Christ About His
Father’s Business by C. H. Spurgeon
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, March 15, 1857, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon,
At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
Do you not know that I must be about my Father’s business? (Luke 2:49)
1. Behold, then, how great an interest God the Father takes in the work of
salvation. It is called “his business;” and though Jesus Christ came to
accomplish our redemption, came to set us a perfect example, and to establish a
way of salvation, yet he did not come upon his own business, but upon his
Father’s business—his Father taking as much interest in the salvation of men as
even he himself did—the great heart of the Father being as full of love as the
bleeding heart of the Son, and the mind of the first person of the Trinity being
as tenderly affected towards his chosen as even the mind of Christ Jesus, our
substitute, our surety, and our all. It is his “Father’s business.” Behold,
also, the condescension of the Son, that he should become the servant of the
Father, not to do his own business, but the Father’s business. See how he stoops
to become a child, subject to his mother; and mark how he stoops to become a
man, subject to God his Father. He took upon himself the nature of man, and
though he was the Son, equal in power with God, who “counted it not robbery to
be equal with God,” yet he “took upon himself the form of a servant and became
obedient to death, even the death of the cross.” Learn, then, oh believer, to
love all the persons of the Divine Trinity alike. Remember that salvation is no
more the work of one than of the other. They all three agree in one, and as in
the creation they all said, “Let us make man;” so in salvation they all say,
“Let us save man;” and each of them does so much of it that it is truly the work
of each and undividedly the work of all. Remember that notable passage of Isaiah
the prophet—“I will divide him a portion with the great and he shall divide the
spoil with the strong.” God divides, and Christ divides. The triumph is God’s;
the Father “divides for him a portion with the great;” it is equally Christ’s;
he “divides the spoil with the strong.” Do not set one person before the other;
reverently adore them alike, for they are one—one in design, one in character,
and one in essence; and while they are truly three, we may in adoration exclaim,
“To the one God of heaven and earth is glory, as it was in the beginning, is
now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen.”
2. But now I shall invite your attention, first, to the spirit of the Saviour,
as breathed in these words, “Do you not know that I must be about my Father’s
business?” and then, secondly, I shall exhort the children of God, with all the
earnestness which I can command, with all the intensity of power which I can
summon to the point, to labour after the same spirit, that they too may
unfeignedly say, “Do you not know that I must be about my Father’s business?”
3. I. First, then note THE SPIRIT OF CHRIST. It was a spirit of undivided
consecration to the will of God his Father. It was a spirit urged onward by an
absolute necessity to serve God. Note the word “must.” “Do you not know that I
must?” There is a something in me which prevents me from doing other work. I
feel an all-controlling, overwhelming influence which constrains me at all times
and in every place to be about my Father’s business; the spirit of high, holy,
entire, sincere, determined consecration in heart to God. “Do you not know that
I must be about my Father’s business?”
4. First, what was the impelling power which (as it were) forced Christ to be
about his Father’s business? and then, secondly, how did he do his Father’s
business, and what was it?
5. 1. What was the impelling power which made Christ say, “I must be about my
Father’s business?”
6. In the first place, it was the spirit of obedience which thoroughly possessed
his heart. When he took upon him the form of a servant he received the spirit of
an obedient servant too, and became as perfect in the capacity of a servant as
he had ever been in that of a ruler, though in that he had perfectly executed
all his office. Beloved believer! Do you not remember when you were first
converted to God, when the young life of your newborn spirit was strong and
active, how impetuously you desired to obey God, and how intense was your
eagerness to serve him in some way or other? I can remember well how I could
scarcely abide myself five minutes without doing something for Christ. If I
walked the street I must have a tract with me; if I went into a railway carriage
I must drop a tract out of the window; if I had a moment’s leisure I must be
upon my knees or at my Bible; if I were in company I must turn the subject of
conversation to Christ, that I might serve my Master. Alas, I must confess, much
of that strength of purpose has departed from me, as I do not doubt it has from
many of you who, with a greater prudence, have also received diminished zeal. It
may be that in the young dawn of life we did imprudent things in order to serve
the cause of Christ; but I say, give me back the time again, with all its
imprudence and with all its hastiness, if I might only have the same love for my
Master, the same overwhelming influence in my spirit, making me obey because it
was a pleasure to me to obey God. Now, Christ felt just the same way. He must do
it. He must serve God; he must be obedient; he could not help it. The spirit was
in him, and would work, just as the spirit of disobedience in the wicked impels
them to sin. Lust, sometimes, drags the sinner on to sin with a power so strong
and mighty that poor man can no more resist it than the dead leaf can resist the
tempest. We had lusts so omnipotent, that they had only to be suggested, and we
were their willing slaves; we had habits so tyrannical that we could not break
their chains; we were impelled to evil, like the straw in the whirlwind, or the
chip in the whirlpool. We were hurried wherever our lusts would bear us—“drawn
away and enticed.” Now, in the new heart it is just the same, only in another
direction. The spirit of obedience works in us, impelling us to serve our God,
so that when that spirit is unclogged and free we may truly say, “We must be
about our Father’s business.” We cannot help it.
