A Sermon Delivered By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
“Come, let us deal wisely with them; lest they multiply, and it come to pass, that, when any war happens, they also join with our enemies, and fight against us, and so leave the land.” Therefore they placed over them taskmasters to afflict them with their burdens. And they built for Pharaoh treasure cities, Pithom and Raamses. But the more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied and grew. (Exodus 1:10-12)
1. The children of this world are wise in their generation. Their policy may be short sighted and their stratagems crooked, nevertheless the world admires the wisdom of their counsels, and makes light of the craftiness of their projects. In their opposition to the Christian church, the men of the world might certainly have been as well able to outwit her by the variety of their manoeuvres as to overwhelm her by the force of their numbers, if it were not that there is an unseen One in her midst, who is more than a match for the guile of their hearts and the might of their hosts. Looking back at the early struggles of the Hebrews to gain a footing among the nations, it is very clear that had the contest been merely between Pharaoh and Israel, the Egyptian king could exercise power and policy enough to defeat the sons of Jacob and reduce them to serfdom; but when a new name is brought in, and the contest appears to be truly between Pharaoh and Jehovah the God of Israel, it is quite another matter, and a far different outcome may be counted upon. There is one behind the curtain who takes Israel’s part. He sees through all Pharaoh’s plots. Even before his thoughts have ripened into plans they are thwarted; as fast as they are set up they are upset; for every intrigue there is a reprisal. Hence he takes the wise in their own craftiness. The whole history of the long feud between the seed of the woman and the seed of the serpent illustrates the subtlety of the serpent’s seed, and the simplicity of the woman’s seed; but even more it brings to light the infinite wisdom of him who rules the seed of the woman; and who will in the end bruise the serpent’s head, and give to his people and the cause they have espoused a complete triumph. Whatever has been done by the enemies in rage or in recklessness, God has always met it calmly and quietly. He has shown himself ready for every emergency. And he has not only baffled and utterly defeated all the inventions of wicked men, but he has turned their wicked machinations to good account, for the development of his own sovereign purposes. He has made his enemies work for him, aiding the enterprise they hated: he has turned their curse into a blessing: he has made evil productive for good: he has extracted sweetness out of their bitter spleen, and distilled healthful medicine from their deadly animosity. He has his way in the whirlwind: the clouds are the dust of his feet. He does not only meet evil with good, but he takes the evil, and subjects it to his own eternal purpose, and from it produces a sequence of events that result in his own glory, for the benefit of his children, and the fulfilment of their destiny.
2. From this general principle we shall now proceed to consider three special illustrations. First, the circumstances of the children of Israel; secondly, the history of the church of Christ; thirdly, the experience of individual Christians.
3. I. IN THE CASE OF ISRAEL, it did seem to be a deeply laid plot, very political and crafty indeed, that as the kings of Egypt, themselves of an alien race, had subdued the Egyptians, they should prevent the other alien race, the Israelites, from conquering them. Instead of murdering them wholesale, it did seem a wise though a cruel thing to make them slaves; to divide them up and down the country; to subject them to toil until their spirits were broken; to appoint them to the most menial work in the land, so that they might be crushed and their spirits become so base that they would not dare to rebel. So we may suppose it was hoped that their physical strength would be so weakened, and their circumstances so reduced, that the clan would soon be insignificant if not utterly extinct. But God met and overruled this policy in various ways. “The more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied.” The census proved the error of their calculation. The plan looked reasonable, but it did not produce the expected results. Had it been another people, the tactics might have been successful; but they were God’s people, endeared to him by their ancestry, ennobled in his sight by their covenant destiny, and encompassed with his favour as with a shield. No conspiracy formed against them could thrive. And so it came to pass, that like certain herbs which spring up when trodden down, or like certain trees that grow taller if loaded with weights, Israel rose superior to all her disadvantages. “The more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied and grew.”
