A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, December 29, 1872, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
Jesus heard that they had cast him out; and when
he had found him, he said to him, “Do you believe on the
Son of God?” He answered and said, “Who is he, Lord,
that I might believe on him?” (Joh 9:35,36)
For other sermons on this text:
(See Spurgeon_SermonTexts "Joh 9:35")
(See Spurgeon_SermonTexts "Joh 9:36")
1. This text is from the story of the blind man to whom Jesus had given sight. His narrative of the cure provoked the anger of the Jews and their rulers; and, since the man could not be brought to see with them that one who had opened his eyes could also be a bad man, they cast him out of their assembly, and by that act indicated to him that he would be, or already was, cast out of the Jewish Church, excluded from the synagogue, and made the victim of the greater excommunication. This was one of the most fearful calamities that could befall a Jew, and I do not doubt that the man considered it to be so. Now, it is not at all likely that any person here is feeling the same trouble, but many may be suffering from something similar. It may be that you have excommunicated yourselves. Within the court of your own heart conscience has held a solemn court, and pronounced upon you a sentence which continually rings in your ears. You scarcely dare to mingle with those who assemble in the house of God, for you feel yourselves unworthy to be among them. Up until recently you were on the best of terms with yourselves, and thought that all was right with God. You hoped that you stood on as good a footing, at any rate, as other men, and perhaps were somewhat better than many around you; but now a process of enlightenment has come over your mind — practices have been seen to be seriously evil which before were regarded as trifles, and sin itself has appeared differently than in former times. Does such a person stand here this morning? Then let me assure him that his state of mind is well known to me, for I knew its horrors for many months. I, too, felt that I was cut off from the congregation of the hopeful, and must not hope for mercy from God. I dared not lift so much as my eyes towards heaven, but complained to the Lord as Jonah did — “I am shut out of your sight.” Hence with brotherly sympathy I speak to any man who thinks himself to be a castaway, excluded from the house of the Lord.
2. The man in the narrative, most happily for him, at the time when the sentence began to cast its gloom over him, was met by the Lord Jesus Christ, who at once proceeded to afford him the necessary cordial. Christ has come as the consolation of Israel, and where he finds that men are burdened in spirit he begins his gracious work: but, observe, he only brings one cordial, and only prescribes one way by which its efficacy can be realised. He spoke to the oppressed man concerning the Son of God and personal faith in him, for this is the master consolation for broken hearts, this is the surest and best means of bringing joy to souls which sit in the dungeons of despondency. Our Lord began by saying to the cast out one, “Do you believe on the Son of God?” Now, if any here present are in the state which I have thus hurriedly sketched, feeling themselves guilty before God, with spirits ill at ease, with hearts alarmed at coming and well deserved judgment, I would come in Christ’s name to them this morning with words of comfort, but they will be the same which Jesus uttered of old. I have nothing to speak to you by way of comfort but concerning the Son of God, and concerning him only, by demanding that you believe on him, for only as you receive him by faith will he be to you a relief from sorrow. He who believes on the Lord Jesus shall not be disappointed, but without faith you are without salvation.
3. We shall this morning labour to bring you all to the point in hand. There shall be between the doctrine of the gospel and your soul this morning, oh you who are not yet a believer, a direct encounter. You shall come up this morning and face the gospel, whether you spurn it or accept it. You shall know, if the plainest words can tell it to you, that if you believe in Christ Jesus you shall be saved, and it shall be presented to you whether you will do this or not, and you shall either believe on the Son of God or incur anew the sin of putting from you the only name given under heaven among men by which you can be saved. I say you shall be brought to this if words can bring you to it, and then I must leave the work of your decision in the hands of God the Holy Spirit. I entreat you who love the Lord, and have prevalence in prayer, to aid me with your supplications, that the result of bringing the sinner face to face with the gospel may be that he may decide to believe in Jesus, that faith may be given to him, that the Son of God may become the object of his soul’s confidence, and that in no case the hearer may be left to continue in unbelief, and to reject the Son of God. You have seen at the mouth of the coal pits how the full wagons as they run down the incline draw the empty ones up to the pit’s mouth so that they also may be filled: I wish that you who have grace may exert the power God has given to you with himself; and so by prevalent intercession you may draw others to the Saviour. While we are preaching be praying, and God will work through both of us. Look upon the unsaved around you with an eye of pity, then look to Christ, your exalted Saviour, with the eye of faith and say to him, “Jesus, you who have redeemed myriads by your blood, now work by your eternal Spirit, and redeem also by power. Let the Spirit who rested on your own ministry, the Spirit who was with your servants at Pentecost, the Spirit who has converted us also to your truth, work mightily among the congregation this morning, so that all these may be led to obey you. When your cross is lifted high, let it bring life to the dead throughout the camp, and be to the awakened a lighthouse of safety, to the despairing a pillar of hope.”
