A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, October 13, 1867, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
And I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to me. (John 12:32)
1. The death of our Lord Jesus Christ must have appeared to his apostles to be an unmitigated disaster. No doubt they conceived that it would be the death of the cause, a heavy blow, and a deep discouragement. Strike the shepherd, and the sheep will be scattered. Strike the head, and what shall become of the members? But our Lord instructed his disciples that what seemed so dreary a circumstance, was really the most hopeful of all the points of his history. He assured them that by his death he would totally defeat the powers of darkness. “Now is the judgment of this world: now shall the prince of this world be cast out.” He comforted them still further by the declaration that his crucifixion, instead of driving men away from his doctrine, would give to that doctrine a particular lustre and a special charm. The cross of Christ, with all its ignominy and shame, is no hindrance to his heavenly teaching; but is, in fact, a matchless magnet by which men are attracted to it. There is such a thing as “the offence of the cross,” and that offence has not ceased; but still, listen to the Master’s words, “I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to me.” The attractive power of the gospel lies mainly in the crucifixion of the gospel’s great Teacher.
2. The text needs, perhaps, to be illustrated by doctrines which lie concealed within itself, and by facts with which it is connected. The prince of darkness had drawn away the sons of men by the fascination of flesh pleasing errors, flattering delusions, alluring pleasures, glittering pomp, and outward show; by these he drew all men to him. The devil led men captive at his will, seducing them from bad to worse. He enticed poor foolish man to his own destruction, as fish are taken by the bait, as birds are lured by decoys, and as barques are wrecked by false lights. An enormous maelstrom of evil had for many an age sucked into its vortex multitudes who were sailing upon the sea of life: all over the ocean of society the influence of this monstrous whirlpool of evil was felt, more or less powerfully, so that those who escaped from its horrid depths were, nevertheless, much impeded and diverted in their course, and found it hard to reach the desired haven; even up to the very mouth of the port of peace, the power of this great whirlpool was evidently felt, drawing all men as it could. Now, the Lord Jesus came into the world to produce a counter attraction, to set in motion a counter current. Lo, I saw in a vision, a mysterious hand reaching out a mighty all attracting magnet from the sky, of so marvellous a power that vessels which were being whirled towards their destruction, many of them were suddenly arrested in their career, and drawn at once to the magnet and to safety, while others, which did not feel its power to the same saving extent, and became ultimately victims of evil, were nevertheless arrested in their career for awhile, hindered in their desperate course, and prevented from perishing so hastily as they would have done. Alas! many of them tugged at the oar, or hoisted all sail to escape from the magnet; and so, as they wilful destroyed themselves, they did sad despite to their conscience, and perished the more miserably because they despised the great salvation. Just as evil draws all of us more or less, so Jesus Christ more or less draws all men who hear the gospel. Some men he draws to himself by the effectual drawings of his grace; these are the “all” here meant—some of all classes, the all for whom he shed his blood; but where his name is preached, even those who do not believe in him, feel some of the influence which Christianity spreads abroad throughout society: his name leavens the lump; the sweet perfume of his spikenard fills all the house where he is sitting. Bent upon instituting the new and heavenly attraction which should overcome the powers of evil, our Lord Jesus came into this world to be lifted up from the earth, not for himself, but for the sins of others. Down from the heights of glory he descended, moved by disinterested love; not that he had anything to gain, but that he might redeem us from our iniquity, and save us from our fearful perils. On the cross he effected the redemption of his people. Nailed there in ignominy, in pain, desertion, and death, he worked out redemption for his chosen. But men stood at a distance from their best Friend. That is implied in the text. Why should they need to be drawn to Jesus, if they were already near him? Some stood so far away from the dying Saviour that they made his death the subject of mockery, and even found subjects for jest in his dying groans and pangs. All of us were alienated from God and from Christ, who is God’s express image. Our evil hearts had piled great mountains between us and the Lord Jesus Christ. By nature we do not appreciate his love; we do not render to him the gratitude which he deserves; but we pass by as though it were nothing to us that Jesus should die. Moreover, since