4. The glory of God shines forth conspicuously in the use to which he turned the persecutions they endured. The severe treatment they had to bear from the enemy became to them a salutary discipline. This comes from the Lord of Hosts, who is wonderful in counsel and excellent in working. From that time the children of Israel began to feel a disgust with Egypt. They had settled down very quietly in Goshen, and thought that it was their rest. They had imbibed much of the manners and customs of the Egyptians. We have it on record that they worshipped the gods of Egypt. They seemed greatly to have appreciated what they afterwards called the luxuries of the land — the leeks, the garlics, the onions, the melons, and the cucumbers. They appear to have been almost naturalised to that country. They were little better than Egyptians. Perhaps people travelling, except by certain accents and contour of countenance, would scarcely have known that they were not descendants of Ham. But now their masters treat them cruelly, and they loathe the Egyptians. They are scattered up and down throughout the land, and Goshen is no longer dear to them. They are treated like strangers, and they feel they are strangers. Now that they hear from morning until night the taskmaster’s oath, and the crack of the cruel whip, and are subjected to incessant toil and bondage, they think far less of Egypt than they used to do. This is what the Lord planned. He never intended that his people Israel should be absorbed into any other family. He never meant them to be other than sojourners on that soil. He had some better thing for them than that they should dwell in that land, and be as the heathen were. So God was answering one purpose. And he did more than this. Now they began to remember, as their bondage grew more and more severe, the God of their fathers whom they had forgotten. I have reminded you that they had fallen into the worship of the gods of Egypt; but now they turn with abhorrence from the gods of their oppressors, and they remember the covenant which Jehovah had made with Abraham, and with Isaac and Jacob, and they prayed. In secret, they utter their groanings before the Most High, and when their taskmasters make them smart, they lift their eyes, suffused with bitter tears, and silently appeal to heaven, to the God of their fathers, that he would have mercy upon them. They had forgotten to pray until then. The majority of them had been unused to call upon the name of the Lord; but now the scourge drives them to seek help from above. Their terrors, their pains, their griefs, and their vexations compel them to lift up that cry to heaven which came into the ears of Jehovah, and moved his hand to help them.
5. More than that, remember that it was necessary for this people to be altogether rescued from that land which for many a year had taxed their labour and bounded their enterprise, because it was not the land which had been promised to them as an inheritance. It was God’s intention and covenant purpose to give them the land of Canaan, a land that flowed with milk and honey. But it is not very easy to induce a nation, numbering some millions, to leave a country in which they have been born and nourished and found a home. Only some very fearful evil can induce them to expatriate themselves. Had Moses gone to the children of Israel before the time of their bondage, and said, “Up! Go to the land which the Lord swears that he will give to you,” he would have seemed to them as one who mocked: they would have laughed him to scorn. In order to cut loose the bonds that bound them to Egypt, the sharp knife of affliction must be used; and Pharaoh, although he did not know it, was God’s instrument in weaning them from the Egyptian world, and helping them as his church to take up their solitary place in the wilderness, and receive the portion which God had appointed for them.
6. Once more — and here you may see the wisdom of God — the very means which Pharaoh devised for the effectual crushing of the people — the destruction of the male children — became the direct, indeed, the divine provision for educating a deliverer for them. Moses would never have been, in all probability, trained in the courts of Pharaoh if he had not been put in the basket of bulrushes on the brink of the Nile; and his mother would certainly never have put him there if there had not been a pitiless edict that the male children should be put to death. Moved by maternal instinct to save her child, and moved by faith in God not to obey the king’s command, she places her child in the ark. Pharaoh’s daughter finds the child, moved to compassion by his cry, extricates him from peril, loves him fondly, adopts him capriciously, and educates him in the very court of Pharaoh. That child grows up to be the man who should vex the fields of Zoan — the man of God, who with a high hand and an outstretched arm, would lead out the slaves of Egypt to become a great nation, which God would bless. So you see the Lord in all points meets Pharaoh and foils him. This Pharaoh was the great representative in those days of the power of evil, and for the Christian church he still stands as the type of the seed of the serpent. But the Lord withstands him, thwarts his purpose, and turns all he does to the very highest and best outcome. Such is the narrative, full of instruction, and charged with portent, that serves as a type of the Lord’s doing when he makes bare his arm for the salvation of his own inheritance.
7. II. Let us now carry the same thought a stage farther, and take a brief survey of THE HISTORY OF THE CHILDREN OF GOD. The similar means will appear in various operations. Men meditate mischief, but it miserably miscarries. God grants protection to the persecuted, and provides an escape from the most perilous exposure. Very often the darkest conspiracy is brought to the most dire confusion. No sooner does Christ gather a church in any place, whether it is in a renowned empire or a paltry village, than opposition is stirred up. “If you were from the world, the world would love his own: but because you are not from the world, but I have chosen you from the world, therefore the world hates you.” “I will put enmity between you and the woman, and between your seed and her seed,” is the first check for the serpent’s wiles, the first ray of hope for his helpless victims; and the prediction will continue to be fulfilled until at last, according to the word of the Lord, the tares are bound in bundles to burn them, and the wheat is gathered into his garner.
