His Name—Wonderful! By C. H. Spurgeon
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, September 19, 1858, By Pastor C. H.
Spurgeon, At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
His name shall be called Wonderful. (Isa 9:6)
1. One evening last week I stood by the seashore when the storm was raging. The
voice of the Lord was upon the waters; and who was I that I should stay indoors,
when my Master’s voice was heard sounding along the water? I rose and stood to
see the flash of his lightnings, and listen to the glory of his thunders. The
sea and the thunders were contesting with one another; the sea with infinite
clamour striving to hush the deep throated thunder, so that his voice would not
be heard; yet over and above the roar of the billows might be heard that voice
of God, as he spoke with flames of fire, and divided the way for the waters. It
was a dark night, and the sky was covered with thick clouds, and scarcely a star
could be seen through the rifts of the tempest; but at one particular time, I
noticed far away on the horizon, as if miles across the water, a bright shining,
like gold. It was the moon hidden behind the clouds, so that she could not shine
upon us; but she was able to send her rays down upon the waters, far away, where
no cloud happened to intervene. I thought as I read this chapter last evening,
that the prophet seemed to have stood in a similar position, when he wrote the
words of my text. All around him were clouds of darkness; he heard prophetic
thunders roaring, and he saw flashes of the lightnings of divine vengeance;
clouds and darkness, for many a league, were scattered through history; but he
saw far away a bright spot—one place where the clear shining came down from
heaven. And he sat down, and he penned these words: “The people who walked in
darkness have seen a great light: they who live in the land of the shadow of
death, the light has shone upon them;” and though he looked through whole
leagues of space, where he saw the battle of the warrior “with confused noise
and garments rolled in blood,” yet he fixed his eye upon one bright spot in the
future, and he declared, that there he saw hope of peace, prosperity and
blessedness; for said he, “To us a child is born, to us a son is given: and the
government shall be upon his shoulder: and his name shall be called Wonderful.”
2. My dear friends, we live today upon the verge of that bright spot. The world
has been passing through these clouds of darkness, and the light is gleaming on
us now, like the glintings of the first rays of morning. We are coming to a
brighter day, and “at evening time it shall be light.” The clouds and darkness
shall be rolled up as a mantle that God no longer needs, and he shall appear in
his glory, and his people shall rejoice with him. But you must mark, that all
the brightness was the result of this child being born, this son being given,
whose name is called Wonderful; and if we can discern any brightness in our own
hearts, or in the world’s history, it can come from nowhere else, than from the
one who is called “Wonderful, Counsellor, the Mighty God.”
3. The person spoken of in our text, is undoubtedly the Lord Jesus Christ. He is
a child who is born, with reference to his human nature; he is born of the
virgin, a child. But he is a son who is given, with reference to his divine
nature, being given as well as born. Of course, the Godhead could not be born of
woman. That was from everlasting, and is to everlasting. As a child he was born,
as a son he was given. “The government is upon his shoulder, and his name shall
be called Wonderful.” Beloved, there are a thousand things in this world, that
are called by names that do not belong to them; but in entering upon my text, I
must announce at the very outset, that Christ is called Wonderful, because he is
so. God the Father never gave his Son a name which he did not deserve. There is
no extravagant praise here, no flattery. It is just the simple name that he
deserves, they who know him best will say that the word does not exaggerate his
qualities, but rather falls infinitely short of his glorious deserving. His name
is called Wonderful. And mark, it does not merely say, that God has given him
the name of Wonderful—though that is implied; but “his name shall be called” so.
It shall be; it is at this time called Wonderful by all his believing people,
and it shall be. As long as the moon endures, there shall be found men, and
angels, and glorified spirits, who shall always call him by his rightful name.
“His name shall be called Wonderful.”
