Peace at Home, and Prosperity Abroad by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Wednesday Evening, May 9, 1860, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon, At The Tabernacle, Moorfields.

On Behalf Of The London Missionary Society

He makes peace in your borders, and fills you with the finest of the wheat. He sends forth his commandment upon earth: his word runs very swiftly. (Ps 147:14,15)

1. Pardon me, my brethren, if I attempt no exposition whatever of the text, but simply endeavour to address you upon what I think is an inference from it, or at least a reflection to which it might readily give rise. The Psalmist is here describing the prosperity of Jerusalem, and he connects that prosperity with the progress and diffusion of the Word of God. He is teaching us I think just this great truth, that there is an intimate connection between the establishment and the building of our Zion at home, and the going forth and the spread of God’s Word abroad, both in the provinces of our own land, and throughout the regions of the world. Our own churches must be in a prosperous state. As the second verse has it—“the Lord builds up Jerusalem,” we may then rest assured that “he will gather together the outcasts of Israel.” If there is in the churches of our own highly favoured land a healthiness of spirit and an abundance of the grace of God, we may know that all our operations will be carried on with success. God shall greatly crown our endeavours, and allow us to see our heart’s desire. If this is not precisely the critical meaning of the text, then let me just say I shall use it in this sense as a motto. The subject of this evening’s discourse will be the connection between a healthy church at home, and the increase of the kingdom of our Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ.

2. First, let me very briefly notice the main points which constitute a healthy state in the Church of Christ. Under what conditions should we be warranted in applying to it the glowing description of this Psalm—“He has blessed your children within you; he makes peace in your borders, and fills you with the finest of wheat.” When we have described this healthiness, we shall proceed to show the connection between this and the sending forth of God’s commandment upon earth—the running swiftly of his word; and then we shall conclude by driving this principle home from the necessary inference.

3. I. First, then, WHAT ARE THE POINTS WHICH CONSTITUTE THE HEALTHINESS OF THE CHURCH AT HOME?

4. 1. To begin with the most important—the true piety of all her members. A Church can never be in a sound and satisfactory state for labour, she never can be in such a condition that God can smile upon her complacently, if she is mixed up with the world, if her sons and daughters are not sufficiently distinguished from the world to be obviously God’s people. If we take into our churches those who are not converted, we swell our numbers, but we diminish our real strength. We might need to purchase a larger church book, we might, perhaps, be able to parade our numbers before the world, and we might even flatter ourselves with our apparent prosperity until we intoxicated our own brain, but we would be going backward when we think we are going forward. We have not conquered the world; we have only yielded to it. We have not brought the world up to us, we have only brought ourselves down to it. We have not Christianized an ungodly generation, but we have adulterated Christianity. We have brought the chaste spouse of Christ to commit fornication among the people. We cannot possibly be too strict in the examination of those who are proposed for church fellowship. I will grant you, there are methods by which bigotry may exclude a large proportion of those whom God has called, putting such an extent of knowledge as the test of Christian experience, that many of the lambs of the flock stand bleating outside the fold, and are never enabled to come and partake of its pastures. This evil, doubtless, is to be avoided. But on the other hand, it is quite possible that the fullest charity with which the mildness of our Saviour’s mind and the love of the Spirit can imbue us, may be blended with the sternest firmness in executing a sacred trust, and with the most prudent discretion in maintaining the purity of discipleship, when we are engaged in the acceptance or rejection of candidates for the fellowship with the visible Church. If tomorrow we could bring into the Church a sufficient number of ungodly but moral men to double our numbers, to double our subscriptions, to double our places of worship, to enable us to double the number of our missionaries, we should by succumbing to the temptation procure a curse instead of a blessing. In our purity, and in our purity alone we stand. Let us once lose our distinctive principles, let us once come back and attempt to nationalize the Church, and bring ourselves from the distinction we have tried to maintain between the Church and the world, and God’s blessing will be withdrawn from us; we shall cease to be strong within, and mighty without. Oh! that God might grant to each of us, who are the pastors of the Church, that unceasing vigilance and constant watchfulness by which we shall be able to detect the wolves in sheep’s clothing, and by which we shall be able to say calmly, sternly, yet lovingly, to those who come before us seeking communion, without satisfactory evidence that they belong to the living family of God, “You must go your way until the Spirit of God has touched your heart, for until you have received the living faith in Jesus, we cannot receive you into the number of his faithful ones.”

