The Anchor by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, May 21, 1876, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.  

By which God, willing more abundantly to show to the heirs of promise the immutability of his counsel, confirmed it by an oath: that by two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us: which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which enters into that within the veil; where the forerunner is entered for us, even Jesus, made a high priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek. [Heb 6:17-20]

For other sermons on this text:
   [See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 893, “Strong Consolation” 884]
   [See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1294, “Anchor, The” 1285]
   Exposition on Heb 6 [See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 2492, “Paul’s Persuasion” 2493 @@ "Exposition"]
   [See Spurgeon_SermonTexts "Heb 6:18"]
   [See Spurgeon_SermonTexts "Heb 6:20"]

1. Faith is the divinely appointed way of receiving the blessings of grace. “He who believes shall be saved,” is one of the main declarations of the gospel. The wonders of creation, the discoveries of revelation, and the movements of providence are all intended to create and foster the principle of faith in the living God. If God reveals anything it is that we should believe it. Of all the books of Holy Scripture it may be said, “These are written that you might believe, and that believing you might have life.” Even if God conceals anything, it is that we may be able to confide in him; since what we know yields very little basis for trust compared with the unknown. Providence sends us various trials, all meant to exercise and increase our faith, and at the same time in answer to prayer it brings us varied proofs of the divine faithfulness which serve as refreshments to our faith. Thus the works and the words of God cooperate to educate men in the grace of faith. You might imagine, however, from the doctrine of certain teachers that the gospel was “Whoever doubts shall be saved,” and that nothing could be more useful or honourable than for a man’s mind to hang in perpetual suspense, sure of nothing, confident of the truth of no one, not even of God himself. The Bible raises a mausoleum to the memory of its heroes, and writes upon it as their epitaph “these all died in faith”; but the modern gospel derides faith, and sets up instead in its place the new virtue of keeping abreast with the most recent thought of the age. That simple trust in the truthfulness of God’s word, which our fathers inculcated as the basis of all religion, would seem to be at a discount now with “men of mind” who are able to cope with “modern thought.” Shame upon professed ministers of Christ that some of these are worshipping at this shrine, and are labouring after the reputation of being intellectual and philosophical by scattering doubts on all sides. The doctrine of the blessedness of doubt is as opposed to the gospel of Jesus Christ as darkness is to light, or Satan to Christ himself; it is invented as a sedative for the consciences of those proud men who refuse to yield their minds to the rule of God.

2. Have faith in God, for faith is in itself a virtue of the highest order. No virtue is more truly excellent than the simple confidence in the Eternal which a man is helped to exhibit by the grace of the Holy Spirit. Indeed, not only is faith a virtue in itself, but it is the mother of all virtues. He who believes becomes strong to labour, patient to suffer, fervent to love, earnest to obey, zealous to serve. Faith is a root from which may grow all that can adorn the human character. So far from being opposed to good works, it is the ever-flowing fountain from where they proceed. Take faith away from the professed Christian and you have cut the sinew of his strength, like Samson you have shorn him of his locks, and left him with no power either to defend himself or to conquer his foes. “The just shall live by faith,” — faith is essential to the vitality of Christianity, and anything which weakens that faith weakens the very mainspring of spiritual power. Brethren, not only does our own experience teach us this, and the word of God declares it, but all of human history goes to show the same truth. Faith is force. Why, even when men have been mistaken, if they have believed the mistake they have displayed more power than men who have known the truth, but have not heartily believed it; for the force that a man has in dealing with his fellow men lies very much in the force of conviction which his beliefs have over his own soul. Teach a man the truth so that his whole heart believes in it, and you have given him both the fulcrum and the lever with which he may move the world. To this very moment the whole earth is tremulous like a mass of jelly beneath the tread of Luther, and why? Because he was strong in faith. Luther was a living believer, and the schoolmen [a] with whom he had to contend were mere disputers; and the priests, and cardinals, and popes with whom he came into contact were mere traders in dead traditions, therefore he struck them hip and thigh, with great slaughter. His whole manhood believed in what he had learned about God, and as an iron rod among potters’ vessels, so was he among the pretenders of his age. What has been true in history all along is most certainly true now. It is by believing that we become strong: that is clear enough. Whatever supposed excellencies there may be in the much vaunted receptive condition of the mind, the equilibrium of a cultured intellect, and the unsettled judgment of “honest” disbelief, I am unable to discern them, and I see no reference to them in Scripture. Holy writ neither offers commendations for unbelief nor presents motives nor reasons for its cultivation. Experience does not prove it to be strength in life’s battle, or wisdom for life’s labyrinth. It is closely related to credulity, and unlike true faith, it is prone to be led by the nose by any falsehood. Unbelief yields no consolation for the present, and its outlook for the future is by no means comforting. We discover no intimation of a sublime cloudland, where men of self appreciating brain power will eternally puzzle themselves and others: we hear no prophecy of a celestial hall of science were sceptics may weave new sophistries, and forge new objections to the revelation of God. There is a place for the unbelieving, but it is not heaven.