man does not come by himself, even when he perceives the gracious errand of the Lord Jesus, our heavenly Friend condescends to draw him. The truth is latent in the text—that men not only are at a distance, but that they will not come to Christ by themselves. The Lord never does unnecessary work; we should never hear of Christ’s drawing us if we would come without being drawn; but the fact is that we stand away from Christ, and love the distance; yes, we make the gulf still wider, developing our original hatred to what is good, by adding the force of habit to our original depravity. Therefore, since men are at a distance and will not come, the crucified Saviour becomes himself the attraction to men. He casts out from himself bands of love and cords of gracious constraint, and binding these around human hearts, he draws them to himself by an invincible constraint of grace. Sinners by nature will not come to Jesus, although his charms might even attract the blind, and arouse the dead. They will not melt, though surely such beauties might dissolve the adamant, and kindle affection in a rock of ice. But Jesus has a wondrous power about him to woo and win the sons of men. Just as out of his mouth goes a twoedged sword, so out of his heart proceed chains of gold by which he binds thousands of willing captives to himself. This attraction, according to the text, is to be found operating upon all classes, nations, ranks, and characters of men, it is not to be excluded from remote lands, or dens of infamy nearer home. Here and there, kings and princes have believingly yielded to its power, while multitudes of the poor have had the gospel preached to them, and have received it in the love they have for it. I trust there are many of us here, belonging as we do to different grades and classes of society, who can verify the truth of this text, “I, if I am lifted up, will draw all men to me.” The young, the old, the rich, the poor, the intellectual, the learned, and the ignorant, Jesus draws some of all kinds and thus he earns for himself the glory of being the universal attraction, the attraction to which all hearts must yield when he draws effectually by his grace.
3. Having thus skimmed over the text, and endeavoured to bring before you the thoughts which it kindles, we shall now speak upon what it is in the cross which becomes attractive to men; and, secondly, we shall have a word to say concerning the direction in which the Christ crucified draws; and then, thirdly, with what power he draws.
4. I. First, dear friends, WHAT IS THE ATTRACTION OF JESUS CRUCIFIED?
5. It is asserted by our Saviour that when lifted up from the earth, he would draw all men: he intended by this his crucifixion; for John tells us, “This he said indicating what kind of death he should die.” (John 12:33) Let it not be forgotten then that the power of the gospel lies in what certain people consider to be its weakness and reproach. Christ dying for sinners is the great attraction of Christianity. Certain preachers have missed the point by forgetting this. What is Socinianism except an attempt to have Christ without his cross? Those who sat around the cross, and said, “Let him come down from the cross and we will believe him,” were the true ancestors of modern Unitarians, who respect the character of our Lord, and highly esteem him as a teacher, but reject him utterly as a substitute, an atonement, and a sacrifice for sin. They fondly dream that if they teach his holy life without his ignominious death, men will be attracted to him. Such has not proved to be the case. “I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men to me” is true, and shall be true; but Christ merely as a wise teacher, and an eminent example, has not drawn the sons of men, who are too far fallen to be charmed into holiness by a mere exhibition of moral excellence, however perfect. Men do not need so much a portrait of a man in health as medicine to remove their own diseases. It has been thought recently by some that the proper way to draw men to the gospel is to preach the future glory of Christ. This, indeed, is to be preached in its place, for every part of divine truth should hold its position in the gospel harmony; but it is all a mistake, and a very grand and terrible mistake, too, for men to put the glorified Saviour into the place of the crucified Saviour. You may preach the millennium; you may extol as much as you wish the magnificence of those happy days, when he shall reign from the river even to the ends of the earth; but you will never make men Christians by it. I have heard it said that the Jews will be converted to Christianity by the doctrine of the second coming, since the second advent is to us precisely what they think the first advent should be. But it is not so, beloved, the only effectual attraction lies where the text puts it, “I, if I am lifted up.” The crucified Saviour draws the Jew as well as the Gentile: the sons of Israel shall not be converted by the doctrine of a glorified Saviour, but by the Man of Sorrows, who was despised and rejected by men—the Messiah, who was cut off; but not for himself—the sacrifice offered outside the gate.