7. 2. But Christ had what only some men have. He had another motive for this,
another impelling cause. He had a sacred call to the work which he had
undertaken, and that secret call drove him on. You think, perhaps, it is
fanatical to talk of sacred calls; but call it fanatical or not, this one thing
I will own—the belief in a special call to do a special work is like the arm of
omnipotence to a man. Let a man believe that God has appointed him to do a
particular work, and you may sneer at him: what does he care? He would give as
much for your sneer as he would for your smile, and that is nothing at all. He
believes God intends him to do the work. You say no: but he never asked you for
your vote upon the question; he has received God’s message, as he thinks, and he
goes on, and you cannot resist him. If he sits still for a little while, a
spirit haunts him—he does not know what it is, but he is unhappy unless he
engages in a business which he feels is the commission of his life. If he holds
his tongue when God has commanded him to speak, the word is like fire in his
bones—it burns its way out, until at last he says, with Elihu, “I am filled with
matter; I am like a vessel that needs a vent;” I must speak, or burst; I cannot
help it. Depend upon it, the men that have done the greatest work for our holy
religion have been the men who had the special call to it. I no more doubt the
call of Luther than I doubt the call of the apostles, and he did not doubt it
either. One of the reasons why Luther did a thing was because other people did
not like it. When he was about to smite a blow at the Papacy by marrying a nun
all his friends said it was a fearful thing. Luther consulted them, and did the
deed, perhaps, all the sooner because they disapproved of it. A strange reason
it may seem, that a man should do a thing because he was dissuaded from it; but
he felt that it was his work to strike the Papacy right and left, and for that
he would give up everything, even the friendship of friends. His business, by
night and by day, was to pray down the pope, to preach down the pope, to write
down the pope, and do it he must, though often in the roughest, coarsest manner,
with iron gauntlets on his hands. It was his work; do it he must. You might have
done what you pleased with Luther, even to the ripping out his tongue: he would
have taken his pen, dipped it in fire, and written in burning words the doom of
Papacy. He could not help it, heaven had forced him to the work; he had a
special commission given him from on high, and no man could stop him any more
than he could stop the wind in its blowing, or the tide in its motions. Christ
had a special work. “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me; the Lord has anointed me
to preach glad tidings to the poor.” And he felt the effects of this
anointing—the power of this impelling. And he must not stop, he could not, he
dare not. “I must,” he said, “be about my Father’s business.”
8. 3. But once more, Christ had something which few of us can fully know. He had
a vow upon him—the vow to do the work from all eternity. He had become the
surety of the covenant; he had sworn that he would execute his Father’s
business. He had taken a solemn oath that he would become man; that he would pay
the ransom price of all his beloved ones; that he would come and do his Father’s
business, whatever that might be. “Lo, I come,” he said. “In the volume of the
book, it is written of me, I delight to do your will, oh God.” Therefore, being
faithful and true, the covenant, the engagement, the suretyship, the sworn
promise and the oath made him say, “I must be about my Father’s business.”
