The Great Itinerant by C. H. Spurgeon

A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, October 22, 1865, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.

Who went around doing good. (Acts 10:38)

1. You will observe, if you read the chapter before us, that Peter’s sermon was short and much to the point. He preached Jesus Christ to Cornelius immediately and unmistakably. He gave a very admirable sketch of the life of Jesus, of which he affirmed himself to have been an eyewitness, and he brought forward in his closing sentence just that simple gospel which it is our joy to preach. “To him give all the prophets witness, that through his name whoever believes in him shall receive remission of sins.” This should be an instructive example to all professed ministers of the gospel. We might say less about other matters without loss, if we would say more about the Lord Jesus. If we should omit some other teaching, if there were more of a savour of the name and of the person of Jesus Christ in our ministry, the omissions might be tolerated. It is a strange thing that men should profess to be sent by God, and yet talk about everything except the great message which they are sent to deliver. My errand as a minister is to preach Christ, and it will avail me little to have been clear and earnest upon other points, if I have neglected to preach Christ crucified. To put my own views of doctrine or moral practice in the place of Jesus, is to put out the sun, and supply its place with a tiny candle; to take away the children’s bread, and offer them a stone. We commend Peter as an example to all who preach or teach, either in the street, the sick room, or the house of prayer; do as Peter did; come at once to the soul of your ministry, and preach Christ crucified in plain and simple language. If any should plead that the subject should be adapted to the audience, we see from the narrative that there is sure to be something in the history of Christ applicable to the case before us. Peter purposely gave prominence to certain points in the history of the Master which would be most likely to enlist the sympathy of Cornelius. He says of him, “He is Lord of all”; as much as to say, “He is not Lord of the Jews only, but also of the Gentiles, and therefore, oh Cornelius, his dominion reaches to you. He is to be worshipped and adored, and he is to become a blessing, and a propitiatory sacrifice, not only to Israel’s hosts, but even to the Italian band; and therefore you, oh Centurion, may take heart.” Perhaps the words of our text were uttered by Peter concerning Christ because they also would be sure to attract the notice of a man who was “A devout man, and one who feared God with all his house, who gave much alms to the people, and always prayed to God.” He did as much as say, “You go around doing good, Cornelius. It is the very soul of your life to help the needy, to feed the hungry, and to clothe the naked: Jesus also went around doing good in a higher sense, and I hold him up to you as one to be beloved by every devout and generous heart.”

2. Other points are to be noticed in Peter’s address, which were evidently adapted to the case before him, but we have said enough to prove that there is something in the story of Jesus suitable to win the attention, and to gain the heart of any congregation, large or small. Only let the Holy Spirit help us to enlarge upon the gospel of the Lord Jesus, and we have no need to wander abroad for foreign themes; we can sit at the foot of the cross, and find a perpetually profitable subject there. No need to gather the sheaves of science, or the sweet flowers of poetry; Christ Jesus is both our science and our poetry, and as ministers we are complete in him. When we come to preach about him, and to lift him up, we are armed from head to foot, and rich with weapons for our spiritual warfare; although education and art have had no hand in fashioning our suit of armour, we do not need to fear that we shall meet a single foe who can withstand the terror of those celestial arms. God grant us grace in all our teachings to keep close to Jesus Christ, for his love is a theme most fit for all cases, and most sweet at all times.