8. Whenever there has been a great persecution raised against the Christian church, God has overruled it, as he did in the case of Pharaoh’s oppression of the Israelites, by making the aggrieved community to increase more abundantly. The early persecutions in Judea promoted the spread of the gospel; hence, when after the death of Stephen the disciples were all scattered abroad throughout the regions of Judea and Samaria, except the apostles, the result is thus given: “Therefore those who were scattered abroad went everywhere preaching the word.” So, too, when Herod stretched out his hands to vex certain of the church, and killed James, the brother of John, with the sword; what came of it? Why Luke tells us in almost the same words that Moses had used: “The word of God grew and multiplied.” Those terrible and bloody persecutions under the Roman Emperor by no means stopped the progress of the gospel; but strangely enough men seemed to press forward for the crown of martyrdom. The church probably never increased at a greater ratio than as when her foes were most fierce to assail and most resolute to destroy her. It was so in later times. The Reformation in this country and throughout Europe never went on so prosperously as when it was most vigorously opposed. You shall find in any individual church that wherever evil men have conspired together, and a storm of opposition has burst out against the saints, the heart of the Lord has been moved with compassion, and the hand of the Lord has been raised to help, until we have come to look upon opposition as an omen of good, and persecution for righteousness’ sake as a tearful seedtime, quickly to be followed by a harvest of joy. We have looked on our adversaries, though they seemed like stormy petrels, (a) as being the index of a favourable wind to the good barque of Christ’s church. Persecution seems to be the wave that, when it leaps up around her, speeds her course. Let the mountains be removed, and cast into the midst of the sea; but after long experience of Jehovah’s faithfulness towards his people, we are confident that his church shall not be moved: she shall possess her soul in tranquillity. Persecution has evidently aided the increase of the church by the scattering abroad of earnest teachers. We are very apt to form hives — too many of us together — and our very love for one another renders it difficult to separate us and scatter us around. Persecution therefore is permitted to scatter the hive of the church into various swarms, and each of these swarms begins to make honey. We are all like the salt if we are true Christians, and the proper place for the salt is not to be stored in a box, but scattered by handfuls over the meat which it is to preserve. We are of good service when we are kept together in great bands: happy we certainly are in the presence of each other; but we are to separate and scatter, and we shall conquer as we are scattered abroad. You remember the days of our Puritan forefathers, when the dominant church of the day determined to crush out pure evangelism. To what extent did it succeed? Did it destroy their faith and their confidence? No, my brethren; by driving them out of an apostate church, and compelling them to take up their stand as separated believers outside the camp, bearing Christ’s reproach and cross, an everlasting testimony for pure truth was enshrined. Was the crisis prolonged? Were deeds of violence legalised? By the increasing rigour of such persecution, our forefathers were constrained to leave their native shores, and they had to pass in the Mayflower, and afterwards in some succeeding vessels, across the blue Atlantic, sadly but surely to found another centre for the proclamation of the gospel, and upon the wide continent of a new world they became the progenitors of another nation holding firmly the fundamentals of the faith, and rejoicing in the liberty by which Christ has made us free. There might have been no church in the United States if it had not been that our ancestors were driven to the wilds among the Red Indians, there to establish themselves, and set up a banner for the truth as it is in Jesus. It will always be so. I could almost wish that in this island, though I dread calamity, I could almost wish, for the Master’s honour, that some irresistible impulse should force his disciples to go abroad to the regions beyond our present sphere of life and labour. I rejoice, though I do not like to miss my friends, when I find them led or driven, it may be, to emigration, whether it is to Australia, Canada or anywhere else, because I trust that if they are living seed they will be as a handful of grain sown in the land, the fruit of which shall shake like Lebanon. Christian men are sometimes called to leave positions of great comfort and to occupy stations of great hardship. They may account it a reverse of fortune, while God intends it as an appointment to special service. If they bear Christ’s gospel with them to a people sitting in darkness, that will be a great gain in the long run for the church. Your being sent to a village, though you do not like it, may be a lasting blessing for the hamlet. Your residing among strangers, when you would far rather find a more congenial home among your own kindred, may be for the good of that neighbourhood. Who knows? Where should lamps be set up except in dark places? Where should we have a guard for Christ’s army, except where the enemy is most likely to make the assault? Be patient, then, my brethren, amidst the persecutions or trials you may be called upon to bear; and be thankful that they are so often overruled for the growth of the church, the spread of the gospel, and the honour of Christ.