5. 2. Next to the sincere piety of all our Church members, I think we must look very carefully and very steadfastly to the soundness of that gospel which we proclaim and preach. Soundness I say—and here possibly I may be touching upon a delicate subject, but what does it matter if that subject is of the utmost and highest importance! There should be, I affirm, in the declaration of the ministers of Christ, not uniformity, for that is not consistent with life, but unity which is not only consistent with life, but which is one of the highest marks of a healthy existence. I do not think the time will ever come when all of us shall see eye to eye, and shall all use the same terms and phrases in setting forth doctrinal truths. I do not imagine there ever will be a period, unless it should be in that long looked for millennium, when every brother shall be able to subscribe to every other brother’s creed; when we shall be identical in our apprehensions, experiences, and expositions of the gospel in the fullest sense of the word. But I do maintain there should be, and there must be if our churches are to be healthy and sound, a constant adherence to the fundamental doctrines of divine truth. I should be prepared to go a very long way for charity’s sake, and admit that very much of the discussion which has existed even between Arminians and Calvinists has not been a discussion about vital truth, but about the terms in which that vital truth shall be stated. When I have read the conflict between that mighty man who made these walls echo with his voice, Mr. Whitfield, and that other mighty man equally useful in his day, Mr. Wesley, I have felt that they contended for the same truths, and that the vitality of Godliness was not mainly at issue in the controversy. But, my brethren, if it should ever come to be a matter which casts doubts upon the divinity of Christ, or the personality of the Holy Spirit, if it should come to a matter of using gospel terms in a sense that has been most contrary to that which has ever been attached to them in any age of the truth; if it should ever come to the marring and spoiling of our ideas of divine justice, and of that great atonement which is the basis of the whole gospel, as they have been delivered to us; then it is time my brethren once and for all that the scabbard is thrown aside, that the sword is drawn. Against anyone who assails those precious vital truths which constitute the heart of our holy religion, we must contend even to the death. It is not possible that two opposing views can both be true. We are continually told when one man contradicts another, that he only has another viewpoint. Indeed, my brethren, the one man is blind, he does not see at all; the other sees, having the eyes of his understanding enlightened. There may be two views of truth, but two views of truth cannot be directly antagonistic. One must be the true view and the other the false view. No stretch of my imagination can ever allow me to anticipate the time when “yes” and “no” can lie comfortably down in the same bed. I cannot conceive by any means there ever can be a matrimonial alliance between positive and negative. Do you think such things might exist? Truly there were giants at one time, when the sons of God saw the daughters of men; and we may live to see gigantic heresies, when God’s own children may look upon the fair daughters of philosophy, and monster delusions shall stalk across the earth. A lack of union about truth too clearly proves that the body of the Church is not in a healthy state. No man’s system can be said to be in a normal condition if that man prefers ashes to bread, and prefers ditch water to that which flows from the bubbling fountain. A man must be unhealthy or he would not use such garbage. We must look to the preservation of the health of the Church. Alas! if her doctrines are tainted, her faith will not be maintained, and the Church being unsound, who can tell what next may occur?

