The Leafless Tree by C. H. Spurgeon
Copyright © 2010 (see Terms of Use)
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Evening, March 8, 1857, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon,
At New Park Street Chapel, Southwark.
But yet in it shall be a tenth, and it shall return, And shall be eaten; as a
teil tree, and as an oak, whose substance is in them, when they cast their
leaves: so the holy seed shall be its substance. (Isa 6:13)
1. Our first business tonight will be briefly to explain the metaphor employed
in the text. The prophet was told that despite all the admonitions he was
instructed to deliver, and notwithstanding the eloquent earnestness of his lips,
which had been just touched with a live coal from off the altar, still the
people of Israel would persevere in their sins, and would therefore be certainly
destroyed. He asked the question, “Lord, how long?” that is, “How long will the
people be thus impenitent? How long will your sore judgment thus continue?” and
he was informed that God would waste and destroy the cities and their
inhabitants, until the land would be utterly desolate. Then it was added, for
his comfort, “Yet in it shall be a tenth.” And so it happened; for when
“Nebuchadnezzar carried away all Jerusalem,” the historian gives this
reservation—“none remained except the poorer sort of the people of the land.”
They were left by the captain of the guard, “to be vinedressers and husbandmen.”
Thus in it there was a tenth; this small remnant of the people, however, was to
be nearly destroyed too. “It shall return and shall be eaten;” the sense is
eaten up or consumed. The poor creatures left in the land, many of them fled
into Egypt at the time of the conspiracy of Ishmael, (not Ishmael, the son of
Hagar, but an unworthy member of the royal family of Judah,) and there in Egypt,
most of them were cut off and perished. “But,” says God, “although this tenth
only shall be preserved, and then even this small part shall be subjected to
many perils, yet Israel shall not be destroyed, for it shall be as a terebinth
tree and as an oak;” their “substance is in them, when they cast their leaves,”
and so lose their verdure and their beauty; thus in like manner, a holy seed, a
chosen remnant, shall still be the substance of the children of Israel, when the
fruitful land is stripped of its foliage, and that fair garden of earth is
barren as the desert.
2. The figure is taken, first of all, from the terebinth or turpentine tree—here
translated the teil tree. That tree is an evergreen, with this exception, that
in very severe and inclement weather it loses its leaves; but even then the
terebinth tree is not dead. And so of the oak, it loses its leaves every year,
of course, but even then it is not dead. “So,” says God, “you have seen the tree
in winter, standing naked and bare, without any sign of life, its roots buried
in the hard and frozen soil, and its naked branches exposed to every blast,
without a bloom or a bud; yet the substance is in the tree when the leaves are
gone. It is still alive, and it shall, by and by, in due season bud and bloom;
so,” he says, “Nebuchadnezzar shall cut off all the leaves of the tree of
Israel—take away the inhabitants, only a tenth shall be left, and they shall
almost all be eaten up; still the church of God and the Israel of God never
shall be destroyed; they shall be like the terebinth tree and the oak, whose
substance is in them, when they cast their leaves; so the holy seed shall be its
substance.”
3. I hope I have made the meaning of the passage as plain as words can make it.
Now, then, for the application—first, to the Jews; secondly, to the Church;
thirdly, to each believer.
4. I. First, TO THE JEWS.
5. What a history is the history of the Jew! He has antiquity stamped upon his
forehead. His is a lineage more noble than that of any knights or even kings of
this our island, for he can trace his pedigree back to the very loins of
Abraham, and through him to that patriarch who entered into the ark, and to
there up to Adam himself. Our history is hidden in gloom and darkness; but
theirs, with certainty, may be read, from the first moment even down until now.
And what a chequered history has been the history of the Jewish nation!