4. I find that this name may bear two or three interpretations. The word is
sometimes in Scripture translated “marvellous.” Jesus Christ may be called
marvellous; and a learned German interpreter says, that without doubt, the
meaning of miraculous is also wrapped up in it. Christ is the marvel of marvels,
the miracle of miracles. “His name shall be called Miraculous,” for he is more
than a man, he is God’s highest miracle. “Great is the mystery of godliness; God
was revealed in the flesh.” It may also mean separated, or distinguished. And
Jesus Christ may well be called this; for as Saul was distinguished from all
men, being head and shoulders taller than they, so is Christ distinguished above
all men; he is anointed with the oil of gladness above all other men, and in his
character, and in his acts he is infinitely separated from all comparison with
any of the sons of men. “You are fairer than the children of men; grace is
poured into your lips.” He is “the chief among ten thousand and altogether
lovely.” “His name shall be called the Separated One,” the distinguished one,
the noble one, set apart from the common race of mankind.
5. We shall, however, this morning, keep to the old version, and simply read it
thus, “His name shall be called Wonderful.” And first I shall notice that Jesus
Christ deserves to be called Wonderful for what he was in the past; secondly,
that he is called Wonderful by all his people for what he is in the present; and
thirdly, that he shall be called Wonderful, for what he shall be in the future.
6. I. First, Christ shall be called Wonderful for WHAT HE WAS IN THE PAST.
Collect your thoughts, my brethren, for a moment, and centre them all on Christ,
and you will soon see how wonderful he is. Consider his eternal existence,
“begotten of his Father from before all worlds,” being of the same substance
with his Father: begotten, not made, co-equal, co-eternal, in every attribute,
“very God of very God.” For a moment remember that he who became an infant of a
span long, was no less than the King of ages, the everlasting Father, who was
from eternity, and is to be to all eternity. The divine nature of Christ is
indeed wonderful. Just think for a moment, how much interest centres around the
life of an old man. Those of us who are only as children in years, look up to
him with wonder and astonishment, as he tells us the varied stories of the
experience through which he has passed; but what is the life of an aged man—how
brief it appears when compared with the life of the tree that shelters him. It
existed long before that old man’s father crept as helpless infant into the
world. How many storms have swept over its brow! how many kings have come and
gone! how many empires have risen and fallen since that old oak was slumbering
in its acorn cradle! But what is the life of the tree compared with the soil on
which it grows? What a wonderful story that soil might tell! What changes it has
passed through in all the eras of time that have elapsed since “in the beginning
God created the heavens and the earth.” There is a wonderful story connected
with every atom of black mould which furnishes the nourishment of the oak. But
while is the history of that soil compared with the marvellous history of the
rock on which it rests—the cliff on which it lifts its head. Oh! what stories
might it tell, what records lie hidden within it. Perhaps it could tell the
story of the time when “the earth was without form and void, and darkness was
upon the face of the earth.” Perhaps it might speak and tell us of those days
when the morning and the evening were the first day, and the morning and the
evening were the second day, and could explain to us the mysteries of how God
made this marvellous piece of miracle,—the world. But what is the history of the
cliff, compared with that of the sea that rolls at its base—that deep blue
ocean, over which a thousand navies have swept, without leaving a furrow upon
its brow! But what is the history of the sea, compared with the history of the
heavens that are stretched like a curtain over that vast basin! What a history
is that of the hosts of heaven—of the everlasting marches of the sun, moon, and
stars! Who can tell their generation, or who can write their biography? But what
is the history of the heavens, compared with the history of the angels? They
could tell you of the day when they saw this world wrapped in swaddling bands of
mist—when, like a newborn infant, the last of God’s offspring, it came forth
from him, and the morning stars sang together, and the sons of God shouted for
joy. But what is the history of the angels that excel in strength, compared with
the history of the Lord Jesus Christ? The angel is only of yesterday, and he
knows nothing; Christ, the Eternal One, charges even his angels with folly, and
looks upon them as his ministering spirits, that come and go at his good
pleasure. Oh, Christians, gather with reverence and mysterious awe around the
throne of him who is your great Redeemer; for “his name is called Wonderful,”
since he has existed before all things, and “by him all things were made; and
without him was not anything made that was made.”
