation!” Such were the manly arguments which drew the Lacedaemonians and Athenians to the fight — not the whips so fit for beasts, nor the cords so suitable for cattle. This illustration may show the difference between the world’s service of bondage, and the Christian’s religion of love: the worldling is flogged to his duty under fear, and terror, and dread, but the Christian man is touched by motives which appeal to his highest nature; he is affected by motives so dignified as to be worthy of the sons of God; he is not driven as a beast, he is moved as a man. Let me show you this.
6. In the first place, the Christian man never works to obtain eternal life. He knows it is a gift and receives it as such. The unconverted man thinks that there are certain things which he ought to do, by the doing of which he will be saved, and he selfishly, if he is awakened, sets to work to perform these actions with more or less of perseverance in the hope of obtaining pardon for sin and salvation for his soul. Being a son of the bondwoman, he finds his way to Sinai. But the Christian man knows that salvation is not the wage of service, but that life is the gift of God, the dowry bestowed on us by sovereign grace, and therefore he never looks for salvation to the law. As a child of the promise, he wins the New Jerusalem by birthright and by the covenant of grace. Legal motives cease to affect the instructed believer — while he was outside of Christ in his ignorance he tried to work out a righteousness of his own, but now he has come to Christ and seen everlasting righteousness finished and brought in. He is saved — he knows that he is saved, and he knows also that he is saved by the merits of another. Now, being saved, he works out his own salvation with fear and trembling, not that he may save himself, but because he knows he is saved, since God himself is working in him to will and to do his own good pleasure. If that man is engaged as a minister of Christ he will never preach as though his salvation depended on his preaching. Let him be occupied in his business or calling, he will not be honest and sober, conscientious and devout, because he thinks to save himself by it. Indeed, truly, he has turned his hope away from his own works to the work of Jesus Christ the Redeemer, and therefore that motive of trying to win salvation by merit is disgusting to him; he is so far from yielding to its power, that he utterly loathes it. Let such arguments affect the ungenerous spirits that can live for themselves, but it has no power over us, we are saved, and now being saved, out of love to the Father and the Well Beloved we are impelled to service.
7. Neither does a Christian try to serve God with the idea that he is to keep himself in spiritual life by such service. I have heard it more or less insinuated, that although we are saved at present, and have eternal life in present possession, yet all depends on our own faithfulness, and if we are not what we should be, eternal life will die out and the grace given will be withdrawn. I must confess I find in that book nothing of the kind, neither do I pray, nor read the Scriptures, nor attend divine worship, with the remotest idea of sustaining my own spiritual life. The spiritual life which the Holy Spirit gives us cannot die, it is as eternal as the life of God. It is a living and incorruptible seed which remains for ever. A true believer truly in Christ is most safe, for he can never perish, neither can anyone pluck him out of Christ’s hands. The dread of being driven out of the divine family is not a motive capable of stirring his heavenly nature. He knows that because Jesus lives he shall live also; he is not forced to holiness by dread of being forsaken by his God; he does not believe such a thing to is possible; he leaves a motive so slavish to the poor sons of Hagar who, like their bondslave mother, cannot dwell with the child of promise. As for him, other and higher considerations rule him. He is drawn by the cords of a man and by the bands of love. Further, you will see the gentleness of the way in which God calls his people to duty, in the fact that he is pleased to accept their service even when it is in itself far from being at all worthy of his smile. Oh my brethren, if you and I had to be saved or to be preserved in spiritual life by our doings, then nothing but perfection in service could satisfy our case, and every time we felt that what we had done was marred and imperfect we should be full of despair. But now we know that we are already saved, and are for ever safe, since nothing remains unfinished in the work which justifies us; we bring to the Lord the loving offerings of our hearts, and if they are imperfect we water with our tears those imperfections, but we know that he reads our hearts and takes our works not for what they are in themselves but for what they are in Christ. He knows what we would make them if we could, he accepts them as if they were what we mean them to be. He takes the will for the deed often, and he takes the half deed often for the whole; and when justice would condemn the action as sinful, for it is so imperfect, the mercy of our Father accepts the action in the Beloved, because he knows what we meant it to be, and though our fault has marred it, yet he knows how our hearts sought to honour him by it. Oh, it is such a blessed thing to remember that though the law cannot accept anything unless it is perfect, yet God, in the gospel, as we come to him as saved souls, accepts our imperfect things. Why, there is our love, how cold it often is, and yet Jesus Christ takes pleasure in our love! Then, again, our faith, I must almost call it unbelief, it is often so weak, and yet though it is as a grain of mustard seed, Jesus accepts it, and works wonders by it. As for our poor prayers, often so broken with so many distracted thoughts in them, and so poverty stricken in importunity and earnestness, yet our dear Lord takes them, washes them in his blood, adds his own merit to them, and they come up as a sweet savour before the Most High. It is delightfully encouraging to know that in our sincere but feeble service the Scripture is fulfilled, “a bruised reed he shall not break, and a smoking flax he will not quench.” Even our green ears of grain may be laid on the altar. If we cannot bring a lamb, our turtledoves and two young pigeons shall be received.