9. Moreover, beloved, persecution in the church — even when it does not take the form of burning or imprisonment, but of slander, of cruel mockings, jesting, jeering, and venomous spite — in whatever form it is sent, persecution helps to keep up the separation between the church and the world. I fear the rich most when they bring gifts. I loathe the world most when it fawns and flatters. When I heard of a lady who had identified with Christ in baptism, that the cold shoulder was given to her in all the circles in which she moved; do you think that I felt more disposed to condole or to congratulate? It was said that now she had only a few invitations to such places and such society as she had previously frequented; and I rejoiced, and thanked God for it. I was glad for it, for I felt she was farther removed from temptation. When I heard of a young man who, after he joined the church, those in his workshop met him at once with loud laughter and reproached him with bitter scorn. I was thankful, because now he could not take up the same position with them. He was a marked man: those who knew him discovered that there was such a thing as Christianity, and such a one as an earnest defender of it. It is no evil to the church, depend upon it, to have a great gulf fixed between her and the world. The worst thing that ever could happen for us is, when marriages are made between the sons of God and the daughters of Belial. This brought on the Deluge; and if it could ever be carried out thoroughly again, it would bring on judgments terrible to think about. It is bad for the worldly, since “those who are far from God shall perish”; but it is a thousand times worse for the professing when they play fast and loose with their profession, for so it is written, “You have destroyed all those who go prostituting from you.” Summary vengeance is their lot. “Come out from among them, and be separate, and do not touch the unclean thing; and I will receive you, and will be a Father to you, and you shall be my sons and daughters.” This is a text that needs to be thundered in trumpet tones. What does the great King say to the spouse? “Forget also your own people, and your father’s house; so shall the King greatly desire your beauty: for he is your Lord; and worship him.” “Do not be conformed to this world: but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” Too much laxness, giving way to the world a friendship full of fascination brings on leanness of spirit, and causes us to be scarcely known as Christians, weakens our testimony, and in every way promotes Satan’s purposes. But when persecution breaks out, barriers are set up, and distinctive colours are worn, so the two camps are kept in open hostility, and when brought to battle with each other, the church is kept pure with armour bright; victory waits her march, and her champions win their laurels.
10. Again, persecution in the Christian church acts like a winnowing fan to the heaps gathered on the threshingfloor. In these soft and silken days any man may be a Christian professor. Often it pays well to make a profession of godliness. Men think the better of you: it brings customers to the shop. No one knows how many conveniences may attach to the profession of religion: albeit, if it is pretence without pretext, everlasting destruction awaits such violation of truth, for God will surely avenge hypocrisy. But in days of persecution, to profess Christ is very inconvenient. Then to be baptised in water may involve a baptism of blood. Then for the soul to burn with zeal for Christ would probably be followed with the body being burnt at the stake. Then a word for Jesus would bring a word of conviction from the judge’s mouth, and, close at the heels of that word, death. Then those who did not love Christ fled to the other side; the cowards and the spies shrank away. Demas went, and Judas went, and all of that brood, to their own company, and then only the true and the brave, the regenerate, the elect of God were left. They stood fast and firm — all the stronger for losing such bad company. Then in those days the church was like a heap of golden wheat, all winnowed and clean grain, fit for a burnt offering to the Most High, to be offered up as a grain offering upon his altar. Her martyrs were among her noblest sons, the very glory of the church and of the Lord Jesus Christ. So you see persecution is overruled for this great good. It ought never to be, while there are sinners in this world — it ought never to be that the Christian escapes opposition. I take it that if a man makes an advance in life and comes to a position of fame, he ought to win it, ought to fight for it. Men ought not to be crowned until first of all they have striven for the mastery; and it should be so in the church of God that we must fight if we would reign. It should not be that we should think it an easy thing and a light matter to be a follower of him whose life was sorrow, and whose death was the death of the cross. If we are to be conformed to him, it cannot be by ease and sloth. Not the downy couch, but the crown of thorns; not the triumph, but the shame, must be the portion of the imitators of the Crucified.