Nebuchadnezzar seemed to have swept them all away with the huge broom of
destruction; the tenth left was again given over to the slaughter, and one would
have thought we should have heard no more of Israel, but in a little time they
rose phoenix-like from their ashes. A second temple was built, and the nation
became strong once more, and though often swept with desolations in the
meantime, yet it did abide, and the sceptre did not depart from Judah, nor a
lawgiver from between his feet, until Shiloh came. And, since then, how huge
have been the waves that have rushed over the Jewish race. The Roman emperor
razed the city to the ground and left not a vestige standing; another emperor
changed the name of Jerusalem into that of Eliah, and forbade a Jew to go within
some miles of it, so that he might not even look upon his beloved city. It was
ploughed and left desolate. But is the Jew conquered? Is he a subjugated man? Is
his country seized? No, he is still one of earth’s nobles—distressed, insulted,
spit upon; still it is written, “To the Jew first, and afterwards to the
Gentile.” He claims a high dignity above us, and he has a history to come which
will be greater and more splendid than the history of any nation that has yet
existed. If we read the Scriptures rightly the Jews have a great deal to do with
this world’s history. They shall be gathered in; Messiah shall come, the Messiah
they are looking for—the same Messiah who came once shall come again—shall come
as they expected him to come the first time. They then thought he would come a
prince to reign over them, and so he will when he comes again. He will come to
be king of the Jews, and to reign over his people most gloriously; for when he
comes, Jew and Gentile shall have equal privileges, though there shall yet be
some distinction afforded to that royal family from whose loins Jesus came; for
he shall sit upon the throne of his father David, and to him shall be gathered
all nations. Oh!
You chosen seed of Israel’s race,
A remnant weak and small.
You may, indeed,
Hail him who saves you by his grace,
And crown him Lord of all;
Your church shall never die, and your race shall never become extinct. The Lord
has said it. “The race of Abraham shall endure for ever, and his seed as many
generations.”
6. But why is it that the Jewish race is preserved? We have our answer in the
text: “The holy seed is its substance.” There is something mysterious, hidden
and unknown within a tree which preserves life in it when everything outward
tends to kill it. So in the Jewish race there is a secret element which keeps it
alive. We know what it is; it is the “remnant according to the election of
grace;” in the worst of ages there has never been a day so black but there was a
Hebrew found to hold the lamp of God. There has always been found a Jew who
loved Jesus; and though the race now despise the great Redeemer, yet there are
not a few of the Hebrew race who still love Jesus the Saviour of the
uncircumcised, and bow before him. It is these few, this holy seed, that are the
substance of the nation, and for their sake, through their prayers, because of
God’s love to them, he still says of Israel to all nations, “Do not touch those
who are my anointed, do no harm to my prophets. These are the descendants of
Abraham, my friend. I have sworn and will not repent; I will show kindness to
them for their father’s sake, and for the sake of the remnant I have chosen.”
7. Let us think a little more of the Jews than we have been accustomed to; let
us pray more often for them. “Pray for the peace of Jerusalem; they shall
prosper that love her.” As truly as any great thing is done in this world for
Christ’s kingdom, the Jews will have more to do with it than any of us have
dreamed. So much for the first point. The Jewish nation is like “a terebinth
tree, and as an oak, whose substance is in them, when they cast their leaves; so
the holy seed shall be its substance.”
8. II. And now, secondly, THE CHURCH OF CHRIST, of which the Jewish people are
only a dim shadow, and an emblem.
9. The church has had its trials; trials from without and trials within. It has
had days of blood red persecution, and of fiery trial; it has had times of sad
apostasy, when an evil heart of unbelief and departing from the living God has
broken out, and a root of bitterness springing up has troubled many, and by it
they have been defiled. Yet, blessed be God, through all the winters of the
church she still lived, and she gives signs now of a sweeter springtime, a
fresher greenness and a healthier condition than she has shown before for many a
day. Why is it that the church is still preserved, when she looks so dead? For
this reason: that there is in the midst of her—though many are hypocrites and
impostors—a “chosen seed,” who are “its substance.” You might have looked back a
hundred years ago upon the professing church of Christ in this land, and what a
sad spectacle it would have been! In the Church of England there was mere
formality; in the Independent and Baptist denominations there was truth, but it
was dead, cold, lifeless truth. Ministers dreamed on in their pulpits, and
hearers snored in their pews: infidelity was triumphant; the house of God was
neglected and desecrated. The church was like a tree that had lost its leaves:
it was in a wintry state. But did it die? No; there was a holy seed within it.
