David’s Dying Prayer by C. H. Spurgeon
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, April 26, 1857, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon,
At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen. (Ps 72:19)
1. There was a time when this prayer would have been unnecessary; a period, in
fact, when it could not have been offered, seeing the thing to be asked for was
already existed. There was a time when the word rebellion had not been uttered
against the great magistracy of heaven; there was a day, when the slime of sin
had never been left by the trail of the serpent, for no serpent existed then,
and no evil spirit. There was an hour, never to be forgotten, when the seraph
might have flapped his wing for ever, and never have found anything of discord,
or anything of rebellion or of anarchy throughout God’s universe; when the
mighty angels assembled in the halls of the Most High, and without exception did
reverence to their liege Lord, and paid him due homage; when the vast creation
revolved around its centre, the great metropolis, the throne of God, and paid
its daily and hourly homage to him; when the harmonies of creation always came
to one spot and found their focus near the throne of God. There was a time when
every star was bright; when all space was filled with loveliness; when holiness,
purity, and happiness, were like a robe which mantled the entire creation. This
world itself was once fair and lovely—so fair and lovely that we who live in
these erring times can scarcely imagine its beauty. It was the house of song,
and the dwelling place of praise. If it had no preeminence among its sister
spheres, certainly it was not inferior to any of them, surrounded with beauty,
girt with gladness, and having in it holy and heavenly inhabitants. It was a
house to which the angels themselves loved to resort, where the holy spirits,
the morning stars, delighted to sing together over this beautiful and fair earth
of ours. But now how is it changed! how very different! Now it is our duty
devoutly to bend our knees and pray that the whole earth may yet be filled with
his glory.
2. In one sense this prayer is still unnecessary, for in a certain sense the
whole earth is filled with God’s glory. “All your works praise you, oh God,” is
as true now as it was in paradise. The stars still sing their Maker’s praise; no
sin has stopped their voice, no discord has made a jarring note among the
harmonies of the spheres. The earth itself still praises its Maker; the
exhalations, as they arise with the morning, are still a pure offering,
acceptable to their Maker. The lowing of the cattle, the singing of the birds,
the leaping of the fishes, and the delights of animal creation, are still
acceptable as consecrated offerings to the Most High. The mountains still bring
righteousness; on their hoary summits God’s holy feet might tread, for they are
yet pure and spotless. Still do the green valleys, laughing with their verdure,
send up their shouts to the Most High. The praise of God is sung by every wind;
it is howled forth in dread majesty by the voice of the tempest; the winds
resound it, and the waves, with their thousand hands, clap, keeping chorus in
the great march of God. The whole earth is still a great orchestra for God’s
praise, and his creatures still take up various parts in the eternal song,
which, ever swelling and ever increasing, shall by and by mount to its climax in
the consummation of all things. In that sense, therefore, the prayer is still
inappropriate. God, who fills all in all, and fills earth and heaven, does not
need to have more glory, as to the essence of his glory; for he is still
glorified in the whole earth.
3. But David intended this prayer in another sense. “Let the whole earth be
filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen;” not as Creator, but as a moral Governor,
and a Ruler. It is as Governor that we have revolted from God and done dishonour
to him; it is as our Master, our Ruler, our Judge, that we have done despite to
his glory, and have trampled on his crown. It is, therefore, in this respect
that David wished that the whole earth might be filled with God’s glory. He
desired that every idol temple might be cast down—that the name of Jehovah might
be sung by every lip, that he in his person might be loved by every heart, and
be for ever adored as “God over all blessed for ever.” A foolish wish, you say,
for it never can be accomplished. Surely the day will never come when hoary
systems of superstition shall die. What! shall colossal systems of infidelity
and of idolatry totter to their fall? They have resisted the battering ram for
many a year; and yet shall they pass away, and shall God’s kingdom come, and his
will be done on earth, even as it is in heaven? No, it is no daydream of a boy,
it is no wish of the enthusiast. Mark who uttered that prayer, and where he was
when he uttered it. It was the prayer of a dying king; it was the prayer of a
holy man of God, whose eyes were just then shining with brightness in view of
the celestial city, as he stood on the mighty Pisgah, “and looked over the
landscape”—the prayer of the dying psalmist, when on the margin of his life he
surveyed the ocean—the prayer of a mighty king, when he saw the scroll of
prophecy unfolded before him for the last time, and was about to be ushered into
the presence of his Maker. He uttered this as his last best wish and desire; and
when he had uttered it he sank back in his bed, and said, “The prayers of David
the son of Jesse are ended.” It was his last prayer: “Let the whole earth be
filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.”