11. Persecution has a further beneficial use in the church of God, and it is this. It may be that the members of the church need it. It is a sorrowful thing that slander should be so often used against God’s people; it is a grievous thing that their little faults should be severely criticised and magnified; but, on the whole, it is good and profitable. It is a great blessing to be made to walk carefully. The Roman who professed that he would like to have a window in his bosom, so that everyone might see his heart, would have wished, I should think, before long for a shutter for that window; yet it is no slight stimulus to a man’s own circumspection for him to know that he is observed by unfriendly eyes. Our life ought to be such as will bear criticism. As Christian men we serve a jealous God, and our works will have to stand the test of fire at the last great day. The wood, and the hay, and the stubble that we have built will be consumed, and only the gold, the silver, and the precious stones will remain. Are we, therefore, to be afraid of the ordinary ordeal of human censure and malignity? If we run with the footmen and they weary us, what shall we do when we contend with horses? And if in this land of comparative peace we are weary, what shall we do in the swelling of Jordan? This is the opposition appointed for us. It is through much tribulation we are to inherit the kingdom; and if we are sincere, and honest and true, we shall not flinch at this: we shall feel that God will overrule it for our sanctification, by making us take heed to our ways, because the wicked watch our paths.
12. And this persecution, dear brethren, has a further usefulness. It often happens that the enmity of the world drives the Christian nearer to his God. How many prayers have been offered up as the result of persecution that would never have been offered otherwise, heaven alone can tell! How many a groan, and sigh, and tear, acceptable to God, have been forced from true hearts by their sufferings, only God alone knows! Ah! in the soft days, the summer days of peace and prosperity, we are apt to gad abroad after vain delights; but when the winter comes, with its keen and cutting blast, we hurry to our own home, we cleave to our own hearth, we love to dwell with our own kindred. Even so very frequently, with hearts all chill and cheerless, we have sought the house of our Father and our God, drawn near to his altar, and found a refreshment we gladly could wish that we might never leave. Why, oh! why, are we so fickle? If we could find help and solace apart from the Rock, away from the Sun, absent from our Lord, our wayward hearts would do so; but when the waters of affliction have covered all the earth, then we fly back to our Noah, our ark, and find rest for the sole of our foot. The friendship of this world is enmity to God. It rivals God’s friendship, it deceives and deludes many hearts; but when the world frowns, it is a blessed frown that makes me seek my Saviour’s smile. Anything that drives me to my knees is good. Anything that makes me trust in the promise, and wait only upon God because my expectation is from him, is healthful for my soul, infuses courage, and inspires confidence, and invests her with fresh strength. Oh brethren, the very glory of the church is to live nearer to God. The more she thinks of her great and glorious Head, and the more she leans upon the invisible arm of the Eternal, the more invincible she is. Persecution in driving her to her stronghold is overruled to her help.
13. And yet, further, the dark days of fiendish persecution have witnessed bright deeds of Christian heroism never to be forgotten. How often have the richest and the ripest fruits of the Spirit been produced by the Lord’s people when they have been most grieved and stricken! Then the saints have been like clusters thrown into the winepress; but who shall produce the red wine? Whose except the feet of God’s enemies shall tread the grapes? And as with exultation they bruise and trample down, they shall crush nothing in the dust but husks: the living wine shall flow, and God shall receive all of it. They work — these foes work — and think that with axes they can break down our carved work, and cast fire into the sanctuary of God, but all the while they do not burn the true sanctuary: they only burn the poor wooden facade with which man has defaced the living temple. Let them burn on: they do no harm, but good ensues. If you read “Foxe’s Book of Martyrs,” or any of the martyrologies of earlier ages, you will find there patience, self-denial, consecration, confidence in God, and all the finer graces of temperament in full bloom, perfuming the air with their fragrance. One is astonished at what our poor, weak humanity has been able to endure for the truth, when strengthened by the Spirit of God. Truly, humble and weak, and timid women have shown true mettle, becoming valiant, and cheering on men of muscle and sinew, whose hearts had grown faint. We could mention the names of many saints, if this were the time, who have endured torment as severe as inquisitors could devise, or relentless executioners could inflict, and yet they have not denied their Lord. This is the patience of the saints, I think, when the martyrs perished in the Roman amphitheatre, and the cruel crowd looked down to watch their agonies as their bones were crushed between the jaws of wild beasts; angels gathered in tiers, invisible multitudes of them gathered, and looked on with eyes of admiration at the spectacle of mortal men ravished with the love of God, waving the banner of immortal truth, while from frightful wounds and horrid gashes their lifeblood streamed. Oh! what God can do by us when he works in us! Perhaps heaven itself, except when it gazed upon the cross, never saw a nobler spectacle than when men and women, who bore the cross of Christ in their hearts, gave themselves up wholly as living sacrifices to him. The church looks fairer and shines brighter when she is in the furnace. The smell of fire does not pass upon her. Her Lord is with her, and if the fire is heated seven times hotter, his glory is seven times the brighter. So, again, the principle of the text is brought out: “the more they afflicted them, the more they multiplied.” Their enemies try to deal wisely with them to put them down, but their wisdom is folly. God has blessed the church by her persecution.