6. 3. But not to tarry longer here, it seems to me the next important point with regard to the true healthiness of the Church at home, will be more and more of the spirit of union. This Society happily represents in a large degree this sacred bond of brotherhood. It may have become somewhat denominational; it was never intended to be; nor is it the fault of the maintainers; it is not because they have made it exclusive, but because other denominations have somewhat seceded, and established societies of their own. The London Missionary Society included all Christian men, whether in the Establishment or not. I believe we are all eligible to become members, and all may, as far as we can, assist in sending forward the gospel by its means. But alas! there lingers among our Churches—and I hope it is only a lingering of that which must presently expire—there lingers still a spirit of disunion, because we do not agree in ceremonies. We must needs have different communions, because we cannot see eye to eye in discipline, while nevertheless we are really and vitally one. We must have I suppose different walks, and cannot commune and converse with one another as members of the same family, and as parts of the same divine body. Whenever the foot is at enmity with the hand there must be something like madness in the body; there cannot be a sound mind within that body which is divided against itself. And if there is among us any remnants of the spirit of division; if there is anything in us that would make us excommunicate and cut off brethren, because we cannot see with them in all the points of the spiritual compass, though we agree in the main; if it is so, then there must be somewhere or other an unhealthy disease, there must be grey hairs here and there, which have stolen upon us though we did not know. Oh my heart longs to see a more thorough union among the ministers of Christ Jesus. I think there is more of it than we sometimes believe. I am sure the more we come to know one another, the better we love each other. Distrust may arise from lack of personal acquaintance; we need more frequently to come together; and if the Churches were more active, so as to throw us together, I think we should discover more of a real unity than perhaps we think has begun to exist. And oh! that this unity may grow and continue, and may not be merely an evangelical alliance in form, but a spiritual confederation in fact; that its enunciation may come from every lip and every heart, and that there may be a real love toward every other member of that alliance, in carrying out its principles to the fullest and the greatest extent.

7. 4. These three points—purity of life, soundness of doctrine, and unity of the ministers of the Church of Christ—will help to constitute a healthy Church at home. All these things, however, will never avail unless there is added another thing, namely, constant activity. We all have our times when we feel dull, and listless, and heavy; when we would rather be in bed all day than get up; rather sit in the chair than go to business or enter the pulpit; or when we are in the pulpit, we find our brain does not work, and we cannot put out the energy that we wish to. The tongue may be as a ready writer, but we cannot speak as we would desire. We feel at times that we are not well, that there is something wrong in our system. And the Church every now and then gets into the same state. At intervals some earnest speech stirs the members up to spasmodic action, then they return again to their apathy and Laodicean lukewarmness. Sometimes they feel as if they would carry all by storm, but immediately they sit down again in calm security. We have hundreds of our churches, from which I continually receive an answer like this to the enquiry, “How do you prosper?”—“Well, we are not increasing much, we have added no souls to the Church, but we are very comfortable.” That very comfortableness has stolen upon a large proportion of the Church of the Lord Jesus Christ. It is a marvel that they should be comfortable while souls are dying, and sinners perishing; when hell is filling, and the kingdom of Christ is not extending. But they are still quite comfortable; and they come to look upon the revivals and increase to the Church as wonders and prodigies, rather like comets that come now and then, than like suns which are to abide with us; and they grow into the habit of questioning the revival spirit, and thinking that when the Church is alive, she has become excited, that she has been dram drinking (tippling) and is intoxicated, instead of behaving that as if is just her actual evidence of health. When she is in health she is at work without her hands, praying with all her tongues, weeping with all her eyes, and agonizing with God in prayer with all the might of her many intercessors. Oh, my brethren, we are all wrong when we think that the Church is healthy when it is comfortable and still. It is the health of the stagnant pool, the health of the graveyard, the health of a fainting fit—a fit that is on the very verge of death. May God be pleased to stir our blood that we may discover what the Church really is when she shall put forth all her energy. If we saw a queen sitting upon a heap of rubbish, her hair dishevelled, and dirt upon her garments, if she never stirs hand or foot, but sits down sleeping on in her misery, could you think she is a queen in all her dignity? Rise up you Virgin Daughter of Zion, and let us behold you in your beauty; shake yourself from the dust, and put on your beautiful garments, and ascend to your throne—then men shall see what you are. When you are idle, and careless, and prayerless, you are sick and ready to die; but when you are anxious, and striving, and travailing, then you are in the state in which your Lord would have you; you bless him and he has blessed you.