3. The few words which we have taken for our text, are around an exquisite miniature of the Lord Jesus Christ. “He went around doing good.” There are not many touches, but they are the strokes of a master’s pencil. The portrait cannot be mistaken for anyone else. The mightiest conquerors may gaze upon its beauties, but they cannot claim that it is intended to portray their lives. Alexander, Caesar, Napoleon—these went around conquering, burning, destroying, murdering; they went not around doing good. Prophets too, who professed to have been sent by God, have traversed sea and land to make proselytes, but no one could see the good which they accomplished. Mohammed’s career was fraught with incalculable evil. The few good men and true who, like Howard, have traversed the world, seeking to minister to the necessities of mankind, have wept over the heavenly portrait, and sighed that they are not more like it. This is what they sought to be, and as far as they copied this portrait, this is what they were; but they fall short of the original, and are not slow to confess their shortcomings. What Peter here draws in words, God’s divine grace drew, in some measure, in lines of real life in the case of Howard and some other followers of Jesus of Nazareth; still, in the highest and fullest sense, these words are applicable to no one except the Master, for his followers could not do such good as he achieved. His is the model, and theirs the humble copy; his the classic type, and theirs the modest imitation. He did good, and good only: but the best of men, being men at the best, sow mingled seed; and if they scatter handfuls of wheat, there is here and there a seed of tares; however carefully they may select the grains, yet the cockle and the hemlock will fall from their hands as well as the good seed grain of the kingdom. Concerning the Master, and only concerning the Master, it is true in the fullest, and the broadest, and most unguarded sense, “He went around doing good.”

4. Two things this morning: first I shall want you, dear brethren, to consider him; and then, in the second place, to consider yourselves.

Let Us Consider Him

5. I. The first occupation will be pleasing, as well as profitable. LET US CONSIDER HIM.

No Purposeless Wandering

6. 1. Consider first, his object. He went around, but his travel was no listless motion, no purposeless wandering here and there—“he went around doing good.” Oh man of God, have a purpose, and devote your whole life to it! Do not be an arrow shot at random, as in child’s play, but choose your target, and swift as the bullet whizzes to the mark, so fly you onwards towards the great aim and object of your life. Christ’s object is described in these words, “doing good.” Of this we may say, that this was his eternal purpose. Long before he took upon himself the nature of man, or even before man was formed from the dust of the earth, the heart of Jesus Christ was set upon doing good. In the eternal council in which the sacred Three entered into the stipulations of gracious covenant, Christ Jesus became the Surety of that covenant in order that he might do good—good in the highest sense—good in snatching his people from the misery which sin would bring upon them, and good in revealing the glorious attributes of God in a splendour which could not otherwise have surrounded them. His delights of old were with the sons of men, because they afforded him an opportunity, such as he could find nowhere else, of doing good. He did good, it is true, among the angels, for the heavenly harps owe all their music to his presence. Among the demons there was no room for positive good; they were given over to evil; but even there restraining goodness found work for itself in binding them down in iron bands, lest their mischief should grow too rampant. On earth, however, was the widest scope and most ample room for goodness in its largest sense; not merely the goodness which restrains evil, and the goodness which rewards virtue, but that greater goodness which descends to ruined sin stricken mortals, and lifts them up from the dunghill of their miserable degradation, to set them upon the throne of glory. It was the eternal purpose of the Lord Jesus Christ, before the lamps of heaven were kindled, or stars began to glitter in the vault of night, that he would do good.