Six young men were expelled from Oxford for praying, reading the Bible, and
talking to poor people about Christ; and these six young men, with many others
whom the Lord had hidden by fifties in the caves of the earth, secret and
unknown—these young men, leaders of a glorious revival, came out, and though
ridiculed and laughed at as Methodists they brought forth a great and glorious
revival, almost equalling the commencement of the gospel triumphs under Paul and
the apostles, and very little inferior to the great reformation of Luther, of
Calvin and Zwingli. And just now the church is to a great degree in a barren and
lifeless state. But will she therefore die? You say that true doctrine is
scarce, that zeal is rare, that there is little life and energy in the pulpit
and true devotion in the pew, while formality and hypocrisy stalk over us, and
we sleep in our cradles. But will the church die? No; she is like a teil tree
and an oak; her substance is in her when she has lost her leaves; there is a
holy seed in her still that is its substance. Where these are we do not know;
some, I do not doubt, are here in this church,—some, I hope, are to be found in
every church of professing Christians: and woe be the day to the church that
loses her holy seed; for she must die, like the oak blasted by the lightning,
whose heart is scorched out of it—broken down, because it has no substance in
it.
10. Let me now draw your attention, as a church connected with this place, to
this point—that the holy seed is the substance of the church. A great many of
you might be compared to the bark of the tree; some of you are like the big
limbs; others are like pieces of the trunk. Well, we would be very sorry to lose
any of you; but we could afford to do so without any serious damage to the life
of the tree. Yet there are some here—God knows who they are—who are the
substance of the tree. By the word “substance” is meant the life, the inward
principle. The inward principle is in the tree, when it has lost its leaves.
Now, God discerns some men in this church, I do not doubt, who are to us like
the inward principle of the oak; they are the substance of the church. I would
really hope that all the members of the church in some degree contribute to the
substance; but I do not think that is so. I am obligated to say I doubt it;
because, when one has fallen and then another, it makes us remember that a
church has much in it that is not life. There are some branches on the vine that
are cut off, because they do not draw sap from the heart of it, they are only
branches bound on by profession, pretended graftings that have never struck root
into the parent stock and that must be cut off, and hewn down, and cast into the
fire. But there is a holy seed in the church that is its substance.
11. Please note here, that the life of a tree is not determined by the shape of
the branches, nor by the way it grows, but it is in the substance. The shape of
a church is not its life. In one place I see a church formed in an Episcopalian
shape; in another place I see one formed in a Presbyterian shape; then, again, I
see one, like ours, formed on an Independent principle. Here I see one with
sixteen ounces to the pound of doctrine, there I see one with eight, and some
with very little clear doctrine at all. And yet I find life in all the churches,
in some degree—some good men in all of them. How do I account for this? Why,
just in this way—that the oak may be alive, whatever its shape, if it has the
substance. If there is only a holy seed in the church, the church will live; and
it is astonishing how the church will live under a thousand errors, if there is
only the vital principle in it. You will find good men among the denominations
that you cannot receive as being sound in faith. You say, “What! can any good
thing come out of Nazareth;” and you go through, and find there are even in them
some true Nazarites of the right order. The very best of men are sometimes found
in the worst of churches! A church does not live because of its rubrics, and its
canons, and its articles; it lives because of the holy seed that is in it as the
substance. No church can die while it has a holy seed in it, and no church can
live that does not have the holy seed, for “the holy seed is its substance.”