8. 5. One more point, and I will conclude this description of the Church’s healthiness. The Church is never healthy except when she abounds in prayer. I have known prayer meetings that have been like the bells to the parish steeple—a very poor parish where there were never enough bells to ring a chime. The minister has had to pray twice and read a long chapter, in order to spin out the time; or to meet the deficiency still more efficiently, he has called upon a brother who had the gift of supplicating for twenty-five minutes, and then concluded by asking pardon for his short comings. And then the few friends, the bold hearted, self-denying martyrs, who went to hear the Word of God, were obliged to endure the torture of hearing such a prayer as that! Those brethren must come and go, and never feel that God has been in their midst, that they have never been near to the throne of God, never had the wrestling with the angel, never brought a blessing down, for the man has been praying against time, “an occupying of the few minutes,” as they call it, and there was no real intercession or drawing near to God. Now, what Church can be considered to be as Christ would have her, when her members meet to pray, and they constitute only a handful? I do not care if the place is crowded at your other services, the Church is not prosperous if the prayer meetings are poorly attended. It means nothing if that Church has given a hundred, or five hundred, or a thousand pounds to the Missionary Society—write “Ichabod” on her walls, unless the brethren meet together for prayer. The most erudite minister may instruct the people; the most earnest preacher may plead God’s cause with men, but if he does not have with him a band of men who plead man’s cause with God, his pleadings will be in vain. Close down that house in which men have ceased to pray; or if you open it, let your opening be a meeting for hearty and earnest prayer. I have to mourn and confess in my own case, that I have had to feel in myself—and I think I can speak for many others—a lack of prayerfulness with regard to missionary effort especially. These things do not strike us as the destitution of London does; for the City Missionaries, and for the sinners of our own congregations, I trust we do not need reasons to make us pray. These reasons are before us every day. We do pray for our own families, and our own congregations, but the heathen are across the sea, many miles away. We may now and then see an East Indian sailor in the street, or the dark face of a Hindu, and then our soul breathes a silent ejaculation; but alas! for the most part, many Christians might say, whole months pass with them without pleading the cause of the heathen, who are in darkness, before the throne of God; and how can we expect, while this unhealthiness exists among us, that God will bless our missionary operations? Zion must travail before she can bring forth children. She may use all her weapons but if she keeps back the great battering ram of prayer, she will never break the walls of the spiritual Jericho. She may use every other instrument, but unless she takes John Bunyan’s weapon of “all prayer,” she will never put to rout the great enemy of souls. Yes, my brethren, we need faithfulness, we need healthiness, we need a prayerful spirit given to us, then we may conclude that all is well with us.

9. It shall be left to each individual heart, and each member of the Church, to answer for himself the question, whether his own Church is in a state of spiritual health, taking these things as a test; namely, purity, soundness, unity, and prayerfulness.

