Comfort For The Desponding by C. H. Spurgeon

 

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, November 25, 1855, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At New Park Street Chapel, Southwark.

Oh that I were as in months past. (Job 29:2)

1. For the most part the gracious Shepherd leads his people beside the still waters, and makes them to lie down in green pastures; but at times they wander through a wilderness, where there is no water, and they find no city to dwell in. Hungry and thirsty, their soul faints within them, and they cry to the Lord in their trouble. Though many of his people live in almost constant joy, and find that religion’s ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace, yet there are many who pass through fire and through water: men do ride over their heads,—they endure all manner of trouble and sorrow. The duty of the minister is to preach to different characters. Sometimes we admonish the confident, lest they should become presumptuous; oftentimes we stir up the slumbering, lest they should sleep the sleep of death. Frequently we comfort the desponding, and this is our duty this morning—or if not to comfort them, yet to give them some exhortation which may by God’s help be the means of bringing them out of the sad condition into which they have fallen, so that they may not be obliged to cry out for ever—“Oh that I were as in months past!”

2. At once to the subject. A complaint; its cause and cure; and then to close up with an exhortation to stir up your pure minds, if you are in such a position.

3. I. First, there is a COMPLAINT. How many a Christian looks on the past with pleasure, on the future with dread, and on the present with sorrow! There are many who look back upon the days that they have passed in the fear of the Lord as being the sweetest and the best they have ever had, but as to the present, it is clad in a sable garb of gloom and dreariness. They could wish for their young days over again, that they might live near to Jesus, for now they feel that they have wandered from him, or that he has hidden his face from them, and they cry out, “Oh that I were as in months past!”

4. 1. Let us take distinct cases one by one. The first is the case of a man who has lost the brightness of his evidences, and is crying out, “Oh that I were as in months past!” Hear his soliloquy:—“Oh that my past days could be recalled! Then I had no doubt of my salvation. If any man had asked for the reason of the hope that was in me, I could have answered with meekness and with fear. No doubt distressed me, no fear harassed me; I could say with Paul, ‘I know whom I have believed,’ and with Job, ‘I know that my Redeemer lives;’

My steady soul did fear no more
Than solid rocks when billows roar.

I felt myself to be standing on the rock Christ Jesus. I said—

Let cares like a wild deluge come,
And storms of sorrow fall;
Sure I shall safely reach my home,
My God, my heaven, my all.

But ah! how changed it is now! Where there was no cloud it is all cloud; where I could read ‘my title clear,’ I tremble to read my damnation quite as clearly. I hoped that I trusted in Christ; but now the dark thought rises up, that I was a hypocrite, and had deceived myself and others. The most I can attain to, is—‘I think I will hope in him still; and if I may not be refreshed with the light of his countenance, still in the shadow of his wings will I trust.’ I feel that if I depart from him there is no other Saviour; but oh! what thick darkness surrounds me! Like Paul of old, there have been days and nights when neither sun, nor moon nor stars have appeared. I have lost my roll in the Arbour of Ease; I cannot now take it out of my breast pocket, and read it to console me on my journey; but I fear that when I get to the end of the way they will deny me entrance, because I did not come in by the door to receive his grace and know his love, but have been deceived. I have taken carnal fancies for the workings of the Spirit, and have imputed what was only natural conviction to the work by God the Holy Ghost.”

5. This is one phase, and a very common one. You will meet many who are crying out like that—“Oh that I were as in months past!”

6. 2. Another phase of this great complaint, which it also very frequently assumes, is one under which we are lamenting—not so much because our evidences are withered as because we do not enjoy a perpetual peace of mind as to other matters. “Oh” says one, “Oh that I were as in months past; for then whatever troubles and trials came upon me, were less than nothing. I had learned to sing—

Father, I wait your daily will;
You shall divide my portion still;
Give me on earth what seems thee best,
Until death and heaven reveal the rest.

I felt that I could give up everything to him; that if he had taken away every mercy I could have said—

Yes, if you take them all away,
Yet will I not repine;
Before they were possessed by me,
They were entirely thine.

