Comfort Proclaimed by C. H. Spurgeon

A Pastoral Letter

1. I am a prisoner still. Weakness has succeeded pain, and languor of mind is the distressing result of this prostration of my physical powers. It is the Lord’s doing. In some sense I might say with Paul, “I am a prisoner of Jesus Christ.” But ah! my bonds are more easy and less honourable to wear than his. Instead of a dungeon, my lot is cast in an abode of comfort. I am not restrained from my accustomed ministry by a chain forged by man, but by the silken cord of God’s providence: no rough jailer, but loving relatives and friends attend to me in these tedious hours of my bondage. I beseech you therefore, my beloved, let your many prayers to God on my behalf be each and all mingled with thanksgiving. Gratitude should always be used in devotion, like salt of old was in sacrifice, “without prescribing how much.”

2. And now, though unable to stand in the pulpit, I will endeavour to give you short address,—or rather, I will attempt to express the kindlings of my heart in a few broken sentences.

3. And first, to you my well beloved and trusty brothers and sisters in Christ, and in the family tie of church fellowship; to you I tender my fondest regards, my sincerest thanks, my sweetest love. I feel refreshed by your sympathy, and my heart is overwhelmed at the estimation in which you hold me. It brings the hot blush to my cheek, and well it may. Tenderly as a husband thinks of the doting affection of his wife, as a father receives the fond homage of his children, as a brother when he is held in honour by all the family circle—so tenderly, and even more tenderly, I remember your care for me. The tone of your supplications during my affliction has been grateful to me beyond measure. I rejoice that you have with humble submission kissed the rod; not impatiently asking for my recovery, but meekly acquiescing in the providence of our heavenly Father, craving most of all that the Lord would sanctify the pains of your pastor, and guard with his own watchful eye the flock. “Grace and peace be multiplied to you, through the knowledge of God, and of Jesus our Lord.”

4. Yet again, in the still room of retirement, I anxiously remember some who would have been baptised on a profession of their faith, and received into membership of the church before this, had not my health been thus impaired. Do not be fretful concerning this delay: accept it as an ordained trial of your patience. If a farmer has a field of grain severed by the sickle from its native earth, but not yet housed in the garner, is he not concerned lest he suffer loss? How much more, as a minister of Christ, am I concerned for you—the converts God has given to me. Oh, beloved! be steadfast. Do not commit the great sin. Beware lest Satan take advantage of you—for we are not ignorant of his devices. Do not draw back. It is written in the law, “No devoted thing that a man shall devote to the Lord of all that he has, shall be sold or redeemed: every devoted thing is most holy to the Lord.” The Israelite might not retract the beast that he dedicated from his fold for an offering—far less the Christian, when he has resolved to yield up his heart, his life, his soul to Jesus. I do not speak thus to grieve you. Do not think that my jealousy bodes a suspicion, but rather that it betokens my love. “We are not of those who draw back to perdition; but of those who believe to the saving of the soul.” “My little children, these things I write to you that you do not sin.”

5. To those who have worshipped during the past two years in the Surrey Music Hall,—the preacher sends greetings and his love. You have heard how the Prophet Samuel set up a stone and called the name of it EBENEZER, saying, “So far has the Lord helped us.” That stone marked the place where the Lord gave the children of Israel a great victory over the Philistines: but it likewise marked the “very place where, twenty years before, the Israelites were defeated, and the Ark of God was taken.” Let us rejoice, oh my people, with trembling. Two years ago that Hall was the scene of such tragedy,1 such dire calamity and death, as we hardly dare to think of. Surely that was the night of my heart’s bitterest anguish. “However our God turned the curse into a blessing.” For ninety-nine successive Lord’s days I was enabled to supply the pulpit; no congregation could have been more evenly sustained; never were sermons more widely echoed. God has owned these services to the quickening of many souls, to the establishing of many in our most holy faith, and by them through his goodness has the Blessed Spirit stirred up many of my brethren in the ministry to a righteous emulation. “According to this time it shall be said, What has God wrought!” Ah, sirs! if you knew in what fear we began, and with what anxiety we have continued—if you knew the unrequited exertions of those beloved brethren, whose names are unknown to fame, but whose good offices were essential to keep the place open—if you knew, once more, how many a time your minister has prostrated himself as a broken hearted sinner before God to renew his first vows of unreserved self-dedication—if you knew these things, you would not be backward in that ascription of praise never more fit to flow forth in liquid strains with weeping eyes—“Not to us, oh Lord, not to us, but to your name give glory.” My beloved brethren, “Be steadfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as you know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord.”