Whenever you make a vow, my dear friends—and do that very seldom—take care that
you keep it. Few should be the vows that men make, but they should always be
sincerely kept. God asks no vow of us; but when his Spirit moves us to make a
vow—and we may do so honestly if we make a vow in his strength—we are bound to
keep it. And he who feels that he has made a vow, must then feel himself
impelled to do the work which he has vowed to do. Let the difficulty be never so
great, if you have vowed to overcome it, do it. Let the mountain be never so
high, if you have made a vow to God that you will attempt it, scale its summit,
and never give it up. If the vow is a proper one, God will help you to
accomplish it. Oh you upon whom are the vows of the Lord! (and some of you have
taken solemn vows upon you, by making a profession of religion) I beseech you,
by the sacrament in which you dedicated yourself to your Lord, and by that other
sacrament in which you found communion with Jesus, now to fulfil your vows, and
pay them daily, nightly, hourly, constantly, perpetually; and let these compel
you to say, “I must be about my Father’s business.” These, I think, were the
impelling motives which forced Christ on in his heavenly labour.
9. Secondly. But now, what was his Father’s business? I think it lay in three
things—example, establishment, expiation.
10. 1. One part of his Father’s business was, to send into the world a perfect
example for our imitation. God had written various books of example in the lives
of the saints. One man was noted for one virtue, and another for another. At
last, God determined that he would gather all his works into one volume, and
give a condensation of all virtues in the person of our Lord Jesus Christ. Now
he determined to unite all the parts into one, to string all the pearls on one
necklace, and to make them all apparent around the neck of one single person.
The sculptor finds here a leg from some eminent master, and there a hand from
another mighty sculptor. Here he finds an eye, and there a head full of majesty.
He says, within himself, “I will compound these glories, I will put them all
together; then it shall be the model man. I will make the statue par excellence,
which shall stand first in beauty, and shall be noted ever afterwards as the
model of manhood.” So said God, “There is Job—he has patience; there is Moses—he
has meekness, there are those mighty ones who all have eminent virtues. I will
take these, I will put them into one; and the man Christ Jesus shall be the
perfect model of future imitation.” Now, I say, that all Christ’s life he was
endeavouring to do his Father’s business in this matter. You never find Christ
doing a thing which you may not imitate. You would scarcely think it necessary
that he should be baptized; but lo, he goes to Jordan’s stream and dives beneath
the wave, that he may be buried in baptism to death, and may rise again—though
he did not need to rise—into newness of life. You see him healing the sick, to
teach us benevolence; rebuking hypocrisy to teach us boldness; enduring
temptation to teach us hardness, by which, as good soldiers of Christ, we ought
to war a good warfare. You see him forgiving his enemies to teach us the grace
of meekness and of forbearance; you behold him giving up his very life to teach
us how we should surrender ourselves to God, and give up ourselves for the good
of others. Put Christ at the wedding; you may imitate him. Aye, sirs, and you
might imitate him, if you could, in turning water into wine, without a sin. Put
Christ at a funeral; you may imitate him—“Jesus wept.” Put him on the mountain
top; he shall be there in prayer alone, and you may imitate him. Put him in the
crowd; he shall speak so, that if you could speak like him you would speak well.
Put him with enemies; he shall so confound them, that he shall be a model for
you to copy. Put him with friends, and he shall be a “friend who sticks closer
than a brother,” worthy of your imitation. Exalt him, cry hosanna, and you shall
see him riding upon a “colt, the foal of an ass,” meek and lowly. Despise and
spit upon him; you shall see him bearing contumely and contempt with the same
evenness of spirit which characterised him when he was exalted in the eye of the
world. Everywhere you may imitate Christ. Aye, sirs, and you may even imitate
him in that “the Son of Man came eating and drinking,” and in it fulfilled what
he determined to do—to pull down the vain pharisaism of man, which says that
religion stands in meats and drinks, whereas, “Not that which goes into a man
defiles a man, but that which goes out of a man, that defiles the man.” And that
is the time when we should take heed to ourselves, lest the inner man be
defiled. Never once did he swerve from that bright, true mirror of perfection.
He was in everything as an exemplar, always doing his Father’s business.