3. Coming to our text, whose tone is far removed from all uncertainty, we see clearly that the Lord does not desire us to be in an unsettled condition, but would put an end to all uncertainty and questioning. Just as among men a fact is established when an honest man has sworn to it, so “God willing more abundantly to show to the heirs of promise the immutability of his covenant, confirmed it by an oath.” Condescending to the weakness of human faith, he himself swears to what he declares, and thus gives us a gospel doubly certified by the promise and oath of the everlasting God. Surely angels must have wondered when God lifted his hand to heaven to swear to what he had promised, and must have concluded that henceforth there would be an end of all strife, because of the confirmation which the Lord thus gave to his covenant.

4. In working out our text, I must direct you to its most conspicuous metaphor. This world is like a sea, restless, unstable, dangerous, never calm. Human affairs may be compared to waves driven with the wind and tossed. As for ourselves, we are the ships which go upon the sea, and are subject to its changes and motions. We are apt to be drifted by currents, driven by winds, and tossed with tempests: we have not yet come to the true terra firma, the rest which remains for the people of God; God would not have us carried about with every wind, and therefore he has been pleased to fashion for us an anchor of hope most sure and steadfast, so that we may ride out the storm. I shall not attempt to preach from all of the great text before us, for it would require seven years at least, and a Dr. John Owen, or a Joseph Caryl to bring out a tithe of its meaning. I am simply going to work out the one set of truths suggested by the image of an anchor, and may God grant that all of us this morning who know the meaning of that anchor may feel it holding us firmly by its grip within the veil; and may others, who have never possessed that anchor before, be enabled to cast it overboard this morning for the first time, and feel throughout all the rest of their lives the strong consolation which such a holdfast is sure to bestow upon the believing heart.

5. I. First, let me call your attention to THE PURPOSE OF THE ANCHOR of which our text speaks. The purpose of an anchor, of course, is to hold the vessel firmly to one place when winds and currents would otherwise remove it. God has given us certain truths, which are intended to hold our minds firmly to truth, holiness, perseverance — in a word, to hold us to himself.

6. But why hold the vessel? The first answer which would suggest itself would be to keep it from being wrecked. The ship may not need an anchor in calm waters, when upon a broad ocean a little drifting may not be a very serious matter: but there are conditions of weather in which an anchor becomes altogether essential. When a gale is rushing towards the shore, blowing great guns, and the vessel cannot hold her course, but must surely be driven upon an iron bound coast, then the anchor is worth its weight in gold. If the good ship cannot be anchored there will be nothing left of her in a very short time but here and there a spar; the gallant vessel will go to pieces, and every mariner be drowned; now is the time to let down the anchor, the best bower-anchor [b] if you will, and let the good ship defy the wind. Our God does not intend his people to be shipwrecked; however, they would be shipwrecked and lost if they were not held firmly in the hour of temptation. Brethren, if every wind of doctrine whirled you about at its will you would soon drift far away from the truth as it is in Jesus, and concerning it you would make shipwreck; but you cost your Lord too much for him to lose you; he bought you at too great a price, and sets too great a value on you for him to see you broken to pieces on the rocks; therefore he has provided for you a glorious holdfast, that when Satan’s temptations, your own corruptions, and the trials of the world assail you, hope may be the anchor of your soul, both sure and steadfast. How much we need it! For we see others fall into the error of the wicked, overcome by the deceitfulness of unrighteousness, and left for ever as castaways. “Having no hope and without God in the world.” If you have done business on the great waters for any length of time, you must be well aware that if it were not for everlasting truths which hold you firmly, your soul would have long since been hurried into everlasting darkness, and the proud waters would have gone over your soul long before this. When the mighty waves have lifted themselves up, your poor bark has seemed to go down to the bottom of the mountains, and if it had not been for unchanging love and immutable faithfulness, your heart would have utterly fainted. Nevertheless, here you are today, convoyed by grace, provisioned by mercy, steered by heavenly wisdom, and propelled by celestial power. Thanks to the anchor, or rather to the God who gave it to you, no storm has overwhelmed you; you are underway for the port of glory.