12. Observe, again, that the substance of the oak is a hidden thing: you cannot
see it. When the oak or the terebinth is standing destitute of leaves, you know
that life is there somewhere. But you cannot see it! And very likely you cannot
and do not know the men that are the holy seed, the substance of the church.
Perhaps you imagine the substance of the church lies in the pulpit. No, friend!
Let us pray to God that such of us as are in the pulpit may be a part of that
substance; but much of the substance of the church lies where you do not know
anything about it. There is a mine near Plymouth, where the men who work in it,
two hundred and fifty feet below the surface, have a little shelf for their
Bibles and their hymn books, and a little place where every morning, when they
go down in the black darkness, they bow before God, and praise him whose tender
mercies are over all his works. You never heard of these miners, perhaps, and do
not know of them; but perhaps some of them are the very substance of the church.
There sits Mr. Somebody in that pew: oh! what a support he is to the church. Yes
in money matters, perhaps; but do you know, there is poor old Mrs. Nobody in the
aisle that is most likely a greater pillar to the church than he, for she is a
holier Christian, one who lives nearer to her God and serves him better, and she
is, “its substance.” Ah! that old woman in the attic that is often in prayer,
that old man on his bed that spends days and nights in supplication; such people
as these are the substance of the church. Oh! you may take away your prelates,
your orators, and the best and greatest of those who stand among earth’s mighty
men, and their place could be supplied; but take away our intercessors, take
away the men and women that breathe out prayer by night and day, and like the
priests of old offer the morning and evening lamb as a perpetual sacrifice, and
you kill the church at once. What are the ministers? They are only the arms of
the church, and its lips. A man may be both dumb and armless, and yet live. But
these, the heavenly seed, the chosen men and women who live near their God, and
serve him with sacred fervent piety—these are the heart of the church; we cannot
do without them. If we lose them we must die. “The holy seed is its substance.”
13. Then, my hearer, you are a church member. Let me ask you—are you one of the
holy seed? Have you been born again to a lively hope? Has God made you holy by
the sanctifying influence of his Spirit, and by the justifying righteousness of
Christ, and by the application to your conscience of the blood of Jesus? If so,
then you are the substance of the church. They may pass by you and not notice
you, for you are little; but the substance is little; the life germ within the
grain of barley is too small for us, perhaps, to detect; the life within the egg
is almost a molecule—you can scarcely see it; and so the life of the church is
among the little ones, where we can scarcely find it. Rejoice, if you are much
in prayer; you are the life of the church. But you, oh you proud man, pull down
your grand thoughts of yourself: you may give to the church, you may speak for
the church, and act for the church, but unless you are a holy seed you are not
its substance, and it is the substance which is in reality of the greatest
value.
14. But here let me say one thing, before I leave this point. Some of you will
say, “How is it that good men are the means of preserving the visible church?” I
answer, the holy seed does this, because it derives its life from Christ. If the
holy seed had to preserve the church by its own purity and its own strength, the
church would go to the dogs tomorrow; but it is because these holy ones draw
fresh life from Christ continually that they are able to be, as it were, the
salvation of the body, and by their influence, direct and indirect, shed life
over the whole visible church. The prayers of those living ones in Zion bring
down many a blessing upon us; the groans and cries of these earnest intercessors
prevail with heaven, and bring down very argosies (great cargoes) of mercy from
the gates of paradise. And besides, their holy example tends to check us and
preserve us in purity; they walk among us like God’s own favoured ones, wrapped
in white, reflecting his image wherever they go, and tending, under God, to the
sanctifying of believers, not through their vaunting of any self-righteousness,
but by stirring up believers to do more for Christ, and to be more like him.
“The holy seed shall be its substance.”
15. III. And now I come to the third point. This is true of EVERY INDIVIDUAL
BELIEVER: his substance is in him when he has lost his leaves.