14. And do you not think that
persecution and opposition — such little oppositions as
we encounter now; little indeed, compared with those of
olden times — are permitted for our good, as in Israel’s
case, to make us feel that this is not our rest, and
cause us to long for the better land? Perhaps, dear
Christian, if you lived in a Christian household, where
all the usual order helped your piety, if you were put
into the conservatory of a gracious providence, you
might always be content to live below. We soon take root
in this soil, for we are earthy by nature, and we cling
to earth — like to its like. But when there comes the
jeer, the unkind remark, the cruel innuendo, the bitter
sarcasm, then we feel, “This is not my rest: I must seek
better company than this, a better land, and a better
portion than I shall find on this side of Jordan.” And
then we long for the home coming, when the King, the
Husband, shall bring home his spouse, and the marriage
shall be consummated in the skies. Oh! how sometimes,
when the world has been very very cold, you have longed
for the warm bosom of your Saviour! You would have
nestled in the world’s bosom if you could, but when she
would not receive you but thrust you out, then you came
to your true self, and exercised your right senses, and
you said, “I will return to my husband. It was better
with me then than now.” Oh that our hearts were always
set on heaven! There is our treasure: there let our
hearts be also. There is our Lord and King: to him
should our hearts flee. There are the best ones of our
families, our relatives, who are everlastingly our
associates, brothers and sisters whose brotherhood and
sisterhood no death can bring to an end —
There my best friends my kindred dwell,
There God my Saviour reigns.
We ought to long for that land: and I say the whip of persecution is helpful, because it makes us learn that this is the house of bondage, and moves us to long after and seek for the land of liberty — the land of joy.
15. III. And now I close this address by just very briefly hinting that THIS GREAT GENERAL TRUTH APPLIES TO ALL BELIEVERS; but I will make a practical use of it. Dear brother, dear sister, are you passing through great trials? Very well then, to endure them I pray that God’s grace may give you greater faith; and if your trials increase more and more, so may your strength increase. You will be acting after God’s manner, guided by his wisdom, if you seek to get more faith out of more trial, for that trial does strengthen faith, through divine grace, experience teaches us, and as we make full proof of the faithfulness of God, our courage, once apt to waver, is confirmed. Do pray the Lord that when the trials multiply you may get faith by which to endure them; that out of the eater you may get food; and out of the strong find strength.
16. So, too, if you know the truth of God to be at any time assailed, and your own mind is beset with doubts about any doctrine, always ask God so to open that particular truth to your understanding, and endear it to your heart, that by the assaults you are enabled to repel, your faith may be the more confirmed. Oh! there is a light way of holding truth, and there is a tenacious way of grasping it. I have held doctrines, as it were, in my hand, like a boy’s ball, that might be thrown away. But it is another thing when the King prints the mark of the doctrine right into your very soul, so that you could no more part with it than you could part with life itself. Trials often burn doctrines into us, and heresies and infidelities make the good confession dear in our sight as a prize which we could never part with. So opposition to the truth leads to the multiplication of evidences in its support, and the more we are assailed with the arguments of science, falsely so called, the firmer we adhere to the oracles of God.
