Negotiations For Peace
No. 952-16:529. A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Evening, September 18, 1870, By C. H. Spurgeon At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington. 6/15/2011*6/15/2011
Preaching peace by Jesus Christ: (he is Lord of all). (Acts 10:36)
1. These words were addressed to an admirable congregation, all met with an earnest purpose, all conscious that they were in the presence of God, all like good soil that had been ploughed and prepared for the good seed. Happy preacher to have such a congregation. God make this congregation to be of the same kind. The preacher also was a very faithful messenger from heaven. No sooner did Peter know that he was commissioned to the Gentile centurion and his household, than he came to his house; and when he found himself surrounded by the family and their friends, he girt up his loins for his work, and gave his whole soul to his subject. Peter goes straight to his business; there is no beating about the bush, no prefatory apology, but he begins to preach. Jesus Christ spoken of by prophets, seen by apostles, hung on a tree, and risen again on the third day. It is well when the preacher feels that preaching is no mere display, and is not intended to be an opportunity for him to show how excellent an orator he can be. The true ambassador for Christ feels that he himself stands before God, and has to deal with souls in God’s place as God’s servant, and therefore has no time for considering the graces of oratory and the tricks of rhetoric, but must speak from his innermost soul the word of the Lord. Every preacher stands in a solemn place — a place in which unfaithfulness is inhumanity to man as well as treason to God. To be false to our charge will cast us into the deepest condemnation; to be hurled from a pulpit into hell will be to perish indeed. See, then, that both the congregation and the preacher are particularly in God’s presence in their solemn assemblies, and should feel and act accordingly. Pray for us and for yourselves that we both may so behave before the Lord, that our assembling together may not increase our sin, but may prove to be a rich and lasting blessing.
2. We have in the text before us the subject upon which Peter preached on his sermon to Cornelius and his friends. He seems to have taken it for granted that men are at war with God, that even the attentive congregation before him, although consisting of the best of men, were by nature at enmity with their Maker. He speaks therefore as an ambassador desirous of establishing a better state of things, and tells those whom he has come to preach peace to by Jesus Christ, who is Lord of all. I shall this evening try to follow his example, and though I cannot do so with equal steps, yet I have in my heart the same earnest desire for the souls of my hearers as the apostle had. I pray that all of you may be brought to peace with God through Jesus Christ.
3. First, this evening, I shall give some reasons why those of you who are not reconciled to God should desire peace with him. When we have weighed these I shall, secondly, endeavour to negotiate the terms of peace, and then, thirdly, we shall lay before you a claim or proclamation, which is publicly asserted, and to be universally maintained, namely, that Jesus Christ is Lord of all.
4. I. To begin, then, I shall endeavour to offer to the unconverted REASONS WHY THEY SHOULD DESIRE TO BE AT PEACE.
5. May I not urge as the first reason that it is not commendable to be at enmity with any of the wise and good. It is best to be at peace with all men, but it is incumbent upon us to be in friendship with holy men. I should deeply regret to have anyone for my enemy, but if he would be a godly person I should consider it a calamity. If the angels of heaven were opposed to us it would look bad, those holy beings would not needlessly take umbrage; but when it comes to opposition to the infinitely good, just and holy God, who in his right mind can do other than bewail it, and desire to see it ended by a gracious peace? Strife against evil, injustice, and tyranny is honourable, but to contend with uprightness, goodness, and holiness is deplorable. No possible benefit can arise from a conflict in which we are on the wrong side. If God is for us, no one can successfully fight against us, but to have God opposed to us is in itself the chief of evils. My hearer, “Acquaint yourself with God, and be at peace, for by it good shall come to you.”