8. Then, further, our gracious Lord gives us promises of help in all holy exercises. Under the law it is, “Make the bricks,” but there is no promise of straw; under the gospel we have help for every time of need. You know how it is written, “The Spirit also helps our infirmities: for we do not know what we should pray for as we ought.” Our good works are rather God’s works than ours, in so far as they are good. He first of all gives us good works, and then rewards us for them, as if they were all our own. “You have done all our works in us.” “I am like a green fir tree, from me your fruit is found.” Yes, blessed be God, all true fruit of grace comes from him. Is this not a charmingly powerful motive to serve? Though it is so different from the reasons which drag on the sons of men, do we not feel it to be mightily operative? The Lord will help us in the service, and render to man according to his work. He has said, “Do not fear; for I am with you: do not be dismayed; for I am your God: I will strengthen you; yes, I will help you; yes, I will uphold you with the right hand of my righteousness.”
9. Furthermore, as if more fully to show how we are drawn with the cords of love and bands of a man, all the motives which are used to impel us to service appeal to what is most honourable in our regenerated manhood. We have frequently heard the objection of those who oppose the doctrines of grace, “If I believed, as you do, that all true believers are saved, and shall never perish, I would live as I like,” our answer is, “It is highly probable that you as an unconverted man would do so, but if you had received a new nature, and all your tastes were changed, matters would stand otherwise.” For such a man as a Christian is to live as he likes, would be to only live an absolutely pure and perfectly holy life. The Holy Spirit implants within his people at their new birth a dignity and nobility of character to which they were utterly strangers before, and they would not and could not sin as they once did. They cannot sin as before because they are born by God. The things which they took pleasure in before, now seem to them grovelling and despicable, and they seek after higher and nobler objects. I believe that gospel motives, if they were addressed to all mankind promiscuously, would prove a failure as much as if we tried to excite enthusiasm in all men by poetic imagery or profoundly philosophical argument; but gospel motives used on God’s people are as nails fastened in a sure place, they are suitable, and therefore effectual. You could not hope to govern the nation by the same rules and methods with which as a father you order your family. In your family it maybe there is not even a rod, certainly there is no policeman, no prison, no black cap, no disowning. Children are ruled by a father on a scheme essentially different from the rule of magistrates, and kings. There are maxims of courts of legislature which would never be tolerated in the home of love. Just so within the family of God there are no penal inflictions, no words of threatening, such as must be employed by the great King when he deals with all of his rebellious subjects. You are not under the law, else there would be judgment and curses for you, you are under grace, and now the motives by which you are to be moved are such as might not affect others, but which, since you are renewed in the spirit of your mind, must powerfully affect you. It is a great thing for a man to feel that God does not now appeal to him as he would to an ordinary person, but that having given him a new nature he addresses him on higher grounds. “I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that you present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable to God, which is your reasonable service. And do not be conformed to this world: but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect will of God.” We have known of a boy in school whose conduct has been greatly improved when the teacher has had wisdom enough to appeal to his better qualities. When the lad has felt that his age, or superiority of position have demanded better things of him, he has yielded to the motive. In dealing with his people, the Lord appeals to their higher characteristics; he does not say to the regenerate man as he did to Adam, “Do this and you shall die,” but he says to him, “He that believes in Christ shall never die. I will never leave you nor forsake you. I have loved you with an everlasting love — what then is your return for all this love?” The really saved soul, overwhelmed with gratitude, exclaims, “My God, my Father, I cannot sin, I must live as you would have me, I must serve you. Such love as this touches my heart, it stirs everything that is noble that you have implanted in me. Tell me what your will is, and whether I have to bear it or to do it, I will delight in it if you will give me all sufficient grace.” Yes, the Lord always appeals to the higher point in the Christian’s constitution, and thus he draws us with the cords of a man, with bands of love.
