Looking To Jesus by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, May 23, 1858, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.

They looked to him, and were lightened: and their faces were not ashamed. (Ps 34:5)

1. From the connection we are to understand the pronoun “him” as referring to the word “Lord” in the preceding verse. “They looked to the Lord Jehovah and were lightened.” But no man ever yet looked to Jehovah God, as he is in himself, and found any comfort in him, for “our God is a consuming fire.” An absolute God, apart from the Lord Jesus Christ, can afford no comfort whatever to a troubled heart. We may look to him, and we shall be blinded, for the light of Godhead is insufferable, and since mortal eye cannot fix its gaze upon the sun, no human intellect could ever look to God, and find light, for the brightness of God would strike the eye of the mind with eternal blindness. The only way in which we can see God is through the Mediator Jesus Christ.

Until God in human flesh I see,
My thoughts no comfort find,—

God shrouded and veiled in the manhood,—there we can with steady gaze behold him, for so he comes down to us, and our poor finite intelligence can understand and lay hold upon him. I shall therefore use my text this morning, and I think very legitimately, in reference to our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ—“They looked to him, and were lightened;” for when we look at God, as revealed in Jesus Christ our Lord, and behold the Godhead as it is apparent in the Incarnate Man, who was born of the Virgin Mary, and was crucified by Pontius Pilate, we do see that which enlightens the mind, and casts rays of comfort into our awakened heart.

2. And now this morning, I shall first invite you, in order to illustrate my text, to look to Jesus Christ in his life on earth, and I hope there are some of you who will be lightened by that. We shall then look to him on his cross. Afterwards we shall look to him in his resurrection. We shall look to him in his intercession; and lastly, we shall look to him in his second coming; and it may be, as with faithful eye we look upon him, the verse shall be fulfilled in our experience, which is the best proof of a truth, when we prove it to be true in our own hearts. We shall “look to him” and we shall “be lightened.”

3. I. First, then, we shall LOOK TO THE LORD JESUS CHRIST IN HIS LIFE. And here the troubled saint will find the most to lighten him. In the example, in the patience, in the sufferings of Jesus Christ, there are stars of glory to cheer the midnight darkness of the sky of your tribulation. Come here, oh children of God and whatever your distresses are now, whether they are temporal or spiritual, you shall, in the life of Jesus Christ and his sufferings, find sufficient to cheer and comfort you, if the Holy Spirit shall now open your eyes to look to him. Perhaps I have among my congregation, indeed I am sure I have, some who are plunged in the depths of poverty. You are the children of toil; with much sweat of your brow you eat your bread; the heavy yoke of oppression galls your neck; perhaps at this time you are suffering the very extremity of hunger; you are pinched with famine, and though in the house of God, your body complains, for you feel that you are brought very low. Look to him, oh poor distressed brother in Jesus; look to him, and be lightened.

Why do you complain of want or distress,
Temptation or pain?—he told you no less;
The heirs of salvation, we know from his word,
Through much tribulation must follow their Lord.

See him there! Forty days he fasts and he hungers. See him again; he treads the weary way, and at last very thirsty he sits upon the side of the well of Sychar; and he the Lord of glory, he who holds the clouds in the hollow of his hand, said to a woman, “Give me a drink.” And shall the servant be above his master, and the disciple above his Lord? If he suffered hunger, and thirst, and nakedness, oh heir of poverty, be of good cheer; in all these you have fellowship with Jesus; therefore be comforted, and look to him and be lightened.

4. Perhaps your trouble is of another caste. You have come here today smarting from the forked tongue of that adder—slander. Your character, though pure and spotless before God, seems to be lost before man; for that foul slanderous thing has sought to take away that which is dearer to you than life itself, your character, your good reputation; and you are this day filled with bitterness and made drunken with wormwood, because you have been accused of crimes which your soul loathes. Come, oh child of mourning, this indeed is a heavy blow; poverty is like Solomon’s whip, but slander is like the scorpion of Rehoboam; to fall into the depths of poverty is to have it on your little finger, but to be slandered is to have it on your loins. But in all this you may have comfort from Christ. Come and look to him and be lightened. The King of kings was called a Samaritan; they said of him that he had a devil and was mad; and yet infinite wisdom dwelt in him, though he was charged with madness. And was he not always pure and holy? And did they not call him a drunken man and a winebibber? He was his Father’s glorious Son; and yet they said he did cast out demons through Beelzebub the prince of the demons. Come, poor slandered one; wipe that tear away! “If they have called the Master of the house Beelzebub, how much more shall they call those of his household?” If they had honoured him, then you might have expected that they would honour you, but inasmuch as they mocked him and took away his glory and his character, do not blush to bear the reproach and the shame, for he is with you, carrying his cross before you, and that cross was heavier than yours. Look, then, to him and be lightened.