7. Consider, again, the incarnation of Christ, and you will rightly say, that
his name deserves to be called “Wonderful.” Oh! what is that I see? Oh! world of
wonders, what is that I see? The Eternal of ages, whose hair is white like wool,
as white as snow, becomes an infant. Can it be? You angels, are you not
astonished? He becomes an infant, rests on a virgin’s bosom, draws his
nourishment from the breast of a woman. Oh wonder of wonders! Manger of
Bethlehem, you have miracles poured into you. This is a sight that surpasses all
others. Talk of the sun, moon, and stars; consider the heavens, the work of
God’s fingers, the moon and the stars that he has ordained; but all the wonders
of the universe shrink into nothing, when we come to the mystery of the
incarnation of the Lord Jesus Christ. It was a marvellous thing when Joshua
ordered the sun to stand still, but more marvellous when God seemed to stand
still, and no longer to move forward, but rather, like the sun upon the dial of
Ahaz, went back ten degrees, and veiled his splendour in a cloud. There have
been matchless and wonderful sights, at which we might look for years, and yet
turn away and say, “I cannot understand this; here is a deep into which I dare
not dive; my thoughts are drowned; this is a steep without a summit; I cannot
climb it; it is too high, I cannot attain to it!” But all these things are as
nothing, compared with the incarnation of the Son of God. I do believe that the
very angels have wondered incessantly ever since they first saw it. They never
cease to tell the astonishing story, and to tell it with increasing astonishment
too, that Jesus Christ, the Son of God, was born of the Virgin Mary, and became
a man. Is he not rightly called Wonderful? Infinite, and an infant—eternal, and
yet born of a woman—Almighty, and yet resting on a woman’s bosom—supporting the
universe, and yet needing to be carried in a mother’s arms—king of angels, and
yet the reputed son of Joseph—heir of all things, and yet the carpenter’s
despised son. Wonderful are you, oh Jesus, and that shall be your name for ever.
8. But trace the Saviours course, and all the way he is wonderful. Is it not
marvellous that he submitted to the taunts and jeers of his enemies—that for all
his life he should allow the bulls of Bashan to surround him and the dogs to
encompass him? Is it not surprising that he should have bridled in his anger,
when blasphemy was uttered against his sacred person? Had you or I been
possessed of his matchless might, we should have dashed our enemies down the
brow of the hill, if they had sought to cast us there; we should never have
submitted to shame and spitting; no, we would have looked upon them, and with
one fierce look of wrath, have dashed their spirits into eternal torment. But he
hears it all—keeps in his noble spirit—the lion of the tribe of Judah, but
bearing still the lamb-like character of
The humble man before his foes,
A weary man, and full of woes.
I do believe that Jesus of Nazareth was the king of heaven, and yet he was a
poor, despised, persecuted, slandered man; but while I believe it I never can
understand it. I bless him for it; I love him for it; I desire to praise his
name while immortality endures for his infinite condescension in thus suffering
for me; but to understand it, I can never pretend. His name must all his life
long be called Wonderful.
9. But see him die. Come oh my brothers, you children of God, and gather around
the cross. See your Master. There he hangs. Can you understand this riddle: God
was revealed in the flesh, and crucified by men? My Master, I cannot understand
how you could stoop your sacred head to such a death as this—how then could take
from your brow the coronet of stars which from old eternity had shone
resplendently there; but how you should permit the thorn crown to gird the
temples astonishes me far more. That you should cast away the mantle of your
glory, the azure of your everlasting empire, I cannot comprehend; but how you
should have become veiled in the ignominious purple for awhile, and then be
bowed to by impious men, who mocked you as a pretended king, and how you should
be stripped naked to your shame, without a single covering, this is still more
incomprehensible. Truly your name is Wonderful. Oh your love to me is wonderful,
surpassing the love of a woman. Was there ever grief like yours? Was there ever
love like yours, that could open the flood gates of such grief. Your grief is
like a river; but was there ever a spring that poured out such a torrent? Was
there ever love so mighty as to become the fount from which such an ocean of
grief could come rolling down? Here is matchless love—matchless love to make him
suffer, matchless power to enable him to endure all the weight of his Father’s
wrath. Here is matchless justice, that he himself should acquiesce to his
Father’s will, and not allow men to be saved without his own sufferings; and
here is matchless mercy to the chief of sinners, that Christ should suffer even
for them. “His name shall be called Wonderful.”