6. The second reason ought to have weight with every honest man, it is this, that the war in which you are engaged is an unjust one. It never ought to have been begun, there was never any justifiable cause for its outbreak; God was unjustly and wickedly assailed by his ungrateful creature. What ought never to have been begun had better be stopped as soon as possible. Sin is war against right, against love, against happiness. Transgression of God’s law is a transgression of commands most equitable and beneficial. To love evil is dishonourable, wrong, unfair, unjust, and the conscience of man tells him it is so. To be at war with God is to fight against truth and justice, and to contend for falsehood, unholiness, injustice, unrighteousness. When men love what is right, and good, and true, and yield themselves up to God’s will, then the war is over; but inasmuch as the war against God consists in our doing the wrong, and loving the wrong, and thinking the wrong, and clinging to the wrong, such a war, in the very nature of things, ought to come to a close. May the Holy Spirit set this in its true colours, and convince every one of you that not to love God is the most shameful of evils, the most detestable of enormities. How can it ever be justifiable for the creature to contend against the Creator? Shall the clay rise against the potter? Will it ever become a right thing for children to rebel against their parents? The ox fed at the stall will serve its owner; shall it be right that we, being fed by God, should still refuse him our service? The natural order of the relationship between us and our Creator involves in all justice that we should be conformed to his will. Oh men, will you choose the ways and wages of unrighteousness, and cover yourselves with confusion? Oh that there was in you an honest judgment to judge uprightly. Besides, what evil has our Creator done to us that we should go to war against him? What quality is there in him that we ought to hate? What is there that we can justly challenge in the character of God which might righteously provoke our antagonism? Is he not kindness itself? Does he not overflow with lovingkindness? Does he not send his rain upon the just and upon the unjust? Does he not command his sun to rise upon the evil as well as the good? Has he not sent us fruitful seasons, and kept his covenant, that day and night, seedtime and harvest, summer and winter, should not cease? For which of these things should we rebel against him? Some of you have riches; should you for that cause forget the God who gave them to you? Others of you are in sound, robust health; should you violate the commands of him who gives you this choicest of blessings? We appeal to you, men and brethren, why are you at war with your God? If he were a cruel tyrant, if he were unjust, if he trod you beneath his feet, if his government were malicious and degrading, I could understand your warfare, but it is an evil, an unjust, a villainous war, because the Lord is full of mercy and his name is love. Oh that men would end their rebellion at this hour, while we summon them to do so in the name of God! Eternal Spirit convince them of sin, of righteousness, and of judgment to come, and lead them to the blood which speaks peace.
7. A third argument for ending the war may be drawn from the fact that he who began it has been terribly defeated, and is at this moment a prisoner. He who began the war is Satan, the archenemy. Our first parents did not first rebel; man was the dupe of an older rebel. Apollyon, once an angel, conceived ambitious thoughts, and would gladly have become equal with his Maker, but he was banished from heaven by just decree, and then resorting to this lower region, sought out our mother Eve, and seduced our race, hoping to maintain the war against the Lord of Hosts by inciting us to cast off our allegiance. Little has he gained by this stratagem, overwhelming has been his defeat. Hurled from the battlements of heaven at first, he has worn his chain wearily these many years, seeking rest and finding none, dreading that day of wrath when he shall be dragged at the chariot wheels of our divine Redeemer, and then consigned to the hell of old prepared for him. Jesus who once was slain, has led captives captive. He whose heel was bitten by the old dragon has broken the serpent’s head. Revolt, oh man, against the prince of the power of the air; follow him no longer; take up arms against the demon monarch; refuse henceforth to follow his beck and call. What right has the devil to reign over you? He neither made you, preserved you, or blessed you; he will only do evil to you continually. Strike for your freedom, strike at once, and shake off his galling yoke. The everlasting fire has been prepared for him; why do you need to share it? The wages of sin will be death; why continue in so unprofitable a service? May God grant that you may escape the wrath to come that knows no end, by turning against your old master and enlisting beneath the banner of your Saviour. Down with the black, sin stained, sulphureous colours, and run up the red cross. Exchange the black Diabolos for the fair Emmanuel, and peace shall come to you.