5. But I hear another say, “Ah! but my trouble is worse than either of those. I am not smarting from slander today, nor am I burdened with penury; but, sir, the hand of God lies heavy upon me; he has brought my sins to my remembrance; he has taken away the bright shining of his countenance; once I believed in him, and could ‘read my title clear to mansions in the skies,’ but today I am brought very low; he has lifted me up and cast me down; like a wrestler, he has elevated me that he might dash me to the ground with the greater force, my bones are grievously vexed, and my spirit within me is melted with anguish.” Come, my tried brother, “look to him and be lightened.” Groan no longer over your own miseries, but come with me and look to him, if you can. Do you see the garden of Olives? It is a cold night, and the ground is crisp beneath your feet, for the frost is hard; and there, in the gloom of the olive garden, kneels your Lord. Listen to him. Can you understand the music of his groans, the meaning of his sighs? Surely, your griefs are not as heavy as his were, when drops of blood were forced through his skin, and a bloody sweat stained the ground! Say, are your wrestlings greater than his? If, then, he had to combat with the powers of darkness, expect to do so also; and look to him in the last solemn hour of his extremity, and hear him say, “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” And when you have heard that, do not murmur, as though some strange thing had happened to you, as if you have to join in his “lama sabachthani,” and have to sweat a few drops of his bloody sweat. “They looked to him, and were lightened.”

6. But, possibly I may have here someone who is greatly persecuted by man. “Ah!” one says, “I cannot practise my religion with comfort. My friends have turned against me; I am mocked, and jeered, and reviled, for Christ’s sake.” Come, Christian, do not be afraid of all this, but, “look to him, and be lightened.” Remember how they persecuted him. Oh! think of the shame and spitting, the pulling out of the hair, the reviling of the soldiers; think of that fearful march through the streets, when every man hooted at him, and when even they who were crucified with him reviled him. Have you been treated worse than he? I think this is enough to make you gird your armour on once more. Why do you need to blush to be as much dishonoured as your Master? It was this thought that cheered the martyrs of old. Those who fought the bloody fight, knew they should win the blood red crown—that ruby crown of martyrdom; therefore they endured, as seeing him who is invisible; for this always cheered and comforted them. They remembered him who had “endured such opposition of sinners against himself, that they might not be weary or faint in their minds.” They “resisted to blood, striving against sin;” for they knew their Master had done the same, and his example comforted them. I am persuaded, beloved brothers and sisters, that if we looked more to Christ, our troubles would not appear so black. In the darkest night, looking to Christ will clear the ebony sky; when the darkness seems thick, like that of Egypt, darkness that might be felt, like solid pillars of ebony, even then, like a bright lightning flash, as bright but not as transient, a look to Jesus will prove to be. One glimpse at him may well suffice for all our toils while on the road. Cheered by his voice, nerved by his strength, we are prepared to do and suffer, even as he did, to the death, if he will be with us, even to the end. This, then, is our first point. We trust that those of you, who are weary Christians, will not forget to “look to him, and be lightened.”

7. II. And now I have to invite you to a more dreary sight; but, strange as it is, just as the sight becomes more black, so to us, does it grow more bright. The more deeply the Saviour dove into the depths of misery, the brighter were the pearls which he brought up—the greater his griefs, the greater our joys, and the deeper his dishonour, the brighter our glories. Come, then—and this time I shall ask poor, doubting, trembling sinners and saints, to come with me,—come now to Calvary’s cross. There, on the summit of that little hill, outside the gates of Jerusalem, where common criminals were ordinarily put to death—the Tyburn of Jerusalem, the Old Bailey of that city,1 where criminals were executed—there stand three crosses; the centre one is reserved for one who is reputed to be the greatest of criminals. See there! They have nailed him to the cross. It is the Lord of life and glory, before whose feet angels delight to pour full vials of glory. They have nailed him to the cross: he hangs there in mid-heaven, dying, bleeding; he is thirsty, and he cries. They bring him vinegar, and thrust it into his mouth. He is in suffering, and he needs sympathy, but they mock him, and they say, “He saved others; he cannot save himself.” They misquote his words; they challenge him now to destroy the temple, and build it in three days; while the very thing was being fulfilled, they taunt him with his powerlessness to accomplish it. Now see him, before the veil is drawn over agonies too black for eye to behold. See him now! Was ever a face marred like that face? Was ever a heart so full of agony? And did eyes ever seem so pregnant with the fire of suffering, as those great wells of fiery agony? Come and behold him, come and look to him now. The sun is eclipsed, refusing to behold him! the earth quakes; the dead rise; the horrors of his sufferings have startled earth itself,