I knew no fear for the future. Like a child on its mother’s breast I slept securely; I said, ‘Jehovahjireh, my God will provide;’ I put my business into his hands; I went to my daily labour; like the little bird that wakes up in the morning, and does not know where its breakfast is to come from, but sits on the twig, singing—

Mortal, cease from toil and sorrow,
God provides for the morrow;

so was I. I could have trusted him with my very life, with wife, with children, with everything; I could give all into his hands, and say each morning, ‘Lord, I do not have a will of my own, or if I have one, still, your will be done; your wish shall be my wish; your desire shall be my desire.’ But ‘oh that I were as in months past!’ How changed am I now! I begin fretting about my business; and if I lose now only a five pound note, I am worried incessantly, whereas, if it were a thousand before, I could have thanked the God who took it away as easily as I could the God that gave it to me. Now the least thing disturbs me. The least shadow of a doubt as to some calamity that may befall me, rests on my soul like a thick cloud. I am perpetually self-willed, desiring always to have just what I wish. I cannot say I can resign all into his hands; there is a certain something I could not give up. Twined around my heart there is an evil plant called self-love. It has twisted its roots within the very nerves and sinews of my soul. There is something I love above my God. I cannot give up all now. But ‘oh that I were as in months past!’ For then my mercies were real mercies, because they were God’s mercies.” “Oh,” says he, “"that I were as in months past!" I would not have had to bear such trouble as I have now; for though the burden might have pressed heavily, I would have cast it on the Lord. Oh! that I knew the heavenly science of taking the burdens off my own shoulders, and laying them on the Rock that supports them all! Oh! if I knew how to pour out my griefs and sorrows as I once did! I have been a fool, an arrant fool, a very fool, that I should have run away from that sweet confidence I once had in the Saviour! I used to go then to his ear, and tell him all my griefs.

My sorrows and my griefs I poured
Into the bosom of my God;
He helped me in the trying hour,
He helped me bear the heavy load.

But now, I foolishly carry them myself, and bear them in my own heart. Ah!

‘What peaceful hours I then enjoyed!’

Oh that they would return to me.”

7. 3. Another individual perhaps is speaking thus concerning his enjoyment in the house of God and the means of grace. “Oh,” says one, “in months past, when I went up to the house of God, how sweetly did I hear! Why, I sat with my ears open, to catch the words, as if it was an angel speaking; and when I listened, how at times did the tears come rolling down my cheeks! and how my eyes did flash, when some brilliant utterance, full of joy to the Christian, aroused my soul! Oh! how I awoke on the Sunday morning, and sing,

Welcome, sweet day of rest,
That saw the Lord arise;
Welcome to this reviving breast,
And these rejoicing eyes!

And when they sang in the house of God, whose voice was as loud as mine. When I retired from worship, it was with a light tread; I went to tell my friends and my neighbours what glorious news I had heard in the sanctuary. Those were sweet Sabbaths. And when the prayer meetings came around, how enthused I was to be found in my place! and the prayers were prayers indeed to my spirit; whoever I heard preach, provided it was the gospel, how did my soul did feed and fatten under it! for I sat at a very banquet of joy. When I read the Scriptures they were always illuminated, and glory gilded the sacred page, whenever I turned it over. When I bent my knee in prayer, I could pour my soul out before God, and I loved the exercise; I felt that I could not be happy unless I spent my time upon my knees; I loved my God, and my God loved me. But oh! how changed now! ‘Oh that I were as in months past!’ I go up to God’s house; it is the same voice that speaks, the same man I love so much, still addresses me; but I have no tears to shed now; my heart has become hardened even under his ministry; I have few emotions of joy; I enter the house of God as a boy goes to school, without much love to it, and I go away without having my soul stirred. When I kneel down in secret prayer, the wheels are taken off my chariot, and it drags very heavily; when I strive to sing, all I can say is, ‘I would but cannot.’ ‘Oh that I were as in months past!’ when the candle of the Lord shone around about me!”

8. I trust there are not many of you who can join in this; for I know you love to come up to the house of God. I love to preach to a people who feel the word, who give signs of assent to it—men and women who can afford a tear now and then in a sermon—people whose blood seems to boil within them when they hear the gospel. I do not think you understand much of the phase I am describing; but still you may understand a little about it. The word may not be quite as sweet and pleasant to you as it used to be; and then you may cry out—“Oh that I were as in months past!”