17. Or it may be, dear Christian worker, that recently you have had a great many discouragements. You seem to have laboured in vain, and spent your strength for nothing. Ask then, in prayer, and act accordingly, that the more you are defeated the less you may be disposed to yield; but rather that you may be endowed with fresh energy for the service, and strive with increased assurance for the victory. When you feel “I am foiled in that point,” say, “Nevertheless, I cannot be beaten: I belong to a seed that cannot be vanquished. If I did not belong to the house of Israel, I might have been destroyed and overcome; but no one can stand against the Hebrews, against true Israelites — they must win the day.” Therefore, settle it in your mind that if you do not win souls one day, you will another; and if you cannot press into your enemies’ territory in one part, you will in another; and if he defeats you at any time, then multiply your efforts to do good. Always take revenge on Satan if he defeats you, by trying to do ten times more good than you did before. It is in some such way that a dear brother now preaching the gospel, whom God has blessed with a very considerable measure of success, may trace the opening of his career to a circumstance that occurred to myself. Sitting in my pulpit one evening, in a country village, where I had to preach, my text slipped from my memory, and with the text seemed to go all that I had thought to speak upon it. A rare thing to happen to me; but I sat utterly confounded. I could find nothing to say. With strong crying I lifted up my soul to God to pour out again within my soul of the living water so that it might gush forth from me for others; and I accompanied my prayer with a vow that if Satan’s enmity thus had brought me low, I would take so many new men whom I might meet during the week, and train them for the ministry, so that with their hands and tongues I would avenge myself on the Philistines. The brother I have alluded to came to me the next morning. I accepted him at once as one whom God had sent, and I helped him, and others after him, to prepare for the service, and to go out in the Saviour’s name to preach the gospel of the grace of God. Often when we fear we are defeated, we ought to say, “I will do all the more. Instead of abandoning this work, now I will make a general levy, and a sacred conscription upon all the powers of my soul, and I will gather up all the strength I ever had in reserve, and make from this moment a tremendous lifelong effort to overcome the powers of darkness, and win for Christ fresh trophies of victory.” In this way you will have an easier time of it, for if you do more good the more you are tempted, Satan will not tempt you so often. When he knows that all the more you are afflicted so much the more you multiply, very likely he will find it wiser to leave you alone, or test you in some other way than that of direct and overt opposition. So whenever you have a trial, take it as a favour; whenever God holds in one hand the rod of affliction, he has a favour in the other hand; he never strikes a child of his unless he has some tender blessing in store. If he visits you with unusual affliction, you will have unusual delight; the Lord will open new windows for you, and show his beauty as he does not show it to others. According as your tribulations abound, so also shall your consolations abound in Christ Jesus. In the deeper waters you shall find him nearer, for he has said, “When you pass through the waters, I will be with you.” He will be with you always, but he has promised to come to you especially and particularly, and, as it were, by appointment, when you are driven out into the wilderness, or harassed by the foe. He comforts those who are cast down. Rejoice, therefore, in your afflictions, if so be you have faith to believe that they shall be blessed for your good.
18. What is all this to the unconverted? Ah, sirs! while the men of God flourish in adversity, the men of this world are ruined by their prosperity. Even the cup of pleasure and sensual enjoyment, of which you delight to drink, has its bitter dregs which you shall be compelled to swallow. Yet even now all your days are not passed in sunshine. You have your troubles; but you have no God to resort to. You will have many more severe plagues than you have ever yet been visited with; but if you continue in unbelief, you will still have no God to trust in. Perhaps you go to some friends in any emergency now, but no friend can help you in the dying hour. No brother can go with you through the swellings of Jordan. Oh friendless one, oh Christless sinner! do you not want God to be your helper, and Christ to be your friend? If you do, then behold the Saviour on the cross. Turn your eyes to him: penitently trust him: rely upon him, and he is yours, and then henceforth the Lord of Hosts shall be with you, and the God of Jacob shall be your refuge, and your afflictions also shall work your good. May God bless each one of you, for Jesus’ sake. Amen.
(a) Petrel: A small seabird with
black and white plumage and long wings; (distinctively
called Storm Petrels or Stormy Petrels). OED.
Mr. Spurgeon hopes to be permitted to preach on July 2. He is most thankful to inform all friends that he is better in health, and trusts he may be able again to occupy the pulpit of the Tabernacle from Sunday to Sunday.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2012/05/29/prosperity-under-persecution