10. But he died. He died! See Salem’s daughters weep around him. Joseph of
Arimathea takes up the lifeless body after it has been taken down from the
cross. They bear it away to the sepulchre. It is put in a garden. Do you call
him Wonderful now?
Is this the Saviour long foretold
To usher in the age of gold?
And is he dead? Lift his hands! They drop motionless by his side. His foot still
exhibits the nail print; but there is no sign of life. “Aha,” cries the Jew, “is
this the Messiah? He is dead; he shall see corruption in a little while. Oh!
watchman, keep a good watch lest his disciples steal his body. His body can
never come forth, unless they do steal it; for he is dead. Is this the Wonderful
the Counsellor?” But God did not leave his soul in Hades; nor did he allow his
body—“his holy one”—to see corruption? Yes, he is wonderful, even in his death.
That cold clay corpse is wonderful. Perhaps this is the greatest wonder of all,
that he who is “Death of death and hell’s destruction” should for a while endure
the bonds of death. But here is the wonder. He could not be held by those bonds.
Those chains which have held ten thousand of the sons and daughters of Adam, and
which have never been broken yet by any man of human mould, unless by a miracle,
were only to him as green bowstrings. Death bound our Samson fast and said, “I
have him now, I have taken away the locks of his strength; his glory is
departed, and now he is mine;” but the hands that kept the human race in chains
were nothing to the Saviour; the third day he burst them, and he rose again from
the dead, from henceforth to die no more. Oh! you risen Saviour—you who could
not see corruption—you are wonderful in your resurrection. And you are wonderful
too in your ascension—as I see you leading captivity captive and receiving gifts
for men. “His name shall be called Wonderful.”
11. Pause here one moment, and let us think—Christ is surpassingly wonderful.
The little story I have told you just now—not little in itself, but little as I
have told it—has in it something surpassingly wonderful. All the wonders that
you ever saw are nothing compared with this. As we have passed through various
countries we have seen a wonder, and some older traveller than ourselves has
said, “Yes this is wonderful to you, but I could show you something that utterly
eclipses that.” Though we have seen some splendid landscapes, with glorious
hills, and we have climbed up where the eagle in his flight seemed to knit the
mountain and the sky together, and we have stood and looked down, and said, “How
wonderful!” He says, “I have seen fairer lands than these, and wider and richer
prospects by far.” But when we speak of Christ, no one can say they ever saw a
greater wonder than he is. You have come now to the very summit of everything
that may be wondered about. There are no mysteries equal to this mystery, there
is no surprise equal to this surprise; there is no astonishment, no admiration
that should equal the astonishment and admiration that we feel when we see
Christ in the glories of the past. He surpasses everything.
12. And yet again—wonder is a short lived emotion; you know, it is proverbial
that a wonder grows grayheaded in nine days. The longest period that a wonder is
found to last is about that time. It is such a short lived thing. But Christ is,
and ever shall be wonderful. You may think of him through threescore years and
ten, but you shall wonder at him more at the end than at the beginning. Abraham
might wonder about him, when he saw his day in the distant future; but I do not
think that even Abraham himself could wonder about Christ so much as the very
least in the kingdom of heaven of today wonders about him, since we know much
more than Abraham, and therefore wonder even more. Think again for one moment,
and you will say about Christ that he deserves to be called Wonderful, not only
because he is always wonderful, and because he is surpassingly wonderful, but
also because he is altogether wonderful. There have been some great feats of
skill in the arts and sciences; for instance, if we take a common wonder of the
day, the telegraph—how much there is about that which is wonderful! But there
are a great many things in the telegraph that we can understand. Though there
are many mysteries in it, still there are parts of it that are like keys to the
mysteries, so that if we cannot completely solve the riddle, yet we can
understand some of the simpler aspects of how it works. But now if you look at
Christ in any manner, from anywhere, in anyway, he is all mystery, he is
altogether wonderful, always to be seen and always to be admired.