7. An anchor is also needed to keep a vessel from discomfort, for even if it is not wrecked it would be a wretched thing to be driven here and there, to the north and then to the south, as winds may shift. Unhappy is he who is the creature of external influences, flying along like thistle-down in the breeze, or a rolling thing before the whirlwind. We require an anchor to hold us so that we may remain in peace, and find rest for our souls. Blessed be God, there are solid and sure truths infallibly certified to us, which operate powerfully upon the mind in order to prevent its being harassed and dismayed. The text speaks of “strong consolation.” Is that not a glorious word, — we have not merely consolation which will hold us firmly and bear us up against the tempest in times of trouble, but strong consolation so that when affliction bursts out with unusual strength, like a furious tornado, the strong consolation, like a sheet anchor, [c] may be more than a match for the strong temptation, and may enable us to triumph over all. Very restful is that man who is very believing.

   Hallelujah! I believe!
   Now the giddy world stands fast,
   For my soul has found an anchor
   Till the night of storm is past.

8. An anchor is needed, too, to preserve us from losing the headway which we have made. The vessel has been making good headway towards port, but the wind changes and blows in her teeth: she will be borne back to the port from which she started, or to an equally undesirable port, unless she can resist the foul wind; therefore, she puts down her anchor. The captain says to himself, “I have come so far and I am not going to be blown back. Down goes my anchor, and here I stay.” Saints are sometimes tempted to return to the country from where they came out, they are half inclined to renounce the things which they have learned, and to conclude that they never were taught by the Lord at all. Alas, old Adam pulls us back, and the devil endeavours to drive us back, and if it were not for something sure to hold onto, we should go back. If it could be proved to be, as certain cultivated teachers would have us believe, that there is nothing very certain, that although black is black it is not very black, and though white is white it is not very white, and from certain standpoints no doubt black is white and white is black, if it could be proved, I say, that there are no eternal truths, no divine certainties, no infallible truths, then we might willingly surrender what we know or think we know, and wander around on the ocean of speculation, the waifs and strays of mere opinion: but while we have the truth, taught to our very souls by the Holy Spirit, we cannot drift from it, nor will we though men consider us fools for our steadfastness. Brethren, do not aspire to the charity which grows out of uncertainty; there are saving truths and there are “damnable heresies”; Jesus Christ is not yea and nay; his gospel is not a cunning mixture of the gall of hell and the honey of heaven, flavoured to the taste of bad and good. There are fixed principles and revealed facts. Those who know anything from experience about divine things have cast their anchor down, and as they heard the chain running out, they joyfully said, “This I know, and have believed. In this truth I stand firm and immovable. Blow winds and crack your cheeks, you will never move me from this anchorage; whatever I have attained by the teaching of the Spirit, I will hold firmly as long as I live.”

9. Moreover, the anchor is needed so that we may possess constancy and usefulness. The man who is easily moved and believes this today and that tomorrow, is a fickle creature. Who knows where to find him? Of what use is he to the younger kind and the feeble folk, or indeed to anyone else? Like a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed, what service can he render in the work of the Lord, and how can he influence others for good? He does not believe, how can he make others believe? I believe that the orthodox unbeliever is more largely a creator of infidelity than the heterodox believer: in other words, I fear that the man who earnestly believes an error has a less injurious influence upon others than the man who holds the truth in indifference, and secret unbelief: this man is tolerated in godly company, for he professes to be one of ourselves, and he is therefore able to stab at piety beneath her shield. The man knows nothing, certainly, but only hopes and trusts, and when defending truth he allows that much may be said on the other side, so that he kisses and stabs at the same time.

10. Our God has provided an anchor for us to hold us firmly lest we are shipwrecked, lest we are unhappy, lest we lose the progress we have made, and lest our character should become unstable, and therefore useless. These purposes are kind and wise; let us bless the Lord who has so graciously cared for us.

11. II. Secondly, I invite you to consider THE MAKE OF THE ANCHOR. — “That by two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation.”

12. Anchor making is very important work. The anchor smith has a very responsible business, for if he makes his anchor badly, or of weak material, woe to the shipmaster when the storm comes on. Anchors are not made of cast iron, nor of every kind of metal that comes to hand, but they are made of wrought iron, strongly welded, and of tough, compact material, which will bear all the strain that is likely to come upon it at the worst of times. If anything in this world should be strong it should be an anchor, for safety and life often depend upon it.