7. This was his practical object, when he made his ever memorable descent from the throne of his splendour to the manger of his poverty. Angels might well sing at Bethlehem, “Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, good will toward men,” for Jesus Christ did not come condemning the world, but doing good. His presence in the manger did good, as it cheered both rich magi and poor shepherd, both learned and illiterate, both Simeon and Anna, with the knowledge that God had come down to men. His childhood afterwards did good, for though it was so unobtrusive and obscure that a few words suffice to describe it, yet he has become the very mirror of childhood’s dutiful obedience to this day. You know how his later life was one practical carrying out of the solitary object which brought him from the throne of glory to the abodes of sinful men. He “went around doing good.” Nor was this his purpose merely and the object of his errand, but his official prerogative. He received the name of Jesus at his birth, “For he shall save his people from their sins.” He was named “Christ,” because the Spirit of the Lord was upon him, and he was anointed to preach good tidings to the meek, and to open the prisons for those who were bound. Jesus Christ is the title which speaks of one whose office it is to do good. Mention any name you please which belongs to the Saviour, and you will see that it is incumbent upon him, ex officio, to go around doing good. Is he a Shepherd? He must do good to his sheep. Is he a Husband? He must love his Church and give himself for her, so that he may cleanse and perfect her. Is he a Friend? He “sticks closer than a brother” and does good. Is he “the Lion of the tribe of Judah?” It is not to do damage or mischief to innocence and weakness, but that, strong as a lion when he tears his prey, he may tear in pieces the foe of truth and goodness. Is he a Lamb? In this his goodness shows itself most completely, for he lays down his life so that his Israel may go free when the destroying angel strikes Egypt. Everywhere it was his particular prerogative and his special business to go around doing good. But more, it was not only his intention and the object of his errand, and his prerogative, but his actual performance. He did good in all senses. Jesus Christ accomplished physical benefits among the sons of men. How many blind eyes first saw the light through the touch of his finger! How many silent ears heard the charming voice of affection after he had said “Be open!” Even the gates of death were no barrier for the errands of his goodness; the widow at the gate of Nain felt her heart leap within her for joy when her son was restored; and Mary and Martha were glad when Lazarus came out from his grave. He did good physically. We have thought that our Lord did this not merely to show his power and universality of his benevolence, and to teach spiritual truth by acted parables, but also to say to us in these days, “Followers of Jesus, do good in all kinds of ways. You may think it to be your special calling to feed souls, but remember that your Master broke loaves and fishes for hungry bodies. You may deem it your chief object to instruct the ignorant, but remember that he healed the sick. You may make it your chief joy to pray for the healing of sick spirits, but remember that he rescued many bodies from incurable disease.” As much as lies in us let us do good to all men, and good of all kinds too; although it is especially for the household of faith, and especially in a spiritual sense. Let no act of mercy seem beneath him who is a follower of the man who went around doing good. There is a spirit springing up among us which is very dangerous, although it wears the garb of excessive spirituality. It is unpractical and un-Christlike—a spirit which talks in this fashion—“The sons of men tried to improve the world and make it better; but as for Enoch, the man of God, he knew that the world was so bad that it was of no avail to attempt to better it, and therefore he left it alone, and walked with God.” They say that it may be well for such carnal minded Christians as some of us, to try and improve society and to give a better tone to morals; but these dear spiritual brethren are so taken up with divine things, and so assured that the mission is of a super celestial character, that they will have nothing to do with blessing mankind, being quite sufficiently occupied with blessing themselves and one another. I pray God that we may never fall into the unpractical speculations and separations of certain brethren whose superior sanctity they must allow us to suspect. The large heartedness of the Lord Jesus Christ is one of the most glorious traits in his character. He scattered good of all sorts on all sides. Let us, if we profess to be his followers, never be constrained even by pretended spirituality. Do good “as much as lies in you,” to the utmost extent of your power, and let that be of every kind. It strikes me that the Lord Jesus also did much moral good. Where he did not save spiritually, he