He dies! the friend of sinners dies;

And we invite you to look on this scene that you may be lightened. What are your doubts this morning? Whatever they are, they can find a kind and fond solution here, by looking at Christ on the cross. You have come here, perhaps, doubting God’s mercy; look to Christ upon the cross, and can you doubt it then? If God were not full of mercy, and plenteous in his compassion, would he have given his Son to bleed and die? Can you think that a Father would rend his darling from his heart and nail him to a tree, that he might suffer an ignominious death for our sakes, and yet be hard, merciless, and without pity? God forbid the impious thought! There must be mercy in the heart of God, or else there would never have been a cross on Calvary.

8. But do you doubt God’s power to save! Are you saying in yourself this morning, “How can he forgive so great a sinner as I am?” Oh! look there, sinner, look there,

To the great atonement made,
To the utmost ransom paid.

Do you think that that blood has not an efficacy to pardon and to justify? Truly, without that cross it would have been an unanswerable question,—“How can God be just, and yet the justifier of the ungodly?” But see there the bleeding substitute! and know that God has accepted his sufferings as an equivalent for the woes of all believers; and then let your spirit dare to think, if it can, that the blood of Christ is insufficient to enable God to vindicate his justice, and yet to have mercy upon sinners.

9. But I know you say, “My doubt is not of his general mercy, nor of his power to forgive, but of his willingness to forgive me.” Now I beseech you, by him who lives and was dead, do not this morning look into your own heart in order to find an answer to that difficulty; do not now sit down and look at your sins; they have brought you into the danger—they cannot bring you out of it. The best answer you will ever get, is at the foot of the cross. Sit down, when you go home this morning, for half-an-hour, in quiet contemplation, sit at the foot of the cross, and contemplate the dying Saviour, and I will then defy you to say, “I doubt his love for me.” Looking at Christ produces faith. You cannot believe on Christ except as you see him, and if you look to him you will learn that he is able to save; you will learn his lovingkindness; and you cannot doubt him after having once beheld him. Dr. Watts says,

His worth, if all the nations knew,
Surely the whole world would love him too;

and I am sure it is quite true if I read it another way—

His worth, if all the nations knew
Surely the whole world would trust him too.

Oh, that you would look to him now, and your doubts would soon be removed; for there is nothing that so speedily kills all doubt and fear as a look into the loving eye of the bleeding, dying Lord. “Ah,” one says, “but my doubts are concerning my own salvation in this respect; I cannot be as holy as I want to be.” “I have tried very much,” one says, “to get rid of all my sins, and I cannot; I have laboured to live without wicked thoughts, and without unholy acts, and I still find that my heart is ‘deceitful above all things;’ and I wander from God. Surely I cannot be saved, while I am like this?” Stop! Look to him, and be lightened. What business have you to be looking at yourself? The first business of a sinner is not with himself, but with Christ. Your business is to come to Christ; sick, weary, and diseased soul, and ask Christ to cure you. You are not to be your own physician, and then go to Christ, but just as you are; the only salvation for you is to trust implicitly, simply, nakedly, on Christ. As I sometimes put it—make Christ the only pillar of your hope, and never seek to buttress or prop him up. “He is able, he is willing.” All he asks of you is just to trust him. As for your good works, they shall come afterwards. They are after fruits of the Spirit: but your first business is not to do, but to believe. Look to Jesus, and put your only trust in him. “Oh,” another cries, “Sir, I am afraid I do not feel my need of a Saviour as I ought.” Looking at yourselves again! all looking at yourselves you see! This is all wrong. Our doubts and fears all arise from this cause—we will turn our eyes the wrong way—just look at the cross again, just as the poor thief did when he was dying; he said, “Lord, remember me when you come into your kingdom.” Do the same. You may tell him if you please, that you do not feel your need of him as you ought; you may put this among your other sins, that you fear you have not a right sense of your great and enormous guilt. You may add to all your confessions, this cry “Lord help me to confess my sins better; help me to feel them more penitently.” But remember, it is not your repentance that saves you; it is just the blood of Christ, streaming from his hands, and feet, and side. Oh! I beseech you by him whose servant I am, turn your eyes to the cross of Christ this morning. There he hangs this day; he is lifted up in your midst. As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so is the Son of Man lifted up today in your eyes, that whoever believes in him may not perish, but have everlasting life.