9. 4. But I will tell you one point which perhaps may escape you. There are some of us who lament extremely that our conscience is not as tender as it used to be; and therefore our soul cries in bitterness, “Oh that I were as in months past!” “When first I knew the Lord,” you say, “I was almost afraid to put one foot before another, lest I should go astray; I always looked before I leaped; if there were a suspicion of sin about anything, I faithfully avoided it; if there were the slightest trace of the trail of the serpent on it, I turned from it at once; people called me a Puritan; I watched everything; I was afraid to speak, and some practices that were really allowable I utterly condemned; my conscience was so tender, I was like a sensitive plant; if touched by the hand of sin, my leaves curled up in a moment; I could not bear to be touched I was so tender; I was covered all over with wounds, and if any one brushed against me I cried out; I was afraid to do anything, lest I should sin against God. If I heard an oath, my bones shook within me; if I saw a man break the Sabbath, I trembled and was afraid; wherever I went, the least whisper of sin startled me; it was like the voice of a demon when I heard a temptation, and I said with violence, ‘Get you behind me, Satan,’ I could not endure sin; I ran away from it as from a serpent; I could not taste a drop of it. But ‘Oh that I were as in months past.’ It is true, I have not forsaken his ways; I have not quite forgotten his law; it is true, I have not disgraced my character, I have not openly sinned before men, and no one but God knows my sin; but oh! my conscience is not what it once was. It thundered once, but it does not now. Oh conscience! conscience! you are gone too much to sleep; I have drugged you with laudanum,1 and you are slumbering, when you ought to be speaking! You are a watchman; but you do not tell the hours of the night as you once did. Oh conscience! sometimes I heard your rattle in my ears, and it startled me; now you sleep, and I go on to sin. It is only a little I have done; still, that little shows the way. Straws tell which way the wind blows; and I feel that my having committed one little sin, evidences in what way my soul is inclined. Oh! that I had a tender conscience again! Oh! that I had not this rhinoceros conscience, which is covered over with tough hide, through which the bullets of the law cannot pierce! Oh! that I had a conscience such as I used to have! "Oh that I were as in months past!"”

10. 5. One more form of this sad condition. There are some of us, dearly beloved, who have not as much zeal for the glory of God and the salvation of men as we used to have. Months ago, if we saw a soul going to destruction, our eyes were filled with tears in a moment; if we only saw a man inclined to sin, we rushed before him with tears in our eyes, and wished to sacrifice ourselves to save him; we could not walk the street, except we must be giving someone a tract, or reproving someone; we thought we must be for ever speaking of the Lord Jesus; if there would be any good to be done, we were always first and foremost in it: we desired by all means to save some, and we did think at that time that we could give up ourselves to death, if we might only snatch a soul from hell. So deep, so ardent was our love for our fellowmen, that for the love we bore Christ’s name, we would have been content to be scoffed at, hissed at, and persecuted by the whole world, if we could have done any good in it. Our soul was burning with intense longing for souls, and we considered all other things to be base and worthless. But ah! now souls may be damned, and there is not a tear; sinners may sink into the scalding pit of hell, and not a groan; thousands may be swept away each day, and sink into bottomless woe, and yet not an emotion. We can preach without tears; we can pray for them without our hearts. We can speak to them without feeling their necessities; we pass by the haunts of infamy—we wish the inmates were better, and that is all. Even our compassion has died out. Once we stood near the brink of hell, and we thought each day that we heard the yellings and howlings of the doomed spirits ringing in our ears; and then we said, “Oh God, help me to save my fellowmen from going down to the pit!” But now we forget it all. We have little love to men; we have not half the zeal and energy we once had. Oh! if that is your state, dearly beloved; if you can join in that, as your poor minister, alas! can do in some measure, then may we well say, “Oh that I were as in months past!”