10. Let us add that love is always the great master force in motivating Christians. Terror is used very little; threatening and wrath are laid aside. Gospel arguments are moulded in this manner, “The love of Christ constrains us; because we thus judge, that if one died for all, then were all dead: and that he died for all, so that they which live should not henceforth live for themselves.” Jesus seems to plead, “I have made you, even you, poor defiled one, to be precious in my sight; do you love me? If you love me keep my commandments, and feed my sheep! I have bought you, even with my heart’s blood I have redeemed you out from among the people, and from its chief men. Does my love not constrain you? Will you not give yourself to my service, to promote my glory?” All conquering love is master of all our forces; he is the commander-in-chief of all our powers. When the love of God is obviously shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit, our duty becomes our highest delight, and the work of God our highest joy. Rutherford, speaking of how his Lord encouraged him with sweet fellowship while he was serving him, says in his quaint way, “When my Master sends me on his errands, he often gives me a bawbee (a) for myself”; by which he means, as sure as ever God sent him on his errands he gave him a penny for reward, as we do to boys. How often have our prayers for others returned into our own heart! How often do we find it to be a blessing to bless others! Have you not found it so? You have been trying to comfort God’s people, and the comfort has been reflected upon your own soul. You watered others and by it were watered yourself. You were trying to praise God, you were not thinking of yourself, but as you sang you obtained a blessing, your heart mounted higher and higher, and you blessed the Lord with an exhilaration of spirit you had not known before. The praises of God’s people are poured out, even as larks give their songs; they sing, not because they ought to, but because they delight to sing; they fulfil their nature, and find in it their happiness. Virtue and holiness become to Gods people a delight, they take pleasure in it: sin is hateful, but holiness is lovely to them. Just as it will be their highest heaven to be perfect, so now their nearest approach to heaven occurs when they are by God’s Spirit sanctified and led into nearness to Christ.
11. Thus I have, without dwelling on the mere words, given you the sense of the first clause of the text, “I drew them with cords of a man, with bands of love.” The impelling, urging powers that lead Christians on to consecration and holiness, are never those which are suitable slaves or carnal minds, but such as are worthy of the dignity of the sons of God, and they are full of tenderness, and kindness, and love; for the gentleness of God is great towards his people.
12. II. I shall now ask you to turn to the next sentence, and observe, HOW THE LORD GIVES REST TO HIS PEOPLE — “I was to them as those who take off the yoke on their jaws, and I gave food to them.”
13. Sometimes a common illustration may be more forcible than a more refined comparison, and I shall give you in a moment a very homely one. The passage here means that God treated his people as ploughmen, when they are merciful, treat the bulls with which they have been ploughing, they lift off the yoke from them, withdraw the muzzle, and then give them their food. But our explanation of it shall be a more common sight. Out there in that street stand still and observe. That inn is a common stopping place. Watch it a moment. Here comes a huge, heavily loaded van. Three or four steaming, panting horses have been laboriously dragging along this mountain on wheels. They are greatly in need of rest. The word is given, and the poor animals gladly stand still; down comes the driver from his box; the reins are dropped, and he proceeds to take the bits out of the poor creatures’ mouths. How pleased they seem to be to get rid of the bits which have been so long between their jaws. Nor is the rest all the horses get, they shall have a draught of water, or the well filled nose bags shall be fitted upon them, and they shall rest and feed. I thought of this text when I looked at that sight the other day; it is the exact explanation of the text, “I was to them as those who take off the yoke from their jaws, and I gave food to them.” As you see wearied horses contentedly and happily take their rest and feed, you have before you precisely what the prophet meant. God takes out the bits from his servants’ mouths, the yoke from their backs, brings them their food, and invites them to feed and rest, and be happy.
14. Let us take, then, the
first point, “I was to them as those who take off the
yoke.” Now, the Lord has taken off from his people a
great many yokes, or the same yoke under different
situations. He has taken many bits out of their mouths.
First, there was the old yoke of ceremonialism — what a
burden that must have been to believers under the law!
There was this they must not eat, and that they must not
drink, and the other they must not wear; there was this
to be done on one day and that to be done on another. It
was always touch not, taste not, handle not, and so on.