4. I. The run of our discourse this morning being solemnly practical, we shall, in the most distinct manner, lay down and define THE MATTER IN HAND.
5. With you, my anxious friend, the greatest and weightiest business that can concern you is that you find salvation. You do not have it at present, your conscience tells you that; and though you are well aware that you must obtain it, or be lost for ever, still you have as yet only a small prospect of ever finding it. You have sinned, and punishment awaits you; neither can you escape! The point above all points with you is that you be saved, and if you are really awakened you desire to be saved from sin as well as from its punishment; you would not only escape from the consequences of doing wrong, but from the propensity to do wrong; from the constant power and defilement of past sin, and from the tendency to sin again. You desire also to be forgiven, and by forgiveness to be set clear from the anger of a justly offended God, and to be rendered acceptable to the Most High; and if you are in your right mind you desire that all this should be done really and truly, not in pretence or fiction, but in deed and in truth. God forbid that you should ever be content with the name of being saved, with an external and professional salvation of outward rites and ceremonies, while your heart remains unpurified and your nature uncleansed. In some other departments we may be deceived and not be very great losers, but in soul matters we must make all things sure; for if we are deceived there, it is all over with us indeed. Let me be cheated with base metal instead of gold, if you wish, but not with falsehoods in the place of saving truth, or deceptive notions in lieu of gracious operations. Let me be deceived concerning the food I eat, and find every morsel of it adulterated, if so it must be; but not in the bread of eternal life which my soul craves after. Be true to my soul, if all else is a lie!
6. Do you, my hearer, desire salvation from the power and guilt of sin, and do you desire it to be thorough and real? Do you not also long for it now? If God has at all quickened you, you long to be saved at once, and tremble at the idea of delay. Sin is bitter to you now, it is a present plague. The matter before us now is present salvation, personal salvation to be experienced for yourself. If there is such a thing as looking up to the smiling face of a reconciled Father in heaven, you desire to enjoy it now: if it is possible for the load of sin to be rolled from off a mortal’s shoulders for ever, you desire to be free from that burden at this instant: if there is, indeed, a fountain in which, if a man is washed, every stain shall disappear, you long to plunge beneath its cleansing flood at once, and be made whiter than the driven snow. If your soul is so far awakened I bless God indeed, for there is nothing beneath the sun — and, indeed, there is nothing above it — that can rival in importance your soul’s salvation.