6. And what is this supreme attraction of the cross? I answer, that by the power of the Holy Spirit many have been drawn to Christ by the disinterested love which his death reveals. Does that man on that tree die without the necessity of death; out of pure love—out of pure love for those who hated him; out of love for the very men who fastened him to the cruel wood? Did he have anything to gain? Was it charity in all its perfection—nothing but the milk white lily of love? Was there nothing else except charity that could bind him to the tree? Nothing! “You know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, although he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, so that you through his poverty might be rich.” “Scarcely for a righteous man will one die: yet perhaps for a good man some would even dare to die. But God commends his love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” Many a heart has been so charmed with this, that it has run to Christ, drawn by the silken bonds of love. Do not some of you feel as if you could love the dear Lover of souls this morning? Do not even my feeble descriptions of his Godlike work entice you? Oh, do you not feel that you must love one who loved so truly when there was no benefit for him to receive in return? Why, I have thought that if Jesus had never died for me, I must still love him for having died for others; and if I had no share in the benefits which his passion procured, yet I have sometimes felt as if; out of admiration for “love so amazing, so divine,” I must give my heart to him. Here is one master attraction of the Crucified.
7. Others have doubtless been brought to the Saviour’s feet by delight in the satisfaction which is rendered to justice by the Redeemer’s death. Many men reason this way with themselves. Conscience is uneasy: offence has been committed against God: now, in the nature of things, under all law that is at all respected, there must be punishment for offences; but how shall the exercise of the prerogative of mercy be rendered perfectly consistent with the fulfilment of the penalty? That bleeding Saviour solves the difficulty. He dies, “The just for the unjust, so that he may bring us to God.” “The chastisement of our peace was upon him, and with his stripes we are healed.” Many men, finding their conscience rendered perfectly at ease when they have come to lean themselves upon the fact that Christ died for sinners, have been so enamoured with that glorious truth, that the attraction has bound them to the cross for ever. I must confess that this is one of the great considerations which, in the hand of the Holy Spirit, will keep me a Christian, as well as make me in love with my Lord more and more, I do not see where else justice can meet with mercy and embrace; I do not know where else righteousness and peace can kiss each other, except on the cross where my Master gave up his life for transgressors. There I see the riddle all unriddled—fallen man brought back to God, and God, justly incensed at man’s offence, able to display his love without in any way tarnishing his unsullied justice, or even diminishing its severity. Oh my hearers, this is a blessed attraction, indeed: oh that it would attract some of you! Oh that the thought that your sin can thus be justly forgiven—that there is “No condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus,” since Christ was condemned in their place, may draw very many of you to himself!
8. Many others have been drawn to the gospel by a sense of the exact suitability of the atonement of Christ to the needs of their condition. Just as the glove fits the hand, so the crucified Saviour suits the necessities of a sinner. Here is exactly what the man needs. He feels himself to be guilty; he dreads the punishment of his transgression; his conscience, like an adder, stings him; like a fire always fed with fresh fuel, it blazes within him; but when he encounters Christ, he finds peace, and he says within himself, “This is precisely what I require. Thirsty, here is living water; naked, here is a robe of righteousness; vile, here is a public fountain; lost and undone, here is one who came to seek and to save those who were lost.” Ah, I beseech my Lord to make all of you feel your condition, and then you will set a high price upon my Lord. Some of you imagine that you are rich and increased in goods, and have need of nothing; may you feel your deep needs before God; may you see how spiritual the law of God is, so that it touches your thoughts, and your words, and condemns you as much for these as for outward acts of sin: and when you once feel your sinnership, sweet will the Saviour’s name be in your ears, and you will be drawn to the cross, because the crucified Saviour is all that you need.
9. Further, thousands upon
thousands have been effectually drawn to Christ by
seeing how graciously, how readily, how wondrously,
how abundantly, he pardons as he hangs upon the tree.
I cannot understand pardon as coming directly from God,
apart from a Mediator. Jehovah, the judge of all the
earth, is too high, too terrible, too glorious in
holiness, for sinners to deal with him absolutely. Our
God is a consuming fire. When he descends on Sinai, the
mountain smokes and melts as wax. Behold, the whole
earth trembles at his presence, its pillars are
dissolved! Before him goes the pestilence; at his feet
are coals of fire; as he rides upon the wings of the
wind, he scatters hailstones and coals of fire from his
pavilion of clouds and darkness. As for his voice, it is
thunder, and the flash of his eye is lightning. Who can
receive pardon from an absolute God? He is great and
terrible, and will by no means clear the guilty. But
when I see God in Christ, and know that “in him”—that
Man who died upon the tree—“dwells all the fulness of
the Godhead bodily,” I can come to him without fear, and
with holy joy seek for and receive perfect pardon; from
that bleeding hand I dare to expect a pardon; I am bold
to look for a great pardon from such a great Saviour who
suffered so greatly. When I hear him say to the dying
thief, “Today you shall be with me in paradise,” I can
hopefully sing,
The dying thief rejoiced to see
That fountain in his day;
And there may I, though vile as he,
Wash all my sins away!