11. 2. And so in the matter that I have called establishment; that is the
establishment of a new dispensation; that was his Father’s business, and in it,
Christ was always doing it. He went into the wilderness to be tempted by the
devil. Was he doing it then? Ah, sirs, he was; for it was necessary that he
should be “a faithful high priest in things pertaining to God, to make
reconciliation for the sins of the people. For in that he himself has suffered
being tempted, he is able to help those who are tempted.” When he speaks, you
can see him establishing his Word, and when he puts the finger of silence to his
lips, he is doing it as much; for then was fulfilled the prophecy, “he was
brought as a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is dumb.”
Does he work a miracle? Do the obedient winds hush their tumult at his voice? It
is to establish the gospel, by teaching us that he is divine. Does he weep? It
is to establish the gospel, by teaching us that he is human. Does he gather the
apostles? It is that they may go abroad into every land, preaching the Word of
God. Does he sit upon a well? It is that he may teach a woman, and that she may
teach the whole city of Samaria the way of salvation. He was always engaged in
this work of example, and this work of establishment.
12. 3. And ah, beloved, when he came to the climax of his labour, when he came
to the greatest toil of all, that which a thousand men could never have done;
when he came to do the great work of expiation, how thoroughly he did it!
View him prostrate in the garden;
On the ground your Maker lies.
On the bloody tree behold him:
Hear him cry before he dies—
‘IT IS FINISHED!’
And there you have a proof that he was about his Father’s business. It was his
Father’s business made him sweat great drops of blood; his Father’s business
ploughed his back with many gory furrows; his Father’s business pricked his
temple with the thorn crown; his Father’s business made him mocked and spit
upon; his Father’s business made him go about bearing his cross; his Father’s
business made him despise the shame when, naked, he hung upon the tree; his
Father’s business made him yield himself to death, though he needed not to die
if so he had not pleased; his Father’s business made him tread the gloomy shades
of Gehenna, and descend into the abodes of death; his Father’s business made him
preach to the spirits in prison; and his Father’s business took him up to
heaven, where he sits on the right hand of God, doing his Father’s business
still! His Father’s business makes him plead day and night for Sion; the same
business shall make him come as the Judge of quick and dead, to divide the sheep
from the goats; the same business shall make him gather together in one, all
people who dwell on the face of the earth! Oh, glory to you, Jesus; you have
done it! You have done your Father’s business well.
13. II. Thus, I have given you the example. Now, let me exhort you to IMITATE
IT.
14. Tell me, if you can why the religion of Christ is so very slow in spreading.
Mohammed, an imposter stood up in the streets to preach. He was hooted, stones
were thrown at him. Within the month, he had disciples. A few more years, and he
had a host behind him. Not a century had rolled away, before a thousand
scimitars flashed from their scabbards at the bidding of the caliphs. His
religion overran nations like wildfire, and devoured kingdoms. But why? The
followers of the prophet were entirely devoted to his cause. When that Moslem of
old spurred his horse into the sea, to ride across the straits of Gibraltar, and
then reined him up, and said, “I would cross if God willed it!” there was
something in it that told us why his religion was so strong. Ah! those warriors
of that time were ready to die for their religion; and therefore it spread. Can
you tell me why Christianity spread so much in primitive times? It was because
holy men “did not count their lives dear to them,” but were willing to “suffer
the loss of all things” for Christ’s sake. Paul traverses many countries; Peter
ranges through many nations; Philip and the other evangelists go through various
countries, testifying the word of God. Sirs, I will tell you why our faith in
these days spreads so little. Pardon me—it is because the professors of it do
not believe it! Believe it! Yes; they believe it in the head, not in the heart.