7. Now the matter which I must press upon you is this. If you are ever to be saved, God has declared that salvation must come to you as a gift of his grace, as an act of his free favour, and can only be received by you through your believing in his Son. Just as Christ consoled the man in the temple by saying to him, “Do you believe on the Son of God?” so today there is no consolation, much less salvation for you, except through believing in God’s own Son. A hundred times you have heard the story of God’s only begotten Son, who is the lover of men’s souls; but we must tell it to you yet again. God will not save men on the basis of their merits; indeed, if they have any merits they do not require saving. If God owes you anything, produce the account and you shall have it. If there are any obligations on God’s part towards you, say what they are, and if they can be proven to exist, God will never give you less than you can justly claim. Alas! my friend, if you are lodged where you deserve to be, where will it be except in the pit of hell? It would be well for you then to cease all claims and demands. God will only save you as a guilty person who deserves to be destroyed, but whom he saves because he chooses to save him — because he resolves to reveal in him the abundance of his mercy. “By grace you are saved,” is the immutable purpose of heaven; and it is further decreed, that this grace shall be received by men through the channel of faith, and by that channel only. God will save only those who trust in his Son. Jesus Christ the Lord came into this world and took upon himself our nature, as we taught you last Sunday, (See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1087, “The Hexapla of Mystery” 1078) and being found in fashion as a man, he took the transgressor’s place; the transgressions of his people were numbered upon him, imputed to him, charged to his account, and he suffered for them as if they had been his own sins. He was scourged, tormented, crucified, and slain; the stripes he bore were the chastisments due to human sin, and the death he endured was the death threatened to transgressors; and now, whoever will trust in Jesus shall participate in the result of all the Redeemer’s substitutionary agonies, and the case shall stand like this — the sufferings of Christ shall be instead of the believers suffering, and the merits of Christ shall be instead of the obedience which man ought to have rendered. Faith in Jesus makes us righteous through the righteousness of another; it causes us to be accepted in the Beloved, perfect in Christ Jesus. Just as by the first Adam we fell, so by the second Adam we rise again. Now the way to partake in the benefits of the death of the Lord Jesus is simply by believing in him. Here let it be understood that believing in Jesus is not a mysterious and complex action. It does not require a week to explain what faith is. Faith believes what God has revealed concerning Christ, and it therefore trusts in Christ as the divinely appointed Saviour. I believe that Jesus was God’s Son, that God sent him into the world to save sinners, that to do so he became a substitute to justice for all those who trust him, and, since I trust him, I know that he was my substitute and that I am clear before God. Since Jesus died for me, God’s justice cannot put me to eternal death for whom Jesus my substitute has died; God’s truth cannot demand a second time the debt which has already been fully paid on my behalf. The rationale of the whole thing is as plain as possible, and whoever in this world, old or young, Jew or Gentile, literate or illiterate, rich or poor, debauched or moral, will trust in Jesus shall be saved — indeed, he is saved the moment he does so; but whoever is born of woman and refuses to trust in Jesus is condemned already, because he has not believed on the Son of God. No matter what a man’s character is, if in that character there is no faith, he is a lost soul; but on the other hand, no matter what his character has been, if he comes to the cross now and believes in Jesus, he begins from that moment a new life; God will give to him all the graces and excellencies of character which will adorn his faith, and his faith shall save him. Trusting in Jesus, believing in Jesus, that is the matter. I want to bring my hammer down upon this anvil at every stroke, and if the Lord will be pleased to place before me some heart that he has melted in the furnace of conviction, the strokes will tell, if the Eternal God will also add his almighty arm and strike with divine energy. If only any soul is brought to faith in Jesus the work is done; to believe in the Son of God is the point, and nothing else.
8. II. This being the matter in hand, we will make an advance, in the second place, to notice that there is A QUESTION IN OUR TEXT WHICH INVOLVES THE WHOLE BASIS OF FAITH.
9. The man said to Jesus, “Who is he, Lord, that I might believe on him?” This man all through the narrative proves himself to be a very shrewd fellow. I do not know that holy Scripture gives us an example of a more common sense man than this man whose eyes were opened; and so, when he is told that he must believe in the Son of God, he comes to the point at once, and says, “Who is he, Lord, that I might believe on him?” as if that was all he wanted to know — “Who is he?” and then the faith would surely come. When a soul is seeking faith, this question is the main point; the crux of the whole matter lies there. This man did not say, “Lord, who am I that I should believe?” — not at all; that would have been wide of the mark. If I read a story in the newspapers, about the truthfulness of which there is a question, I do not begin asking what my own character is, as though that had anything to do with it, but I ask who the authority for the story may be. I do not look within, but I look to the person claiming belief. The story is true or not, whatever I may be. My character does not concern the truth or falsehood of the statement, I must enquire into the statement itself. So this man did not make any remarks about what he might have been or might still be, but he hung the issue on this nail — “Who is he, Lord, that I might believe on him?” So now, dear hearer, all the arguments for your faith lie within the scope of that question, “Who is he, Lord, that I should believe in him?” You need not say, “Who am I that I should believe? I have lived a life that has been defiled with sin; I have gone from one transgression to another; I have resisted conscience; I have opposed the gospel; I have defiled myself by sins against light and knowledge.” It does not matter. There you stand, with all your defilement taken for granted, and God says to you, “Whoever believes on the Lord Jesus Christ has everlasting life.” That is the saving matter; that, and nothing more or less. Will you believe in the Lord Jesus or not? What you are has nothing to do with it. If God’s witness is true, it is true whether you are black or white, whether you are a big sinner or a little sinner; and if it is false it will not be any the truer, whether you are good or bad, worthy or unworthy. If Jesus is able to save he ought to be trusted; and if he is not able no one ought to rely upon him — the whole question turns on that.