It becomes easy for the soul to understand how sin can be forgiven when it sees how sin has been avenged in the person of Jesus. Oh sinners, my Lord Jesus is able to forgive all manner of sins. “The blood of Jesus Christ his Son cleanses us from all sin.” “All manner of sin and blasphemy shall be forgiven men.” “‘Come now, and let us reason together,’ says the Lord: ‘although your sins are as scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; although they are red like crimson, they shall be as wool.’” How blessed to hear these words preached from that unrivalled pulpit, the cross! How sweet to hear the dying lips proclaim abounding mercy! How consoling to hear him speak of the riches of divine grace who said, “I thirst,” and “Lama sabachthani!” Oh, this is to be attracted indeed! This wondrous pardoning power of the crucified Redeemer is one of the master attractions of the cross.
10. But I must not enlarge. One more particular must suffice. Have not many of us been wonderfully drawn to the gospel by the intense griefs and agonies of Jesus? Beloved, when we see men in prosperity, it is natural for us to envy them; but it is equally natural for us to pity those who are in suffering: and love is in the next degree above pity. So I do not doubt that when we have portrayed Christ Jesus evidently crucified among you, the gracious Spirit has moved many tender hearts first to pity, and afterwards to love the bleeding Lamb. What a melting power there is in Gethsemane! Can you view the bloody drops of sweat, as they fall upon the frozen soil, and not feel that, in some degree, invisible but irresistible cords are drawing you to Jesus? Can you see him flagellated in Pilate’s hall, every thong of the scourge tearing the flesh from his shoulders—can you see him as they spit into his lovely face, and mar his blessed visage, and not feel as if you could gladly fall down and kiss his feet, and make yourself his servant for ever? And, lastly, can you behold him hanging upon the hill of Golgotha to die—can you see him as his soul is there overwhelmed with the wrath of God, with the bitterness of sin, and with a sense of utter desertion—can you sit down and watch him there and not be attracted to him? Ah, I wish that more of you would feel so attracted that you could resist no longer, but would come at once and give yourselves up to him! You may not feel that you could kiss the King upon his throne, but will you not kiss the King upon his cross? You may revolt from him when he wields a rod of iron, but will you not touch the silver sceptre held in the bloodstained hand which bled for his enemies? Oh come here, sons and daughters of men, and yield yourself to sorrow’s Lord! Daughters of Jerusalem, come here as of old, and weep both for him and for yourselves! Oh seek a portion in his sin atoning death, a place in heaven which his resurrection has opened.
11. Before I leave this point, I must observe, dear friends, that it renders my soul very great comfort to think that the attractive power in my crucified Lord does not lie in the eloquence of those who preach, nor in the logic and power of persuasion of those who proclaim his gospel. Ah! poor fools that we are, when we preach we sometimes think souls must be saved because we were fluent; and at another time, we suppose no good will be done, because we spoke in great mental bondage; but, ah! it is not the man who tells the story, nor the manner in which he tells it; it is the story itself which wins, under God the Holy Spirit. There is in the cross itself a power. The Holy Spirit rests like a dove upon that blood stained tree, and through him constraining grace comes streaming down to human hearts. It is not of man, neither by man, for the attractions of Jesus crucified are as a dew from the Lord, which does not tarry for man, neither waits for the sons of men.
12. II. We proceed to enquire in WHAT DIRECTION DOES THE CROSS ATTRACT?
13. In one word: it attracts towards everything that is good and blessed. No man was ever enticed to evil by a crucified Saviour. The emotions which are properly excited in the soul by the doctrine of the atonement, must always be towards goodness. The preaching of the cross does no mischief. Its sacred stream bears no man towards the rock of ruin; but its tendencies are everywhere and at all times towards man’s best and happiest estate.