We have not enough of true devotedness to the cause, or else God would bless
Sion with a far greater increase, I am fully persuaded. How few there are that
have given themselves fully up to their religion! They take their religion, like
my friend over there has taken that little farm of his. He has a farm of a
thousand acres, but he thinks he could increase his means, perhaps, by taking a
little farm of a hundred acres or so a little way off; and he gives that to his
agent and does not take much trouble about it himself. It is not very likely he
will have very fine farming there, because he leaves it to someone else. Just so
with religion. Your great farm is your shop, your great aim is your worldly
business. You like to keep religion as a snug investment at very small interest
indeed, which you intend to draw out when you get near death; but you do not
want to live on it just now. You have enough profit from your own daily
business, and you do not want religion for every day life. Sirs, the reason why
your religion does not spread is because it has not gotten root enough in your
hearts. How few there are of us who are ready to devote ourselves wholly,
bodily, and spiritually to the cause of the gospel of Christ! And if you should
attempt to do so, how many opponents would you meet with! Go into the church
meeting, and be a little earnest; what will they say? Why, they will treat you
just as David’s brother did, when David spoke about fighting Goliath. “Oh,” he
said, “because of the pride and the naughtiness of your heart, to see the battle
you are come.” “Now, stand aside; do not think you can do anything; away with
you!” And if you are in earnest, especially in the ministry, it is just the
same. Your brethren pray every Sunday—“Lord, send more labourers into the
vineyard!” And if God should send them, they wish them safely out of their
corner of it, at any rate. They may go anywhere else, but they must not come
anywhere near them, for it might affect their congregation, it might stir them
up a little; and people might think they did not labour quite earnestly enough.
“Stand aside!” they say. But brethren, do not mind about that. If you cannot
bear to be huffed and snuffed, there is little good in you. If you cannot bear
snuffing, depend upon it you cannot be well lit yet. Dare to go on against all
the prudence of men, and you will find them pat you on the shoulder by and by
and call you “dear brother.” Every man is helped to get up, when he is as high
as he can be. If you are down, “keep him down,” is the cry; but if you are
getting up, you will never get help until you have done it yourself; and then
men will give you their help when you do not require it. However, your war cry
must be, “Do you not know that I must be about my Father’s business?”
15. Again, even the best of your friends, if you are truly zealous for God, will
come to you and say—and very kindly too—“Now, you must take a little more care
of your constitution. Now, do not be doing so much; do not, I beseech you!” Or
if you are giving money away—“Now you must be a little more prudent; take more
care of your family. Really, you must not do so.” Or if you are earnest in
prayer, they will say—“There is no need of such enthusiasm as this: you know you
can be religious, and not too religious; you can be moderately so.” And so you
find both friends and enemies striving to hinder your consecration to Christ.
Now, I like what old Rowland Hill said, when someone told him that he was
“moderately religious.” “Well then, you are irreligious; for a man that is
moderately honest is a rogue for certain; and so the man that is moderately
religious is irreligious.” If religion is worth anything it is worth everything;
if it is anything it is everything. Religion cannot go halves with anything
else, it must be all. We must, if we are thoroughly imbued with the spirit of
Christ, imitate Christ in this—the giving up of all to God; so that we can
sincerely say,
And if I might make some reserve,
And duty did not call,
I love my God with zeal so great,
That I could give him all.
I shall never forget the circumstance, when after I thought I had made a full
consecration to Christ, a slanderous report against my character came to my
ears, and my heart was broken in agony because I would have to lose that, in
preaching Christ’s gospel. I fell on my knees, and said, “Master, I will not
keep back even my character for you. If I must lose that too, then let it go; it
is the dearest thing I have; but it shall go, if, like my Master, they shall say
I have a devil and am mad; or, like him I am a drunken man and a winebibber. It
is gone, if I may only say—"I have endured the loss of all things; and I do
count them only dross that I may win Christ!"” And you, Christian, will never
get on well in serving God, until you have given all to him. That which you keep
back will canker and rust. If you reserve the least portion of your time, your
property, or your talents, and do not give all to Christ, you will find there
will be a sore, a gangrene in it; for Christ will bless you in all when you give
all to him; but what you keep from him, he will curse, and blight, and ruin. He
will have all of us, the whole of us, all we possess, or else he never will be
satisfied.