10. Neither raise any quibbles concerning your present condition. You say, “But I at this moment feel myself so hard of heart; I cannot weep as some can; repentance is hidden from my eyes; prayer is heavy, groaning is work for me; even while I am listening to the gospel this morning my attention is not riveted as it ought to be upon the truth which I know to be vital; I am destitute of every good point; I am empty of everything that can commend me to mercy.” I answer, what does that matter? Suppose I tell a man that the sum of ten thousand pounds has been left to him in a will, is it anything to the point if he shows me his rags, his empty cupboard, and his wretched bed? Does his poverty make me a liar? Why does the man introduce such extraneous matter into the good news? Either it is true or it is not; his condition has nothing to do with the truth or falsehood of my declaration. If the man were wrapped in scarlet and fine linen, that would not make my statement any the truer; and if the dogs lick him as they did Lazarus, that does not give him a right to deny my truthfulness when I tell him a fact. So, oh sinner, your condition has nothing to do with the question whether Jesus is to be trusted or not. “God so loved the world that he gave his only begotten Son, that whoever believes in him should not perish, but have everlasting life.” Will you believe in him? Will you trust the Lord Jesus? If you desire to trust him the subject for enquiry is, “Is he worth trusting?” But this has nothing to do with it to say, “I am this,” or “I am that.” Is this not so? I appeal to your own common sense.
11. “But still, concerning the future,” one says; “I might go back to my old sins. I cannot trust myself, I have made some reformations before, and they have been only poor ventures; my ship has gone out to sea, and foundered in the first gale; I cannot expect with such temptations as will await me, that I shall bear up and enter heaven.” Now, what has the question of believing in Jesus to do with your good resolutions, or your miserable failures? Whoever trusts Christ shall be saved. If you are lost trusting him in the future, God’s word will not be true. The question is, “Can you trust Christ?” and that turns on that other “Is he worthy to be trusted?” No other question can be admitted for a single moment. The case is something like that of a man at sea; his ship is wrecked; she is breaking up; her decks have been swept; he barely retains his hold on a floating spar of a mast. See! the lifeboat comes up close to his side, and is ready to take him on board. Now, if there is a question in that man’s mind about getting into that lifeboat in order to be saved, the only rational one that I can conceive is, “Will the boat carry me to shore? Is she seaworthy? Will she outlive the breakers? Can she reach the land safely?” You cannot conceive the poor fellow’s saying, “I tremble too much from fever to be rescued by that boat,” or “The sea has washed the last rag from off my back, the boat will not suit me,” or “Another time I may be wrecked on the coast of Africa, and there may be a lifeboat.” No, no. Man alive, there is the boat! Is she seaworthy? That is the question. If so, get into her. If Christ is not worth trusting, do not trust him and if he is worthy of all confidence, then stop asking idle questions and cast yourself upon him. “If we receive the witness of men, the witness of God is greater: for this is the witness of God which he has testified concerning his Son. He who believes on the Son of God has the witness in himself: he who does not believe God has made him a liar; because he does not believe the record that God gave of his Son. And this is the record, that God has given to us eternal life, and this life is in his Son. He who has the Son has life; and he who does not have the Son of God does not have life.” (1Jo 5:9-12)
12. Still, we will keep to this point — Jesus is worth trusting, worthy of the sinner’s unwavering faith. He is worth trusting, oh sinner, because first of all he on whom you are asked to rely today by the command of the gospel, is God himself. You have offended God, and it is God who came into the world to save sinners. Against Christ your sins were launched as arrows from a bow, but he against whom those bolts were shot has come in the fulness of his power and the infinity of his mercy to save those who believe. Can you not trust yourself in almighty hands — almighty to save? Is anything impossible with God? An angel could not save you, but surely God himself can! How can you limit the Holy One of Israel? How can you set bounds to boundless love, or limits to limitless grace? If Jesus were man and not God, unbelief would have good excuse; but if the Saviour is divine, where can distrust find a cloak for itself?