13. What is our anchor? It has two great blades or flukes to it, each of which acts as a holdfast. It is made of two divine things. The one is God’s promise, a sure and stable thing indeed. We are very ready to take a good man’s promise, but perhaps the good man may forget to fulfil it, or be unable to do so: neither of these things can occur with the Lord, he cannot forget and he cannot fail to do as he has said. Jehovah’s promise, what a certain thing it must be! If you had nothing except the Lord’s mere word to trust in surely your faith should never stagger. To this sure word is added another divine thing, namely, God’s oath. Beloved, I scarcely dare speak upon this sacred topic. God’s oath, his solemn assertion, his swearing by himself! Conceive the majesty, the awe, the certainty of this! Here, then, are two divine assurances, which like the flukes of the anchor-hold us firmly. Who dares to doubt the promise of God? Who can have the audacity to doubt his oath?

14. We have for our anchor two things, which, in addition to their being divine, are expressly said to be immutable — that is, two things which cannot change. When the Lord utters a promise he never reneges on it — “the gifts and calling of God are without repentance.” Has he said and shall he not do it? Has he promised and shall it not stand firm? He never changes and his promise remains from generation to generation. Then comes the oath, which is the other immutable thing; how could that be altered? God has pledged the honour of his name, and it is not supposable that, under such circumstances, he will retract his engagements and deny his own declarations. Ah, no —

   The gospel bears my spirit up.
   A faithful and unchanging God
   Lays the foundation for my hope
   In oaths, and promises, and blood.

15. Notice next of these two things that is said — “By which it is impossible for God to lie.” It is inconsistent with the very idea and thought of God that he should be a liar. A lying God would be a solecism [d] in language, a self-evident contradiction. It cannot be, God must be true, true in his nature, true in his thoughts, true in his designs, true in his acts, and assuredly true in his promises and true in his oath. “By which it is impossible for God to lie.” Oh, beloved, what blessed holdfasts we have here! If hope cannot rest on such assurances what could it rest upon?

16. But now, what is this promise, and what is this oath? The promise is the promise given to Abraham that his seed should be blessed, and in this seed should all nations of the earth be blessed also. To whom was this promise made? Who are the “seed?” In the first place, the seed is Jesus, who blesses all nations; and next, our apostle has proved that this promise was not made to the seed according to the flesh, but to the seed according to the spirit. Who, then, are the seed of Abraham according to the spirit? Why, believers; for he is the father of the faithful, and God’s promise, therefore, is confirmed to all who exhibit the faith of believing Abraham. The covenant is secured for Christ himself, and to all who are in Christ, that the Lord will bless them for ever and make them blessings.

17. And what is the oath? That may refer to the oath which the Lord swore to Abraham after the patriarch had offered up his son, for which see the twenty-second chapter of Genesis: but I think you will agree with me if I say it more probably refers to the oath recorded in the one hundred and tenth Psalm, which I would have you notice very carefully, — “The Lord has sworn, and will not repent, you are a priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek.” I think this is referred to, because the twentieth verse of our text goes on to say, “Where the forerunner is entered for us, even Jesus, made a high priest for ever after the order of Melchizedek.” Now, beloved, I want you to see this anchor. Here is one of its holdfasts, — God has promised to bless the faithful, he has declared that the seed of Abraham, namely believers, shall be blessed, and made a blessing. Then comes the other arm of the anchor, which is equally strong to hold the soul, namely, the oath of the priesthood, by which the Lord Jesus is declared to be a priest for ever on our behalf; not an ordinary priest after the manner of Aaron, beginning and ending a temporary priesthood, but without beginning of days or end of years, living on for ever; a priest who has finished his sacrificial work, has gone in within the veil, and sits down for ever at the right hand of God, because his work is complete, and his priesthood endures in its eternal efficacy. This is a blessed anchor to the soul: to know that my Priest is within the veil; my King of righteousness and King of peace is before the throne of God for me, representing me, and therefore I am secure in him for ever. What better anchor could the Comforter himself devise for his people? What stronger consolation can the heirs of promise desire?

18. III. We have no time to linger, though tempted to do so, and therefore I ask you to advance in the third place to notice OUR HOLD OF THE ANCHOR. It would be of no use for us to have an anchor, however good, unless we had a hold of it. The anchor may be sure, and may have a steadfast grip, but there must be a strong cable to connect the anchor with the ship. Formerly it was very general to use a rope cable, but large vessels are not content to run the risk of breakage, and therefore they use a chain cable for the anchor. It is a grand thing to have a solid substantial connection between your soul and your hope; to have a confidence which is surely your own, from which you can never be separated.