16. And now let me answer one or two objections, and I shall still stir you up,
who make a profession of religion, to give up all you have to Christ. You say,
“Sir, I cannot do it; I am not in the right profession.” Well, sir, you spoke
truly when you said that; for if there is a profession that will not allow us to
give all to Christ, it is not a right profession, and we ought not to follow it
at all. “But,” you say, “how can I do it?” Well, what are you? I do not care
what you are; I assert it is possible for you to do all things in the name of
God, and so to give glory to Christ. Do not think you need to be a minister to
dedicate yourself to Christ. Many a man has disgraced the pulpit, and many a man
has sanctified an anvil; many a man has dishonoured the cushion upon which he
preached, and many a man has consecrated the plough with which he has turned the
soil. We ought in all our business, as well as in our sacred acts, to do all for
Christ. Let me illustrate this. A merchant in America had devoted a large part
of his money for the maintenance of the cause of Christ; and one said to him,
“What a sacrifice you make every year.” He said, “Not so. I have a clerk:
suppose I give that clerk fifty pounds to pay a schoolmaster, and when he goes
to the schoolmaster, he should say, ‘Here is your salary; what a sacrifice it is
to me to give you that!’ Why, the schoolmaster would say, "Sir, it is not yours;
it is no sacrifice at all to you."” So said this good man, “I gave up all when I
came to God; I became his steward, and no longer head of the firm. I made God
the head of the firm, and I became the steward. And now when I distribute my
wealth, I only distribute it as his alms giver; and it is no sacrifice at all.”
If we talk of sacrifices we make a mistake. Ought not that to be the spirit of
our religion? It should be made a sacrifice at first, and then afterwards there
should be a voluntary offering of all. “I keep my shop open,” said one, “and
earn money for God. I and my family live out of it—God allows us to do it; for
as a minister lives by the gospel, he allows me to live by my business; and he
permits me to provide a pension for old age, but that is not my object.” “I sell
these goods,” said another one, “but the profit I get, God has; that which I
require for my own food and clothing, and for my household, that God gives back
to me; for he has said, bread shall be given to me, and water shall be certain;
but the rest is God’s, not mine; I do it all for God.” Now you do not understand
that theory, do you? It is not business. No, sirs, but if your hearts were right
you would understand it, for it is God’s gospel—the giving up of all to Christ;
the giving up of everything to his cause. When we do that, then we shall
understand this passage—“Do you not know that I must be about my Father’s
business?” For your business, though it is carried on in your name, will,
unknown to men, be carried on in God’s name too. Let me beg of you, however, not
to tell everyone, if you do it. I have known some that hang the gospel in the
window; more attractively, sometimes, than ribbons. I do hate the fanatic, who,
when you go to buy ribbons or pay a bill, asks you to have a tract, or invites
you into the back parlour to pray; you will see at once what he is after. He
wants to sanctify his counter; so that as people catch flies with honey, he may
catch you with religion. Put your religion where it will come out, but do not
flaunt it. If a stranger should call upon you, and in a moment exclaim “Let us
pray;” your best policy is to let him have the street to do it in, and you
should say, “Thank you, I do my praying alone mostly. I see what it is. If I
thought you had the spirit of prayer, and it had been the proper season, I would
have joined with you with all my heart.” But the religion of a man who will just
step into your house, to let you see what an extraordinarily pious man he is, is
either very sick, or else it is a galvanized thing that has no life in it at
all. I regard prayer as a very sacred thing. “When you pray, enter into your
closet; and when you give alms, do not let your left hand know what your right
hand does.” For truly if you do it to be seen by men you have your reward: and a
poor one it is; a little praise for a minute, and it is all gone. But,
nevertheless, do not run into one extreme by running from another. Consecrate
your business by your religion. Do not paint your religion on your sign board;
but keep it ready whenever you need it, and I am sure you will always need it.
17. Another says, “How can I do God’s business? I have no talent, I have no
money; all I earn in the week I have to spend, and I have scarcely enough money
to pay my rent. I have no talent; I could not teach in a Sunday School.”
Brother, have you a child? Well, there is one door of usefulness for you.
Sister, you are very poor; no one knows you; you have a husband, and however
drunken he may be, there is a door of usefulness for you. Bear up under all his
insults; be patient under all his taunts and jeers, and you can serve God, and
do God’s business in that way. “But, sir, I am sick, it is only today I am able
to get out at all; I am always on my bed.” You can do your Master’s business, by
lying on a bed of suffering, for him, if you do it patiently. The soldier who is
ordered to lie in the trenches, is just as obedient as the man who is ordered to
storm the breach. In everything you do you can serve your God. Oh, when the
heart is rightly tuned in this matter we shall never make excuses, and say, “I
cannot be about my Father’s business.” We shall always find some business of his
to do. In the heroic wars of the Swiss, we read that the mothers would bring
cannonballs for the fathers to fire upon the enemy, and the children would run
around and gather up the shot that sometimes fell, when ammunition ran short. So
that all did something. We hate war, but we will use this illustration in the
war of Christ. There is something for you all to do. Oh I let us who love our
Master, let us who are bound to serve him by the ties of gratitude let us say,
“Do you not know that I must be about my Father’s business?”