13. I feel this morning as if I could not help believing in Christ now that I know him to be divine. Faith has grown to be a necessary act of my mind. Save me! Who shall persuade me that he cannot? Come out you demons with your arguments and plead with me, and you cannot inject a doubt into my soul while I know him to be God; he can shake the heavens when he pleases and make the earth to tremble; he bears up the universe upon his shoulders; can he not save my poor soul? Indeed, he can. “Who is he that I might believe on him?” He is divine, and therefore I believe.
14. But next, the Lord Jesus Christ, in whom the sinner is invited to trust, is commissioned by God to save. He came into the world as a Saviour, not on his own authority, but as the Messiah sent by God. He has the full concurrence of the sacred Trinity. It is the will of the Father, it is the will of the Holy Spirit, as well as the will of the Son, that whoever believes in Jesus should be saved. He was anointed by the Lord for his particular work. Now, I feel as if this was a special basis for trust in him. If Christ were an amateur Saviour who had taken up the business of saving on his own authority, there might be a question; but if God has divinely commissioned him to save, oh soul, how can you doubt any more? Warranted by God, authorized by the Eternal, oh heart, rest in him.
15. Then, notice, the Lord Jesus Christ has actually done all that is necessary for him to do for the salvation of all who trust him. Years ago, before Jesus Christ came into the world, if I had been sent to preach the gospel, I must have cried “Jesus will take upon him the sins of believers and lay down his life for his church,” but now I have a more encouraging message, — Jesus has carried his people’s sins away for ever, he has suffered on their behalf all that was required to make an end of their transgressions. Whatever was demanded by the justice of God as a punishment for the injured honour of the law he has rendered. The equivalent for all the sufferings of all the elect had they been in hell for ever, Christ has suffered to the utmost: everything that was necessary that God might be just, and still the justifier of him who believes, Christ has endured. The cup of vengeance is not full, and waiting to be drained; it is empty, and turned bottom upwards, Jesus has drank it dry. The labours necessary for our redemption, superlatively greater than the labours of Hercules, have all been accomplished. Christ has gone into the grave, has gone out of the grave, and gone up to his glory. He has entered heaven because his work is done; and now he sits down at the right hand of the Father in the posture of rest and honour, because he has perfected for ever all those who put their trust in him. Now, soul, how can you refuse to believe in Jesus? To me the argument seems impossible to be resisted. If it is so, that Christ has died, the just for the unjust, and that all who trust him shall be saved, I will also trust him, and I shall find peace through his blood.
16. Moreover, soul, the point we trust God’s grace is bringing you to is this — Jesus deserves to be trusted, and we will trust him — for he is full of power to save, for he is now upon the throne, and all power is given to him in heaven and in earth. We know he is full of power to save because he is saving souls every day. Some of us are the living witnesses that he can forgive sin, for we are pardoned, accepted, and renewed in heart; and the only way in which we obtained those blessings was this — we trusted him, we did nothing else but trust him. If any soul here that believes in Jesus should perish, I must perish with him. I sail in that same boat, and if it sinks I have no other one to escape to. I affirm before all of you that I have no other confidence; I do not have so much as the shred of a reliance in any sacrament I have undergone or enjoyed, in any sermon I have ever preached, in any prayer I have ever prayed, in any communion with God I have ever known. My hope lies in the blood and righteousness of Jesus Christ; and I shake off as though it were a viper, into the fire, as a deadly thing only fit to be burned, all pretence of relying on anything I may be, or can be, or ever shall be, or do. “No one except Jesus,” — this is the settled pillar upon which we must build; it will bear us up, but nothing else can. Now, since by the authority of infallible Scripture, we know that Jesus has this power, why is it that souls seeking rest do not obey the command, and rest themselves freely upon him? This is the climax of human depravity, that it rejects the witness of God himself, and chooses to perish in unbelief.