4. First, this morning, I shall try to explain the prayer; then I shall labour
as God shall enable me, to inflame the hearts of all Christian men to desire the
object of this prayer; then offer a word or two of counsel as to the pursuit of
the object here spoken of; and conclude by noticing the promise to buoy our
hopes up. By and by “the earth shall be filled with his glory.”
5. I. First, then, let me EXPLAIN THE PRAYER. It is a large prayer—a massive
one. A prayer for a city needs a stretch of faith; aye, there are times when a
prayer for one man is enough to stagger our belief; for we can scarcely think
that God will hear us for even that one. But how great this prayer is! how
comprehensive! “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.”
It does not exempt one single country, however trodden under the foot of
superstition; it does not leave out one single nation, however abandoned. For
the cannibal as well as for the civilised, for the man that grasps the tomahawk
as well as for the man who bends his knee in supplication, this prayer is
uttered, “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen and Amen.”
6. Let me just very briefly note what I believe the psalmist meant. He desired
that the true religion of God might be sent into every country. Looking from
that point of view, as we utter this prayer, what a multitude of thoughts rush
into our minds! Lo, over there we see the hoary systems of ancient superstition;
we behold multitudes bowing down before Buddha and Brahma, and paying their
adorations to idols that are not gods: we pray for them, that they may cease to
be idolaters, and that God’s name may be known among them. Over there we see the
crescent, gleaming with a pale and sickly light, and we pray that the followers
of Mohammed may bow themselves before the cross, renounce the scimitar, and
return to the one who loved them, casting away all the uncleanness and
filthiness of their former religion. We see over there the scarlet woman on the
seven hills, and we include her in our prayer; we pray that God may cast down
Rome; that he may overturn her deep, hell rooted foundations, and may cause her
tyranny over the nations to cease, that she may no more be drunk with the blood
of the slain, and no more with her idolatries and witchcrafts lead the nations
astray. We include her in our supplications. We look on nations that are almost
too debased to be included in the roll of mankind; we see the Hottentot in his
kraal, (fenced village) the Bushman and the Bechuana, and we put up our prayer
for these: “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen and Amen.” Let
Africa’s centre, once thought to be barren but now discovered to be glorious in
fertility, become fertile also in works of grace; let the regions from where our
black brethren have been driven to slavery become the homes of blessedness, and
the regions of God’s praise. We cast our eye to other regions, where the scalp
is still at the Indian’s girdle, where still they wash their hands in blood and
delight themselves in murder; or we look to that huge empire of China, and we
see the myriads still lost in infidelity, and a partial idolatry, which is
consuming them and destroying them, and we pray, “Let the whole earth be filled
with his glory; Amen, and Amen.” Yes, it is a great prayer, but we mean it. We
are praying against Juggernaut, and against Buddha, and against every form and
fashion of false religion; we are crying against antichrist, and we are praying
that the day may come when every temple shall be dismantled, when every shrine
shall be left poor as poverty, and when there shall be no temple but the temple
of the Lord God of Hosts, and when no song shall be sung but the song of
“Hallelujah; to the one who loved us, and washed us from our sins in his own
blood.”
7. But we mean more than this. We ask not merely the nominal Christianity of any
country, but the conversion of every family in every country. “Let the whole
earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.” Is that wish too great, too
high? Are we too sanguine in our expectations? No; “The knowledge of the Lord”
is to “cover the earth, as the waters cover the sea,” and that is entirely. We
do not wish to see dry places here and there; but as the deep foundations of the
depths are covered with the sea, so we wish that every nation may be covered
with God’s truth. And so we pray that every family may receive it; yes, we pray
that every household may have its morning and its evening prayer; we pray that
every family may be brought up in the fear of the Lord, that every child may, on
its mother’s knee, say, “Our Father,” and that the answer may come to the
infant’s prayer, “Your kingdom come.” Yes, we ask from God that every house may
be like the tents of Judah, consecrated to God; we ask that even the kraal of
the Hottentot may become a synagogue for God’s praise. Our desire is, that man
may become so holy, that every meal may become a eucharist, and every cup a
chalice, and every garment a priestly vestment, and that all their labours may
be consecrated to the Lord. We are bound to expect it, for it is said, “Even the
bells upon the horses shall be holiness to the Lord, and even the pots in the
Lord’s house shall be like the bowls before the altar.”