They were encircled and surrounded with all sorts of
legislation, and hedged in by laws about their houses,
their clothes, their beds, their drinking vessels;
legislation about birds and beasts and fishes — about
everything, in fact. But now Christ has taken off that
yoke from us, and “touch not, taste not, handle not,”
stands as an abrogated law. We have given to us a
liberty, a freedom from every yoke of bondage, and
although there are some who are for bringing in a new
ceremony, with its holy places, and holy days, and holy
things, and priests, and rites, and ceremonies, and I do
not know what else, these are the children of the
bondwoman, we do not regard them. Under the law of
liberty which Christ has proclaimed, we are free indeed.
Where’er we seek him he is found,
And every place is hallowed ground.
Every creature of God is good, and nothing to be refused. Now, it is the heart that is holy or unholy, and not the thing; what our Lord has cleansed, we no longer consider common or unclean. Carnal ordinances of outward things are put away as childish things. We worship God in the Spirit, and have no confidence in the flesh. “Stand firm therefore in the liberty by which Christ has made us free, and do not be entangled again with the yoke of bondage.”
15. Better still, he has taken from us the yoke of the law. Oh, do you not remember, beloved, when you carried that yoke, because you were trying to save yourselves by your own works? You supposed that if this sin were relinquished, and that virtue were pursued, you might at length become acceptable with God, but after months and perhaps years of such attempt, you found yourself as far off from acceptance as ever, as indeed you would have been if you had lived ten thousand years, for by the works of the law there shall no flesh living be justified; all that the law can do is to bring a knowledge of sin, but it is not capable of bringing acceptance with God. At that time how the yoke of divine justice pressed upon you heavily! You felt you had sinned, and that God must punish sin, and you did not understand that he had laid help upon one who is mighty to save. This yoke galled you very terribly, but, do you remember when he took away the yoke from you, and removed this bit from your mouth? Well does my soul remember it, when I saw Jesus put under the law for me, so that I might no more be under the law; when I saw him fulfil it, and satisfy all its demands, so that I might be absolved. Oh, what joy to perceive that I am not condemned, for the law has no more dominion over me, and I am not under the law but under grace! Everyone here who has believed in Jesus, has received just such liberty as this, and now the law does not alarm you, neither does your past sin make you tremble: the law is satisfied, your sin is pardoned, and God has given you this blessed rest, this quiet resting place.
16. Further than this, you have also been delivered from the yoke of sin. There was a time when we strove to be rid of sin. We had been made to see its evil nature, and we were sufficiently alarmed and awakened to see that hell would follow upon it, and therefore we desired to escape from evil habits; but, alas! we found that the Ethiopian might sooner change his skin, and the leopard his spots, than we cease to do evil. Our works, though we strove to make them good, remained imperfect; the old leprosy tainted all. Sin, like an iron net, encompassed us and held us firmly; nor could we be free, struggle as we might, until that pierced hand which took away the guilt of sin also released us from its power. By Jesus’ help habits which seemed invincible were soon overcome; customs which bound us firmly were broken as Samson snapped the green withs; we were free by the power of God’s Holy Spirit from the service of Satan and were enlisted under the banner of Christ. Oh, what freedom this is! The Lord continue to give us more and more of it until the last link of sin’s cruel chain shall be removed and our freedom of holiness shall be complete.
17. My dear brothers and sisters, I hope that to many of you God has also been pleased to give great rest from the yoke of care. We ought not to be burdened with cares, and yet some are. Our Saviour has invited us by the example of the fowls of heaven, and of the lilies of the field, to leave care to our God. We are told by his servant, the apostle, to be “careful for nothing, but in everything by prayer and supplication to make known our requests to God.” A minister was in a house where there were five or six little children who were playing and making merry noises, and their father said to the minister, “Indeed, sir, they may well be happy; these are their best days, for they have a father to care for them, they have no need to care for themselves.” When that good man went to church next Sunday he was very much surprised to hear his minister quote his words, and say these were the good times for God’s children, for they had a Father to care for them, and they might be as free from care as little children are. Yes, when we live by faith we are just as free from care as the lambs in the field, or the birds in the woods, casting all our care on him who cares for us. He who bore the burden of our lifelong sin way well bear the burden of our daily troubles; and he is in this respect to us as one who takes off the yoke from the jaws.