18. And now I close up by addressing all the Lord’s people here, and urging them
to serve God with all their hearts, by giving them two or three very brief and
very earnest reasons.
19. Be about your Father’s business with all earnestness, because that is the
way of usefulness. You cannot do your own business and God’s too. You cannot
serve God and self any more than you can serve God and mammon. If you make your
own business God’s business, you will do your business well; and you will be
useful in your day and generation. Never shall we see any great revival in the
church, or any great triumphs of religion until the Christian world is more
touched with the spirit of entire consecration to Christ. When the world shall
see us in earnest then God will bring men in; not before. We go to our pulpits
in half heartedness: we go to our place of worship mere shells without the
kernel. We give the outward ceremony and take away the heart. We shall never see
Christ’s cause triumphant in that way. Do you wish to be useful? Do you wish to
extend your Master’s empire? Then be about your Father’s business.
20. Again, do you wish to be happy? Be about your Father’s business. Oh! it is
sweet employment to serve your Father. You do not need to turn aside from the
way of business to do that. If your heart is right, you can serve God in
weighing a pound of tea as much as in preaching a sermon. You can serve God as
much in driving a horse and cart as in singing a hymn—serve God in standing
behind your counter, at the right time and the right season, as much as sitting
in your pews. And oh! how sweet to think, “I am doing this for God. My shop is
opened on God’s behalf; I am seeking to win profit for God; I am seeking to get
business for God’s cause, that I may be able to devote more to it, and prosper
it more by what I am able voluntarily to consecrate to him.” You will have a
happiness when you rise, such as you never knew before, if you can think, “I am
going to serve God today;” and when you end at night, instead of saying, “I have
lost so much,” you will be able to say, “Not I, my God has lost it. But the
silver and the gold are his, and if he does not care to have either of them—very
well; let them go; he shall have it one way or another. I do not want it; if he
chooses to take it from me in bad debts, well and good. Let me give to him in
another way, it will be the same; I will revere him continually, even in my
daily employment.”
21. And this dear friends, will be the way—and I trust you can be moved by
this—this will be the way to have eternal glory at the last, not for the sake of
what you do, but as the gracious reward of God for what you have done. “They who
turn many to righteousness, shall shine as the stars for ever and ever.” Would
you like to go to heaven alone? I do not think you would. My happiest thought is
this, that when I die, if it shall be my privilege to enter into rest in the
bosom of Christ, I know I shall not enter heaven alone. Thousands have been
there, whose hearts have been pricked and have been drawn to Christ under the
labours of my ministry. Oh! what a pleasant thing to flap one’s wings to heaven
and have a multitude behind, and when you enter heaven to say, “Here I am and
the children you have given to me!” You cannot preach, perhaps, but you can
travail in birth with children for God, in a spiritual sense, in another way;
for if you help the cause you shall share the honour too. You do that, perhaps,
which is not known among men, yet you are the instrument, and God shall crown
your head with glory among those that “shine as the stars for ever and ever.” I
think, dear Christian friends, I need say no more, except to bid you remember
that you owe so much to Christ for having saved you from hell; you owe so much
to that blood which redeemed you—that you are in duty bound to say—
Here, Lord, I give myself away;
‘Tis all that I can do.
Go out now, and if you are tempted by the world, may the Spirit enable you to
reply, “I must be about my Father’s business.” Go out, and if they call you a
fanatic, let them laugh at you as much as they like, tell them you must be about
your Father’s business. Go on, and conquer. God be with you. And now farewell,
with this last word, “He who believes and is baptized, shall be saved; he who
does not believe, shall be damned.” Faith in Christ is the only way of
salvation. You who know your guilt cast yourselves on Christ, and then dedicate
yourselves to him. So you shall have joy here, and glory everlasting in the land
of the blessed, where bliss is without alloy, and joy without end.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/05/26/christ-about-his-fathers-business