10. II. I have now to show THE CONNECTION BETWEEN A HEALTHY CHURCH AT HOME AND THE SPREAD OF CHRIST’S KINGDOM ABROAD.

11. To the mind of the simple this thing will be clear enough. Suppose all the Churches degenerated into lifelessness, and to be very near to spiritual death. Suppose the pulpit in our land gives an uncertain sound. As a result God’s people begin to forsake the assembling of themselves together; no crowds gather to hear the Word; places begin to empty; prayer meetings become more and more deserted; the efforts of the Church may be still carried on, but they are merely a matter of routine; there is no life, no heart in it. I am supposing a case you see, a case which I trust we never may see. Things get worse and worse; the doctrines of the gospel become expunged and unknown; those who fear the Lord do not speak any more to each other. Still for a little time the money continues to be brought into the Society, and foreign missions are sustained. Can you not imagine reading in the next report, “We have had no converts this year; our income is still maintained; but notwithstanding that, our brethren feel that they are labouring under the greatest possible disadvantages; in fact, some of them wish to return home and renounce the work.” Another year—the missionary spirit has grown cold in the Churches, its funds decrease. Another year, and yet another; it becomes a moot point among us as to whether missions are necessary or not. We have come at last to the more advanced point which some divines have already reached, and begin to question whether Mohammed and Confucius did not have a revelation from God as well as Jesus Christ. And now we begin to say, “Is it needful that we should extend the gospel abroad at all? We have lost faith in it; we see it does nothing at home, shall we send that across the sea which is a drug on the market here, and distribute as a healing for the wounds of the daughters of Zidon and of Tyre that which has not healed the daughter of Jerusalem?” I can conceive that first one station then another would be given up, those that would be maintained would only be kept up by reason of an old custom which was remembered to have existed in the absurd days of Evangelists. I can imagine the Church degenerating further, and further, and further, until at last her unhealthiness clearly showed that it would be impossible that it ever could be maintained abroad. You have only to look abroad upon nature, and you will soon find analogies to this. There is a well of water springing up, and the people of the district flock to it; it is said to have healthy properties; men come and drink from it and are refreshed. Suddenly the secret spring begins to fail; by some means or other the water is moved to another place, and the spring is not there any more. You can conceive that this place would cease to be a thoroughfare; there would no longer be visitors. Where multitudes of men and women were accustomed to drink with joy and gladness, there is not a single person to be seen. Or, suppose again, there is the sun in its sphere shedding light on all the planets, and with its attractive power making them move with regularity in their orbits. Suddenly the sun’s fire dies out; its attractive power also decreases, and becomes extinguished. Can you not imagine that the result must be fatal to all the planets that revolve around it? How shall they be sustained in their light and heat, or how shall they be kept in their spheres when once the power that kept them there is gone? Indeed, prophecy is fulfilled; the sun is turned into darkness, and the moon into blood, and the stars fall like withered fig leaves from the tree.

12. And what is the Church to our missionary stations but like the sun? Is it not her light that shines? Do they not receive from her their instructions in the Word of God—the light of the world? And are not those stations the rays from the great central luminary? Let her lose her power and her light, and what must become of the rest of the world? Must not total black darkness cover all the nations? Oh! yes, my brethren, if we do not know that, we soon would know it if God should ever put us to the test. If once England’s glory were extinguished, if once the Christianity of America were put out, where would all the vital godliness be then? How should those agencies which depend upon us be sustained if our home piety would be once brought to nothing? Indeed, we must have the bars of our gates strengthened, there must be peace in our borders, and we must be filled with the finest wheat, or else God’s Word will not run very quickly, nor will his commandment be sent out upon the earth.

13. Let me endeavour very briefly to show what this connection is. There is a direct connection between the pureness of the Church at home and the progress of Christianity abroad—a direct connection; we shall have to speak of the more indirect connection by and by. The inconsistencies of English Christians have proven to be one of the greatest barriers to the progress of Christ’s kingdom in other lands. An excellent minister of the Church in France told me—and told it with a sorrowful earnestness too—that Protestantism received a severe setback in Paris from the inconsistent conduct of Christian men there, those who professed Protestantism at least, if they were not members of our Churches. “Now sir,” he said, “when a man visits Paris, who is a Protestant—an English Protestant—I will not say he is an actual member of your Church certainly,—when he comes to Paris, he neglects all attendance to the Sabbath day;” and Romanists, if spoken to about their constant breach of the holy day, will reply to the Reformed Christians of France, “Look at the Protestants of Great Britain when they are here; do they attend to their religion abroad any better than we do?”

14. I have been assured by several pastors living in Paris, that it is a frightful and lamentable fact, that men when they travel to the continent seem to go there to get rid of their religion; when they land on those shores they assume the garb of a traveller, and think they may be permitted to attend Roman Catholic places of worship on the Lord’s day, and they are not seen worshipping God with their brethren where the worship in the English language is still maintained. I can assure you that I was affectionately requested to avail myself of an early opportunity to make a prominent complaint against the Christianity of England for its inconsistency abroad. In the name of the pastors of France I speak, and in the name of the pastors of l’Oratoire I think I speak also for them—I think I speak for five of them at least—I do beseech Christian men who are going abroad, not to permit themselves to forget their Christianity, but to remember that the eyes of men are still upon them, and if not the eyes of men certainly the eyes of God.