elevated. I am not sure that that poor adulteress was ever truly converted, and yet I know that he said, “Neither do I condemn you: go, and sin no more”; and I can well believe that in this respect, at least, she would sin no more. I do not know that the Pharisees ever became followers of the man of Nazareth; and yet I cannot conceive that they could have listened to his stern rebukes against their hypocrisy without being in some measure humbled if not enlightened. Or if they were not better, at any rate, their professions would not be so readily allowed; society would receive, as it were, a tonic from those sharp and bitter words of the Master, and become too strong and masculine to receive any longer the lofty boastings of those mere pretenders. Jesus Christ, when he sat down on the mount, did not deliver a spiritual sermon of the style commonly classed under that category. That sermon on the mount is for the most part morality—good, high, heavenly morality, higher than any teacher ever reached before; but there is very little in it about justification by faith, or concerning atonement, very little about the doctrine of election, the work of the Holy Spirit, or final perseverance. The fact is the Master was doing moral as well as spiritual good; and coming among a degraded people who had exchanged darkness for light and light for darkness, bitter for sweet and sweet for bitter, he thought it to be a part of his vocation to preach to them truth on that subject as well as upon the higher themes concerning his advent, and his salvation. Dear friends, this admonishes us to seek the moral good of the people among whom we live. The Christian minister must not lay aside his ministry to become the mere moralist lecturer, but he may and should lecture upon morals, and he can say some things in lectures which he could not say in sermons. Let him by all means occasionally leave the pulpit for the platform, if he can do service for society; let him do good in every possible shape and manner. I think that it is the Christian minister’s place not simply to preach the high and glorious doctrine of the cross, but also to deal with the current sins of mankind as did the prophets of old, and to inculcate those virtues most needed in the state, as did men God sent in the ages which are past. Jesus Christ went around doing good, we say, of a moral kind as well as of a spiritual order, but still the Saviour’s great good was spiritual. This was the great end that he was driving at—the bringing out of a people prepared to receive himself and his salvation, he came preaching grace and peace. His great object was the spiritual emancipation of the bondaged souls of men. Beloved, how he sought after this! What tears and cries went up to God from the mountain’s bleak summit! With what earnest intercession did he plead with men when he addressed them concerning repentance and faith! “Woe to you Bethsaida! Woe to you Chorazin!” were not words spoken by one who had a tearless eye. “Woe to you Capernaum!” was not the desolating curse of one who had a hard unsympathetic heart. The Saviour, when he wept over Jerusalem, was only doing once before men what he did all his life before God. He wept over sinners he longed for their salvation. “Never man spoke like that man,” for having the highest truth he spoke it in the highest manner. Never the ostentation of eloquence, never the affectation of oratory, but always the earnest, still, small pleading voice which “does not break the bruised reed, nor quench the smoking flax.” He went around in his daily preaching instructing the people because he found them as sheep without a shepherd, and therefore “he taught them many things.” Physical, moral, spiritual good, the Saviour did good of all kinds—and while I close this point concerning his object of life, let me say that he did something more than all this: he worked enduring good which abides with us now. The good that holy men do is imperishable. The Scripture says, “Their works follow them,” but not to the grave—upward their works ascend. If our works followed our bodies, they would rot in the tomb; but they follow our souls, and therefore mount up to immortality. Look you upon the world now and see whether Jesus Christ is not still in spirit going about doing good. He has gone up to glory, but the spirit of his life and of his teaching is still among us. And what is his religion doing? Ask some of our ancestors and they will tell you how this land was transformed from a region of savages into the abode of peace and joy. You yourselves look today to the far off islands of the south, and see how they have been transformed from dens of the wild blood loving cannibals, into abodes of civilized men. Jesus Christ’s gospel flies like an angel through the midst of heaven, proclaiming good news to men; and wherever its foot rests even for an hour, it transforms the desert into an Eden, and makes the wilderness blossom like the rose. May the Saviour help us so to live, that when we die we may have sown some seeds which shall blossom over our tomb.