13. And again, he is universally wondered about. They tell us that the religion
of Christ is very good for old women. I was once complimented by a person, who
told me he believed my preaching would be extremely suitable for blacks—for
negroes. He did not intend it as a compliment, but I replied, “Well sir, if it
is suitable for blacks I should think it would be very suitable for whites; for
there is only a little difference of skin, and I do not preach to people’s
skins, but to their hearts.” Now, with respect to Christ we can say that he is
universally a wonder, the strongest intellects have wondered about him. Our
Lockes and our Newtons have felt themselves to be as little children when they
have come to the foot of the cross. The wonder has not been confined to ladies,
to children, to old women and dying men; the highest intellects, and the
lustiest minds have all wondered about Christ. I am sure it is a difficult task
to make some people wonder. Hard thinkers and close mathematicians are not
easily made to wonder; but such men have covered their faces with their hands
and cast themselves in the dust, and confessed that they have been lost in
wonder and amazement. Most certainly then may Christ be called Wonderful.
14. II. “His name shall be called Wonderful.” He is wonderful for WHAT HE IS IN
THE PRESENT. And here I will not diverge, but will just appeal to you
personally. Is he wonderful to you? Let me tell the story of my own wonderment
about Christ, and in telling it, I shall be relating the experience of all God’s
children. There was a time when I did not wonder about Christ. I heard about his
beauties, but I had never seen them; I heard about his power, but it was nothing
to me; it was only news of something done in a far country—I had no connection
with it, and therefore I did not pay any attention to it. But there was a time
when there came one to my house of a black and terrible appearance. He pounded
the door; I tried to bolt it—to hold it fast. He struck again and again, until
at last he entered, and with a rough voice he summoned me before him; and he
said, “I have a message from God for you; you are condemned on account of your
sins.” I looked at him with astonishment; I asked him his name. He said, “My
name is the Law;” and I fell at his feet as one who was dead. “I was alive
without the law once: but when the commandment came, sin revived, and I died.”
As I lay there, he struck me. He struck me until every rib seemed as if it must
break, and the bowels be poured forth. My heart was melted like wax within me; I
seemed to be stretched upon a rack—to be pinched with hot irons—to be beaten
with whips of burning wire. An extreme misery lived and reigned in my heart. I
did not dare to lift up my eyes, but I thought within myself, “There may be
hope, there may be mercy for me. Perhaps the God whom I have offended may accept
my tears and my promises of reformation, and I may live.” But when that thought
crossed my mind, the blows were heavier and my sufferings more poignant than
before, until hope entirely failed me, and I had nothing to trust in. Black and
dense darkness gathered around me; I heard a voice as it were, of rushing to and
fro, and of wailing and gnashing of teeth. I said within my soul, “I am cast out
from his sight, I am utterly abhorred by God, he has trampled me in the mire of
the streets in his anger.” And one passed by, of sorrowful but of loving
appearance, and he stooped over me, and he said, “Awake oh sleeper, and arise
from the dead, and Christ shall give you light.” I arose in astonishment, and he
took me, and he led me to a place where a cross stood, and he seemed to vanish
from my sight. But he appeared again hanging there. I looked upon him as he bled
upon that tree. His eyes darted a glance of love unutterable into my spirit, and
in a moment, looking at him, the bruises that my soul had suffered were healed;
the gaping wounds were cured; the broken bones rejoiced; the rags that had
covered me were all removed; my spirit was white as the spotless snows of the
far off north; I had melody within my spirit, for I was saved, washed, cleansed,
forgiven, through him that hung upon the tree. Oh, how I wondered that I should
be pardoned! It was not the pardon that I wondered about so much; the wonder was
that it should come to me. I wondered that he should be able to pardon such sins
as mine; such crimes, so numerous and so black, and that after such an accusing
conscience he should have power to still every wave within my spirit, and make
my soul like the surface of a river, undisturbed, quiet, and at ease. His name
then to my spirit was Wonderful. But, brothers and sisters, if you have felt
this, you can say you thought him wonderful then—if you are feeling it, a sense
of adoring wonder enraptures your heart even now.