17. Moreover, remember also that Jesus Christ this morning is by no means unwilling to save sinners, but on the contrary, he delights to do it. You never have to drag mercy out of Christ, as money from a miser, but it flows freely from him, like the stream from the fountain, or the sunlight from the sun. If he can be happier, he is made happier by giving his mercy to the undeserving. When a poor wretch who only deserves hell, comes to him, and he says, “I have blotted out your sins,” it is joy to Christ’s heart to do it. When a poor blasphemer bows his knee, and says, “Lord, be merciful to me a sinner,” it makes Christ’s heart glad to say, “Your blasphemies are forgiven: I suffered for them on the tree.” When a poor little child, by her bedside, cries, “Gentle Jesus, teach a little child to pray, and forgive the sins which I have done”; the Saviour loves to say, “Permit these little children to come to me, for this also is a part of my reward for the wounds I endured in my hands, my feet, and my side.” When any of you come to him and confess your transgressions and trust yourselves in his hands, it will be a new heaven to him; it will put new stars into his ever bright and lustrous crown; it will make him see the travail of his soul and give him satisfaction. Have we not here also arguments to prove that Jesus is worthy to be trusted?
18. III. This leads us in the third place to say, by all these answers to the question, — “Who is he?” EVERY SINNER IN THIS TABERNACLE IS RESTRICTED THIS MORNING TO THE ALTERNATIVE OF FAITH OR UNBELIEF.
19. You must either trust in Christ, in whom God commands you to trust, or refuse to trust him. I am not sent to preach to some of you this morning, but to everyone who has ears to hear. I have never learned to preach a restricted gospel to a part of a congregation; the commission received by every true minister of Christ is, “Go into all the world and preach the gospel to every creature: he who believes and is baptised shall be saved; he who does not believe shall be damned.” Since you are all creatures, the gospel is hereby preached to all of you; sensitive or insensitive, spiritually dead or spiritually alive, as long as you are able to hear the gospel, one message comes to all of you from the excellent glory. “Whoever will, let him come and take from the water of life freely.” “Believe in the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved.” But I know what will be your course of action unless the Spirit of God prevents it. Many of you will try to decline the alternative between believing and not believing, which I have put so nakedly before you. You will not like to say, “I will not trust Christ,” and yet you will not trust in him. What, then, will you do? Why, you will ring the changes on the old bells, “But I am such a sinner. I am so unworthy!” I have already shown that the plea is not relevant and ought not to be thrust into the business. The question is one and indivisible, “Will you believe on the Son of God?” Why then do you raise another question about yourself which has nothing to do with it? Yet I will take you at your word and answer you. Granted that you are a special and abominable sinner: then of all men in the world you are the man who should trust Christ, because it is written, “This is a faithful saying and worthy of all acceptance, that Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners.” You have been a drunkard, a fornicator, an adulterer, a thief, in fact, a devil of a man; well then you have been a sinner; — that is all it comes to, and Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinners; therefore instead of being shut out by your character, you are shut in by it. You are the kind of man that Christ came to save. You cannot run away and say, “He did not come to save me because I am not a sinner.” You dare not do that.
20. Very likely you will turn around and say, “My reason for unbelief is that I do not feel as I should.” I again say the plea ought never to be urged. Because I feel a pain in my foot this morning, is that a reason why I should not trust in an honest man, or believe a statement which comes to me upon good authority? I will, however, take you at your word. You are so sinful that you are, in all respects, undeserving; well, then, Jesus came to save his people from their sins. Clearly, you are one of the very kind of people whom he came to save, for you are full of sins. His salvation is all of grace, and since you have no good thing about you whatever, you are a most fit case for mercy, free mercy, great mercy! Salvation, all of grace, exactly suits you. You are an empty vessel, then it is clear you need to be filled; you are a filthy vessel, then you need washing; and Jesus proposes both to cleanse and fill. His overtures are exactly adapted to your circumstances. You are the very man for grace to bless.