14. Let us observe that the cross of Christ draws men from despair to hope. Many have been ready to die from despair, because they have said, “There is no salvation for me.” To such as these the first beam of hope has come through a crucified Saviour: they have stumbled on that precious soul saving text, “The blood of Jesus Christ, his Son, cleanses from all sin,” and have been set at liberty. That text has opened the gate of heaven to many hundreds, and I do not doubt it will to thousands more. They have seen how Jesus’ suffering put aside the necessity of our suffering for sin; and peace at once has bedewed the soul. It is no easy thing to draw men away from despair, for despair is the root of many sins. When a man says, “There is no hope,” then he hunts after sin like an eager hound after his game. To teach a man that there is hope—that there is hope for him—is to give him a fair breeze heavenward. The crucified Jesus presents this to anxious souls.
15. It attracts men, in the next place, from fear to faith. They have been accustomed to think of God with trembling, and to be constantly alarmed at his presence. Sin has become a burden, but they have not known how to be delivered from it, and have feared that they must bear it for ever: but the Saviour lifted up upon the cross inspires faith. We think of him, and as we think we believe. We meditate, and as we meditate we trust. Confidence comes in by the way of Calvary. The means of creating faith, through the power of the Holy Spirit, is the cross itself. God works faith in us, but it is through his dying Son. That was a terrible scene in Edinburgh when those lofty houses were filled with occupants who were unable to escape from the smothering smoke, and from the spreading fire. Suppose a fire escape could have been brought to the rescue, yet there is one thing the fire escape could not have done. If these poor creatures had been too faint and stifled to get out of the windows, it could not have lifted them into itself; and yet that would have been one of the things required for their rescue. But the gospel of Jesus does exactly this. It not only comes to men and says, “Now I will save you, if you will get into me,” but it takes hold of a man and puts him into itself; for Jesus Christ attracts men to himself—not only comes near enough to them for them to grasp him, but, as the magnet does with the iron, so Jesus lays hold on sinners’ hearts.
16. Jesus crucified conducts
the man from dread to love. Before God he stood
shivering like a slave, crying, “How shall I escape from
his presence? Oh that I had the wings of the morning,
that I might fly even to the uttermost parts of the sea,
or dive beneath hell’s darkest wave, so that I might
hide from the yet more terrible hell of the glance of
God’s fiery eye!” But when he sees God reconciled in
Jesus, then the sinner sings—
Till God in human flesh I see,
My thoughts no comfort find;
The holy, just, and sacred Three
Are terrors to my mind.
But if Immanuel’s face appear,
My hope, my joy begins;
His name forbids my slavish fear,
His grace removes my sins.
17. In this way the soul is led to love God. “We love him because he first loved us.”
18. Then the attractions of the cross bring us up from sin to obedience. When we are washed in the precious blood, we feel grateful to our Lord Jesus, and we cannot live for sin. We are dead to it. We can no longer take pleasure in what cost him his life. It is impossible for us to consider sweet what we know was bitterness for him. “What will you have me to do?” becomes the question. We submit ourselves with our whole heart to his gracious sway, and to run in the way of his commandments becomes our soul’s delight.
19. Thus we are led constantly also by the cross from self to Jesus. Nothing will kill self like a sight of the Crucified. Lift up the Saviour and down self must go. High thoughts of Christ are always attended by low thoughts of self and vice versa. Think much of yourself; you will think little of the Saviour; but a very low esteem of our own merit, brings a very high esteem of the merits of Christ; and it is a blessed thing when self is completely beaten down. It is a victory which altogether is not won by us, I fear, until we lay down our bodies; but if anything can hang up King Self upon the tree until the evening, it is a sight of the tree upon which the Saviour bled.