6. Yet I have other friends. They are scattered far and wide throughout this country, and the sister isles. To you let me drop a word. You have received me kindly. Faster friendships were never surely made in fewer hours than I have cemented with some of you. You are of my kith and kin. I will take YOU to record that my God has graciously proportioned my strength to my days, while I have been among you “in labours more abundant.” When I have laboured most for his glory, I have feasted most on the provisions of his grace. And blessed be God, when often called to visit a people previously unknown to me, he has given me the key of David, to unlock the secret springs of your heart; no rather, he holds the key in his own hand; he opens and no man can shut. Keep, beloved, the word of his patience, and he will keep you from the hour of temptation which shall come upon all the world to try those who dwell upon the earth.

7. Finally, my brethren, I am cheered and comforted beyond measure by the joyous hope that on the coming Sunday I shall again appear among you. This prospect is as oil to my bones, and although I cannot hope to fulfil my ministry with my accustomed vigour, yet to attempt to address you will be as a rich medicine—as a tonic to my fluttering heart. Brethren, pray for us.

Yours in covenant,

C. H. Spurgeon.

November 2, 1858.

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Evening, September 21, 1856, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At Exeter Hall, Strand.

Comfort, oh comfort my people, says your God. (Isa 40:1)

8. What a sweet title: “My people!” What a cheering revelation: “Your God!” How much of meaning is couched in those two words, “My people!” Here is speciality. The whole world is God’s; the heaven, even the heaven of heavens are the Lord’s and he reigns among the children of men. But he says of a certain number, “My people.” Of those whom he has chosen, whom he has purchased for himself, he says what he does not say of others. While nations and kindreds are passed by as being simply nations, he says of them “My people.” In this word there is the idea of proprietorship to teach us that we are the property of God. In some special manner the “Lord’s portion is his people; Jacob is the lot of his inheritance.” All the nations upon earth are his; he takes up the isles as a very little thing; the whole world is in his power; yet his people are his chosen favoured people, more specially his possession; for he has done more for them than others; he has bought them with his blood; he has brought them near to himself; he has set his great heart upon them; he has loved them with an everlasting love, a love which many waters cannot quench, and which the revolutions of time shall never suffice in the least degree to diminish. “My people!” Oh my hearers, can you by faith put yourselves in that number who believe that God says of them, “My people?” Can you look up to heaven tonight, and say, “My Lord, and my God: mine by that sweet relationship which entitles me to call you Father; mine by that hallowed fellowship which I delight to hold with you when you are pleased to reveal yourself to me as you do not to the world?” Can you, beloved, put your hand into your heart and find there the indentures of your salvation? Can you read your title deed in precious blood? Can you by humble faith lay hold of Jesus’s garments, and say, “My Christ?” If you can, then God says of you, “My people;” for if God is your God, and Christ your Christ, the Lord has a special, peculiar favour toward you, you are the object of his choice, and you shall be accepted, at last, in his beloved Son. How careful God is of his people; those of whom he says, “My people;” note, how anxious he is concerning them, not only for their life, but for their comfort. He does not say, “strengthen, oh strengthen my people;” he does not say to the angel, “protect my people;” he does not say to the heavens, “drop down manna to feed my people;”—his tender regard secures all that and even more for them; but on this occasion, to show us that he is not only regards our interests, but also of our superfluities, he says, “Comfort, oh comfort my people.” He does not wish to have us only as his living people, his preserved people, but he wishes us to be his happy people too. He likes his people to be fed, but what is more, he likes to give them “wines on the lees well refined,” to make glad their hearts. He will not only give them bread, but he will give them honey too; he will not simply give them milk, but he will give them wine and milk, and all the sweet things which their hearts can desire. “Comfort, oh comfort my people;” it is the Father’s yearning heart, careful even for the little things of his people. “Comfort, oh comfort,”—that one with a tearful eye; “Comfort, oh comfort”—that child of mine with an aching heart; “Comfort,”—that poor sorrowful one, “Comfort, oh comfort—my people, says your God.”