19. Our text speaks plainly about this laying hold of the anchor in the end of the eighteenth verse — “That we might have a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us.” We must personally lay hold on the hope; there is the hope, but we are bound to grasp it and hold it firmly. Just as with an anchor the cable must pass through the ring, and so be bound to it, so must faith lay hold upon the hope of eternal life. The original Greek means “to lay hold by main force and so to hold as not to lose our hold when the greatest force would pull it from us.” We must take firm hold of firm truth. Ah, brethren, just as some men have a cloudy hope, so they would seem to have a very doubtful way of laying hold upon it: I suppose it is natural it should be so. For my part, I desire to be taught something certain, and then I pray to be certain that I have learned it. Oh to get such a grip of truth as that old warrior had of his sword, so that when he fought and conquered he could not separate his hand and his sword, for his hand clung to his sword as if it were glued to it. It is a blessed thing to get hold of the doctrine of Christ in such a way that you would have to be dismembered before it could be taken from you, for it has grown into your very self. Be certain that you have a sure hold of your sure anchor.

20. “Well,” one says, “but may we lay hold upon it?” My answer is, the text says it is “set before us,” — to “lay hold of the hope set before us.” You may grasp it, for it is set before you. If any of you were very faint and hungry, and you came to a person’s house, and he said “sit down,” and you sat down at the table, and when you sat there the master set before you a good joint of meat and some very pleasant fruits, and the like, you would not long question whether you might eat them, but would infer your liberty to do so because the food was set before you. Assuredly this is the welcome of the gospel. The hope is set before you. For what purpose is it so set? That you may turn your back upon it? Assuredly not. Lay hold upon it, for wherever truth is found it is both our duty and our privilege to lay hold upon it. All the warrant that a sinner needs for laying hold on Christ is found in the fact that God has presented Christ to be a propitiation for our sins. Christian man you are in a storm; here is an anchor. Do you ask “May I use that anchor?” It is set before you for that very purpose. I warrant you there is no captain here who if he were in a storm, and saw an anchor set before him, he would use it at once and ask no questions. The anchor might not be his, it might happen to be on board as a piece of merchandise; he would not care an atom about that. “The ship has got to be saved. Here is an anchor; over it goes.” Act like this with the gracious hope which God provides for you in the gospel of Jesus Christ: lay hold on it now and for evermore.

21. Now, notice that our hold on the anchor should be a present thing and a conscious matter, for we read, “which hope we have.” We are conscious that we have it. No one among us has any right to be at peace if he does not know that he has obtained a good hope through grace. May you all be able to say, “which hope we have.”

22. Just as it is well to have a cable made of the same metal as the anchor, so it is a blessed thing when our faith is of the same divine character as the truth upon which it lays hold: it needs a God-given hope on our part to seize the God-given promise of which our hope is made. The right mode of procedure is to grasp God’s promise with a God-created confidence: then you see right away that down from the vessel to the anchor the holdfast is all one piece, so that at every point it is equally adapted to bear the strain. Oh to have precious faith in a precious Christ! A precious confidence in precious blood. May God grant it to you, and may you exercise it at this very moment.

23. IV. Fourthly, and very briefly, let us speak of THE ANCHOR’S HOLD OF US.

24. A ship has hold upon her anchor by her chain cable, but at the same time the most important thing is that the anchor keeps its hold upon the ship, and so, because it has entered into the ground of the sea-bottom, holds the vessel hard and fast. Brethren, do you know anything about your hope holding you? It will hold you if it is a good hope; you will not be able to get away from it, but under temptation and depression of spirit, and under trial and affliction, you will not only hold your hope — that is your duty, but your hope will hold you — that is your privilege. When the devil tempts you to say, “I will give it all up,” an unseen power will speak out of the infinite depths, and will reply, “But I shall not give you up, I have a hold of you, and no one shall separate us.” Brethren, our security depends far more upon God’s holding us than our holding onto him. Our hope in God that he will fulfil his oath and promise has a mighty power over us, far more than equal to all the efforts of the world, the flesh, and the devil to drag us away.