11. II. But now we are about to take these different characters, and tell you the CAUSE AND CURE.

12. 1. One of the causes of this mournful state of things is defect in prayer; and of course the cure lies somewhere next door to the cause. You are saying, “Oh that I were as in months past!” Come, my brother; we are going into the very root of the matter. One reason why it is not with you as in months past is this: you do not pray as you once did. Nothing brings such leanness into a man’s soul as lack of prayer. It is well said that a neglected closet is the birthplace of all evil. All good is born in the closet, all good springs from it; there the Christian gets it; but if he neglects his closet, then all evil comes from it. No man can progress in grace if he forsakes his closet. I do not care how strong he may be in faith. It is said that fat men may for a time live on the flesh they have acquired; but there is not a Christian so full of flesh that he can live on old grace. If he waxes fat he kicks, but he cannot live upon his fat. (Deut 32:15) Those who are strong and mighty in themselves cannot exist without prayer. If a man should have the spiritual might of fifty of God’s choicest Christians in himself, he must die, if he did not continue to pray. My brother, can you not look back and say, “Three or four months ago my prayers were more regular, more constant, more earnest than they are now; but now they are feeble, they are not sincere, they are not fervent, they are not earnest?” Oh brother, do not ask anyone what is the cause of your grief; it is as plain as possible; you need not ask a question about it. There is the cause. And where is the remedy? Why, in more prayer, beloved. It was little prayer that brought you down; it is great prayer that will lift you up. It was lack of prayer that brought you into poverty; it must be increase of prayer that will bring you into riches again. Where no oxen are the crib is clean. There is nothing for men to eat where there are no oxen to plough; and where there are no prayers to plough the soil, you have little to feed upon. We must be more earnest in prayer. Oh! beloved, might not the beam out of the wall cry against us? Our dusty closets might bear witness to our neglect of secret devotion; and that is the reason why it is not with us as in months past. My friends: if you were to compare the Christian to a steam engine, you must make his prayers, fed by the Holy Spirit, to be the very fire which sustains his motion. Prayer is God’s chosen vehicle of grace, and he is unwise who neglects it. Let me be doubly serious on this matter, and let me give a home thrust to some. Dear friend, do you mean what you say, and do you believe what you say—that neglect of prayer will bring your soul into a most hazardous condition? If so, I will say no more to you; for you will easily guess the remedy for your lamentable cry, “Oh that I were as in months past!” A certain merchant wishes that he was as rich as he used to be:—he was accustomed to send his ships over to the gold country, to bring him home cargoes of gold, but never a ship has been out of port lately, and therefore can he wonder that he has had no cargo of gold? So when a man prays he sends a ship to heaven, and it comes back laden with gold; but if he stops his supplications, then his ship is weather bound and stays at home, and no wonder he becomes a poor man.

13. 2. Perhaps, again, you are saying, “Oh that I were as in months past!” not so much from your own fault as from the fault of your minister. There is such a thing, my dear friends, as our getting into a terribly bad condition through the ministry that we attend. Can it be expected that men should grow in grace when they are never watered with the streams that make glad the city of our God? Can they be supposed to wax strong in the Lord Jesus, when they do not feed on spiritual food? We know some who grumble, Sunday after Sunday, and say they cannot hear such and such a minister. Why do you not buy an ear trumpet (hearing aide) then? Ah! but I mean, that I cannot hear him to my soul’s profit. Then do not go to hear him, if you have tried for a long while and do not get any profit. I always think that a man who grumbles as he goes out of chapel ought not to be pitied, but whipped, for he can stay away if he likes, and go where he will be pleased. There are plenty of places where the sheep may feed in their own manner; and every one is bound to go where he gets the pasture most suited to his soul. But you are not bound to run away immediately when your minister dies, as many of you did before you came here. You should not run away from the ship as soon as the storm comes, and the captain is gone, and you find her not exactly seaworthy; stand by her, begin caulking her, God will send you a captain, there will be fine weather by and by, and all will be right. But very frequently a bad minister starves God’s people into walking skeletons, so that you can count all their bones; and who wonders that they starve out their minister, when they get no food and no nutriment from his ministry! This is a second reason why men frequently cry out, “Oh that I were as in months past!”

14. 3. But there is a better reason still, that will strike home to some of you. It is not so much the poorness of the food, as the seldomness that you come to eat it. You know, my dear friends, we find every now and then that there is a man who came twice a day to the house of God on the Sunday. On the Monday night he was busy at work; but his apron was rolled up, and if he could not be present all the while, he would come in at the end. On the Thursday evening he would, if possible, come to the sanctuary, to hear a sermon from some gospel minister, and would sit up late at night and get up early in the morning, to make up the time he had spent in these religious exercises. But by and by he thought, “I am too overworked; this is tiring; it is too far to walk.” And so he gives up first one service, and then another, and then begins to cry out, “Oh that I were as in months past!” Why, brethren you need not wonder about this. The man does not eat as much as he used to. Little and often is the way children should be fed, though I have given you a great deal this morning. Still, little and often is a very good rule. I do think, when people give up weekday services, unless it is utterly impractical for them to attend them, farewell to religion. “Farewell to practical godliness,” says Whitfield, “when men do not worship God on the weekday!” Weekday services are frequently the cream of all. God gives his people pails full of milk on the Sunday, but he often skims off the cream for the weekday. If they stay away, is it any wonder that they have to say, “Oh, that I were as in months past!” I do not blame you, beloved; I only wish to “stir up your pure minds by way of remembrance.” A very plain fellow that is—is he not? Yes, he always tells you what he means, and always intends to do so. Stand by your colours, my men! Keep close to the standard if you wish to win the battle! And when there seems to be the slightest defection, it is simply our duty to exhort you, lest by any measure you depart from the soundness of your faith.