8. Thus we have given an outline of the Saviour’s doing good. May we add this sentence as a comfort to any here who are seeking Jesus. If it were his eternal purpose and his life’s mission to do good, and he went around to find out the objects of it, why should he not do good for you? If he healed the blind, if he gave spiritual sight, why should he not give it to you? Oh may the desire be breathed by you, poor seeking soul, breathed solemnly but hopefully to him—“Oh you who in the days of your flesh took pity upon misery and wretchedness in every form, take pity upon me! Save me with your great salvation!” Rest assured, beloved hearer, that prayer should not go up to heaven in vain. His ear is still open to hear the cry of woe, and his hand is still ready to giving the healing touch, and the voice to say, “I will, be clean.” May he do good in you this morning.

He Went Around Doing Good

9. 2. A short time may be profitably spent in considering the mode in which this object was accomplished. We are told that he “went around doing good,” which seems to suggest several points. First of all he did the good personally. He “went around doing good.” He might, if he had chosen, have selected his place, and having seated himself, he might have sent out his apostles as ambassadors to do good in his place; but you will remember that when he sent them out, it was not so that they might be proxies, but that they might be heralds; he sent them two and two to every place where he himself would come. They were to be to him what John the Baptist had been at his first coming. Jesus Christ entered the field of labour in person. It is remarkable how the evangelists constantly tell us that he touched the leper with his own finger, that he visited the bedside of those sick with fever, and in cases where he was asked to speak the word only at a distance, he did not usually comply with such a request, but went himself to the sick bed, and there personally performed the cure. This is a lesson for us if we wish to do good well, to do it ourselves. There are some things which we cannot do ourselves. We cannot remain among our families in England for instance, and preach the gospel in Hindustan. We cannot be engaged this morning in listening to the Word, and at the same time visiting the lodging house or den of iniquity in some back street. There are some works of mercy which are best performed by others, but we can make these more personal by looking after the worker and taking a deeper interest in him, and by attending him with our prayers. I wish that much more of benevolence were performed by men themselves. I do not care to speak against societies, but it is such an odd thing that if I have twenty-one shillings to give away, I cannot give them to a deserving family myself, but I must make it into about fifteen shillings before it goes at all, by paying it into a royal something or other society, and then it proceeds by a roundabout method, and at last is delivered to the poor by a mere hand without a soul, and is received by the poor, not as a gift of charity, but rather as a contribution from an unknown something with a secretary, which needs a place in which to drop its funds. Why should you not go and give away the twenty-one shillings yourself, lovingly and tenderly? It will be better than letting someone else pare it down to fifteen, and give it away coldly and officially. So much depends upon the way of doing good. The look, the word, the prayer, the tear, will often be more valuable to the widow than that half-crown which you have given her. I heard a poor person once say, “Sir, I went to So-and-so for help, and he refused me; but I would sooner be refused by him than I would have money given to me by So-and-so,” mentioning another who gave it with a sort of, “Well, you know I do not approve of giving anything to such as you are, but there it is—you must have it I suppose, so be off with you.” Give your alms away yourselves, and you will learn by so doing, it will enable you to exercise Christian virtues. You will win a joy which it would not be worth while to lose, and you will confer, in addition to the benevolence that you bestow, a blessing which cannot be conferred by the person who is your substitute. He went around doing good. He did it himself Oh! some of you, preach yourselves, I urge you! Talk to the Sunday School children yourselves! Give away tracts—that is well enough if you cannot speak—but do try and talk yourselves. The influence of that hand laid upon your friend’s shoulder, that eye of yours looking into his eye as you say, “Friend, I wish you were converted, my soul longs for your salvation”; there is more in that influence than in a whole library of tracts. Seek souls yourselves. Fish with your own hooks; you can only be successful if you imitate your Master, and yourselves do good in the power of the Holy Spirit.

10. The Saviour not only “went around doing good” personally, but his very presence did good. The presence of the Saviour is in itself a good, apart from the blessings which he bestowed. At the sight of him courage revived, drooping faith grew strong, hope brushed a tear from her eye and smiled. The sight of Jesus Christ as once it calmed the waves and hushed the winds, did so a thousand times in men’s souls. Even demons, when they saw him, cried out and trembled. Sinners wept at the sight of his pitying goodness. The woman who broke the alabaster box of precious ointment, felt that the only fit place to break it was near to him. His presence made her sacred action all the more sweet. What can men not do when Christ is there? And, oh beloved, if we are anything like our Master, our presence will be of some value. There are some of my brethren, when I see them I feel strong. You go into a little prayer meeting, and numbers are not there; but a particular saint is there, and you feel, “Well, if he is there, there is a prayer meeting at once.” You have work to do; it is very hard and toilsome, and you cannot prosper in it; but a brother drops into your little Sunday School, or into your class, and looks at it, and you feel, “Well, if I have that man’s sympathy, I can go on again.” Therefore be careful to give your presence as much as you can to every good work, and do not isolate yourself from those actually engaged in labours of love.

11. Does not our Lord’s going around doing good illustrate his incessant activity? He did not only the good which was all around him, which was close at hand—he not only did the good which was brought to him, as when men were brought on their beds, and laid at his feet, but he “went around.” He could not be satisfied to be still. Throughout the whole land of Judea, from Dan to Beersheba, he trod its weary acres. There was scarcely a village or a hamlet which had not been gladdened by the sight of him. Even Jericho, accursed of old, had been blessed by his presence, and a great sinner had been made a great saint. Everywhere he went casting salt into the bitter waters, and sowing with sunshine the abodes of sadness. He was always active in God’s service, Oh! the creeping, crawling manner in which some people serve the Lord. The very way in which some people mumble through religious exercises, is enough to make one sick at heart, to think that the solemn offices of religion should be entrusted to such inanimate beings. If God of old said of Laodicea, that he would spew that Church out of his mouth, what will he do with those professors in modern times, who are the very pink of propriety, but who were never touched with fire from heaven, and do not know what the word “zeal” means? Our Master was here, and there, and everywhere. Let us gird up the loins of our mind, and do not be weary in well doing; but be “steadfast, unmovable, always abounding in the work of the Lord.”