15. Let me give you another fact, which proves that when the Church is unsound at home she will not prosper abroad. In the recent Report of the Baptist Missionary Society I observed a great trouble through which certain stations have recently passed; a trouble which they have survived, but which materially hindered their usefulness. Certain brethren holding rather extreme Church views thought it necessary, instead of carrying on operations among the pure heathen, to set to work to convert those who were Christians already to their own creed, and the effect in the villages where they tried their scheme was, that by dint of giving more charity than a poorer society could afford to give, they managed to attract a large proportion of the congregations to a different form of Protestant service. The result was just this—they were informed by these pastors—good men doubtlessly—that the sect to which they once belonged was an ignoble body in its own country, and did not possess any influence. And for the first time the Hindus answered that there were Christian men who could deprecate one another—that there were professors of this one religion who had a greater dislike for one another than any two sects of Heathenism ever had. The effect upon the minds of the villagers was not merely disastrous to that one mission, but to Christianity herself. They began to suspect that the house that was divided against itself could not have its foundations upon truth.

16. My brethren, when we shall once come to unity of doctrine, and to purity and consistency of life, the direct agency of our Church members, and of our missionaries upon the heathen world, will be far more healthy and effective than it is. I do not doubt, if I had a wider and more extensive knowledge of the proceedings of the Church in other lands, I could multiply examples of this kind, in which our faults at home have been very great hinderances upon our success abroad.

17. And yet the agency, I think, may be considered in the main to be indirect; but nevertheless, as potent as if it were direct. If our Churches are not true, if they are not kept by God, if they are not pure and holy, and prayerful, they will begin to lose the missionary spirit, and when the missionary spirit evaporates, of what use will be the missionary body? Bury it; yes, in Bloomfield Street we will dig its grave, or in Moorgate Street we shall make a vault! Put on its shroud, and let it have a tearful burial, for if the spirit of missions is lost in the Churches, it would be no use trying to maintain the semblance of the body of the Society. We all know what the missionary spirit is, and yet none of us could exactly describe it. It is a sort of thing that sets a man longing to see others saved, and makes him pant especially for those who have no means of grace in their own lands, that they may have those means carried to them, that they may be saved. This leads them to self-denying, and to earnest prayer for those who are diligent servants. Extinguish the healthiness of the Church, and you have lost that spirit. We can never expect the ruddy flush of health upon the cheek, unless there is health within. The missionary spirit is just that bloom, which will soon be taken away if consumption should seize upon the body. The missionary spirit can only be maintained by the maintenance of life and vitality in the Church. But further, if you take away the missionary spirit; of course all prayerfulness, and with that all powerfulness to part the clouds of heaven is withdrawn. Let the winds of the Holy Spirit, brethren, once depart from our Churches at home, our Missionary Society shall be as a ship at sea with her sails all spread, and her spars well rigged, but without a breath of air to move her towards her port. There she shall lie until she perishes upon the rocks, or founders in a storm. She can be of no service; she can bring no glory to her God, carry no cargo of living spirits up to the port of heaven, unless there is prayer at home to wake up all the winds, and let them loose upon her to speed her on her destined course. With that lack of prayer too, you must remember you suspend all hopes of finding fresh missionaries. I have often wondered whether our Churches are choosing the best means to find young men who would be useful in the mission field. There is growing nowadays a shortage of ministers for our own pulpits. Why it is so I cannot tell, except that it strikes me, that young men are not sufficiently encouraged when they have preaching abilities, to endeavour to do their best to exercise them. I do know a brother who always makes it a rule, if a young man displays any sort of ability, and applies to him for a recommendation for College or otherwise,—positively to throttle him if he can. “You,” he says, “Who are you? I am sure you will never make a minister; you can only talk, sir—you are no good.” And many a young man who might have been usefully employed in that one Church has been driven away from it to seek some more congenial spirit, because he has been hindered in his attempts to do some service. Of course if we never make an attempt to groom ministers, or to bring them out from the world, train them up and guide them to the place where their talents may be proven, we shall not have a right to expect God’s blessing in this matter. Only cease to cultivate wheat, and you shall have very little of it. God does raise men and send them out; but at the same time he works by means, and he makes the Church use means to bring out members. The old Church of the Waldenses used the best means I think that ever will be devised. Every pastor of the Church had one young man with him, and tried to train him up, keeping him in habitual conversation with him, and teaching him what he knew of pastoral discipline and of the preaching of the Word. So that when the one minister died, they did not have to look for a successor, there he was ready at hand among the young men who had come out of that Church. Our nation used to boast that it could grow everything it needed; we do not care for the boast in these free trade times, but we do say that our Churches ought to grow all that they need for themselves. They ought not always to go a hundred miles to get pastors when they could obtain them among themselves. They do not go abroad for deacons! Why not have pastors from among themselves who were raised from childhood in the Church? Ah! should we once become unsound in our Churches, and prayer become cold, and where are the men to come from that shall succeed those heroes of Christ whose blood was shed by heathen hands? Where shall we find the successors to Knuibb and Williams? Where shall we find the successors to Moffat and Livingstone, unless the healthy tone of Christian self-denial and holy firmness of divine fervour is kept up and maintained? Do you imagine you can enlist them from abroad? Do you think they will spring up at your call? Oh, no. It is one thing to obtain money to keep a man, to obtain a free passage for him, and a station where he may be maintained; but another thing to find your man. And you may lose your men because you are not looking for them; you may pass over the men whom God would honour most, because they do not meet your standard of scholastic attainments or oratorical gift. They might meet that by and by. You striving together with prayer, with sympathy and interest in their welfare, God would enrich them; and you might find a phalanx of heroes who would be like the old guard, who never could surrender, but in every battle upon which they should enter would drive their foes before them, even to the ends of the earth.