10. And you children of God, I turn to you, for you have your doubts too. Do you wish to be rid of them? Do you wish to rejoice in the Lord with unmoveable faith and unshakeable confidence? Then look to Jesus; look again to him and you shall be lightened. I do not know how it is with you my beloved friends, but I very often find myself in a doubting frame of mind; and it seems to be a question whether I have any love for Christ at all. And despite the fact that some laugh at the hymn, it is a hymn that I am forced to sing:—

’Tis a point I long to know,
Oft it causes anxious thought;
Do I love the Lord or no?
Am I his, or am I not?

11. And really I am convinced that every Christian has his doubts at times, and that the people who do not doubt are just the people that ought to doubt; for he who never doubts about his state perhaps may do so when it is too late. I knew a man who said he never had a doubt for thirty years. I told him that I knew a person who never had a doubt about him for thirty years. “How is that?” he said, “that is strange.” He thought it was a compliment. I said, “I knew a man who never had a doubt about you for thirty years. He knew you were always the most confounded hypocrite he ever met; he had no doubt about you.” But this man had no doubt about himself: he was a chosen child of God, a great favourite of the Most High; he loved the doctrine of Election, wrote it on his very brow; and yet he was the hardest driver and the most cruel oppressor to the poor I ever met with, and when brought to poverty himself, he might very frequently be seen rolling through the streets. And this man had not a doubt for thirty years; and yet the best people are always doubting. Some of those who are just living outside the gates of heaven, are afraid of being cast into hell after all; while those people who are on the high road to the pit are not the least afraid. However, if you wish to get rid of your doubts once more, turn to Christ. You know what Dr. Carey had put on his tombstone—just these words, for they were his comfort;—

A guilty, weak, and helpless worm,
Into Christ’s arms I fall;
He is my strength and righteousness,
My Jesus and my all.

Remember what that eminent Scotch divine said, when he was dying. Someone said to him, “What, are you dying now?” He said, “I am just gathering all my good works up together, and I am throwing them all overboard; and I am lashing myself to the plank of free grace, and I hope to swim to glory on it.” So do you do; every day keep your eye only on Christ; and as long as your eye is good, your whole body must and shall be full of light. But if you once look cross-eyed, first to yourself and then to Christ, your whole body shall be full of darkness. Remember, then, Christian, to flee away to the cross. When that great black dog of hell is after you, away to the cross! Go where the sheep goes when he is molested by the dog; go to the shepherd. The dog is afraid of the shepherd’s crook; you need not be afraid of it, it is one of the things that shall comfort you. “Your rod and your staff comfort me.” Away to the cross, my brothers! away to the cross, if you wish to get rid of your doubts. I am certain, that if we lived more with Jesus, were more like Jesus, and trusted more on Jesus, doubts and fears would be very scarce and rare things, and we would have as little to complain about as the first emigrants in Australia had to complain about thistles; for they found none there, and none would have been there if they had not been carried there. If we live simply by faith on the cross of Christ, we live in a land where there are no thistles; but if we will live on self, we shall have plenty of thistles and thorns, and briers, and nettles growing there. “They looked to him, and were lightened.”

12. III. And now I invite you to a glorious scene—CHRIST’S RESURRECTION. Come here, and look at him, as the old serpent bruises his heel!

He dies! the friend of sinners dies,
And Salem’s daughters weep around.