8. These are three good reasons, but there are many others, and among them is this one — it is utterly impossible for you to effectively resist the force which is brought against you. It is well when we contemplate warfare to sit down and see whether we are equal to the combat. What man is he who with one thousand can meet him who comes against him with twenty thousand? Now, consider this, you who forget God. If you oppose God, with whom is it that you set yourselves in battle array? Can your puny arm hope to rival the right hand of Jehovah? Can you thunder with a voice like his? If he were a creature like yourselves, you might hope for victory. If he were limited in any degree, you might summon all your strength and hold out in the day of conflict; but who can contend against Omnipotence? Who shall stand against the Almighty God? As well might the fly hope to quench the sun when he has already burned up his wings in a candle! As well might you seek to dry up the Atlantic, or order Niagara Falls to leap up the rock instead of down! As well might you hope to stop the moon in its course, or to pull the stars from their places, as think to stand against God! No, if you had all heaven and earth and hell beneath your feet, yet God could overcome you, for he has made all these things, and can overthrow both them and you with his mere will. Do not let the wax contend with the fire, nor the stubble with the flame. Do not let man, who is only nothingness, think that he can contend with his Maker. You know already how foolish it is to strive against the natural laws of God, and you will find it equally so to contend against his moral government.
9. A man stands in the way of a steam engine rushing on at express speed; he knows that according to the laws of nature its weight and velocity effectually prevent his stopping its course; do you call it courage on his part that he stands on the track and defies the iron horse? It is not courage, it is foolhardiness, it is madness, it is suicide. Yet this is nothing in comparison to what you are doing in placing yourself in opposition to the Lord. God will not alter his laws for you. Why should he? They are just and right, why should he change them? Fire will burn, and if a drunken madcap persists in thrusting his arm between the bars of a furnace, shall fire cease from its nature to secure him immunity from his folly? If a man exposes himself to the rush of an avalanche can he expect the rolling mass to suspend itself in midair for him? If a mariner will go to sea in a vessel worm eaten and unseaworthy, will the waves pity the barque and cease from their rough play and rougher warfare? No, they roll around the leaking craft as they would have done around a better vessel; they toss it, they sink it and the careless mariner perishes. If a man will act contrary to natural laws, he must suffer for it. If you dash your head against a granite rock it will not for your sake soften into down; and it is just so with the moral laws of God’s government, certain results follow from sinful courses of action, inevitably and as a matter of course. Yield, then, to the divine wisdom which has rightly ordained the consequences of sin. Do not necessitate your own destruction. Submit freely where rebellion is absurd. It would be folly to strive against Omnipotence; be wise, then, and submit to the power of the omnipotent God.
10. Further, remember that any resistance which you may be able to offer to the Lord your God will be carried on at a very fearful price. You will have to bear the expenses of the war which you foolishly prolong. All the time that you resist the Almighty you are doing it at your own risk and hazard. And what is that risk and hazard? Why this, that even if you should yield to him ultimately, in order to be saved, you will regret these sins and these rebellions as long as you live. Even when they are forgiven, your iniquities will be a source of perpetual regret to you, they will be a source of danger and weakness to you as long as you live, for although God heals the wounds of our sin, we shall carry the scars even to our graves. Moreover, if you should never receive the saving mercy of God, remember these rebellions of yours are noted against you, and when the Great Judge comes to deal with you and lay his justice to the line, and righteousness to the plummet, for all this you will have to give an account, for all this God will levy his distresses upon you, and you shall be made to feel the weight of his terrible hand of vengeance.