9. Now tonight we shall notice the people to whom the command is addressed; secondly, the reason for it; and thirdly, the means for carrying it out.

10. I. First then, TO WHOM IS THIS COMMAND ADDRESSED? You know, beloved, the Holy Spirit is the great Comforter, and only he alone can solace the saints if their hearts are really to be cheered; but he uses instruments to relieve his children in their distress and to lift up their hearts from desperation. To whom, then, is this command addressed? I believe it is addressed to angels and to men.

11. First of all, I believe this command is addressed to angels: “Comfort, oh comfort my people.” You often speak about the insinuations of the devil; I frequently hear you bemoaning yourselves because you have been attacked by Apollyon, and have had a hard struggle with Beelzebub; you have found it hard to resist his desperate thrusts which he made against you; and you are always talking about him. Allow me to remind you that there is another side to that question, for if evil spirits assault us, doubtless good spirits guard us; and if Satan can cast us down, doubtless it is true God gives his angels charge over us, to keep us in all our ways, and they shall bear us up in their hands lest at any time we dash our feet against a stone. It is my firm belief that angels are often employed by God to plant into the hearts of his people comforting thoughts. There are many sweet thoughts which we have by the way, when we sit down and when we rise up, which we scarcely dare attribute immediately to the Holy Ghost, but which are still beautiful and calm, lovely, and fair, and consoling; and we attribute them to the ministry of angels. Angels came and ministered to Jesus, and I do not doubt that they minister to us. Few of us have enough belief in the existence of spirits. I like that saying of Milton’s, “Millions of spiritual creatures walk this earth, both when we sleep and when we are awake.” And if our minds would be opened, if our ears would be attentive, we might hold fellowship with spirits that flit through the air every moment. Angels hover around the deathbed of saints; the angels stand by the side of every struggling warrior for Christ. In the day of battle we hear in the air the neighing of their steeds. Listen! how softly do they ride to help the elect of God, while in the stern conflict for the right and for the truth, when they would have been cast down, some angel whispers, “Courage brother, courage, I wish I could stand by your side, shoulder to shoulder, and foot to foot, to fight the battle, but I must not; it is left for men. Courage then brother, because angels watch over you!” It is a good wish of ours, when we say at eventide, “Peace be to you beloved! good angels guard you! may they spread their wings over you and stand around your bed!” But it is more than a wish, it is a reality. Do you not know it is written “the angel of the Lord camps around those who fear him?” “Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister to them who are heirs of salvation?” This command then, comes to angels: “Comfort, oh comfort my people.” Frequently the bright winged seraph flaps his wing to earth, to comfort some desponding heart. Frequently the cherub, ceasing for a moment his mighty song to go on errands of love, descends, as Gabriel did of old, to cheer the heart of many a struggling man and to stand by the side of those who are in conflict for God and for his truth. You angels, you bright spirits, “Comfort, oh comfort my people.”