16. The Arminian says that when a Christian loses his leaves he is dead. “No;”
says God’s Word, “he is not; he may look as if he were dead, and not have so
much as here and there a leaf upon the topmost bough; but he is not dead. Their
substance is in them even when they lose their leaves.”
17. By losing their leaves I understand it to mean two things. Christian men
lose their leaves when they lose their comforts, when they lose the sensible
enjoyment of their Master’s presence, and when their full assurance is turned
into doubting. You have had many times like that, have you not? Ah! you were one
day in such a state of joy, that you said you could
Sit and sing yourself away
To everlasting bliss.
But a wintry state came, and your joy all departed, and you stood like a bare
tree after the wind had swept it in the time of winter, with just perhaps one
dead leaf hanging by a thread on the topmost bough. But you were not dead then:
no, your substance was in you, when you had lost your leaves. You could not see
that substance, and for good reason, because your life was hidden with Christ in
God, you did not see your signs, but you had your substance still, though you
could not find it. There were no stirrings of faith, but faith was there, there
were no lookings out of hope, but though hope’s eyelids were shut, the eyes were
there, to be opened afterwards; there was no lifting, perhaps, of the hand of
ardent prayer, but the hands and arms were there, though they hung powerless by
the side. God said, afterwards, “Strengthen the feeble knees, and lift up the
hands that hang down.” Your substance was in you when you had lost your leaves.
Good Baxter says—“We do not see our graces, except when they are being
exercised; and yet they are as much there when they are not exercised as when
they are.” He says, “Let a man take a walk into a forest; there lies a hare or a
rabbit asleep under the leaves; but he cannot see the creature until it is
frightened, and it runs out, and then he sees it to be there.” So if faith is
exercised you will perceive your evidence, but if faith is slumbering and still,
you will be led to doubt its existence; and yet it is there all the while.
Mountains when in darkness hidden,
Are as real as in day,
one said; and truly the faith of the Christian, when shrouded by doubts and
fears, is just as much there as when he rejoices devoutly in the display of it.
18. It is a common error of young converts that they attempt to live by their
experience, instead of tracing their life up to its precious source. I have
known people rejoicing in the fullest assurance one day, and sinking into the
deepest despondency the next. The Lord will sometimes strip you of the leaves of
evidence to teach you to live by faith, as John Kent says,—
If today he deigns to bless us
With a sense of pardoned sin;
He tomorrow may distress us,
Make us feel the plague within;
All to make us
Sick of self and fond of him.
19. But ah! there is a worse phase to the subject than this. Some Christians
lose their leaves not by doubts, but by sin. This is a tender topic—one which
needs a tender hand to touch. Oh! there are some in our churches that have lost
their leaves by lust and sin. Fair professors once they were; they stood green
among the church, like the very leaves of paradise; but in an evil hour they
fell, the slaves of temptation. They were God’s own people by many infallible
marks and signs; and if they were so, though it is grievous that they should
have lost their leaves, yet there is the sweet consolation, their substance is
in them still: they are still the Lord’s, still his living children, though they
have fallen into the coma of sin, and are now in a fainting fit, having gone
astray from him, and having their animation suspended, while life is still
there. Some, as soon as they see a Christian do anything inconsistent with his
profession, say, “That man is no child of God; he cannot be; it is impossible.”
Aye, but, Sir, remember what he thought who once said—“If a brother err, you who
are spiritual restore such a one in the spirit of meekness, considering
yourself, lest you also be tempted.” It is a fact, deny it who will, and abuse
it, if you please, to your own wicked purposes; I cannot help it,—it is a fact
that some living children of God have been allowed—and an awful allowance it
is—to go into the very blackest sins. Do you think David was not a child of God,
even when he sinned? It is a hard subject to touch; but it is not to be denied.