12. Does the text not also imply that Jesus Christ went out of his way to do good? “He went around doing good.” There were short cuts which he would not take, because there were people living in the roundabout way who must be met with. “He must needs go through Samaria.” It is said that that city lay in the most direct way to Jerusalem. So it was, but it was not the right way, because the Samaritans so hated those whose faces were towards Jerusalem, that they mistreated them whenever they could. Yet the Master did not care for perils of waylaying enemies. He did not select the smoothest or the safest road, but he selected that in which there was a woman for whom he could do good. He sits down on the well. I do not know if it was not merely weariness that made him sit there; and when he said, “I am thirsty: give me to drink,” it was not merely that he was thirsty; he had another weariness—he was patient over that woman’s sin, and longed to reveal himself to her: he had another thirst—he did not mean merely “Give me water out of that well”; when he said, “Give me to drink,” he meant “Give me your heart’s love, my soul pants for it; I want to see you—a poor adulterous sinner—saved from sin.” How else do we understand the words which he said to his disciples, when they wondered that he spoke with the woman? He said, “I have food to eat that you know not about, for it is my food and my drink to do the will of him who sent me.” He had received food and drink in seeing that woman leave her waterpot, and go away to tell her fellow sinners, “Come, see a man who told me all things that I ever did. Is this not the Christ?” He went all around after the objects of his gracious desires. So must the Christian. You must not be content to do good in the regular circle of your movements: that is so far so well, but go beyond your old line. Break through the bounds of propriety every now and then, and do an odd thing. I do believe that sometimes these odd expedients achieve more than regular methods. That was a quaint expedient of those who broke up the roof to let down a palsied man so that Jesus might heal him. There has been a good deal said about that roof. According to some people it was not a roof at all but a sort of awning, but this morning we will stick to our old version which tells us “they broke up the tiling,” this must have made it a very uncomfortable for those down below; but I dare say those up top argued—“Well, the Saviour is there, and if anyone shall be hurt by a tile or two he can easily heal them. Anyway we will get this man before him, for this is the case in which we feel most concerned.” Ah! dear friends, many people are so particular about making a little dust or breaking up a few tiles, but our mind is, never worry about that, there will be time to clean the repair after souls are saved, and for so great an end as salvation we may neglect a few niceties and punctilios, and be most of all vehemently desirous that we may do good.