8. But, we go further than that. We do not ask merely for household conversion,
but for the individual salvation of every being existing. “Let the whole earth
be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.” Should there be one heart that does
not beat in God’s praise, or one lip that is dumb in the melody of thanksgiving,
then there would be yet a spot left which would not be filled with God’s praise,
and that one left unconverted would blot and blur the whole great work of
filling the earth with God’s glory. A missionary once said, and said truly, that
if all the people in the world were converted, except one man in Siberia, it
would be worth while for all the Christians in England to make a pilgrimage to
Siberia, if that man’s salvation could not be accomplished in any other way. And
so it would. The salvation of one soul is unutterably precious, and when we
offer this prayer we exclude no one. We pray that the atheist, the blasphemer,
the hardened rebel, the profligate, may each be filled with God’s glory; and
then we ask for mercy for the whole earth; we do not leave out so much as one,
but so hope and expect the day when all mankind shall bow at the Saviour’s feet,
when every hand shall bring tribute, every lip a song, and every eye shall speak
its gladness and its praise. This I believe to be the psalmist’s prayer—that
every man might be converted, and that in fact everywhere, in every heart and
conscience, God might reign without a rival, Lord paramount over the great wide
world.
9. II. Well, now, I am going, in the second place, to try to STIR YOU UP, my
brethren, to desire this great, this wonderful thing for which David prayed. Oh!
for the rough and burning eloquence of the hermit of old, who stirred the
nations of Europe to battle for the cross! I would to God this morning I could
speak as he did, when the multitude were gathered together, or, like that bishop
of the church, who followed him, who addressed the mighty multitudes with such
burning words of fiery eloquence, that at last they heaved to and fro with waves
of excitement, and every man, springing to his feet and grasping his sword
cried, “Deus vult” “The Lord wills it,” and rushed forward to battle and to
victory. In a higher and holier sense I preach the crusade today, not as a
hermit, but as God’s preacher, I come forth to stir you up, men and brethren, to
desire and seek after this great and highest wish of the faithful, that the
whole earth might be filled with his glory. And how shall I stir you up except
by leading you to one or two contemplations?
10. First, I beseech you, contemplate the majesty of God; or rather, since I am
unable to help you to do that just now, let me remind you of seasons when you
have in some measure grasped the thought of his divinity. Have you never at
night gazed upon the starry orbs, with the thought that God was the Maker of
them all, until your soul was steeped in reverent adoration, and you bowed your
head with wonder and with praise, and said, “Great God! how infinite are you?”
Have you never, in looking upon God’s pure earth, when you have seen the
mountains, and the clouds, and the rivers, and the floods, said—
These are your glorious works, Parent of good,
Almighty! Yours this universal frame,
Thus wondrous fair: yourself how wondrous then?
Oh! I think you must have had some glowing bursts of devotion, somewhat like
that burst of Coleridge in his hymn from the valley of Chamounix; or, like that
of Thompson, when he leads the Seasons out to sing God’s praise; or, like that
matchless burst of Milton, when he extolled God, making Adam in the garden
praise his Maker. Yes, there have been moments when we could bow before God,
when we felt our own nothingness, and knew that he was all-in-all. Ah! if you
can have such thoughts as these, my friends, this morning, I know that the next
thought akin to this will be—“Let the whole earth be filled with his glory;
Amen, and Amen.” You cannot bow before God yourself and adore him, without
wishing that all the rest of mankind would do the same. Ah! and the thought has
gone further; you have wished that even inanimate objects might praise him. Oh!
you mountains, let the shaggy woods upon your crowns wave in adoration; you that
with bald heads lift up yourselves loftier than those minor hills, let the
clouds that surround you serve like wings of cherubim to veil your faces. But
oh! adore him, adore him, for he is worthy of all adoration; let him ever be
extolled. You cannot, I repeat, have great thoughts of God yourselves, without
spontaneously rising up and saying, “Let the whole earth be filled with his
glory; Amen, and Amen.”