18. III. The last point is one upon which I would briefly but very earnestly preach to myself and to all here assembled. If it is true, and I am sure it is, that the healthiness of the Church at home is vitally connected with the success of the Word of God as preached abroad, then, dear brothers and sisters, let us remember that it must have also a connection with our own personal standing in the sight of God. Truth is like the crystal, which retains its shape even though it is broken almost to an invisible atom. And so the truth that our success depends upon the whole Church is equally sure, when we bring it down to this, that our success in a measure depends upon the vitality, healthiness, and Godliness of each individual. If you were as a Christian, my brother, a separate and distinct organism—a body entirely separate from everyone else—you, might be very sick and no one else would suffer; but you are not so. Remember that you are a member of his body, of his flesh, and of his bones; and we hold it to be a precious fact, that if one member suffers, all the members suffer; that, if one member rejoices, all the members share the joy. Must it not equally be true, that if one member is unhealthy, the unhealthiness of that member does to a degree taint all the rest? The Church had all things in common in the Apostles’ days in temporals; to this day she has all things common in spirituals. We all draw from the same treasury; on the other hand we ought to contribute to the same. If you contribute less, there is less in the treasury; if your efforts are more feeble than they should be, the efforts of the whole Church are more feeble. Depend upon it, if there is no electric unions between man and man, there are such spiritual unions that the thoughts, acts, and words of any one man do in a degree, however inappreciable to our senses, affect the deeds and actions of every living man, and perhaps of every man who ever shall live to the end of this earthly time. There is no end to a word; it is an infinite thing. It is like the stone that is dropped into the lake—the circles are ever widening. So your influence for good or evil knows no bound. It may be very little upon one individual, but then that individual influences another, and he still another, until the pulse of time, indeed of eternity, may be made to throb through something that you have said or done. You may work an evil work which shall tremble in the flames of hell for ever and ever, or you may do a good work, which under God may glisten in the light of glory throughout eternity. There is no limit to the influence of any man, and certainly there is no possibility of your restraining that influence altogether, and of making yourself so distinct that you are independent of each other.