21. “Ah, but,” another says, “I feel myself lost, utterly lost.” What! are we first to do battle with some of you because you feel too little, and then with others because they feel too much; then we must come back to our one fixed point, and remind you again that both excuses are wide of the mark, and that the one point is — will you, or will you not, believe in the Lord Jesus, whom God has given to be the Saviour of men? But still if you are crushed with sorrowful feelings, there are special reasons for your attending to the gospel call, since some invitations are especially directed to you, such as, “Ho everyone who thirsts come to the waters,” and “If any man is thirsty, let him come to me and drink.” If there are special messages of grace for you who are somewhat awakened to a sense of need, then I entreat you, hurry to accept the testimony of God so that your souls may live.
22. The one question for every
unconverted sinner here is, “Will you believe on Jesus
Christ?” But I hear you saying, “Well, I must do better
in the future; I think after all I may perhaps, by some
exertions of my own, get into a better condition.” How
can you hope so? Have you not made a pretty mess of it
up until now? You had better give up the vain attempt.
If you have done so badly in the past, you have
little encouragement to try the future. Let despair
drive you to faith. The worst of your conduct is you
are going completely contrary to God’s plan. God says,
“I will not save you on the basis of merit, for you have
none.” That is really a gracious declaration of his, for
it only excludes false hopes, since “no flesh living
shall be justified by the works of the law.” Now, if you
say, “I will seek salvation on the basis of works,” you
are flying in God’s face. Is this wise? I should far
rather recommend you to accept at once what he so freely
gives. Follow the course of action adopted by a person
the other day in dealing with another. He wanted to
purchase something from his brother. His brother had
asked a certain amount for it, and he said, “I will give
you half.” “No,” said the brother, “sooner than take so
small a price I will give it to you.” “Thank you; I will
have it,” was the immediate reply. That is what I would
have you do. Do not offer your petty price to God, when
he is ready to give the blessing without money and
without price! I never knew such fools as men are
about the things of God. If they can get a good thing
for nothing, all the world over they will have it
without paying, and yet they rebel against free grace.
Years ago we paid twenty million pounds to set free the
slaves in Jamaica, but before the bill was carried there
were no end of objections raised in the House of Commons
and elsewhere. Many people pleaded their objections, but
I never heard of a Negro appearing at the bar of the
House to urge objections on behalf of the slaves. No
black man came forward to say that the blacks were
unworthy and undeserving, neither did the slaves propose
that a part of the money should be paid by themselves.
Oh no, it is not in human nature to request others to
encumber their free gifts in that fashion; yet here we
are so false to all that is reasonable that we want to
encumber sovereign grace. When God says, “I will blot
out your transgressions now and save you once and for
all; only trust my dear Son”;
’Tis strange,
’Tis passing strange,
’Tis wonderful.
It is madness at its consummation, that men should invent objections, and plead for a gospel with conditions and hard terms.
23. Now, what will men do if driven out of this? I have often seen the sinner in the next place turn to downright falsehood and say, “It is too late,” though he knows very well it never can be too late; for the gospel says, “He who believes and is baptised shall be saved.” It does not say, if he believes when he is twenty-five years of age, or thirty-five, or fifty-five, or one hundred and five, but it stands the same for all ages. It is never too late to believe a truth, and that is the point. — “Will you believe on the Son of God?” Then the sinner will say that he feels within himself that there is no hope, and so because he happens to believe a lie he will make out that God’s truth also is a lie, and refuse to believe what God solemnly declares, namely, that there is salvation in Jesus Christ! But I cannot spend time to mention all these falsehoods, nor indeed to run into all the subterfuges of men who seek to escape from their own mercies. I saw in Pompeii, on a shop door, the motto, “Eme et Habe bis” — “Buy and you shall have,” and I could only think that if I were walking the streets of the New Jerusalem, I should have seen a very different saying, “Come, buy wine and milk, without money and without price.” Now if there could be a shop opened in London in which all the goods were to be had without money and without price, would you quarrel with the shopkeeper, and petition for an Act of Parliament to close his shop, and say it was wicked, because you would rather go on the old terms and pay for all you have? Not a bit of it. Yet why is it you stand out against free grace’s golden motto, “Trust in Christ and you shall have.” Here is instantaneous pardon, perfect pardon, everlasting pardon, sonship through Christ, safety on earth, glory in heaven, and all for nothing, all for nothing; — the free gift of a gracious God to undeserving sinners, who trust in Jesus! Never did an angel have a more gracious, more godlike message of mercy than I have, how I wish I could glow with a seraph’s zeal, and cry with a cherub’s voice while proclaiming it! Oh that men would leave their foolish reasonings, and believe in Jesus Christ.