15. And has he not been wonderful to you ever since that auspicious hour, when
you first heard Mercy’s voice spoken to YOU? How often have you been in sadness,
sickness, and sorrow! But your pain has been light, for Jesus Christ has been
with you on your sickbeds; your care has been no care at all, for you have been
able to cast your burden upon him. The trial which threatened to crush you,
rather lifted you up to heaven, and you have said “How wonderful that Jesus
Christ’s name should give me such comfort, such joy, such peace, such
confidence.” Various things bring to my remembrance of a time almost two years
ago.1 Never shall we forget, beloved, the judgments of the Lord, when by
terrible things in righteousness he answered our prayer that he would give us
success in this house. We cannot forget how the people were scattered—how some
of the sheep were slain, and the shepherd himself was smitten. I may not have
told in your hearing the story of my own woe. Perhaps never soul went so near
the burning furnace of insanity, and yet came away unharmed. I have walked by
that fire until these locks seemed to be crisp with its heat. My brain was
racked. I dared not look up to God, and prayer that was once my solace, was
cause of my fright and terror, if I attempted it. I shall never forget the time
when I first became restored to myself. It was in the garden of a friend. I was
walking, solitary and alone, musing upon my misery, much cheered as that was by
the kindness of my loving friend, yet far too heavy for my soul to bear, when
suddenly the name of Jesus flashed through my mind. The person of Christ seemed
visible to me. I stood still. The burning lava of my soul was cooled. My agonies
were hushed. I bowed myself there, and the garden that had seemed a Gethsemane
became to me a Paradise. And then it seemed so strange to me, that nothing
should have brought me back except that name of Jesus. I thought indeed at that
time that I would love him better all the days of my life. But there were two
things I wondered about. I wondered that he should be so good to me, and I
wondered more that I should have been so ungrateful to him. But his name has
been from that time “Wonderful” to me, and I must mention what he has done for
my soul.
16. And now, brothers and sisters, you shall all find, every day of your life,
whatever your trials and troubles, that he shall always be made the more
wonderful by them. He sends your troubles to be like a black foil, to make the
diamond of his name shine the brighter. You would never know the wonders of God
if you did not discover them in the furnace. “Those who go down to the sea in
ships, who do business on great waters, these see the works of the Lord, and his
wonders in the deep,” and we shall never see the wonders of God except in that
deep; we must go into the depths before we know how wonderful is his power and
his might to save.
17. I must not leave this point without one more remark. There have been times
when you and I have said of Christ, “His name is wonderful indeed, for by it we
have been transported entirely above the world, and carried upward to the very
gates of heaven itself.” I pity you, beloved, if you do not understand the
rhapsody I am about to describe. There are moments when the Christian feels the
charms of earth all broken, and his wings are unbound, and he begins to fly; and
up he soars, until he forgets earth’s sorrows and leaves them far behind; and up
he goes until he forgets earth’s joys, and leaves them like the mountain tops
far below, as when the eagle flies to meet the sun; and up, up, up he goes, with
his Saviour fully before him almost in vision most beautiful. His heart is full
of Christ; his soul beholds his Saviour, and the cloud that darkened his view of
the Saviour’s face seems to be dispersed. At such a time the Christian can
sympathise with Paul. He says, “Whether in the body or out of the body I cannot
tell—God knows!” but I am, as it were, “caught up to the third heaven.” And how
is this rapture produced? By the music of flute, harp, sackbut, psaltery, and
all kinds of instruments? No. How then? By riches? By fame? By wealth? Ah, no.
By a strong mind? By a lively disposition? No. By the name of Jesus. That one
name is all sufficient to lead the Christian into heights of transport that
verge upon the region where the angels fly in cloudless day.
18. III. I have no more time to spend on this point, although the text is
infinite, and one might preach upon it for ever. I have only to notice that his
name shall be called Wonderful IN THE FUTURE.
19. The day is come, the day of wrath, the day of fire. The ages are ended; the
last century, like the last pillar of a dilapidated temple, has crumbled to its
fall. The clock of time is about to strike its last hour. It is on the stroke.