11. Furthermore, let me remind
you of one more thing, namely, that your total defeat
is absolutely certain sooner or later. No man ever
did set himself against God and prosper for long. His
patience suffers long and is kind, but there is an end
to it. Look at Pharaoh. If ever a man defied God
thoroughly, it was that king of Egypt. “Who is the
Lord,” he said, “that I should obey him?” He bore up
against warnings and actual plagues; each time when he
was broken down he defied the Lord again as soon as the
pressure of trouble was removed; but when he imagined
that the infinite God had emptied out his quiver, he
found to his cost that there was still another arrow
left, and that a deadly shaft which would lodge in his
heart and lay him prostrate. He said in his heart, “I
have outlived the plague of the locusts, I have outlived
the lightnings, and the darkness, and the murrain that
fell upon men and beasts, who is Jehovah that I should
care for any further plagues? I will defy him to do his
worst, and fight on to the bitter end.” As he dashes
along in his war chariots, with his mighty hosts at his
side, hastening to pursue the captives who are fleeing
from him, he imagines himself to be omnipotent, but when
he finds his wheels dragging heavily in the depths of
the sea, he turns to flee from the face of the Lord. All
too late was his flight, for God gave the word and the
liquid walls which before had stood like solid masonry,
leapt down upon him, and then the haughty king knew that
Jehovah could vanquish the proud, and put down the
stouthearted. For this cause he was raised up, so that
he might be a standing testimony to all generations that
whoever rebels against the Lord shall meet with a final
and irretrievable overthrow. Oh sinner, your fate may
not be to be drowned in the Red Sea, but worse than
that, you will be shut in for ever where hope is shut
out, and where misery abounds. The punishment of lost
souls will prove to them, beyond all controversy, that
it is a futile, a bitter, a horrible thing to be at war
with the Lord of hosts. No one can endure the terror of
Jehovah’s wrath, why is it that they so lightly dare to
provoke it? Yield, man, it would be folly to stand
against God, you cannot hope to win. Sue for peace
tonight, and may God send it to you. Without such peace
your future is darkened with thick clouds, and the
presages of a horrible tempest. The Lord most surely
comes, and at his coming woe will be the portion of his
enemies.
At his presence nature shakes,
Earth frightened hastes to flee,
Solid mountains melt like wax,
What will then become of thee?
Who his advent may abide
You that glory in your shame,
Will you find a place to hide
When the world is wrapped in flame?
12. Let me tell you (and this is the happiest note that is in my heart tonight), let me tell you it will be altogether to your advantage to be at peace with God. It will be for your present happiness, it will be for your eternal welfare. A soul at war with God is also opposed to its own best interests, but a heart that has yielded to divine love, that has cast down its weapons, that has closed in with divine mercy, is a soul at peace, at rest, a soul that is ready for joy on earth, and for unspeakable bliss above. If there was no hereafter, it is profitable even for this present life to have God for our friend, but when we think of the eternal future even the most superficial consideration suffices to convince us of the urgent necessity of being reconciled to God. Be wise and consider then, take advice and do what will be most profitable for you — namely, seek peace, and yield to Christ who is Lord of all. Meanwhile, my heart’s desire and prayer for you is that you may be saved, and to that end may the Holy Spirit visit you, soften your heart, guide your judgment, and direct your will, so that Jesus may henceforth be yours, and be your peace.
13. II. Now I shall turn, in the second place, to DECLARE THE TERMS ON WHICH PEACE MAY BE NEGOTIATED. I come with a white flag tonight. I ask for a parley, an armistice, a truce. God, meanwhile, holds back his thunderbolts, and invites the sinner to live while mercy is proclaimed to him. Would you have peace, then? Are you in earnest for friendship with your God? Then learn that first of all the great sine qua non is, that peace is made through an ambassador appointed by God, namely, his only begotten Son, Jesus Christ. Here, in the text, it says, “Preaching peace by Jesus Christ.” There will be no peace between God and any man who despises the person, name and work of Jesus Christ. Reject that name, and there is no other by which you can be saved. This is the foundation for peace which was laid of old, and no man can lay another foundation. Hear, then, and let all difficulty vanish from your mind, while we speak of that excellent, that all glorious Person whom the Lord has appointed as heaven’s Plenipotentiary, (a) the Ambassador of the Eternal. This Jesus Christ is God himself — God over all blessed for ever; knowing the mind of God, and able to negotiate with divine authority. But he is also man — man such as you are — man of the substance of his mother, most truly and really man, and, therefore, he is suited to deal graciously with man. Oh, then, because he is your brother, accept him as ambassador. He is fit to be a daysman, and an arbitrator, and a mediator, since he has sympathy with you, and yet has equality with God. If you yourself had the choice of a mediator you could not select one so suited for the office in every way. His love for you, his goodwill for our poor fallen race, his assumption of our nature, his death in mortal form, all should lead you to commit your case into his faithful hands. May God lead you to do so at once, for the matter is urgent.