18. So also, I would add, the
Lord has often delivered us from the yoke of fear. There
is fear of death which haunts too many, fear of coming
trial alarms others, fear of I do not know what, a sort
of undefinable dread comes over many; but when we flee
to our God, all terrors, whether palpable or impalpable,
are scattered like the mists before the wind. When we
can only once come to God in Christ, and say, “My God,
my Father, my whole trust is in you, and my heart
resigns itself to you,” then immediately we can sing —
Should earth against my soul engage,
And hellish darts be hurl’d,
Now I can smile at Satan’s rage,
And face a frowning world.
Get near to God, believer, and you will be calm. Commune with heaven and be at rest. The peace of God passes all understanding, and it is this which Jesus waits to give you. There is no reason why you should be heavily burdened; return to your rest, for the Lord has dealt bountifully with you.
19. III. And now we will take the last clause, “And I gave food to them.” Here we have THE NOURISHMENT WHICH THE LORD GIVES HIS PEOPLE.
20. Humble as my illustration is, I must take you back to it, and point to the nose bags of the horses, for the illustration is just for our country what is meant by the text. The farmer would give his fodder to the ox when he took off the yoke. Now observe what it is that God gives his people. First it is food. “I gave food to them.” Look back on your experience, Christian, see what food God has made you to live on. No soul ever ate a morsel more dainty than this one — substitution. I do think that this is the grandest truth in heaven and earth — Jesus Christ the just One died for the unjust, so that he might bring us to God. It is food for my soul. I can feed on it every day, and all day long. When some of the other truths of God’s word seem to be too rich for me, I can always find an appetite for this, “God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” Yes, the Lord has given us that truth for food.
21. Then take the word “covenant,” what food there is for his people there! He has made a covenant with us, ordered in all things and sure. In Christ Jesus God has entered into a solemn league and compact with his people, and they are his and shall be his. There is food for you. Every promise of God’s word in its turn becomes food for faith. The doctrine of election, what food is that — what butter in a lordly dish! The doctrine of the immutability of God’s purpose, and the consequent security of his saints; the doctrine of the union of God’s people with Christ, their perfection with him, their acceptance in the Beloved. Why, here is food that the world does not know about, food from which if a man eat he shall live for ever. Yes, Jesus Christ himself in his blessed person, what food is he? His flesh and his blood, are they not food indeed, and drink indeed?
22. But what is meant by this word in the text? “I gave food to them.” You see the food God has given us, but how does be give it to us? Why, just as with the ox, the food was not put so low down that he could not reach it, nor so high up that he could not get at it, nor so far away that he could see it but could not feed upon it. “I gave food to them.” So God has a way of bringing home precious truth to his people. He does not put it so low down that they may say, “I never experienced such trouble as that, I was never brought into such depths of soul agony as that, and therefore, I cannot enjoy that truth.” No, he gives the food according to their experience, so that if they have never had a very deep experience, yet there shall be food convenient for them. Sometimes when I have heard a sermon, I have thought that the preacher put the food too high. I was anxious enough to get at it, but his experience was a happier one than mine, his knowledge of God’s ways more extensive than mine, and his way of putting truth more elevated than mine, I could not reach his teaching. But you see God does not place the fodder too high or too low, but he gives food to us. Have you never found it so? You have said, “That sermon was meant for me. That text, why the Lord seemed to have written it after my troubles happened, just to fit and suit my case.” Notice, brethren, the preacher may try to give food to you and yet fail, for although he may think he understands your experience, he may fail to touch it; but when he who knows all things and tries the reins of the children of men, when he means to give his people a feast of fat things full of marrow, he knows how to give the food where they will get it, and to give them an appetite at the same time as he gives them the food, so that their souls shall be satisfied, and their mouth shall praise him with joyous lips. See then the goodness of God towards you; you have been set free from bondage, the yoke is taken off your neck, and you are fed on angels’ food, satisfied with the bread of heaven.
23. Now what is to come out of all this? You see I am coming back to the point I began with — all this is the way in which God is leading you to serve him. He has set you free from the old yoke, so that you may take upon you his yoke, which is easy, and his burden, which is light. He has given you food, but it is that in the strength of that meal you may run in the ways of his commands, and serve him with all your hearts. Do you not, as you turn over the pages of your experience, feel your love kindle, my brethren? I hope you do; and if you do, I know you will serve God, for you cannot love him without intending by and by, and speedily, to put that love into the form of active service. You will teach better this afternoon in the Sunday School; you will do more for God today if you feel these tender thoughts of God stirring up in your hearts zealous thoughts towards him.