12. But on earth, this is more specifically addressed to the Lord’s ministers. He calls his ministers angels of the churches, albeit, they should be a great deal more like angels than they are. Ministers are bound to comfort God’s people. I am sure, however, they cannot do it, unless they preach the good old doctrines of truth. Except they preach grace and gracious doctrine, I cannot see how they are to console the minds of the Lord’s family. If I were to adopt a lax theology which teaches that God’s children may fall away, that although redeemed they may yet be lost, that they may be effectually called, and yet slide back to perdition—I want to know how I could carry out this command? I should say, “Brethren, God has told me to comfort you; that is what I have to preach; you must get what comfort you can out of it for I really cannot find much.” I have often marvelled how the Arminian can comfort himself, how he can light a fire to warm his own heart! What doctrine does he have? He believes he is a child of God today, and he is taught to believe he is a child of the devil tomorrow. He is now, he says, in the covenant, but then that covenant is such an uncertain thing that it may at any time be broken down, and he may die beneath its ruins; he knows himself to be redeemed by the blood of Christ, yet he is taught that that will not be sufficient without the concurrence of some good thoughts, good actions, or certainly by some good grace, some faith of his own. He is led to believe that his standing depends upon his own keeping near to God, instead of remembering that his keeping near to God must be by a sweet attraction that proceeds from God himself. I cannot tell how then comfort is to be procured. I am happy I have no such gospel as that to preach. Let me preach the old gospel of Chrysostom, the old gospel of Augustine, the old gospel of Athanasius, and above all the old gospel of Jesus Christ, the originator of it; for there I can find something to comfort the child of God, “Comfort, oh comfort my people.” It is our duty to reprove, to exhort, to invite, but it is equally our duty to console. The minister should ask God the Spirit that he may be filled with his influence as a comforter; that when he ascends his pulpit on the Sunday morning, his poor hard working people, who have been toiling, fretting with care and anxiety all the week, may say, “Here comes our minister; he is sure to have his mouth filled with good things; as soon as he opens his lips he will utter some great and glorious promise from God’s Word. He has little to say himself, but he will be sure to tell us some good old truths with some fresh unction, and we shall go away refreshed.” Oh! you sons of toil, some of you understand this. You come with weary feet to God’s house; but oh! how gladly do you sing there, and how sweetly does your singing harmonize with your hearts! and when you have heard the Word you go away and say, “Oh that it were Sunday all the week long! Oh! that I might sit and always hear the words of God! Oh! that I might sit and always drink in such comforts, so should I be satisfied as with marrow and fatness!” But sometimes you come up, and there is a flogging for you just when there needs to be consolation; or you get some dry hard metaphysical subject that has not any nourishment for your souls in it, and you go away half starved. You hear some fine discourse with rounded periods, and people say, “Oh! such an oration! never was English so beautifully spoken by Hall or Chalmers. How admirably it was delivered!” But alas! alas! what of the dish, the porcelain, the knife, the plate, the splendid damask2 cloth, the vase of flowers—where is the food? There is none there. You have received the garnishings and you ought to be thankful, and hold your ministers in esteem, even if they withhold from you your necessary bread! But the child of God will not like that; he says “I am weary of such things, away with these garnishings, give it me in plain rough Saxon if you will, but give me the gospel! Cut it up in any way you like, but do give me something to feed upon.” The language may be rough, and the style homely, but the heir of heaven says, “There was ‘comfort for my people’ in it; and that was what I wanted. Its style, humanly speaking, may not have exactly suited my taste, but it has fed my soul, and that will suffice me.”