14. Now further, concerning the
negotiation, I would say to you, oh enemy of God, that
the great difficulty is put away which might have
prevented peace between you and God, for the justice of
God which you have provoked has been satisfied by Jesus
Christ. The sacrifice of Jesus has made compensation for
the injury done by human sin. There is no difficulty now
on God’s part; no difficulty in forgiving any sinner who
believes in Jesus Christ. Your sin was a great stone
which lay at the door, but it is rolled away because
Jesus died; let that comfort you. If you are anxious to
have peace, God’s terms are these (I call them terms for
lack of a better word, but I mean no legality by it); he
asks for no price from you, he demands no millions of
money, indeed, he demands no money at your hands. If you
had the wealth of the Indies, the Lord would despise
such a bribe. If he were hungry, he would not tell you;
if he were thirsty he would not come to you for a drink,
for Lebanon would not be sufficient to burn, nor its
beasts for a burnt sacrifice. He asks for no gold from
you, he asks for no suffering from you, no passing
through dreary penance, or horrible despairing. It would
be no satisfaction to him to see you suffer. He delights
in happiness, he is pleased to see us happy when it is
safe for others that we should be so. Neither does he
ask you to achieve merits to bring to him. You could not
if he should demand it. You have sinned before and will
sin again. All hope for you to atone for the faultiness
of the past by the perfection of the future is gone. You
have broken the law you cannot keep it. If you shall
labour after life under the covenant of works, you must
perish. God, therefore, does not ask you to save
yourself by your own works, but he graciously tells you
that he is full of mercy, full of compassion, delighting
to forgive, ready to pass by your sins, and that at
once. Here is all that the Lord asks from you, and this
he will enable you to do — trust sincerely in his
only begotten Son. On the cross Jesus suffered, turn
your eyes to that cross. He rose again, he ascended to
heaven — trust him to save your soul, because he ever
lives to make intercession for you.
All the doing is completed,
Now ’tis “look, believe, and live”;
None can purchase his salvation,
Life’s a gift that God must give;
Grace, through righteousness, is reigning,
Not of works, lest man should boast
Man must take the mercy freely,
Or eternally be lost.
Then down with your weapons of rebellion; surrender them, confess that you have erred, confess it in your Father’s own bosom. Conscious of his love, be conscious of your sin. Confess that you have done wrong. Cease to do evil, learn to do well. Let the wicked forsake his way, and the unrighteous man his thoughts, and let him return to the Lord. Do not nurture within your heart the viper that will be your destruction. Pull it out and hurl it from you in the strength of him who died to save you.
15. Now, is this hard? Are these severe demands? Is it a hardship to confess the wrong which you have done? Is that too much? Is it not reasonable that you should do it? You cannot be healed, and continue to wound yourself. How can you hope that the poison will be extracted from your veins while you continue to drink it? No, man, look to the cross, and hate your sin, for sin nailed the Well Beloved to the tree. Look up to the cross, and you will kill sin, for the strength of Jesus’ love will make you strong to put down your tendencies to sin. Well, but, you say, “Is there nothing for me to bring, nothing for me to do?” Answer, “There is nothing for you to bring, there is nothing for you to do, but there is much for you to take — for you have to receive Jesus as your all in all.” It is your duty to throw down your weapons of rebellion, and to say tonight, “Great God I yield; my wanderings now are at an end. I yield my soul to you, Jesus, come and save me. And when you have saved me, help me to obey you. Behold, I give myself up to you. Infinite mercy of God, receive me; precious blood of Jesus, cleanse me; Holy Spirit, sanctify me; God my creator, create me anew; Jesus, lover of my soul, teach my soul to love you.” In this way peace is found, even peace through Jesus Christ.