He had the life of God within him before; and though he sinned—oh! horrid and
awful was the crime!—yet his substance was in him when he lost his leaves. And
many a child of God has gone far away from his Master; but his substance is in
him. And how do we know this? Because a dead tree never lives again; if the
substance is really gone, it never lives; and God’s Holy Word assures us, that
if the real life of grace could die out in anyone, it could never come again;
for says the apostle, “it is impossible, if they have been once enlightened, and
have tasted the heavenly gift, and have been partakers of the Holy Ghost,”—if
these fall away—“it is impossible to renew them again to repentance.” Their tree
is “dead, plucked up by the roots.” And the apostle Peter says—“For if, after
they have escaped the corruption that is in the world through lust, they are
again turned back, their last end shall be worse than the first.” But now take
David, or take Peter, whichever you please. Peter we will have. Oh! how foully
did he curse his Master! With many an oath he denied him. But did Peter not then
have the life of God still in him? Yes; and how do we know? Because when his
Master looked upon him, he “went out and wept bitterly.” Ah! if he had been a
dead man, hardened and without the substance in him, his Master might have
looked for all eternity, and he would not have wept bitterly. How do I know that
David was still alive? Why, by this—that although there was a long, long winter,
and there were many prickings of conscience, like the workings of the sap within
a tree, abortive attempts to thrust forward here and there a shoot before its
time, yet when the hour was come, and Nathan came to him and said, “You are the
man,” had David been dead, without the life of God, he would have spurned Nathan
from him, and might have done what Manasseh did with Isaiah, cut him in pieces
in his anger; but instead of that he bowed his head and wept before God; and
still it is written, “The Lord has put away your sin, you shall not die.” His
substance was in him, when he lost his leaves. Oh! have pity upon poor fallen
brethren. Oh! do not burn them; they are not dead logs; though their leaves are
gone their substance is in them. God can see grace in their hearts when you
cannot see it; he has put a life there that can never expire, for he has said,
“I give to my sheep eternal life,” and that means a life that lives for ever—the
water that I shall give him shall be in him a well of water springing up into
everlasting life. You may choke the well up with big stones, but the water will
still find its way out, and well up notwithstanding. And so the heir of heaven
may to the grief of the church and to the injury of himself, most grievously
transgress—and weep, my eyes, oh weep for any that have done so, and oh bleed,
my heart, and you have bled, for any that have so sinned; but yet their
“substance is in them, when they cast their leaves: so the holy seed”—that is,
Christ within them, the Holy Ghost within them, the new creature within
them—“the holy seed shall be its substance.” Poor backslider! here is a word of
comfort for you. I would never comfort you in your sins; God forbid! But if you
know your sins and hate them, let me comfort you. You are not dead! As Jesus
said of the damsel, “She is not dead, but sleeps,” so let me say of you, “You
are not dead; you shall yet live.” Do you repent? Do you grieve over your sin?
That is the bud that shows that there is life within. When a common sinner sins
he does not repent, or if he does repent it is with a legal repentance. His
conscience tricks him, but he squelches it. He does not leave his sin and turn
from it.
20. But did you ever see a child of God after he had been washed from a foul
sin? He was a changed man. I know such a one, who used to carry a merry
countenance, and many were the jokes he made in company; but when I met him
after an awful sin, there was a solemnity about his countenance that was unusual
for him. He looked, I should say, something like Dante, the poet, of whom the
boys said, “There is the man that has been in hell;” because he had written of
hell and looked like it—he looked so terrible. And when we spoke of sin there
was such a solemnity about him; and when we spoke of going astray the tears ran
down his cheeks, as much as to say, “I have been astray too.” He seemed like
good Christian, after he had been in Giant Despair’s castle. Do you not
remember, beloved, the guide who took the pilgrims up to the top of a hill
called Clear, and he showed them from the top of the hill a lot of men with
their eyes put out, groping among the tombs, and Christian asked what it meant.