15. 4. But frequently this complaint arises from idolatry. Many have given their hearts to something else except God, and have set their affections upon the things of earth, instead of the things in heaven. It is hard to love the world and love Christ too; it is impossible. But it is hard not to love the creature; it is hard not to give yourself to earth; I had almost said, it is impossible not to do that; it is difficult, and only God can enable us; he alone can keep us with our hearts fully set on him. But mark whenever we make a golden calf to worship, sooner or latter it will come to this,—we shall get our golden calf ground up and put into our water for us to drink, and then we shall have to say, “He has made me drunken with wormwood.” Never a man makes an idol for himself to worship but it tumbles down on him and breaks some of his bones. There was never a man yet who went to drink from cisterns, but instead of water he found loathsome creatures there, and was bitterly deceived. God will have his people live on him, and on nothing else, and if they live on anything else but him he will take care to give them from the waters of Mara, to embitter their drink, and drive them to the Rock of purest streams. Oh, beloved, let us take care that our hearts are wholly his, only Christ’s, solely Christ’s! If they are so, we shall not have to cry out, “Oh that I were as in months past!”

16. 5. We scarcely need, however, list any more reasons. We will only add one more, and that is the most common one of all. We have, perhaps, become self-confident and self-righteous. If so, that is a reason why it is not with us as in months past. Ah! my friends, that old rascal self-righteousness, you will never get rid of him as long as you live. The devil was well pictured under the form of a serpent, because a serpent can creep in anywhere, through the smallest crevice. Self-righteousness is a serpent; for it will enter anywhere. If you try to serve your God, “What a fine fellow you are,” says the devil. “Ah! do you not serve your God well? You are always preaching. You are a noble fellow.” If you go to a prayer meeting, God gives you a little gift, and you are able to pour out your heart. Presently there is a pat on the back from Satan. “Did not you pray sweetly? I know the brethren will love you; you are growing in grace very much.” If a temptation comes, and you are able to resist it, “Ah!” says he at once, “you are a true soldier of the cross; look at the enemy you have knocked down; you will have a bright crown by and by; you are a brave fellow!” You go on trusting God implicitly; Satan then says, your faith is very strong: no trial can overcome you: there is a weak brother, he is not half as strong as you are! Away you go, and scold your weak brother, because he is not as big as you; and all the while Satan is cheering you on, and saying, “What a mighty warrior you are! so faithful—always trusting in God; you do not have any self-righteousness.” The minister preaches to the Pharisee: but the Pharisee is not fifty-ninth cousin to you; you are not at all self-righteous in your own opinion, and all the while you are the most self-righteous creature in existence. Ah! beloved, just when we think ourselves humble we are sure to be proud; and when we are groaning over our pride we are generally the most humble. You may just read your own estimate backwards. Just when we imagine we are the worst, we are often the best; and when we conceive ourselves the best, we are often the worst. It is that vile self-righteousness who creeps into our souls, and makes us murmur, “Oh that I were as in months past!” Your candle has gotten the snuff of self-righteousness upon it; you need to have that taken away, and then you will burn all right. You are soaring too high; you require something that will bring you down again to the feet of the Saviour, as a poor lost and guilty sinner—nothing at all; then you will not cry any longer, “Oh that I were as in months past!”