16. III. And now, thirdly, and to conclude, I have to make public A CLAIM which Peter made on this occasion, when he spoke to Cornelius and his relatives.
17. I have a claim which ought to be urged wherever the gospel is preached. “He is Lord of all.” This means, first, that Jesus Christ who died on Calvary, is in the mediatorial kingdom, which his Father has given him, Lord of all mankind. He is Lord not of the Jew only, but also of the Gentile; not of one tribe and nation, but of all the tribes born from Adam. He is Lord of all. Remember that text, “As you have given him power over all flesh, so that he may give eternal life to as many as you have given him.” The great object of Christ’s mediatorial kingdom is the salvation of the elect; but in order to accomplish that grand result, power is given to Christ over all flesh, that is over all mankind; and this last truth is the reason why we are enabled honestly to preach the gospel to every creature under heaven. Because Christ has power over all flesh we preach the gospel to all flesh. Because he is Lord of all we are permitted to preach the gospel to all, and say to all who come within its hearing, “Whoever will, let him come and take the water of life freely.” Sons of men, the Son of God is King over you. You are not ruled today so much by the iron sceptre of an absolute God as by the silver sceptre of the Mediator, Jesus Christ. You are under his government today. You may hate him, you may rail against him, but “I will declare the decree,” says the psalmist, “Yet I have set my King upon my holy hill of Zion.” The heathen rage, the princes take counsel together, but the Lord has made Jesus Christ the King of kings, and Lord of lords, and under his reign we dwell. This is a most cheering truth, for so we live under the reign of sovereign mercy, under the reign of the incarnate God, Emmanuel, God with us. Look, oh sinner! You needed a Mediator between you and God, and Jesus stands in that place. You need no Mediator between you and Christ, approach him as you now are, and his gracious heart will gladly receive you. You cannot come to God as king except through a Mediator, but you have to deal with Christ, and you may deal with him now! Come to him. You need no one to introduce you. Come just as you are. Oh may his blessed Spirit sweetly incline you to come, and “kiss the Son lest he is angry, and you perish from the way, when his wrath is kindled only a little.”
18. The text, by declaring the reigning power of the Lord Jesus, shows us most encouragingly the most solid of reasons for yielding to him our trust and obedience. If he is Lord of all, if all things are put under him, then I may with safety rely upon him. This is the Man, the exalted Man, whom we unseen adore, of whom it is written, “You made him to have dominion over all the works of your hands: you have put all things under his feet. All sheep and oxen, yes, and the fowl of the air, and the fish of the sea, and whatever passes through the paths of the sea.” Now, the apostle rightly enough says, “But now we see not yet all things put under him. But we see Jesus, who was made a little lower than the angels for the suffering of death, crowned with glory and honour.” He is reigning on high in heaven, and it is ordained that at the name of Jesus every knee shall bow and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father. Oh, then trust him, for all power is his. He is exalted on high to give repentance and remission of sins. All his power is linked with mercy. Grace perfumes all his attributes.