The guide said, “These are pilgrims that were caught in Giant Despair’s castle;
the giant had their eyes put out, and they are left to wander among the tombs to
die, and their bones are to be left in the courtyard.” Whereupon John Bunyan
very naively says, “I looked, and saw their eyes full of water, for they
remembered they might have been there too.” Just like the man talked and spoke
that I once knew, he seemed to wonder why God had not left him to be an apostate
for ever, as the lot of Judas or Demas. (2Ti 4:10) He seemed to think it was
such a startling thing that while many had gone aside altogether from God’s way
he should still have had his substance in him, when he had lost his leaves, and
that God should still have loved him. Perhaps, beloved, God allows some such men
to live, and sin, and afterwards repent, for this reason. You know there are
some voices needed in music that are very rare, and when now and then such a
voice is to be heard everyone will go to hear it. I have thought that perhaps
some of these men in heaven will sing soprano notes before the throne—choice,
wondrous notes of grace, because they have gone into the depths of sin after
profession, and yet he has loved them when their feet made haste to perdition,
and brought them back, because he “loved them well.” There are but a few of
these, for most men will go foully into sin; they will go out from us because
they are not of us, for if they had been of us they would doubtless have
continued with us. But there have been a few such—great saints, then great
backsliding sinners, and then great saints again. Their substance was in them
when they had lost their leaves. Oh! you that have gone far astray, sit and
weep. You cannot weep too much, though you should cry with Herbert—
Oh, who will give me tears? Come all you springs,
Dwell in my head and eyes; come, clouds and rain!
My grief has need of all the wat’ry things,
That nature has produc’d.
You might well say—
Let every vein
Suck up a river to supply my eyes,
My weary weeping eyes; too dry for me,
Unless they get new conduits, new supplies,
To bear them out, and with my state agree.
But remember still, “He has not forsaken his people, neither has he cut them
off;” for still he says,—
Return, oh wanderer, return,
And seek an injured Father’s heart.
Return! return! return! Your Father’s heart still yearns for you. He speaks
through the written oracles at this moment, saying “How shall I give you up,
Ephraim? How shall I deliver you, oh Israel? How can I make you as Admah? How
can I set you as Zeboim? My heart is moved; my repentings are kindled together;
(Ho 11:8 cf. Deut 29:23) for I will heal their backslidings, I will receive them
graciously, I will love them freely, for they are mine still. As the terebinth
and as the oak, whose substance is in them when they cast their leaves, even so
the holy seed within the elect and called vessels of mercy, is still its
substance.”
21. And now, what have I to say to some of you that live in black sin, and yet
excuse yourselves on account of the recorded falls of God’s people? Sirs, know
this! Inasmuch as you do this, you wrest the Scriptures to your own destruction.
If one man has taken poison, and there has been a physician by his side so
skilful that he has saved his life by a heavenly antidote, is that any reason
why you, who has no physician and no antidote, should yet think that the poison
will not kill you? Why man, the sin that does not damn a Christian, because
Christ washes him in his blood, will damn you. Brookes said—and I will repeat
his words, and conclude—“He who believes and is baptized shall be saved, said
the apostle, be his sins ever so many; but he who does not believe shall be
damned, be his sins ever so few.” Truly your sins may be little; but you are
lost for them without Christ. Your sins may be great; but if Christ shall pardon
them, then you shall be saved. The one question, then, I have to ask of you,
then, is—“Do you have Christ?” For if you do not, then you do not have the holy
seed; you are a dead tree, and in due time you shall be tinder for hell. You are
a rotten hearted tree, all touch wood, ready to be broken in pieces; eaten by
the worms of lust; and ah! when the fire shall take hold of you, what a blazing
and a burning! Oh! that you had life! Oh! that God would give it to you! Oh!
that you would now repent! Oh! that you would cast yourself on Jesus! Oh! that
you would turn to him with full purpose of heart! For then, remember you would
be saved—saved now, and saved for ever; for “the holy seed” would be “its
substance.”
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2009/05/25/leafless-tree