25. How is it that our divine anchor-holds so firmly? It is because it is in its own nature sure — “Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast.” It is in itself sure as to its nature. The gospel is no cunningly devised fable: God has spoken it, it is a mass of fact, it is pure, unalloyed truth, with the broad seal of God himself set upon it. Then, too, this anchor is “steadfast” as to its hold, it never moves from its location. It is sure in its nature, and steadfast when in use, and thus it is in practise safe. If you have believed in Christ to eternal life, and are expecting that God will be as good as his word, have you not found that your hope sustains you and maintains you in your position?

26. Brethren, the result of the use of this anchor will be very comforting to you. “Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast.” It will not prevent your being tossed about, for a ship at anchor may rock a good deal, and the passengers may be very seasick, but she cannot be driven away from her moorings. There she is, and her passengers suffer discomfort, but they shall not suffer shipwreck. A good hope through grace will not altogether deliver you from inward conflicts, indeed, it will even involve them: it will not screen you from outward trials, it will be sure to bring them: but it will save you from all real peril. I may say to every believer in Jesus, that his condition is very like that of the landsman on board ship when the sea was rather rough, and he said, “Captain, we are in great danger, are we not?” Since an answer did not come, he said, “Captain, do you not see great fear?” Then the old seaman gruffly replied, “Yes, I see plenty of fear, but not a bit of danger.” It is often so with us; when the winds are up and the storms are raging there is plenty of fear, but there is no danger. We may be much tossed, but we are quite safe, for we have an anchor of the soul both sure and steadfast, which will not budge.

27. One blessed thing is that our hope has such a grip on us that we know it. In a vessel you feel the pull of the anchor, and the more the wind rages the more you feel that the anchor-holds you. Like the boy with his kite: the kite is up in the clouds, where he cannot see it, but he knows it is there, for he feels its pull; so our good hope has gone up to heaven, and it is pulling and drawing us towards itself. We cannot see our anchor, it would be of no use if we could see it; its use begins when it is out of sight, but it pulls, and we can feel the heavenly pressure.

28. V. And now, lastly, and best of all, THE ANCHOR’S UNSEEN GRIP, “which enters into that within the veil.”

29. Our anchor is like every other, when it is of any use it is out of sight. When a man sees the anchor it is doing nothing, unless it happens to be some small stream anchor or grapnel in shallow water. When the anchor is of use it is gone: there it went overboard with a splash; far down there, all among the fish, lies the iron holdfast, quite out of sight. Where is your hope, brother? Do you believe because you can see? That is not believing at all. Do you believe because you can feel? That is feeling, it is not believing. But “blessed is he who has not seen and yet has believed.” Blessed is he who believes against his feelings, indeed, and hopes against hope. That is a strange thing to do, hoping against hope, believing impossible things, and seeing invisible things: he who can do that has learned the art of faith. Our hope is not seen, it lies in the waves, or, as the text says, “within the veil.” I am not going to run the metaphor too closely, but a mariner might say that his anchor is within the watery veil, for a veil of water is between him and it, and so it is concealed. Such is the confidence which we have in God, whom having not seen we love.

   Let the winds blow, and billows roll,
   Hope is the anchor of my soul.
   But can I by so slight a tie,
   An unseen hope, on God rely?
   Steadfast and sure, it cannot fail,
   It enters deep within the veil,
   It fastens on a land unknown,
   And moors me to my Father’s throne.

30. Albeit our anchor is gone out of sight, yet thank God it has taken a very firm grip, and “entered into what is within the veil.” What hold can be equal to what a man has upon his God when he can cry, “You have promised, therefore do as you have said?” What grasp is firmer than this, “Lord, you have sworn it, you cannot renege. You have said that he who believes in you is justified from all sin. Lord, I believe you, therefore be pleased to do as you have said. I know you cannot lie, and you have sworn that Christ is a priest for ever, and I am resting in him as my priest who has made a full atonement for me. I therefore, pledge you to your oath, accept me for the sake of Jesus’ sacrifice. Can you reject a soul for whom your own Son is pleading? He is able to save to the uttermost those who come to God by him, seeing he lives for ever to make intercession for me: my Lord, this is the hold I have upon you, this is the anchor which I have cast into the deep, mysterious attributes of your wondrous nature. I believe you, and you will not make me ashamed of my hope.” Oh, brethren, what a hold you have upon the living God when you rely on his oath and promise! Thus you hold him as Jacob held the angel, and you will surely win the blessing at his hands.