13. But, my friends, do not support your ministers as an excuse for the discharge of your own duties; many do so. They think when they have subscribed towards the support of the ministry, it is enough; imagining, as our Roman Catholic friends do, that the priest is to do everything, and the people nothing; but that is very wrong. When God said, “Comfort, oh comfort my people,” he spoke to all his people to comfort one another. And who is there here that knows the Lord and has tasted his grace who cannot comfort his brethren? There is my strong friend who is on the mount feasting on dying love; he is the subject of rhapsodies and high excitement; his soul is like the chariot of Amminadib; it is on fire with his Master’s presence; he is living near to God and drinking in fulness of joy. Oh! my brother, go and give out a portion to seven, and also of eight; for you do not know what sorrow there is upon the earth. When you are happy, remember there is sure to be someone else who is sad. When your cup runs over, look out an empty cup to catch the drops that overflow. When your soul is full of joy, go, if you can, and find a mourner and let him hear your song, or sit down by his side and tell him how glad you are, and maybe his poor heart may be warmed by your sweet cheering words. But are you weak? Are you sad yourself? Then go to him who is the great Comforter and ask him to relieve your distresses, and after that go out yourself and comfort others. There is no one so good to comfort others as those who once were comfortless. If I were an orphan now, and needed a helper, I would look for one who had been an orphan in his youth, that he might sympathize with me. If I were homeless and poor, I would not go to the man who has rolled in wealth from earliest youth, but I would look for the man who, like myself, has trodden with bare feet the cold pavement of the street at midnight; I would look for the man who, penniless and poor, has begged his way from town to town, and then, by God’s providence, has worked himself up; for I could believe that such a one would have a heart to sympathize with me. Go, you poor tried one, go you weather beaten soul if you can, and call to your mate, who is just out at sea with you, and tell him to be of good cheer. You who are in the valley of the shadow of death, sing, “Yes, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil;” and maybe some brother far behind you will hear the song, and will take heart.

Lives of great men all remind us, We can make our lives sublime, And departing, leave behind us, Footprints on the sands of time.

Footprints that, perhaps, another, Sailing o’er life’s solemn main, A forlorn and shipwrecked brother, Seeing, may take heart again.

Go, and when you have found any good, strive to perpetuate it by sharing it with others. When your foot is on the rock, show others how to put their feet there. When you are glad, tell others how you were made glad, and the same cordial which cheered you may cheer them likewise. “Comfort, oh comfort my people.”

14. Now why do we not enjoy this a little more? I believe one reason is because most of us are rather too proud to tread in our Master’s footsteps. We like not to say with him, “I am not come to be ministered to, but to minister.” “Comfort, oh comfort my people” is a sublime admonition, but surely never intended for the meagre sympathy of fashion,—for a lady who can ride in her carriage, and send her card up, when she calls to enquire for a friend, who is sick; but if I were to press home the duty, and tell her that “my people” includes the poorest of God’s flock, the weakest and the lowliest, she would think of me as rude and vulgar young man unacquainted with the etiquette of genteel society. Comfort the poor!—why should she? “The lower classes expect a great deal too much from the upper, I shall not demean myself by stooping to them.” Many professing Christians have this kind of feeling, they talk with a fine lisp, they deem it enough to say, “Poor creature, I pity your case, I am sorry for you!” But the heir of heaven reads, “Comfort, oh comfort my people.” There is a poor man in the streets who has just come begging a crust at your door, and you can see by what he says, that there is something of God’s grace in his heart; then comfort him. There is another up the creaking staircase in that back alley; you never went up there, you might be afraid to go; but if you hear of a child of God there, do not shrink back. God’s diamonds may be often found among heaps of rags and tatters, in the very outskirts of the city, the abodes of haggard poverty; so go after them. Whenever you hear of a child of God, go and look for him; for this command, “Comfort, oh comfort my people,” never ought to be put aside by our pride. Why, you go to your churches and chapels, sometimes, and sit in your pews, without even a thought of speaking to your neighbours. Some men will go to a chapel seven years, and scarcely know the name of the next seat holder. Is that right? Many will sit at the Lord’s table too, and not speak to each other. But that is not the fashion of communion as I understand it: it is not the fashion of the gospel either. When I was only a youth, the smallest boy almost that ever joined a church, I remember I thought that everyone believed what he said, and when I heard the minister say brother, I thought I must be his brother, for I was admitted into the church. I once sat next to a gentleman in a pew, and we received the bread and wine together; he called me “Brother,” and since I thought he meant it, I afterwards acted upon it. I had no friend in the town of Cambridge, where I was; and one day when walking, I saw this same gentleman, and I said to myself, “Well now, he called me brother; I know he is a great deal better off than I am, but I do not care about that; I will go and speak to him.” So I went and said, “How do you do, brother?” “I have not the pleasure of knowing you,” was his reply. I said “I sat next to you at the Lord’s table last Sunday, sir, and you called me ‘brother’ when you passed the cup to me, and I was sure you meant it.” “There now,” he said, “it is worth while seeing someone who believes a little with sincerity in these times, come in with me.” And we have been the nearest and dearest bosom friends ever since, just because he saw I took him at his word, that he meant what he said. But nowadays profession has become a pretence and a sham; people sit down at the church together, as though they were brothers, the minister calls you brothers, but he will not speak to you, or own you as such; his people are his brothers, no doubt, but then it is in such a mysterious sense, that you will have to read some German theologian in order to comprehend it. That person is “your very dear brother,” or “your very dear sister,” but if you are in distress, go to them and see if they will assist you. I do not believe in such a religion as that. I would have those who profess to be brothers, believe that “Comfort, oh comfort my people,” applies to every member of Christ’s church, and that they all ought to carry it out to the utmost of their abilities.