He was wrapped in his grave clothes and put into his grave, and there he slept three days and nights. And on the first day of the week, he, who could not be held by the bands of death, and whose flesh did not see corruption, neither did his soul abide in Hades—he arose from the dead. In vain were the bands that swaddled him; he unfolded them by himself, and by his own living power wrapped them in perfect order, and laid them in their place. In vain were the stone and the seal; the angel appeared and rolled away the stone, and the Saviour came forth. In vain were the guards and watchmen; for in terror they fled far away, and he rose the conqueror over death—the firstfruits of those who slept. By his own power and might, he came again to life. I see among my congregation, not a few wearing the black dress of sorrow. You have lost, some of you, the dearest of your earthly relatives. There are others here, who, I do not doubt, are under the constant fear of death. You are subject to bondage all your lifetime, because you are thinking upon the groans, and dying strife, which fall upon men, when they approach the river Jordan. Come, come, I beseech you, you weeping and timid spirits, behold Jesus Christ risen! For remember, this is a great truth—“Now Christ is risen from the dead, and become the firstfruits of those who slept.” And the verse of our song just embodies it:—

What though our inbred sins require
Our flesh to see the dust,
Yet as the Lord our Saviour rose,
So all his followers must.

There widow; weep no longer for your husband, if he died in Jesus. See the Master; he is risen from the dead; he is no spectre. In the presence of his disciples he eats a piece of broiled fish and part of a honeycomb. He is no spirit; for he says, “Handle me and see; a spirit does not have flesh and bones as you see me have.” That was a real resurrection. And learn then, beloved, when you weep, to restrain your sorrows; for your loved ones shall live again. Not only shall their spirits live, but their bodies too.

Corruption, earth, and worms,
Do but refine this flesh;
At the archangel’s sounding trump,
We put it on afresh.

Oh! do not think that the worm has eaten up your children, your friends, your husband, your father, your aged parents—truly, the worms seem to have devoured them. Oh! what is the worm after all, but the filter through which our poor filthy flesh must go? For in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trump, we shall be raised incorruptible, and the living shall be changed; you shall see the eye that just now has been closed, and you shall look on it again, you shall again grasp the hand that just now fell motionless at their side. You shall kiss the lips that just now were clay cold, and white, and you shall hear again the voice that is silent in the tomb. They shall live again. And you who fear death—why do you fear to die? Jesus died before you, and he passed through the iron gates, and as he passed through them before you, he will come and meet you. Jesus who lives can

Make the dying bed
Feel soft as downy pillows are.

Why should you weep? for Jesus rose from the dead; so shall you. Be of good cheer and confidence. You are not lost when you are put into the tomb; you are only a seed sown to ripen for the eternal harvest. Your spirit mounts to God; your body slumbers for awhile to be quickened into eternal life. It cannot be quickened except it dies; but when it dies it shall receive a new life; it shall not be destroyed. “They looked to him, and were lightened.” Oh! this is a precious thing to look to—a risen Saviour. I know of nothing that can lift our spirits higher than a true view of the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead. We have not lost any friends then; they have gone before us. We shall not die ourselves; we shall seem to die, but we shall begin to live; for it is written

He lives to die; he dies to live;
He lives to die no more.

May that be the lot of each one of us!

13. IV. And with the greatest possible brevity, I invite you to LOOK AT JESUS CHRIST ASCENDING INTO HEAVEN. After forty days, he takes his disciples to the hill, and while he discourses with them, suddenly he mounts upward; and he is separated from them, and a cloud receives him into glory. Perhaps I may be allowed a little poetic licence if I try to picture that which occurred after he ascended into the clouds. The angels came from heaven—

They brought his chariot from on high,
To bear him to his throne
Clapped their triumphant wings and cried,
The glorious work is done.