13. We have not quite done with the text yet. It means too that Jesus Christ went far in doing good. The district of Palestine was not very large, but you will observe that he went to its border. He was as it were the bishop of the Holy Land and he never went outside of the diocese, for he said he was not sent except to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. But he went to its border. He went to the coasts of Tyre and Sidon. If he might not go over the mark yet he will go up to the edge; so if there should happen to be any limit to your doing good in any particular place at least go to the end of the limit. However, I rather like Rowland Hill’s thought: when he was blamed for preaching outside of his parish he claimed that he never did so, for the whole world was his parish. Make the world the sphere of your occupations, according to the parable “the field is the world.” I admire the Lord’s going around not simply for the miles he travelled, but for the type of characters he came across. He “went around.” It is nothing wonderful that he went as far as Tyre and Sidon, but it is much that he went as far as tax collectors and sinners. I do not wonder that he went from Dan to Beersheba, but I have wondered often that he went so far as to save prostitutes by his grace. We may in this sense go around doing good without travelling across the sea. A minister once announced to his congregation one Sunday morning, “I am going on a mission to the heathen.” Now he had not told his deacons about it, and they looked at one another. Some of the good people in the congregation began to take out their pocket handkerchiefs; they thought their minister was going to leave them—he was so useful and necessary to them that they felt sad at the mere idea of loosing him. “But” he added, “I shall not be out of town.” So you may go on a mission to the heathen without going out of this huge town of ours. You might almost preach to every kind of literal heathen within the bounds of London; to Parthians, Medes, and Elamites and the dwellers of Mesopotamia. There are men of every colour, speaking every language under heaven, now living in London; and if you want to convert Mohammedans, Turks, Chinese, men from Bengal, Java, or Borneo, you may find them all here. There are always representatives of every nation close at our door. If you want men who have gone far in sin, great foreigners in that respect, you need not certainly leave London for that; you shall find men and women rotten with sin, and reeking in the nostrils of God with their abominations. You may go around doing good, and your railway ticket need not cost you one farthing. No doubt Christ’s perseverance is intended in our text, for when he is rejected in one place, he goes to another. If one will not hear, another will. The unity of his purpose is also hinted at. He does not go about with two aims, but this one absorbs all his heart—“doing good.” And the success, too, of his purpose is here intended. He went around, and not only tried to do good, but he did it; he left the world better than he found it, when he ascended to his Father God.

He Was All Goodness

14. 3. One moment concerning the motive of Christ’s doing good. It is not far to seek. He did good partly because he could not help it. It was his nature to do good. He was all goodness, and just as the clouds which are full of rain empty themselves upon the earth, even so must he. You will have observed that all the good things which God has made are diffusive. There is light; you cannot confine light within narrow limits. Suppose we were to grow so bigoted and conceited as to conceive that we had all the light in the world inside this Tabernacle. We might have iron shutters made to keep the light in, yet it is very probable that the light would not agree with our bigotry, but would not come in at all, but leave us in the dark for wanting to confine it. With splendid mirrors, Turkish carpets, jewellery, fine pictures, rare statuary, you may court the light to come into palatial halls, it comes, it is true, but as it enters it whispers, “And I passed through the iron grating of a prison, just now. I shone upon the poor cottager beneath the crude thatched roof, I streamed through the window out of which half the glass was gone, and gleamed as cheerily and willingly upon the rags of poverty as in these marble halls.” You cannot clip the wings of the morning, or monopolize the golden rays of the sun. What a space the light has traversed doing good. Millions of miles it has come streaming from the sun, and yet further from that fixed star. Oh light! why could you not be contented with your own sphere, why journey so far from home? Missionary rays come to us from so vast a distance that they must have been hundreds of years in reaching us, and yet their mission is not over, for they flash on to still more remote worlds. It is so with the air; as far as the world is concerned, the air will throw itself down the shaft of the deepest coal pit, climb the loftiest Alp, and although men madly strive to shut it out, it will thrust itself into the fever lair and cool the brow of cholera. It is so with water. Here it comes dropping from every inch of the cloudy sky, flooding the streets, flushing the foul sewers, and soaking into the dry soil. Everywhere it will come, for water claims to have its influence felt everywhere. Fire, too, who can bind its giant hands? The king cannot claim it as a royal prerogative. Among those few sticks which the widow woman with the red cloak has been gathering in the woods, it burns as readily as in Her Majesty’s palace. It is the nature of Jesus to diffuse himself; it is his life to do good. His grand motive no doubt is the display of the glorious attributes of God. He went around doing good in order that Jehovah might be revealed in his splendour to the eyes of adoring men. He is the manifestation of the Godhead; he is the express image of his Father’s person, “In him dwells all the fulness of the Godhead bodily,” and through heaven, and earth, and sky, and sun, and stars, all show forth something of the goodness of God, yet the life of Jesus is the fullest and clearest manifestation of the beneficence of deity that ever will be accorded to the sons of men. This is an object worthy of God, to reveal himself, and such an object Christ set before him when he came to do good among the sons of men.