15. II. Secondly, WHAT ARE THE REASONS FOR THIS COMMAND? Why does God say “Comfort, oh comfort my people?”

16. The first reason is because God loves to see his people look happy. The Roman Catholic supposes that God is pleased with a man if he whips himself, walks barefoot for many miles, and torments his body. I am certain if I were to see anyone do that, I would say “Poor soul, give him a pair of shoes; do take that whip from him, I cannot bear to see him so.” And since I believe that God is infinitely more benevolent than I am, I cannot suppose that he would take pleasure in seeing blood run down a man’s back, or blisters rising on his feet. If a man wishes to please God he had better make himself as happy as he can. When I am by the seaside, and the tide is coming in, I see what appears to be a little fringe, looking almost like a mist; and I ask a fisherman what it is. He tells me there is no mist there; and that what I see are all little shrimps dancing in ecstasy, throwing themselves in convulsions and contortions of delight. I think within myself, “Does God make those creatures happy, and did he make me to be miserable? Can it ever be a religious thing to be unhappy?” No; true religion is in harmony with the whole world; it is in harmony with the sun and moon and stars; and the sun shines and the stars twinkle; it is in harmony with all the world; and the world has flowers in it and leaping hills, and carolling birds; it has joys in it; so I believe religion was meant to have joys in it; and I hold it to be an irreligious thing to go moping miserably through God’s creation. You cannot help it sometimes, just as sins will overtake you, but happiness is a very virtue. “Go your way, eat your bread with joy and drink your wine with a merry heart, for God now accepts your works,” which does not mean so much eating and drinking, but rather living with a joyous countenance, and walking before God, believing in his love, and rejoicing in his grace.

17. Again, “Comfort, oh comfort my people;” because uncomfortable Christians often dishonour religion. Look at my friend who is come here tonight with such a sorrowful countenance. Yesterday, he had a new servant in his house, and when she went down into the kitchen she said to her fellow servant, “Is not our master a pious man?” “Yes, surely.” “I thought so because he looks so miserable.” Now that is a disgrace to religion. Whenever a Christian man sinks under affliction; when he does not seek grace from God to battle manfully with his sea of troubles; when he does not ask his Father to give him a great weight of consolation by which he shall be able to endure in the evil day, we may say he does dishonour to the high, and mighty, and noble principles of Christianity, which are designed to bear a man up in times of the very deepest affliction. It is the boast of the gospel that it lifts men above trouble; it is one of the glories of our Christianity, that it makes us say, “Although the fig tree shall not blossom, neither shall fruit be in the vine, the labour of the olive shall fail, and the fields shall yield no grain, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will joy in the God of my salvation.” But when the Christian gets sad and miserable, run to him, brother, wipe that tear from his eye, tell him to cheer up, or at least if he is sad, not to let the world see it; if he fasts, let him anoint his head, and wash his face, that he does not appear to men to fast. Let his garments be always white, and let his head lack no oil; let him be happy; for by so doing he gives credit to religion.