31. Notice next, that when an anchor has a good grip down below, the more the ship drags the tighter its hold becomes. At first, when the anchor goes down, perhaps, it drops upon a hard rock, and there it cannot bite, but eventually it slips off from the rock and enters into the bottom of the sea, it digs into the soil, and, as the cable draws it on, the fluke goes deeper and deeper until the anchor almost buries itself, and the more it is pulled upon the deeper it descends. The anchor gets such a hold at last that it seems to say, “Now, Boreas, [e] blow away, you must tear up the floor of the sea before the vessel shall be let go.” Times of trouble send our hope deep down into fundamental truths. Some of you people who have never known affliction, you rich people who never knew poverty, you healthy folk who were never ill a week, you have not half a grip of the glorious hope that the tried ones have. Much of the unbelief in the Christian Church comes out of the easy lives of professors. When you come to rough it, you need solid gospel. A hard working hungry man cannot live on your whipped creams and your [f] syllabubs — he must have something solid to nourish him; and so the tried man feels that he must have a gospel which is true, and he must believe it to be true, or else his soul will starve. Now, if God promises and swears, do we not have the most solid of assurances? The firmest conceivable faith is no more than the righteous due of the thrice holy and faithful God. Therefore, brethren, when greater trouble comes believe all the more firmly, and when your vessel is tossed in deeper water believe all the more confidently. When the head is aching, and the heart is palpitating, when all earthly joy is fled, and when death comes near, believe all the more. Grow more certain and confident that your Father cannot lie, yes, “Let God be true and every man a liar.” In this way you will obtain the strong consolation which the Lord intends you to enjoy.

32. The text concludes with this very sweet reflection, that although our hope is out of sight we have a friend in the unseen land where our hope has found its hold. In anxious moments a sailor might almost wish that he could go with his anchor and fix it firmly. That he cannot do, but we have a friend who has gone to see to everything for us. Our anchor is within the veil, it is in the place where we cannot see it, but Jesus is there, and our hope is inseparably connected with his person and work. We know for a certainty that Jesus of Nazareth, after his death and burial, rose from the grave, and that forty days afterwards, in the presence of his disciples, he went up into heaven, and a cloud received him. We know this as a historical fact; and we also know that he rose into the heavens, as the comprehensive seed of Abraham, in whom are found all the faithful. Just as he has gone there so we shall surely follow, for he is the first-fruits of the full harvest.

33. According to the text, our Lord Jesus has gone within the veil as our high priest. Now, the high priest within the veil is in the place of acceptance on our behalf. A Melchizedek-high priest is one who has boundless power to bless and to save to the uttermost. Jesus Christ has offered one bloody sacrifice for sin, namely, himself, and now he sits down for ever at the right hand of God, even the Father. Brethren, he reigns where our anchor has entered; we rest in Christ’s finished work, his resurrection power, and his eternal kingship. How can we doubt after this?

34. We are next informed that Jesus has gone within the veil as a forerunner. What is a forerunner if there are not others to run after him? He has gone to lead the way, he is the pioneer, the leader of the great army, the first-fruits from the dead, and if he has gone to heaven as a forerunner, then we who belong to him will follow after. Should that reflection not make our hearts glad?

35. We are told next that as a forerunner our Lord has entered for us — that is entered to take possession in our name. When Jesus Christ went into heaven he did as it were look around on all the thrones, and all the palm branches, and all the harps, and all the crowns, and says “I take possession of all these in the name of my redeemed. I am their representative and claim the heavenly places in their name.” As surely as Jesus is there, the possessor of all things, so also shall each one of us come to his inheritance in due time.

36. Our Lord Jesus by his intercession is drawing us to heaven, and we have only to wait a little while and we shall be with him where he is. He pleads for our homecoming, and it will come to pass before long. No sailor likes his anchor to come home, for if it does so in a storm matters look very ugly; our anchor will never come home, but it is drawing us home; it is drawing us to itself, not downwards beneath devouring waves, but upwards to ecstatic joys. Do you not feel it? You who are growing old, do you not feel its home drawings? Many cords hold us here, but they are getting fewer with some of you — the dear wife has passed away, or the beloved husband has gone; many of your children have gone too, and a host of friends. These are all helps to draw you upward. I think at this very moment you must feel as if your barque were about to change by some magic power from a ship which floats on the waters to an eagle which can fly in the air. Have you not often longed to mount while singing —

   Oh that we now might grasp our guide!
      Oh that the word were given!
   Come, Lord of hosts, the waves divide,
      And land us all in heaven!