11. But, my brethren, turn your eyes up there. What do you see there? You see
the Son of God stepping from the place of his glory, casting aside the garments
of his majesty, and robing himself in garments of clay. Do you see him there? He
is nailed to a cross. Oh! can you behold him, as his head hangs meekly on his
breast? Can you catch the accents of his lips, when he says, “Father, forgive
them?” Do you see him with the thorn crown still upon his brow, with bleeding
head, and hands, and feet? And does not your soul burst with adoration, when you
see him giving himself for your sins? What! can you look upon this miracle of
miracles, the death of the Son of God, without feeling reverence stirred within
your bosom—a marvellous adoration that language never can express? No; I am sure
you cannot. You bow yourself before that cross; you close your eyes that are
already filled with tears, and as you bend your head upon the mount of Calvary I
hear you say, “Jesus, have mercy upon me.” And when you feel the blood applied
to your conscience, and know that he has blotted out your sins, you are not a
man unless you spring from your knees and cry, “Let the whole earth be filled
with his glory; Amen, and Amen.” What! did he bend his awful head down to the
shades of death? What! did he hang upon a cross and bleed, and shall not earth
praise him? Oh you dumb, surely this might loosen your tongues. Oh you silent
ones, you might begin to speak; and if you do not, surely the very stones will
speak, and the rocks that split once at his death will split again, and open a
wide mouth to let their hallelujahs ascend to heaven. Ah! the cross makes us
praise him. Lovers of Jesus, can you love him without desiring that his kingdom
may come? What! can you bow before him, and yet not wish to see your Monarch
master of the world? Out with you, men, if you can pretend to love your Master,
and yet not desire to see him the conqueror. I give you not a farthing for your
piety, unless it leads you to wish that the same mercy which has been extended
to you might reach to others, and unless it prompts you to pray this prayer,
“Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.”
12. But gaze a moment longer. The man who died for sinners sleeps within a
grave; a little while he sleeps, until the angel rolls away the stone and gives
him liberty. Do you behold him, as he wakes up from his slumber, and radiant
with majesty, and glorious with light, frightens his guard, and stands a risen
man? Do you see him, as he climbs to heaven, as he ascends to the paradise of
God, sitting at the right hand of his Father until his enemies are made his
footstool? Do you see him, as principalities and powers bow before him, as
cherubim and seraphim cast their crowns at his feet? Do you hear him? Do you
hear him intercede, and do you hear also the music of the glorified spirits,
ever chanting perpetual choruses before his throne? And do you not wish that we
might
Prepare new honours for his name,
And songs before unknown?
Oh! it is impossible to see the glorified Christ with the eye of faith, without
exclaiming afterwards, “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and
Amen.”