18. Again, “Comfort, oh comfort my people;” because a Christian in an uncomfortable state cannot do very much work for God. Break a poor man’s heart and let him come on this platform with a grieved and agonizing spirit, and oh! what a lack of power there will be in him! He needs all his time for his own sighs and groans, and will have no time to spend on God’s people. We have seen brokenhearted ministers who have sadly lamented that when in trouble, they have found themselves unable to declare God’s truth as they could wish. When the mind is happy, then it can be laborious. Nothing harms the man while he can keep a good account with heaven, and feel it is so; while he can say that God is his own God, he can work night and day, and scarcely feel fatigued. But take away his comforts and his joys, and then one day’s labour distracts his nerves and shatters all his mind. Then comfort God’s people, because bruised reeds give little music, and the smoking flax makes little fire. “Comfort, oh comfort” the saints, for they will work ten times better when their minds have once been made comfortable.

19. Again; “Comfort” God’s people, because you profess to love them. You call that poor aged cripple, limping home tonight, leaning on her crutch, your sister, do you know that she will go to bed tonight without supper? Only once has she tasted food today, and that was dry bread; do you know that? and is she your sister? Let your heart speak: would you allow your sister to eat dry bread once a day, and have nothing else? No; out of love to her as your relative, you would go and comfort her. There is another poor brother who will pass you on the road home, not poor in bodily things, but poor in soul, distressed in spirits. Do not do as that person has just done—he has quickened his pace, because he says that old man makes him miserable, and it makes him melancholy to talk with him. No; just go to him and say, “Brother, I hear you are in the valley of Baca; well, it is written, they who pass through the valley of Baca make it a well, the rain also fills the pools.” Join him, for it is written, “Comfort, oh comfort my people.” “No, sir,” you say, “I intend to go tonight with one or two very good people, and we shall enjoy ourselves together, and be very glad tonight.” Yes, but if they are glad you cannot comfort them, so go and find some brokenhearted one if you can, some poor, sad, mourning one, and say, “The Lord has appeared to you of old, saying, ‘I have loved you with an everlasting love.’ God’s mercies have not failed and, therefore, we are not consumed.” Go and cheer him. What! are there no families near you where the head has recently been removed by death? Have you no bereaved friends? have you no poor in your streets, no distressed, no desponding ones? If you have not, then that Scripture might be ripped out of the Bible, for it would be useless; but because I am sure you have such, I bid you, in God Almighty’s name, to go and look for the needy, the distressed, and the poor, and send them portions of food. “Comfort, oh comfort my people.”

20. III. In the last place, God never gives his children a duty to do without giving them THE MEANS TO DO IT; he never bids them make bricks without straw, and when he tells us to comfort God’s people, we may be certain there are many means by which they may be comforted. Let me just hint at those things in the everlasting gospel which have a tendency to comfort the saints. What, child of God! Are you at a loss for a topic to comfort the aching heart? Listen, then; go tell of the ancient things of former days; whisper in the mourner’s ear electing grace, and redeeming mercy, and dying love. When you find a troubled one, tell him about the covenant, in all things ordered well, signed, sealed, and ratified; tell him what the Lord has done in former days, how he cut Rahab and wounded the dragon; tell him the wondrous story of God’s dealings with his people. Tell him that God who divided the Red Sea can make a highway for his people through the deep waters of affliction; that he who appeared in the burning bush which was not consumed, will support him in the furnace of tribulation. Tell him about the marvellous things which God has done for his chosen people: surely there is enough there to comfort him. Tell him that God watches the furnace just as the goldsmith the refining pot.

Your days of trial then, Are all ordained by heaven; If he appoint the number ‘ten,’ You ne’er shall have eleven.

If that does not suffice, tell him of his present mercies; tell him that he has much left though much is gone. Tell him there is “now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus;” tell him that now he is accepted in the beloved, tell him that he is now adopted, and that his standing is safe. Tell him that Jesus is above, wearing the breastplate, or pleading his cause. Tell him that though earth’s pillars shake, God is a refuge for us; tell the mourner that the everlasting God does not fail, neither is weary. Let present facts suffice you to cheer him.