24. IV. Lastly, on this alternative, today, may rest EVERLASTING THINGS FOR MANY OF YOU.
25. I remember well, for the
anniversary of the season has almost come around, when I
was placed in a similar condition to many now present,
when I knew myself to be ruined and undone, and heard,
for the first time truly to understand it, that word,
“Look to me, and be saved, all you ends of the earth.” I
know how it stood that morning. I was like Naaman by the
Jordan’s brink. There flowed the flood. The old nature
said, “Are not Abana and Pharpar, rivers of Damascus,
better than all the waters of Israel? May I not wash in
them and be clean?” Human nature said, “I want to feel
something: I want to have John Bunyan’s experience; I
want to have my mother’s experience; I want to feel a
broken heart; I want to groan more bitterly; I want to
be kept awake for so many more nights; and all that kind
of thing.” Suppose I had still resisted; if God’s grace
had not come in and made all that wicked pride of mine
give way, I might have been at this hour I do not know
where, if still living among men. I might have been in
hell, gnawing my tongue to think I should ever have
heard such a plain gospel sermon, and should have put
far from me the gospel when it was proclaimed, and all
because I would not believe what is indisputably true,
and would not trust in him whom no one ever trusted in
vain. This morning I know there are some in my condition
here, in whom the good Spirit will say, “Wash and be
clean”; and the soul will sigh, “It seems too good to be
true”: but the good Spirit will reply, “Are not my ways
higher than your ways, and my thoughts than your
thoughts?” Unbelief will say, “Your sins are many,” but
the good Spirit will answer, “Though your sins are as
scarlet, they shall be as white as snow, though they are
red like crimson, they shall be as wool.” Then the heart
will suggest, “But I have rebelled against you, oh God,
for so long”; and the sweet Spirit of God will whisper,
“ ‘I have blotted out your sins like a cloud, and your
iniquities like a thick cloud: Return to me, for I am
married to you,’ says the Lord.” And I trust that now,
at this very moment, many a heart will say, “I will,
then, simply rest my soul’s salvation upon Christ the
Son of God, who is the only Saviour of the lost: I will
never from this day on hope to be a self-saved man, nor
look to anything except to him who on the bloody tree
endured the wrath of God on the behalf of as many as
believe on him.” Soul, if you do trust Jesus like this,
as surely as you live you are saved! Go in peace. I do
not only speak these words this morning from these poor
lips of clay, but he who was nailed on the tree, whom
all heaven adores, speaks this morning through me — and
he says to one, “Daughter, be of good cheer, your sins
are forgiven you”; and to another, “Son, your sins are
forgiven you: take up your bed and walk.” Oh forgiven
one, I charge you to do it, and as you go out of this
house this morning, saved, and full of joy, tell others
about it; never stop telling about it, and live to love
him who has saved you! I saw the other day a picture by
Rubens, in which he has painted Mary Magdalene kissing
the feet of Christ while they still are gushing with
founts of blood on the cross. It was a strange picture,
but I felt that if I had been there I would have kissed
them too, although they had been crimson with his gore.
Oh blessed feet! Oh blessed Saviour! Oh blessed Father
who gave his Son to be so blessed a Saviour! Oh blessed
Spirit of the blessed God who led our wicked, proud
hearts into obedience and trust in Jesus: yes, blessed
be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has
begotten us to a living hope by the resurrection of
Jesus Christ from the dead. May the Lord bless you.
Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon —
Ro 3:9-4:13]
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2012/11/09/essence-of-simplicity