20. Finally the uplifted Redeemer draws us away from earth to heaven. Earth holds us firmly: we cannot escape from its grasp; but we feel a heavenward drawing. It is Jesus Christ who is drawing us; that same Christ who has gone up to the throne after having trodden the winepress. He daily attracts us upward to himself. Do you not feel his drawings? Oh, I think you do! When the boy’s kite goes up very high into the air, and gets into the clouds, he cannot see it. Yet he declares, “It is there.” Why? “Why,” he says, “I can feel it pull.” And we know the Lord Jesus Christ is there-he who was crucified, for we can feel him pull; we can feel him draw. Oh that we could give ourselves completely up to him, and mount towards him! I trust we have experienced some of that mounting, for he has “raised us up together, and made us sit together in heavenly places” in him. We know what the resurrection life means. We do not grovel for ever in worldly cares and carnal thoughts, but sometimes at least we get up into the higher atmosphere, and have near and dear communion with the Well Beloved. Saviour, draw us more and more!
21. III. We now pause to
enquire with what order of power does the Saviour when
he is lifted up draw men? What are the characteristics
and qualities of this power? In brief, first of all, the
power with which Christ draws us is, according to the
text, a very gentle power. “I, if I am lifted up,
will draw all men.” Drawing is very different
from driving. The way by which Jesus leads his
followers, is by soft, gentle influences. “I will
draw men.” The law is a school teacher to bring us
to Christ; and the preachings of the terrors of the law
are very useful in their way; but whenever a sinner
really comes to Christ, the last action is never a
drive; it is always a draw. The dove may have been
driven part of the way to the ark by the wind, but the
last act of getting into the ark happened when Noah put
out his hand and pulled the dove into the ark. The real
act which brings us into union with Christ, is always a
drawing act—an act of gentleness. Every converted man
may say, when he is converted, “Your gentleness has made
me great.” The heathen pictures one of their goddesses
in her chariot drawn by doves. Surely it is by doves
that we are drawn, in the chariot of the gospel, towards
the Lord Jesus! How very gentle, though all but
omnipotent, is the influence of the sun upon the earth
and all the planets! How they constantly revolve around
and follow it in its wondrous march; yet you never feel
that it draws! If you harness a horse to your chariot,
he tugs and pulls by fits and starts; but the father of
lights draws all the ponderous planets along their
appointed ways, and yet there is not enough of a jolt to
shake an aphid from a rosebud. So there is no noise in
the loving drawings of the Saviour. Much of the
fanaticism which comes with religious excitement is not
from God. The genuine dew of heaven falls calmly.
As in soft silence vernal showers
Fall to refresh the fields and flowers,
So in sweet silence from above
Drops the sweet influence of his love.
Christ’s drawings are gentle. In the next place, observe that Christ’s drawings are gracious; for is it not by grace that he should draw at all? If any of you were about to give away food to the poor, and they would not come for it, I think you would say, “Let them go without it.” You would not attempt to bring them to the feast. Indeed, you would say, “It is good enough on my part to be ready to relieve them; but if they will not come, then let their starving be upon their own heads.” But see what Jesus does! He does not just throw a life jacket to poor drowning men. Indeed he does more, for this life jacket has the wonderful quality of attracting the man to itself; so, that although at first he might be unwilling to be rescued, this mystic life jacket changes his will, so that he is willing to be saved.
22. But, next, Jesus draws with a widespread power. “I will draw all men to me.” Not every man. Every man is not effectually drawn, for millions of men never heard the name of Jesus Christ at all; but men of all kinds “all men”; that is, Jews and Gentiles. It is an “all,” of comprehension; it is an “all” meaning all kinds of men. And what a wonderful thing it is that the cross of Christ does draw all men! They thought it never could draw the “roughs,” the prostitutes, the homeless vagrants; but there have been found for Christ some of his mightiest trophies among the lowest of the low. Nor should we think that the cross cannot attract the rich, and that it is of little use putting the gospel before the fashionable classes. Ah, do not tell us this! There is a boundless power in the cross of Christ. If we preach it to kings and princes, we do not need to be ashamed. If we could have a parliament of men who were as bad as demons, as proud as Pharaoh, and as furious as Saul of Tarsus, if we preached Christ crucified to them, it would not be in vain.