13. But now one other thought. Common humanity urges us to pray this prayer. Did
you never walk through a village full of drunkenness and profanity? Did you
never see at every ale house poor wretched bloated carcasses that once were men,
standing, or rather leaning against the posts, staggering with drunkenness! Have
you never looked into the houses of the people, and beheld them as dens of
iniquity, at which your soul did turn aghast? Have you never walked through that
village and seen the poverty, and degradation, and misery of the inhabitants,
and sighed over it? Yes, you have. But was it ever your privilege to walk
through that village in later years, when the gospel has been preached there? It
has been mine. Once it was my delight to labour in a village where sin and
iniquity had once been rampant, and I can say with joy and happiness, that
almost from one end of the village to the other, at the hour of eventide, you
would have heard the voice of song coming from every roof top, echoing from
every heart. Oh! what a pleasant thing to walk through the village, when
drunkenness has almost ceased, when debauchery is dead, and when men and women
go forth to labour with joyful hearts, singing as they go the praises of the
everliving God; and when at sunset the humble cottager calls his children
together, and reads them some portion from the book of truth, and then together
they bend their knees—oh! happy, happy households! Yes, we have seen some such
places; and when our hearts have been gladdened by the sight, we have said, “Let
the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen and Amen.” It has been our
delight sometimes to tabernacle among the lowly for a little season. We have had
our seat given to us in the chimney corner for awhile, and by and by as the time
to retire drew near, the good man of the house has said to the prophet’s
servant, “Now, sir, will you read for us tonight, since you are here?” And we
have noticed the faces of the little group around us, as we have read some
portion like this—“Truly God is good to Israel, even to such as are of a clean
heart.” And then we have said, “No, we will not pray tonight; you must be priest
in your own house, and pray yourself.” And then the good man has prayed for his
children, and when we have seen them rise up and kiss their parent for the night
we have thought, “Well, if this is the kind of family that religion makes, let
the whole earth be filled with his glory. For the blessedness and for the
happiness of man, let God’s kingdom come, and let his will be done.” Contrast
that, my brethren, with the murderous rites of the Hindu; contrast it with the
savagery and barbarism of heathen lands. If I could bring some barbarian to
stand before you this morning, he might himself be a better preacher than I can
be, as with his almost unintelligible utterances and clicks he would begin to
tell you the few ideas he had, which ideas began and ended with himself, and
with the miserable prey on which he lived. You would say, “What! is there such a
miserable race as this?” Let us at once kneel down and utter this prayer, and
then rise up and labour to fulfil it—“Let the whole earth be filled with his
glory.” I feel that I cannot stir you this morning as I wished. (If I were a
Welshman I think I could move your hearts; they have such a knack of waking
people up by what they say.) Oh! my soul longs for that day; it sighs for that
blessed period. Would God that all sighed and longed for it too, and were
prepared to work and labour, watch and pray, until we should indeed sing with
truth,
Hallelujah! Christ the Lord
God Omnipotent shall reign;
Hallelujah! Christ in God,
God in Christ is all-in-all.
May such a day come, as it certainly will!
14. III. And now I am to give you A FEW COUNSELS IN THE PURSUIT OF THIS OBJECT.
15. First, you cannot pray this prayer unless you seek in your own life to
remove every impediment to the spread of Christ’s kingdom. You cannot pray it,
sir; you cannot say, “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and
Amen,”—you who cursed God yesterday. How can the same lip that cursed God say,
“Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.” You cannot say
it, sir,—you who break his commandments, and violate his laws, and run riot
against his government. If you said it you would be a vile hypocrite. Is there
anything in our character and conduct which has a tendency to prevent the spread
of the gospel? Oh! we say it with pain, there are many members of the churches
everywhere whose characters are such that if they remain what they are, Christ’s
gospel never can fill the whole earth, for it cannot fill their hearts. You know
the men, they call themselves God’s dear people, and they would be dear if they
were given away; certainly no one would buy them at the lowest price in the
world. They say that they are his precious ones, and they must be very precious,
or else he never would have any thoughts of mercy towards such a set as they
are. And they will sometimes say, “Ah! we are the Lord’s elect;” and they live
in sin. They say there are very few of their sort, and we reply, “What a mercy!”
If there were we would need many of our public buildings to be turned at once
into jails, to lock up such people. No, we do not believe in the characters of
men who make a profession of religion, and yet do not live up to it. Do not tell
us about such profession; just be quiet altogether. Do not call yourselves
religious, and yet act as others do. I do prefer a man that is a right down
blustering sinner when he is at it. Do not let him go into sin, and then mask
and cover it all up. There is no use in it. The man is not honest. I do think
there is some hope for a man who is a downright, thorough-bred sinner, that goes
at it and is not ashamed of it; but a rascally, raving hypocrite, that comes
crawling into our church, and yet lives in sin all the while—such a man—God
Almighty may save him, but it is very seldom that he does save such people. He
lets them go on, and reap the fruit of their own ways; he lets them find out,
after all, that hypocrisy is a sure road to hell, and never can lead to heaven.
We must look well to ourselves, by God’s Spirit, or else we must not pray this
prayer: “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.”