19. Look then you cold, you careless ones, look on this—you are not innocent, you have helped to spoil the Church. Next time you go abroad to find fault, remember that you share in the cause of that fault. Next time you mourn the Church’s prayerlessness, remember that it is your own prayerlessness that helps to make up the bulk of the Church’s lack. Next time you complain of any minister’s dullness, or of any Church’s lack of energy, oh! reflect, it is your own dullness, your own lack of energy, that helps to swell the rolling tide. If every man mended one, all would be mended; if every man had only one soul stirred, and that soul his own, the whole Church would be stirred up. If it were possible for every member of the Church to be sound, how could any part of the body be sick? If every individual were what he should be, how could there be any complaints? We have grown into the habit of praying for the Church as if she were a colossal culprit, which we should tie up, and then take the ten thonged whip of the law and pull off thongful after thongful of the quivering flesh, while all the while the real culprit is escaping, namely—ourselves—our own individual selves. I do feel more and more the necessity of looking at the souls of men in the light of my own responsibility to them. I do not want to look at the maps sometimes published by the Society, with red and green marks, showing where there is light. I like to look at, and have a map where I have been a light. I would rather look at London, not in the light of what any particular society or its agency can do for it, but in the light of what I can do for it; and so each of you ought to look on his fellowman. No society ever thought of taking your responsibility on itself; if it did so, or if you ever thought so, both of you have been mistaken. Responsibilities to God for the souls of men is cast on each one of us; and no contribution, however liberal, can ever shield us from the obligation. We must stand, each man for himself, and hear the “Well done good and faithful servant,” or else “You wicked and slothful servant.”

20. My dear Christian friends—members of our Churches—are you doing all you can for the souls of men? You cannot save them, but God the Holy Spirit can make you the instruments of their salvation. When you hear the bell tolling tomorrow for someone who lived in your street, can you go into the cemetery, and can you stand there and look at the grave and say, “I did all that was in the power of any mortal man for that man’s salvation?” No, you cannot . I am afraid that none of us, or only a very few, could say, when we hear of the death of friends, “If that man perishes, I did not leave a single stone unturned.” No, we might say we have done something, but we could not say that we have done all that we might have done.

21. And to conclude,—that I may discharge this solemn responsibility myself in some measure,—are there not many in this congregation who are still unconverted? We talk about heathens—there are heathens here. You have heard the name of Jesus these many years, but you are no more Christian tonight than the Hottentot in his village; perhaps you are further off from the kingdom of heaven than he is, because you have become more hardened in heart by rejecting the gospel of Christ,—a sin he has never committed, since he has never known it. Ah! my hearers, in this place there have been hundreds of souls brought to Jesus. There is not a pew in this ancient Tabernacle which could not tell stories of grace. If it could only speak, it would say, “Such and such a broken hearted penitent sat here.” These walls, if they could cry aloud, could tell how many sighs and groans they have heard, and how many precious tears they have seen trickling from the eyes of converted men and women. And is there not one here tonight who shall yet be saved? Remember, you are lost and ruined; ruined utterly, helplessly, and hopelessly. As far as you yourself are concerned, there is no hope for your salvation. But there is help laid on One that is mighty to save, even Jesus Christ. Look away from yourself to him, and you are saved. Cast away all self-confidence and rest on Jesus and your spirit lives. The soul quickening words are “Believe and live.” Oh! may the Lord enable you now to trust Jesus and you shall be saved, be your sins ever so many. The hour which sees you look to Christ, sees sin’s black garment all unbound and cast away. The hour which sees your eye look to the bleeding Saviour, sees the eye of God looking down on you with obvious complacency and joy. “He who believes on the Lord Jesus Christ shall be saved,” be his sins ever so many; “he who does not believe shall be damned,” be his sins ever so few. I would earnestly exhort those who feel their need of Jesus, those who are “weary and heavy laden, lost and ruined by the fall,” now to take the Saviour, even now, for he is yours. You have a personal right to him, as surely as your hearts are willing to receive him, you have nothing of your own; Christ is yours, take him, his grace is free as the air. Partake of this water of life which saves. Drink it, no one can deny you, drink even to the full, and there shall be joy in heaven, and joy on earth over sinners saved. May the Lord add his blessing for Jesus’ sake. Amen.

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/11/30/peace-at-home-and-prosperity-abroad