23. This attraction has, in the fourth place, an effectual power, for Jesus Christ in his own elect ones draws most effectually. I said, very gently, but none the less mightily because of the gentleness. The swallows fly across the sea to distant lands. Did you ever feel the influence which attracts them? It is not perceptible by the most delicate of instruments, and yet how effectual it is. They cannot stay behind when the time has come. See how they twitter over the gables of our houses, and leave those neatly built nests beneath our eaves. The goal of their pilgrimage lies many a weary mile across the sea; but there they go: a mysterious influence draws them; and he who thus draws the swallow to other lands, and guides it in its flight, draws men to the cross so that they never rest until they have left their haunts of sin, and come to live where Jesus Christ distributes peace.
24. I will add, for the comfort
of some who are here that Jesus Christ draws today with
a present power. “I, if I am lifted up from the
earth, will draw all men to me.” That means that he is
drawing them now. He does not say that he will
sometimes, but he does draw now. Oh, I do
not know whom he may be drawing, but I do trust he is
drawing some of you! Here I stand with the gospel to
preach to you, like one with a magnet in his hand. Now,
do I know who God’s elect are? I do not, but I shall
soon find out. Are you not like a great heap of steel
filings and ashes mixed together? I cannot separate you,
neither do I need to put the filings on this side and
the ashes on the other; I have only to thrust in the
magnet, and the division will be effectually made. Jesus
crucified is the great discriminator; his atonement is
the great detector of God’s elect. The gospel reveals
the eternal purpose. If God intends to save you, you
will flee to his dear Son. If you are left to perish, it
will be because of your own wilfulness in neglecting the
Saviour and turning your back upon the fountain which
cleanses from all sin. Jesus draws today, and Jesus
will draw still. Happy days are coming when he will
draw more mightily, when they shall run to him: even
multitudes that did not know him shall run to him,
because of the Holy One of Israel who has magnified him.
“He shall see the travail of his soul, and shall be
satisfied.” Dear Saviour, this morning—
Draw reluctant hearts,
To thee let sinners fly,
And taste the bliss thy love imparts,
And drink and never die.
25. The lessons to be drawn from this discourse we will give you in two or three words.
26. First, to believers working for Christ. Learn from the text that if you wish to win souls, you must draw them rather than drive them. Very few people are bullied into heaven. The way to bring men to Jesus Christ is not by rough words, and angry looks, and continually warning them, but rather by gentle invitations. Tenderly as a nurse with her child must we seek to win souls. In the second place, if we wish to win souls, Jesus Christ must be our great attraction. In the class in the Sunday School, visiting from house to house, or elsewhere, we must keep close to the text, and the text must be the cross. I must confess there is a very great sweetness to my soul in preaching about Christ. I hope it is never a weariness to preach any part of divine truth; but, oh! it is delight itself to preach about the Master: then we have to deal with the kernel of the matter. When we preach Jesus Christ, oh! then we are not putting out the plates, and the knives and the forks, for the feast, but we are serving up the food itself. Now we are not, as it were, working in the field at the hedging and the ditching, and the sowing, but we are gathering the golden sheaves, and bringing the harvest home. If we want a hundredfold harvest, we must sow seed which was steeped in the blood of Calvary; and, dear friends, if you want to be drawn nearer to Christ yourselves, do not go to Moses to help you, but get to Christ. Go to Christ to get to Christ. “I, if I am lifted up from the earth, will draw all men”—where?—“to me.” Jesus draws to himself. Remember you have never experienced the fulness of the drawings unless you are drawn to Christ. If you are only drawn to holiness, or drawn to the church, or to good experiences, you have not obtained the fulness and soul of the matter. You must be drawn to Christ—right away from ordinances and everything else, until you get into his bosom. Then you shall have found the summum bonum—the greatest good, then you have reached what Christ would have you obtain—what he died that you might obtain when he on the tree was lifted up, so that he might draw you to himself.
27. And now, sinner, if
you wish to come to Jesus, let the text whisper a
comforting word in your ear. He must draw you. Think
much upon his death. This afternoon turn to those
chapters in the evangelists where his death is recorded.
Picture that dying Saviour to yourself; and ask
yourself, “Is this anything to me? Do I have a share in
it?” Then cover your face with your hands, and kneel
down and cry, “Oh God, be merciful to me a sinner! Wash
me in the precious blood.” Before long you shall feel
that the precious Christ has drawn you to himself, and
that you are saved! May the Lord bless you for Jesus’
sake. Amen.
[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon—John
12:1-36]
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2011/05/02/the-great-attraction