17. III. And now, the closing up is to be an EXHORTATION.

18. An exhortation, first of all, to consolation. One is saying, “Oh! I shall never be in a more unhappy state than I am in now; I have lost the light of his countenance; he has completely gone away from me, and I shall perish.” You remember in John Bunyan’s “Pilgrim’s Progress,” the description of the man shut up in the iron cage. One says to him, “Will you never come out of this cage?” “No, never.” “Are you condemned for ever?” “Yes, I am.” “Why was this?” “Why I grieved the Spirit, and he is gone; I once thought I loved him, but I have treated him lightly, and he has departed. I went from the paths of righteousness, and now I am locked up here, and cannot get out.” Yes, but John Bunyan does not tell you that the man never did get out. There have been some in that iron cage that have come out. There may be one here this morning, who has been for a long while sitting in that iron cage, rattling the bars, trying to break them, trying to file them through with his own little might and strength. Oh! dear friend, you will never file through the iron bars of that terrible cage; you will never escape by yourself. What must you do? You must begin to sing like the bird in the cage does; then the kind master will come and let you out. Cry to him to deliver you; and though you cry and shout, and he shuts out your prayer, he will hear you by and by; and like Jonah you shall exclaim in days to come, “Out of the belly of hell I cried to the Lord, and he heard me.” You will find the roll under the settle, although you have dropped it down the Hill of Difficulty; and when you have it you will put it in your bosom again, and hold it all the more tightly, because you have lost it for a short while.

Return, oh wanderer, return,
And seek an injured Father’s face;
Those warm desires that in you burn,
Were kindled by reclaiming grace.

19. And now another exhortation, not so much to console you as to stir you up more and more to seek to be what you ought to be. Oh Christian men and women, my brothers and sisters in the faith of Jesus Christ! How many are there of you who are content just to be saved, and merely to enter heaven? How many do we find who are saying, “Oh! if I can only just get in at the door—if I can simply be a child of God!” and they carry out their desires literally; for they are as little Christian as they can possibly be. They desire moderation in religion! But what is moderation in religion? It is a lie; it is a farce. Does a wife ask her husband to be moderately loving? Does a parent expect his child to be moderately obedient? Do you seek to have your employees moderately honest? No! Then how can you talk about being moderately religious? To be moderately religious is to be irreligious. To have a religion that does not enter into the very heart and influence the life, is virtually to have no religion at all. I tremble sometimes, when I think of some of you who are mere professors. You are content—you whitewashed sepulchres; you rest satisfied because you are beautifully whitened, without looking at the charnel house2 beneath. How many of you make clean the outside of the cup and platter; and because the church can lay nothing to your charge, and the world cannot accuse you, you think the outside of the cup will be sufficient. Take heed! take heed! The judge will look at the inside of the cup and platter one day; and if it is full of wickedness he will break that platter, and the fragments shall for ever be cast about in the pit of torment. Oh! may God make you to be real Christians! Waxen winged professors! you can fly very well here; but when like Icarus,3 you fly upwards, the mighty sun of Jesus shall melt your wings, and you shall fall into the pit of destruction. Ah! gilded Christians, beautifully painted, varnished, polished, what will you do when you shall be found at last to have been worthless metal? When the wood, hay, and stubble shall be burned and consumed, what will you do if you are not the genuine coin of heaven, if you have not been molten in the furnace, if you have not been minted from on high? If you are not real gold, how shall you stand the fire in that “great and terrible day of the Lord?” Ah! and there are some of you who can stand the fire, I trust. You are the children of God; but, beloved, do I charge you wrongfully when I say, that many of us know that we are the children of God, but we are content to be as little dwarf children; we are always crying out, “Oh that I were as in months past!” That is a mark of dwarfishness. If we are to do great things in the world we must not often utter this cry. We must often be singing

I the chief of sinners am;
But Jesus died for me;

and with cheerful countenance we must be able to say that we “know whom we have believed.” Do you wish to be useful? Do you desire to honour your Master? Do you long to carry a heavy crown to heaven, that you may put it on the Saviour’s head? If you do—and I know you do—then seek above all things that your soul may prosper and be in health—that your inner man may not be simply in a living state, but that you may be a tree planted by the rivers of water, bringing forth your fruit in your season, your leaf never withering, and whatever you do prospering. Ah! do you want to go to heaven, and wear a starless crown there—a crown that shall be a real crown, but that shall have no star upon it, because no soul has been saved by you? Do you wish to sit in heaven with a dress of Christ’s on, but without one single jewel that God has given you for your wages here below? Ah! no; I think you wish to go to heaven in full dress, and to enter into the fulness of the joy of the Lord. Five talents well improved, five cities; and let no man be satisfied with his one talent merely, but let him seek to put it out at interest; “for to him that has shall be given, and he shall have abundance.”