24. Three things I am anxious
to say. The first is, if God has thus dealt tenderly
with us, we see clearly how truly he loves us. Why does
a mother love her child? There are many reasons, but one
is this, because she has done so much for him. It is a
strange thing in human nature, that if anyone does you a
kindness, you may forget him, and be ungrateful; but if
you bestow a kindness on a person, you will love him and
remember him. It is not the receiver generally that is
certain to give love, it is the giver of kindness who
binds himself to the other. A mother must love her child
because she has done so much for him; she has suffered,
and she has cared so much, that she must love him. The
more you have done for a person the better you love him.
Now, Jesus does not love us because of anything good in
us, but today he loves us because he has done so much
for us. He has taken the yoke from our necks, he has
given food to us, he has drawn us with bands of love,
and cords of a man, and having spent so much love on us,
he loves us dearly. Jesus who suffered so much, is bound
to us by new bonds. Calvary is not only the fruit of his
love, but the root of fresh love. Another stream of love
springs up at the foot of the cross. “I,” says the
Redeemer, “can see my groans and agonies in them.” He
loves us because he has loved us. This thought ought to
cheer us — God has done too much for us to let us
perish.
Can he have taught me
To trust in his name,
And thus far have brought me
To put me to shame?
Can he have loved me before the world was, and redeemed me with his own Son’s life, and yet cast me away? It cannot be: the love of God in times past is a guarantee for the continuance of that love for ever and for ever.
25. The second word is this — if God has done all this for us, come, my brother, what do you think? Will we not try to do more in the future for him? Shall it be that the Roman Catholic, that the legalist, that those who serve God from fear, do more than we do? Shall they give more than we do? Shall they love more than we do? Shall they pay more than we do? Indeed, if there are any who should love God, we claim to take the first rank; if there are any who may suffer for him, or who may work for him, we feel we ought to be in the forefront. If we might make some reserve, and duty did not call, Jesus has loved our souls with love so great that we (if others do not) must give him all. Oh let us prove, my brethren, by our future zeal and consecration, that the motives which God uses, though they are gentle yet they are strong, and though they seem to others to be only frail, yet to us are omnipotence itself.
26. The last word is this — all
this surely that we have been saying this morning ought
to lead those who do not know God to desire to know him.
What if his service is not conducted on principles of
slavery but of liberty, will you not take up his yoke?
If he takes the bit from the jaws, if it is he who feeds
his children and gives them rest, do you not feel drawn
to him? Ho, you who are harnessed to the heavy van of
this world’s care and toil, will you not ask to have
such rest as this? You who, like the laborious bull,
have been ploughing to and fro in the furrows of your
worldly toil seeking rest but finding none, working as
the ox does for others, and scarcely having a morsel of
fodder for your own mouth, come to Jesus and he will
give you rest. Take his yoke upon you and learn from
him, for his yoke is easy and his burden is light. Oh
that you would seek him today! and if you seek him he is
to be found. He is to be found by the eye of faith that
looks out of self to him. Trust him — that is the
word — and he is yours. May God grant that each one of
you exercise that trust today, and a vision of joy and
peace will open before you, the like of which though a
man should tell it to you, you would not conceive to be
possible. He who believes in Jesus Christ has life
eternal and heaven has begun. May you have it now for
Jesus’ sake. Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon —
Psalms 37:1-11,23-40
Romans 6]
(a) Bawbee: A Scotch coin of base
silver equivalent originally to three, and afterwards to
six, pennies of Scotch money, about a halfpenny of
English coin; hence, in modern use, a halfpenny, a
“copper.” OED.
Special Appeal
It is absolutely necessary to erect an Infirmary for the sick children in our Orphanage at Stockwell. Several months ago I announced a Bazaar to open on the twenty-first of this month, and hoped by its means to raise all the money to build the hospital. I am much perplexed by the fact that very few friends have come forward to help, and the movement threatens to be almost a failure, unless those who have helped me before come to my rescue now. This appeal is very late. Only some ten days remain, but if every one of my readers will send a contribution, either in money or goods, and send it at once, the work can still be done. If I have sown to you spirituals, permit my poor orphans to reap from your temporals. Any useful articles will be specially welcome. Direct parcels to C. H. Spurgeon, “The Orphanage,” Stockwell, London.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2012/01/31/bands-of-love