I do not doubt, that with matchless triumph he ascended the hill of light and went to the celestial city, and when he neared the portals of that great metropolis of the universe, the angels shouted, “Lift up your heads, oh you gates; and lift them up you everlasting doors,” and the bright spirits from burning battlements, cried out, “Who is this King of Glory—who?” And the answer came, “the Lord mighty in battle, and the Lord of Hosts; he is the King of Glory.” And then both those upon the walls, and those who walk with the chariot join the song once more, and with one mighty sea of music, beating its melodious waves against the gates of heaven and forcing them open, the strain is heard, “Lift up your heads, oh you gates, and lift them up you everlasting doors, that the King of Glory may come in”—and he went in. And at his feet the angelic hosts all cast their crowns, and the blood washed came out and met him, not casting roses at his feet, as we do at the feet of conquerors in our streets, but casting immortal flowers, imperishable wreaths of honour that never can decay; while again, again, again, the heavens rang with this melody, “To him who has loved us, and washed us from our sins in his blood, and has made us kings and priests to God and his Father—to him be glory for ever and ever.” And all the saints and all the angels said, “Amen.” Now look here, oh Christians, here is your comfort; Jesus Christ won the victory, and he ascended to his throne of glory. You are fighting today, and wrestling with spiritual enemies, not with flesh and blood, but with principalities and powers; you are at war today, and maybe the enemy has grievously thrust at you, and you have been ready to fall; it is a marvel to you, that you have not turned your back in the day of battle, for you have often feared lest you should be made to flee like a coward from the field. But do not tremble, your Master was more than conqueror, and so shall you be. The day is coming when with splendour less than his, but yet the same in its measure, you too shall pass the gates of bliss; when you are dying, angels shall meet you in the midstream, and when your blood is cooling with the cold current, then your heart shall be warmed with another stream, a stream of light and heat from the great fountain of all joy, and you shall stand on the other side of Jordan, and angels shall meet you clothed in their immaculate garments, they shall attend you up the hill of light, and they shall chant the praise of Jesus, and hail you as another trophy of his power. And when you enter the gates of heaven, you shall be met with Christ your Master, who will say to you—“Well done, good and faithful servant, enter into the joy of your Lord.” Then you will feel that you are sharing in his victory, as once you shared in his struggles and his war. Fight on, Christian, your glorious Captain has won a great victory, and has secured for you in one and the same victory, a standard that never yet was stained with defeat, though often dipped in the blood of the slain.

14. V. And now once more, “Look to him, and be lightened.” See there he sits in heaven, he has led captivity captive, and now sits at the right hand of God, for ever making intercession for us. Can your faith picture him today? Like a great high priest of old, he stands with outstretched arms: there is majesty in his bearing, for he is no lowly cringing suppliant. He does not beat his breast, nor cast his eyes upon the ground, but with authority he pleads enthroned in glory now. There on his head is the bright shining mitre of his priesthood, and look, on his breast are glittering the precious stones upon which the names of his elect are everlastingly engraved; hear him as he pleads, do you not hear what it is?—is that your prayer that he is mentioning before the throne? The prayer that this morning you offered before you came to the house of God, Christ is now offering before his Father’s throne. The vow which you just now uttered when you said, “Have pity and have mercy,”—he is now uttering there. He is the Altar and the Priest, and with his own sacrifice he perfumes our prayers. And yet, maybe, you have been at prayer for many a day, and had no answer; poor weeping suppliant, you have sought the Lord and he has not heard you, or at least not answered you to your soul’s delight; you have cried to him, but the heavens have been as brass, and he has shut out your prayer, you are full of darkness and heaviness on account of this, “Look to him, and be lightened.” If you do not succeed, he will; if your intercession is unnoticed, his cannot be ignored; if your prayers can be like water spilt on a rock which cannot be gathered up, yet his prayers are not like that, he is God’s Son, he pleads and must prevail; God cannot refuse his own Son what he now asks, he who once bought mercies with his blood. Oh! be of good cheer, continue still with your supplication. “Look to him, and be lightened.”

15. VI. In the last place, there are some of you here, weary with this world’s din and clamour, and with this world’s iniquity and vice. You have been striving all your life long, to put an end to the reign of sin, and it seems as if your efforts have been fruitless; the pillars of hell stand as firm as ever and the black palace of evil is not laid in ruins; you have brought against it all the battering rams of prayer, and the might of God, you have thought,—and yet the world still sins, its rivers still roll with blood, its plains are still defiled with the lascivious dance, and its ear is still polluted with the filthy song and profane oath. God is not honoured; man is still vile; and perhaps you are saying, “It is vain for us to fight on, we have undertaken a task which cannot be accomplished; the kingdoms of this world never can become the kingdoms of our Lord and of his Christ.” But, Christian, “Look to him, and be lightened.” Lo! he comes, he comes, he comes quickly; and what we cannot do in six thousand years, he can do in an instant. Lo! he comes, he comes to reign; we may try to build his throne, but we shall not accomplish it. But when he comes, he shall build his throne himself, on solid pillars of light, and sit and judge in Jerusalem, amidst his saints, gloriously. Perhaps today, the hour we are assembled, Christ may come—“For no man knows that day and hour; no, not even the angels in heaven.” Christ Jesus may, while I yet speak, appear in the clouds of glory. We have no reason to be guessing at the time of his appearing; he will come as a thief in the night; and whether it shall be at the cock crowing, or broad day, or at midnight, we are not allowed to guess; it is left entirely in the dark, and the prophecies of men are vain, vain your “Apocalyptic Sketches,” or anything like that. No man knows anything about it, except that it is certain he will come; but no spirit in heaven or on earth should pretend to know the time when he comes. Oh! it is my joyous hope, that he may come while yet I live. Perhaps there may be some of us here who shall be alive, and remain at the coming of the Son of Man. Oh, glorious hope! we shall not all have to sleep, but we shall all be changed. He may come now, and we who are alive and remain shall be caught up together with the Lord in the air, and so shall be for ever with him. But if you die, Christian, this is your hope. “I will come again, and receive you to myself, that where I am, there you may be also.” And this is to be your duty, “Watch, therefore, for in such an hour as you do not think, the Son of Man comes.” Oh, will I not continue working, for Christ is at the door! Oh! I will not give up toiling ever so hard, for my Master comes, and his reward is with him, and his work before him, giving to every man according as his work shall be. Oh, I will not lie down in despair, for the trump is sounding now. I think I hear the trampling of the conquering legion, the last of God’s mighty heroes are even now, perhaps, born into the world. The hour of this revival2 is the hour of the turning of the battle; thick has been the fight, and hot and furious the struggle, but the trump of the Conqueror is beginning to sound, the angel is lifting it now to his lips. The first blast has been heard across the sea, and we shall hear it yet again; or if we do not hear it in these days of ours, yet still it is our hope. He comes, he comes, and every eye shall see him, and those who have crucified him shall weep and wail before him, but the righteous shall rejoice, and shall magnify him exceedingly. “They looked to him, and were lightened.”