16. And there is my friend Mr. Save-all. I am sure he cannot pray this prayer;
at least I think I hear him in his soul say, “Oh Lord, let the whole earth be
filled with your glory.” A contribution is requested to assist the cause in so
doing. Oh! no, not at all. Like the old negro woman we have all heard of, who
sang, “Fly abroad, you mighty gospel,” and put her eye up in such a devout
frame, that her brother negro who was passing the plate that day could not get
her to pay any attention to him, until he jogged her elbow, and said, “Yes,
sissy, it is well enough to sing, ‘Fly abroad, you mighty gospel;’ if you would
give it wings then it might, but you are just singing this and doing nothing at
all.” Now, what is the good of a man singing, “Fly abroad, you mighty gospel,”
and praying this prayer, “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory,” if he
has six thousand pounds a year coming in for doing nothing at all? It is no use
for a man to put on a pair of long sleeves, and say, “Oh, it is my devout desire
that the whole earth may be filled with his glory,” and then leave the world to
stare at him and consider what good he is. It is no use for a man simply to be a
curate or something of that sort, buy his manuscripts cheap, come up and read
off two sermons twenty minutes long, go home with a good conscience that he has
done his duty twice, and then say, “Let the whole earth be filled with his
glory.” Why, my friends, there is no chance of it if that is the way it is to be
done, not the slightest in the world; to cry, “Let the whole earth be filled
with his glory,” and then stand still and do nothing at all; or merely do some
nominal well paid work, and feel it is all over. We need something in the
ministry a little different before even ministers can pray this prayer in
sincerity. I am not finding fault with any of my brethren, but I would recommend
them to preach thirteen times a week, and then they can pray this prayer a
little better. Three times a week would not do for me. It would hurt my
constitution; preaching thirteen times a week is good healthy exercise. But you
shut yourself up in your study, or what is ten times worse, you do nothing at
all, but just take it easy all the week until the Sunday comes, and then borrow
a sermon out of an old magazine, or buy one of the helps for ministers, or take
down one of Charles Simeon’s skeletons and preach it. My good man, you cannot
pray in that fashion. The poorest Sunday School teacher has a better right to
pray that prayer than you have. You go to a fire that is raging vehemently, and
say, “Oh, let it be put out!” and stand with your hands in your pockets, while a
little boy that is standing there and passing the bucket may pray that prayer
sincerely, but you cannot. No, my brethren, you must be up and doing for your
Master, or else you cannot pray this prayer. You say, “I am doing my duty;” but
my friend, that is not much use; you must do a little more than that; doing your
duty, as you think, is often doing only a very small part of your duty. What is
a man’s duty? “Why, as much as he is paid for, Sir.” Oh, no, I think not; a
man’s duty is to do whatever his hand finds to do, with all his might; and until
he does that he cannot with any sincerity offer this prayer, “Let the whole
world be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.” Ah, there are some here that I
could mention, who by their unparalleled philanthropy; by their unique and
unrivalled love of their fellow creatures, have done much to fill the earth with
God’s glory; for they have let the world see what Christian men and Christian
women are able to do when God’s love has touched their hearts. There are to be
found some who by devoting themselves to the service of their Master, and
spending and being spent for him, have done much to heighten the opinion of the
world towards Christianity, and make them think better of the Christian church
than they would have done if it had not been for these few rare, mighty heroes
in the midst of us. “Let the whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and
Amen.” But it cannot be, speaking after the manner of men, unless we each of us
labour and endeavour as God shall help us, to extend the kingdom of our Master.
17. And now, my friends, have I been urging you to an impossible task? Have I
been telling Christian men to pray for that which never can be granted? Ah! no,
blessed be God, we are taught to pray for nothing but that which God has been
pleased to give. He has told us to pray that his kingdom may come, and his
kingdom will come, and come most assuredly, too. Hark! hark! hark! I hear
mustering for the battle; there in the dim distance I see the armies gathering;
yes, I can dimly see their ensign, and behold the flag that waves before them!
Who are these that come? Who are these? These are nobler and better men than we!
These are warriors of Christ, as yet, perhaps, unborn. These are the mighty men,
the rearguard; these are the imperial guard of heaven, who have been fighting
long. The enemy has sometimes fled, but so far we have achieved very little, the
phalanx of the foe stands still fast and firm, and we have blunted our blades
against the shields of the mighty. As yet the victory is not complete; the
Master stands on the hill with his reserve. Lo! I see them—they are coming, they
are coming. Some of us shall live to see them—men those tongues are made of
fire, whose hearts are full of flame, who speak like angels and preach like
cherubim! The men are coming, and happy shall the man be that marks the triumph;
each tramp of theirs shall be the tramp of victory, each blast of theirs shall
level walls of spiritual Jerichos, each blow of their horn shall clear an acre
of valiant foes; each stroke from their sword shall cleave a dragon; and every
blow from their arm shall be mighty to overturn thrones and sceptres and kings!