21. But if this is not enough, tell him about the future; whisper to him that there is heaven with pearly gates and golden streets; tell him that

A few more rolling suns at most, Will land him on fair Canaan’s coast.

and therefore he may bear his sorrows well. Tell him that Christ is coming, and that his sign is in the heavens, his advent is near, he will soon appear to judge the earth with equity, and his people in righteousness. And if that does not suffice, tell him all about that God who lived and died. Take him to Calvary; picture for him the bleeding hands, and side, and feet; tell him about the thorn crowned King of grief; tell him about the mighty Monarch of woe and blood, who wore the scarlet of mockery which was yet the purple of the empire of grief; tell him that he himself bore our sins in his own body on the tree. And if I have not said enough, go to your Bible, read its pages, bend your knee and ask for guidance, and then tell him some great and precious promise, so that you may accomplish your mission, and comfort one of God’s people.

22. I have only a few words to say to some, who I grieve to think have no comfort. They need something else before they can be comforted. Some of my hearers are not God’s people; they have never believed in Christ, nor fled to him for refuge. Now I will tell you briefly and plainly the way of salvation. Sinner! know that you are in God’s sight guilty, that God is just and that he will punish you, for your sins. Listen, then: there is only one way you can escape and it is this: Christ must be your substitute. Either you must die, or Christ must die for you. Your only refuge is faith in Jesus Christ, by which you shall be assured that Christ did really and actually shed his blood for you. And if you are able to believe that Christ died for you, I know it will cause you to hate sin, to seek for Christ, and to love and serve him world without end. May God bless us all, forgive us our sins, and accept our souls for Jesus’ sake!

Spurgeon Sermons

These sermons from Charles Spurgeon are a series that is for reference and not necessarily a position of Answers in Genesis. Spurgeon did not entirely agree with six days of creation and dives into subjects that are beyond the AiG focus (e.g., Calvinism vs. Arminianism, modes of baptism, etc.) Terms of Use Modernized Edition of Spurgeon’s Sermons. Copyright © 2010, Larry and Marion Pierce, Winterbourne, Ontario, Canada. Used by Answers in Genesis by permission of the copyright owner. The modernized edition of the material published in these sermons may not be reproduced or distributed by any electronic means without express written permission of the copyright owner. A limited license is hereby granted for the non-commercial printing and distribution of the material in hard copy form, provided this is done without charge to the recipient and the copyright information remains intact. Any charge or cost for distribution of the material is expressly forbidden under the terms of this limited license and automatically voids such permission. You may not prepare, manufacture, copy, use, promote, distribute, or sell a derivative work of the copyrighted work without the express written permission of the copyright owner.

Footnotes 1.On Sunday morning, October, 19, 1856, Spurgeon was to preach to for the first time at Surrey Gardens Music Hall. The building had seating for over ten thousand people and was the one of the largest auditoriums in England at that time. The young preacher arrived early at the Hall and was amazed to see the streets and garden area thronged with people. When the doors were opened, the people entered quickly and soon the place was full. Wisely, Spurgeon started the service earlier than the time announced. He led in prayer and then announced a hymn, which the large congregation sang reverently. He then read scripture and commented on it, and this was followed by a pastoral prayer. As he was praying, voices began to shout “Fire! Fire! The galleries are giving way! The place is falling!” Spurgeon stopped praying and did his best to calm the people, but the damage had been done. In the stampede that followed, seven people were killed and twenty-eight injured. Spurgeon tried to preach, hoping that that would arrest the crowd, but the tumult and the shouting were even too much for the prince of preachers. He then asked the people to sing a hymn as they exited in an orderly manner, and he himself left in a state of shock. He spent the next week in a broken condition, wondering if he would ever preach again. Back 2.Damask: A rich silk fabric woven with elaborate designs and figures, often of a variety of colours. OED. Back - See more at: http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/08/31/comfort-proclaimed#sthash.4bqlbz4D.dpuf

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