20. And finally, to many of you what I have preached about has no interest to you whatever. Perhaps you may say, “"Oh that I were as in months past!" for then I was quite well, and a jolly fellow was I. Then I could drink with the deepest drinker anywhere. Then I could run merrily into sin; but I cannot now. I have hurt my body. I have injured my mind. It is not with me as it used to be; I have spent all my money. I wish I were as I used to be!” Ah! poor sinner, you have good reason to say, “Oh that I were as in months past!” But wait four or five months, and then you will say it more emphatically, and think that even today is better than that day; and the further you go on, the more you will wish to go back again; for the path to hell is down, down, down, down—always down—and you will be always saying, “Oh that I were as in months past!” You will look back to the time when a mother’s prayer blessed you, and a father’s reproof warned you—when you went to a Sunday School, and sat upon your mother’s knee, to hear her tell you of a Saviour; and the longer the retrospect of goodness, the more that goodness will pain you. Ah! my friends, you have need to go back, some of you. Remember how far you have fallen—how much you have departed. But oh! you need not turn back! Instead of looking back and crying, “Oh that I were as in months past!” say something different. Say, “Oh that I were a new man in Christ Jesus.” It would not do for you to begin again in your present state; you would soon be as bad as you now are; but say, “Oh that I were a new man in Christ Jesus; oh that I might begin a new life!” Some of you would like to begin a new life—some of you reprobates, who have gone far away! Well, poor mortal, you may. “How?” do you say. Why, if you are a new man in Christ Jesus you will begin again. A Christian is as much a new man as if he had been no man at all before; the old creature is dethroned, he is a new creature, born again, and starting on a new existence. Poor soul! God can make you a new man. God the Holy Spirit can build a new house out of you, with neither stick nor stone of the old man in it; and he can give you a new heart, a new spirit, new pleasures new happiness, new prospects, and at last give you a new heaven. “But,” says one “I feel that I want these things; but may I have them?” Guess whether you may have them, when I tell you—“This is a faithful saying, and worthy of all acceptation, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners.” It does not say it is worthy of some acceptation, but it is worthy of all the acceptation you will ever give it. If you now say, “Jesus came into the world to save sinners; I believe he did! I know he did; he came to save me,” you will find it “worthy of all acceptation.” You say still, “But will he save me?” I will give you another passage: “Whoever comes to me I will in no wise cast out.” Ah! but I do not know whether I may come! “Whoever,” it says. “He who comes to me I will in no wise cast out.” “Whoever will, let him come,” it is written. Do you will? I only speak to such as will, who know their need of a Saviour. Do you will? Then, God the Holy Spirit says, “Whoever will, let him come, and take the water of life freely.”

The feeble, the guilty, the weak, the forlorn,
In coming to Jesus shall not meet with scorn;
But he will receive them, and bless them, and save
From death and destruction, from hell and the grave.

and he will lift them up to his kingdom of glory. God so grant it; for his name’s 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. Laudanum: In early use, a name for various preparations in which opium was the main ingredient. Now only: The simple alcoholic tincture of opium.  
  2. A house for dead bodies; a house or vault in which the bones of the dead are piled up.
  3. Icarus’ father, Daedalus, a talented craftsman, attempted to escape from his exile in Crete, where he and his son were imprisoned at the hands of King Minos, the king for whom he had built the Labyrinth to imprison the Minotaur (part man, part bull). Daedalus, the master craftsman, was exiled because he gave Minos’ daughter, Ariadne, a clew of string in order to help Theseus survive the Labyrinth. Daedalus fashioned a pair of wings out of wax and feathers for himself and his son. Before they took off from the island, Daedalus warned his son not to fly too close to the sun, nor too close to the sea. Overcome by the giddiness that flying lent him, Icarus soared through the sky curiously, but in the process he came too close to the sun, which melted the wax. Icarus kept flapping his wings but soon realized that he had no feathers left and that he was only flapping his bare arms. And so, Icarus fell into the sea in the area which bears his name, the Icarian Sea near Icaria, an island southwest of Samos.[1] Hellenistic writers who provided philosophical underpinnings to the myth also preferred more realistic variants, in which the escape from Crete was actually by boat, provided by Pasiphaë, for which Daedalus invented the first sails, to outstrip Minos’ pursuing galleys, and that Icarus fell overboard en route to Sicily and drowned. Heracles erected a tomb for him. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Icarus

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/03/17/comfort-for-desponding