15. I have not said enough about the Saviour, but still as much as time allows us, and I will close that point with this one thing: if Jesus Christ went around doing good, and if his motive was simply God’s glory, poor troubled sinner, can he not glorify God in you? You need pardon: you will be an illustrious instance of God’s grace if he should ever save you. Have hope. If Jesus Christ goes around, you are not too far off. If he looks upon the most forlorn, you are not in too desperate a plight. Cry to him when your spirit is overwhelmed, yet look to the rock that is higher than you. “From the ends of the earth I have cried to you, oh God, and you heard me.” May it be your joy today to find him to be your friend, who “went around doing good.”

Consider Ourselves

16. II. We were in the second place to CONSIDER OURSELVES. This is the application of the subject.

17. Consider ourselves then concerning the past, with sorrow and shamefacedness. Have we gone about doing good? I fear there are some here who never did any spiritual good. The tree is corrupt, and it cannot bring forth good fruit. The fountain is bitter, and it cannot yield sweet water. You must be born again before you can go around doing good. While your nature is as father Adam left it, good cannot come from you. “There is no one who does good, no not one.” How clearly this is true in some people, as proven by their very profession. The profession of some men is one in which they cannot hope to do good. There are some in all callings who either do positive harm, or at any rate cannot imagine that they are doing any good. Let them repent. “Every tree that does not bring forth good fruit is hewn down and cast into the fire.” May God grant that neither our character nor our vocation may stand in the way of our doing good. But you who have new hearts and rights spirits, and are saved by faith in the precious blood of Jesus, have you done all the good you could? I dare not say yes—I wish I dare. No, Master, there must have been many times when I might have served you when I have not done it. I have been an unprofitable servant. I have not done what was my duty to have done. Ah! some of you have missed a world of joy in having done so little good. You have not given, therefore you are not increased. You never gave much to others, and so they have not given back to you full measure, pressed down and running over. You have not borne the burdens of others, and so your own burden has become heavy and intolerable. Christians, in looking back upon the past, must you not drop tears of regret, and do you not bless that preserving love which still follows you—yes, which will never let you go, but despite your barrenness and unfruitfulness, will not cease to work upon you until it has made you fit to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in light, who day without night serve God in his temple?

18. Concerning the future. The old question comes up, if any man says today, “I am resolved to go around doing good”—is he able to do it? And again, the reply comes, we must first be good, or else we cannot do good. The only way to be good is to seek for the good One, the good Master. If you have a new heart and a right spirit, then go your way and serve him; but if not, pause awhile. To the wicked God says, “What have you to do to declare my statutes?” He will have clean handed men to do his work. Wash first in the brazen laver if you wish to be a priest. God will not have men for his servants who would defile the sacred place. “Be clean you who bear the vessels of the Lord.” May God give us to rest implicitly upon the Lord Jesus Christ by a living faith, and so to be cleansed in his precious blood, and then we may resolve to go out and live for him. Have we any work to do now that we can do at once? If we have, whatever our hand finds to do, let us do it. Let us not be asking for greater abilities than we have. If we can get them, let us do so; but meanwhile let us use what we have. Go, oh housewife, to your house, and from the lowest room to the top go you about doing good: here is enough range for you. Go, oh teacher, to your little school, and among those boys or girls, let your example speak, and there is enough range for you. Go, oh worker, to your shop, and among your fellow workmen, let drop here and there a word for Christ; above all, let your example shine, and there is work for you. You domestic servants, the kitchen is sphere enough for you. You shall go about doing good from the dresser to the fireplace, and you shall have width enough and verge enough to make it a kingdom consecrated to God. Without leaving your position any one of you, without giving up the plough, or the cobbler’s lapstone, or the needle, or the plane, or the saw, without leaving business—without any of you good sisters wanting to be nuns, or any of us putting on the serge and becoming monks—in our own calling let us go around doing good. The best preparation for it will be, renew your dedication to Christ, be much in earnest prayer, seek the sanctifying influences of the Holy Spirit, and then go out in your Master’s strength with this as your resolve—that as portraits of Jesus Christ it shall be said of you, “He went around doing good.” May God add his blessing for the Saviour’s sake. Amen.

[Portion Of Scripture Read Before Sermon—Acts 10]

http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2010/11/11/the-great-itinerant