My cable has grown shorter recently, a great many of its links have vanished, I am nearer my hope than when I first believed. Every day hope nears fruition, let our joy in it become more exaltant. A few more weeks or months, and we shall dwell above, and while we shall need no anchor to hold us firmly, we shall eternally bless that divine condescension which produced such a holdfast for our unstable minds while tossed upon this sea of care.

37. What will those of you do who have no anchor? for a storm is coming on. I see the lowering clouds, and hear the distant hurricane. What will you do? May the Lord help you at once to flee for refuge to the hope set before you. Amen.

[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon — Heb 6]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Work of Grace as a Whole — All Mercies Traced To Electing Love” 230]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “God the Father, Attributes of God — Faithful And Unchanging” 193]
[See Spurgeon_Hymnal “The Christian, Conflict and Encouragement — Confidence In The Promises” 632]


[a] Schoolmen: Certain theologians of the Middle Ages; so called because they lectured in the cloisters or cathedral schools founded by Charlemagne and his immediate successors. See Explorer "http://www.infoplease.com/dictionary/brewers/schoolmen.html"
[b] Bower Anchor: The name of two anchors, the best bower, and small bower, carried at the bows of a vessel. OED.
[c] Sheet Anchor: A large anchor, formerly always the largest of a ship’s anchors, used only in an emergency. OED.
[d] Solecism: An impropriety or irregularity in speech or diction; a violation of the rules of grammar or syntax. OED.
[e] Boreas: The north wind; the god of the north wind. OED.
[f] Syllabub: A drink or dish made of milk (frequently as drawn from the cow) or cream, curdled by the mixture of wine, cider, or other acid, and often sweetened and flavoured. OED.

The Work of Grace as a Whole
230 — All Mercies Traced To Electing Love <148TH />
1 Indulgent God! how kind
      Are all thy ways to me,
   Whose dark benighted mind
      Was enmity with thee;
   Yet now, subdued by sovereign grace,
   My spirit longs for thine embrace.
2 How precious are thy thoughts,
      That o’er my bosom roll:
   They swell beyond my faults,
      And captivate my soul;
   How great their sum, how high they rise,
   Can ne’er be known beneath the skies.
3 Preserved in Jesus, when
      My feet made haste to hell;
   And there should I have gone,
      But thou dost all things well;
   Thy love was great, thy mercy free,
   Which from the pit deliver’d me.
4 Before thy hands had made
      The sun to rule the day,
   Or earth’s foundation laid,
      Of fashion’d Adam’s clay,
   What thoughts of peace and mercy flow’d
   In thy dear bosom, oh my God.
5 Oh! fathomless abyss,
      Where hidden mysteries lie:
   The seraph finds his bliss,
      Within the same to pry;
   Lord, what is man, thy desperate foe,
   That thou shouldest bless and love him so?
6 A monument of grace,
      A sinner saved by blood:
   The streams of love I trace
      Up to the Fountain, God;
   And in his sacred bosom see
   Eternal thoughts of love to me.
                        John Kent, 1803.
 


God the Father, Attributes of God
193 — Faithful And Unchanging
1 How oft have sin and Satan strove
   To rend my soul from thee, my God!
   But everlasting is thy love,
   And Jesus seals it with his blood.
2 The oath and promise of the Lord
   Join to confirm the wond’rous grace;
   Eternal power performs the word,
   And fills all heaven with endless praise.
3 Amidst temptations sharp and long,
   My soul to this dear refuge flies;
   Hope is my anchor, firm and strong,
   While tempests blow and billows rise.
4 The gospel bears my spirit up;
   A faithful and unchanging God
   Lays the foundation for my hope
   In oaths, and promises, and blood.
                        Isaac Watts, 1790.
 


The Christian, Conflict and Encouragement
632 — Confidence In The Promises
1 Why should I sorrow more?
      I trust a Saviour slain,
   And safe beneath his sheltering cross,
      Unmoved I shall remain.
2 Let Satan and the world,
      Now rage or now allure;
   The promises in Christ are made
      Immutable and sure.
3 The oath infallible
      Is now my spirit’s trust;
   I know that he who spake the word,
      Is faithful, true, and just.
4 He’ll bring me on my way
      Unto my journey’s end;
   He’ll be my Father and my God,
      My Saviour and my Friend.
5 So all my doubts and fears
      Shall wholly flee away,
   And every mournful night of tears
      Be turn’d to joyous day.
6 All that remains for me
      Is but to love and sing,
   And wait until the angels come
      To bear me to the King.
                  William Williams, 1772;
                  Charles H. Spurgeon, 1866

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2013/10/15/the-anchor