They come, they come; and until they come what shall we do?—Why fight on and
hold our posts. But lo! they come. Let us be cheered with the thought that
victory is certain. The hour comes when this mighty band of heroes shall sweep
the earth with the banner of victory. And when in years to come, you and I shall
look upon the plain of battle, we shall see there an idol broken, there a
colossal system of wickedness dashed in pieces, there a false prophet slain,
there a deluder cast away. Oh! glorious shall be that day when victory shall be
complete; when the horse and the rider shall be overthrown; when the battle that
is without blood and without smoke, without rolling of garments of warriors,
shall be completed by the shout of victory through him who has loved us.
18. Beloved, we will wait awhile. We will still continue on this side with our
Master; for though we are fighters now, we shall be winners by and by. Yes, man,
woman, you who are unknown, unnoted, but are striving for your Master, by
prayer, and praise, and labour, the day is coming when everyone of you shall
have a crown of victory! The hour is coming when your heart shall beat high, for
you shall share the conquest; those men who are coming, without whom we cannot
be made perfect, shall not have all the honour. We who have borne the brunt of
the fight shall have a share of the glory; the victors shall divide the spoil,
and we shall divide the spoil with them. You, tried, afflicted, forgotten and
unknown, you shall soon have the palm branch in your hand, and you shall ride in
triumph through the streets of earth and heaven, when your Master shall make
show of principalities and powers publicly, in the day of his victory! Only
still continue, only wrestle on, and you shall be crowned.
19. But I have yet one word to say, and then Amen. You know, in Roman warfare
there were special rewards given for special works. There was the mural crown
for the man who first scaled the rampart and stood upon the wall. I am looking
on this great congregation with a thought in my mind which agitates my spirit.
Young men! young men! is there not one among you that can win a mural crown?
Have I not one true Christian heart here that is set for work and labour? Have
not I one man that will devote himself for God and for his truth? Henry Martyn!
you are dead; and is your mantle buried with you? Brainard, you sleep with your
fathers; and is your spirit dead too, and shall there never be another Brainard?
Knibb, you have ascended to your God; and is there nowhere another Knibb?
Williams, your martyred blood still cries from the ground; and is there nowhere
another Williams? What! not among this dense mass of young and burning spirits?
Is there not one that can say in his heart, “Here am I, send me?” “Lo, this
hour, by God’s grace being saved, I give myself up to him, to go wherever he
shall please to send me, to testify his gospel in foreign lands?” What! are
there no Pauls now? Have we no one who will be apostles for the Lord of hosts? I
think I see one who, putting his lips together, makes this silent resolve—“By
God’s grace I this day devote myself to him; through trouble and through trial I
will be his, if he will help me; for missionary work or for anything else I give
up my all to God; and if I may die as Williams did, and wear the blood red crown
of martyrdom, I will be proud; and if I may live to serve my Master, like a
Brainard, and die at last worn out, here I am, take me, Master; give me the
honour of leading the forlorn hope, of leading the vanguard of Christianity;
here I am, send me.” Oh Lord, accept that young man! Lo, I consecrate him this
day in your name for that service; these outstretched hands this morning give a
benediction to you, young hero of the cross! Your brother’s heart beats with
you; go, and go to victory; and if it must be mine to stay here to labour in a
more easy and pleasant part of the vineyard, which I dare not leave, still I
will envy you, that you have the honour of going to far distant lands, and I
will pray for you, that your success may be great, and that through you the
kingdoms of this world may be brought to Christ, and the knowledge of the Lord
cover the earth. But we will all pray this prayer in our houses alone—“Let the
whole earth be filled with his glory; Amen, and Amen.”
20. You who are enemies to God, beware, beware, beware! It will be a hard thing
to be found on the side of the enemy in the great battle of right.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/06/02/davids-dying-prayer