19. Because Jesus is Lord, I ask you my fellow men to yield him reverence and serve him. Obey him, for he is your liege Lord and sovereign. It ought to be all the easier to obey him because he is numbered with the human race. The old history which we learned when we were children told us that the Welsh could not bear the yoke of an English king. They wanted to have a prince born in their own country; and, therefore, their English conqueror brought before them his own son, born in their own principality, and they accepted him as Prince of Wales. God reigns over us, but so that we may love his reign he has anointed his own Son our own Elder Brother, Jesus Christ, King of kings and Lord of lords. Jesus the infinite condescended to be an infant; he who sustains all things was laid upon a woman’s breast. There is no man more a man than Jesus, and yet in no respect is he other than equal with God. Let us then accept the rule of Jesus. This is the ladder that Jacob saw, the bottom of which rests on the earth, near to you — your feeble feet may reach it; but the top reaches to heaven, and now between earth and heaven, between man and God, there is a ladder that never can be broken, by which sinners may ascend to the glory of God. Oh love him, then; with all your hearts cherish the name and honour of the incarnate God, Emmanuel. Because he is so unspeakably glorious and gracious, serve him with joy and gladness.
20. May it also be known that
Jesus the Saviour must be received as Lord in the souls
of those whom he redeems. You must obey him if you trust
him or else your trust will be mere hypocrisy. If we
trust a physician we follow his prescriptions; if we
trust a guide we follow his directions, and if we fully
rely on Jesus, we obey his gracious commands. The faith
which saves is a faith which produces a change of life,
and subdues the soul to obedience to the Lord. Do not be
deceived; where Jesus comes he comes to reign. Without
submission to his will and word, you are without the
safety of his atonement. The ship is saved from the rock
because it obeys the pilot’s hand as he moves the helm;
if it were untrue to the steerage it would perish with
the best of helmsmen on board. It is most just that he
who bought us, sought us, found us, saved us, and
preserves us should have our loving allegiance, and so
assuredly it must be, or no peace can be established
between us and God. Let us welcome his sway and ask him
to exert his power. May this be our daily prayer.
Almighty King of saints,
These tyrant lusts subdue:
Drive the old serpent from his seat,
And all my powers renew.
This done, my cheerful voice
Shall loud hosannas raise;
My soul shall glow with gratitude,
My lips proclaim thy praise.
21. And lastly, let me say, I
do not present this to you as a matter of choice as to
whether you will or not submit to the will of God and
seek reconciliation with him; neither do I speak with
bated breath when as a herald, I hereby proclaim Jesus
to be both Lord and God; but in the name of him who
lives and was dead and is alive for evermore, and has
the keys of hell and of death — I say, in his name, I
demand of you that you obey him, and receive him as the
Christ of God. Yield yourselves to him who is Lord of
all. Do you refuse the summons that I give you now as
his officer tonight? Then take heed what you do, for as
the Lord lives you shall answer for this in the great
day of his appearing. Behold he comes with clouds, and
every eye shall see him, and also those who crucified
him, and you who despise him must be judged by him. If
you reject him you shall nevertheless see the Son of Man
sitting at the right hand of God, and coming in the
clouds of heaven to judge the quick and the dead. I say,
again, then, I do not come to you to flatter and deceive
you, I do not come to plead with you as though my Lord
and Master were on equal terms with you. He summons you
to surrender, he orders you to throw down your arms and
accept his mercy. He is not afraid of your opposition,
neither does he need your friendship. It is his grace
which leads him to invite you to peace. He condescends
to negotiate with you like this whom he might have sent
into hell with one word of his lips years ago. If you
refuse him you shall answer for it. On your heads shall
be your own blood, and in that day when heaven and earth
shall pass away like a scroll, you without a shelter,
you without an advocate, you without an excuse, shall be
banished from his presence to endure the wrath of God.
May the Lord grant his mercy so that not one of you may
oppose him, but tonight, before another sun rises, may
there be peace established on a sure footing between you
and God, for Christ is our peace. May you take him and
trust him, and be reconciled to God; and to God shall be
the glory for ever and for ever. Amen and Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Acts
10]
(a) Plenipotentiary: Invested with
full power, esp. as the deputy, representative, or envoy
of a sovereign ruler; exercising absolute power or
authority. OED
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