The time is come when the things that are made must disappear. Lo, I see earth’s
bowels moving. A thousand hills give up the slumbering dead. The battlefields
are clothed no more with the rich harvests that have been manured with blood;
but a new harvest has sprung up. The fields are thick with men. The sea itself
becomes a prolific mother, and though she has swallowed men alive, she gives
them up again, and they stand before God, an exceedingly great army. Sinners!
you have risen from your tombs; the pillars of heaven are reeling; the sky is
moving to and fro; the sun, the eye of this great world, is rolling like a
maniac’s, and glaring with dismay. The moon that long has cheered the night now
makes the darkness terrible, for she is turned into a clot of blood. Portents,
and signs, and wonders surpassing one’s imagination, make the heavens shake, and
make men’s hearts quake within them. Suddenly upon a cloud there comes one like
to the Son of Man. Sinners! picture your astonishment and your wonder when you
see him. Where are you, Voltaire? You said, “I will crush the wretch.” Come and
crush him now! “No” Voltaire says, “he is not the man I thought he was.” Oh how
will he wonder when he really finds out who Christ is! Now, Judas, come and give
him a traitor’s kiss! “Ah! no,” he says, “I did not know who I kissed: I thought
I only kissed the son of Mary, but lo! he is the everlasting God.” Now, you
kings and princes, who stood up and took counsel together against the Lord and
against his anointed, saying, “Let us break his bands asunder, and cast his
cords from us!” Come now, take counsel once more; rebel against him now! Oh! can
you picture the astonishment, the wonder the dismay, when careless, godless
infidels and Socinians really find out who Christ is? “Oh!” they will say, “this
is wonderful; I did not think he was at all like this;” while Christ shall say
to them, “you thought that I was altogether like as yourselves; but I am no such
thing; I am come in all my Father’s glory to judge the quick and dead.”
20. Pharaoh led his hosts into the midst of the Red Sea. The path was dry and
rippled, and on either side stood like a wall of alabaster the clear white water
stiff as with the breath of frost, consolidated into marble. There it stood. Can
you guess the astonishment and dismay of the hosts of Pharaoh, when they saw
those walls of water about to close upon them? “Behold, you despisers, and
wonder, and perish!” Such will be your astonishment, when Christ, whom you have
despised today—Christ, whom you did not want to be your Saviour—Christ whose
Bible you left unread, whose Sabbath you despised—Christ, whose gospel you
rejected, shall come in the glory of his Father, and all his holy angels with
him. Indeed, then truly you will “behold, and wonder, and perish,” and you shall
say, “His name is Wonderful.”
21. But perhaps, the most wonderful part of the day of judgment is this, do you
see all the horrors there—the black darkness, the horrible night, the clashing
comets, the pale stars, sickly and wan, falling like figs from the fig tree? Do
you hear the cry, “Rocks, hide us, mountains, fall on us?” “Every battle of the
warrior is with confused noise;” but there never was a battle like this. This is
with fire and smoke indeed. But do you see there? All is peaceful all serene and
quiet. The myriads of the redeemed, are they shrieking, crying, wailing? No; see
them! They are gathering—gathering around the throne. That very throne that
seems to scatter, as with a hundred hands, death and destruction on the wicked,
becomes the sun of light and happiness to all believers. Do you see them coming
robed in white, with their bright wings? while gathering around him they veil
their faces. Do you hear them cry, “Holy, holy, holy, Lord God of hosts, for you
were slain, and you have risen from the dead; worthy are you to live and reign,
when death itself is dead?” Do you hear them? It is all song, and no shriek. Do
you see them? It is all joy, and no terror. His name to them is Wonderful; but
it is the wonder of admiration, the wonder of ecstasy, the wonder of affection,
and not the wonder of horror and dismay. Saints of the Lord! you shall know the
wonders of his name, when you shall see him as he is, and shall be like him in
the day of his appearing. Oh! my enraptured spirit, you shall bear your part in
your Redeemer’s triumph, unworthy though you are, the chief of sinners, and less
than the least of saints. Your eye shall see him and not another; “I know that
my Redeemer lives, and when he shall stand in the latter day upon the earth,
though worms devour this body, yet in my flesh I shall see God.” Oh! make
yourselves ready, you virgins! Behold the bridegroom comes. Arise and trim your
lamps, and go out to meet him. He comes—he comes—he comes; and when he comes,
you shall well say of him as you meet him with joy, “Your name is called
Wonderful. All hail! all hail! all hail!”
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.
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