16. I remember I concluded preaching at Exeter Hall with these three words, “Jesus, Jesus, Jesus!” and I think I will conclude my sermon of this morning with the same words, but not until I have spoken to one poor forlorn soul who is standing over there, wondering whether there is mercy for him. He says, “It is well enough, sir, to say, ‘Look to Jesus;’ but suppose you cannot look? If your eye is blind—what then?” Oh! my poor brother, turn your restless eyeballs to the cross, and that light which gives light to those who see, shall give eyesight to those who are blind. Oh! if you cannot believe this morning, look and consider, and weigh the matter, and in weighing and reflecting you shall be helped to believe. He asks nothing from you; he bids you now to believe that he died for you. If today you feel yourself a lost, guilty sinner, all he asks is that you would believe on him; that is to say, trust him, confide in him. Is it not little he asks? And yet it is more than any of us are prepared to give, except the Spirit has made us willing. Come, cast yourselves upon him; fall flat on his promise; sink or swim, confide in him, and you cannot guess the joy that you shall feel in that one instant that you believe on him. Were there not some of you impressed last Sunday, and you have been anxious all the week? Oh! I hope I have brought a good message to you this morning for your comfort. “Look to me and be saved, all the ends of the earth,” says Christ, “for I am God, and besides me there is no one else.” Look now, and looking you shall live. May every blessing rest upon you, and may each go away to think of that one person whom we love, even Jesus—Jesus—Jesus!

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. Tyburn was used for centuries as the primary location of the execution of London criminals; the Old Bailey was the main criminal court of London.  
  2. On September 21, 1857 Jeremiah Lanphier began a series of prayer meetings in New York. By the beginning of 1858 his congregation was crowded, often with a majority of businessmen. Newspapers reported that over 6,000 were attending various prayer meetings in New York, and 6,000 in Pittsburgh. Daily prayer meetings were held in Washington, D.C. at 5 different times to accommodate the crowds. Other cities followed the pattern. Soon, a common midday sign on business premises read, "We will reopen at the close of the prayer meeting." By May, 50,000 of New York’s 800,000 people were new converts. Finney wrote of this revival, “This winter of 1857-58 will be remembered as the time when a great revival prevailed. It swept across the land with such power that at the time it was estimated that no less than 50,000 conversions occurred weekly.” Coincidentally, the very month that Jeremiah Lanphier began his prayer meeting in New York, four young Irishmen began a weekly prayer meeting in the village of Connor near Ballymena. This meeting is generally regarded as the origin of the 1859 revival that swept through most of the towns and villages in the north of Ireland and in due course brought 100,000 converts into the churches. It was also ignited by a young preacher, Henry Grattan Guinness, who drew thousands at a time to hear his preaching. The movement spread to Wales, Scotland and England, with estimates that a million people were converted in the United Kingdom. Missionaries subsequently carried the movement abroad.  

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/08/05/looking-to-jesus