A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, April 14, 1878, By C. H. Spurgeon, At The Metropolitan Tabernacle, Newington.
After this, Jesus knowing that all things were now
accomplished, so that the Scripture might be fulfilled,
says, “I thirst.” [Joh
19:28]
For other sermons on this text:
[See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 1409, “Shortest of
the Seven Cries, The” 1400]
[See Spurgeon_Sermons No. 3385, “Saviour’s
Thirst, The” 3387]
Exposition on
Joh 19:1-37 [See Spurgeon_Sermons No.
3123, “King of the Jews, The” 3124 @@ "Exposition"]
Exposition on
Joh 19:14-37 [See Spurgeon_Sermons
No. 3279, “Ever This Our War Cry — Victory, Victory!”
3281 @@ "Exposition"]
Exposition on
Joh 19:23-37 [See Spurgeon_Sermons
No. 3311, “Water and the Blood, The” 3313 @@
"Exposition"]
Exposition on
Lu 23:33-46
Joh 19:25-30 [See Spurgeon_Sermons
No. 2263, “Christ’s Plea for Ignorant Sinners” 2264 @@
"Exposition"]
1. It was most fitting that every word of our Lord upon the cross should be gathered up and preserved. Just as not a bone of him shall be broken, so not a word shall be lost. The Holy Spirit took special care that each of the sacred utterances should be fittingly recorded. There were, as you know, seven of those last words, and seven is the number of perfection and fulness; the number which blends the three of the infinite God with the four of complete creation. Our Lord in his death cries, as in all else, was perfection itself. There is a fulness of meaning in each utterance which no man shall be able fully to bring out, and when combined they make up a vast ocean of thought, which no human line can fathom. Here, as everywhere else, we are constrained to say of our Lord, “Never man spoke like this man.” Amid all the anguish of his spirit his last words prove him to have remained fully self-possessed, true to his forgiving nature, true to his kingly office, true to his filial relationship, true to his God, true to his love for the written word, true to his glorious work, and true to his faith in his Father.
2. Since these seven sayings were so faithfully recorded, we do not wonder that they have frequently been the subject of devout meditation. Fathers and confessors, preachers and divines have delighted to dwell upon every syllable of these matchless cries. These solemn sentences have shone like the seven golden lampstands or the seven stars of the Apocalypse, and have attracted multitudes of men to him who spoke them. Thoughtful men have drawn a wealth of meaning from them, and in so doing have arranged them into different groups, and placed them under various points. I cannot give you more than a mere taste of this rich subject, but I have been most struck with two ways of regarding our Lord’s last words. First, they teach and confirm many of the doctrines of our holy faith. “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing” is the first. Here is the forgiveness of sin — free forgiveness in answer to the Saviour’s plea. “Today you shall be with me in paradise.” Here is the safety of the believer in the hour of his departure, and his instant admission into the presence of his Lord. It is a blow at the fable of purgatory which strikes it to the heart. “Woman, behold your son!” This very plainly presents the true and proper humanity of Christ, who to the end recognised his human relationship to Mary, of whom he was born. Yet his language teaches us not to worship her, for he calls her “woman,” but to honour him who in his most dire agony thought of her needs and griefs, as he also thinks of all his people, for these are his mother and sister and brother. “Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?” is the fourth cry, and it illustrates the penalty endured by our Substitute when he bore our sins, and so was forsaken by his God. No exposition can fully disclose to us the sharpness of that sentence: it is keen as the very edge and point of the sword which pierced his heart. “I thirst” is the fifth cry, and its utterance teaches us the truth of Scripture, for all things were accomplished, so that the Scripture might be fulfilled, and therefore our Lord said, “I thirst.” Holy Scripture remains the basis of our faith, established by every word and act of our Redeemer. The second last word is, “It is finished.” There is the complete justification of the believer, since the work by which he is accepted is fully accomplished. The last of his last words is also taken from the Scriptures, and shows where his mind was feeding. He cried, before he bowed the head which he had held erect amid all his conflict, as one who never yielded, “Father, into your hands I commend my spirit.” In that cry there is reconciliation to God. He who stood in our place has finished all his work, and now his spirit comes back to the Father, and he brings us with him. Every word, therefore, you see teaches us some grand fundamental doctrine of our blessed faith. “He who has ears to hear, let him hear.”
3. A second mode of treating these seven cries is to view them as presenting the person and offices of our Lord who uttered them. “Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing” — here we see the Mediator interceding: Jesus standing before the Father pleading for the guilty. “Truly I say to you, today you shall be with me in paradise” — this is the Lord Jesus in kingly power, opening with the key of David a door which no one can shut, admitting into the gates of heaven the poor soul who had confessed him on the tree. Hail, everlasting King in heaven, you admit to your paradise whomever you wish! Nor do you set a time for waiting, but instantly you open wide the gate of pearl; you have all power in heaven as well as upon earth. Then came, “Woman, behold your son!” in which we see the Son of man in the gentleness of a son caring for his bereaved mother. In the former cry, as he opened Paradise, you saw the Son of God; now you see him who was really and truly born of a woman, made under the law; and you still see him under the law, for he honours his mother and cares for her in the last article of death. Then comes the “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” Here we behold his human soul in anguish, his innermost heart overwhelmed by the withdrawing of Jehovah’s face, and made to cry out as if in perplexity and amazement. “I thirst,” is his human body tormented by grievous pain. Here you see how the mortal flesh had to share in the agony of the inward spirit. “It is finished” is the second last word, and there you see the perfected Saviour, the Captain of our salvation, who has completed the undertaking upon which he had entered, finished transgression, made an end of sin, and brought in everlasting righteousness. The last expiring word in which he commended his spirit to his Father, is the note of acceptance for himself and for us all. Just as he commends his spirit into the Father’s hand, so he brings all believers near to God, and henceforth we are in the hand of the Father, who is greater than all, and no one shall pluck us from there. Is this not a fertile field of thought? May the Holy Spirit often lead us to glean in it.
4. There are many other ways in which these words might be read, and they would be found to be all full of instruction. Like the steps of a ladder or the links of a golden chain, there is a mutual dependence and interlinking of each of the cries, so that one leads to another and that to a third. Separately or together our Master’s words overflow with instruction to thoughtful minds: but of all except one I must say, “Of which we cannot now speak particularly.”
5. Our text is the shortest of all the words of Calvary; it stands as two words in our language — “I thirst,” but in the Greek it is only one. I cannot say that it is short and sweet, for, alas, it was bitterness itself to our Lord Jesus; and yet out of its bitterness I trust there will come great sweetness for us. Though bitter to him in the speaking it will be sweet to us in the hearing, — so sweet that all the bitterness of our trials shall be forgotten as we remember the vinegar and gall of which he drank.
6. I. We shall by the assistance of the Holy Spirit try to regard these words of our Saviour in a fivefold light. First, we shall look upon them as THE SIGN OF HIS TRUE HUMANITY.
7. Jesus said, “I thirst,” and this is the complaint of a man. Our Lord is the Maker of the ocean and the waters that are above the firmament: it is his hand that closes or opens the bottles of heaven, and sends rain upon the evil and upon the good. “The sea is his, and he made it,” and all fountains and springs are of his digging. He pours out the streams that run among the hills, the torrents which rush down the mountains, and the flowing rivers which enrich the plains. One would have said, “If he were thirsty he would not tell us, for all the clouds and rains would be glad to refresh his brow, and the brooks and streams would joyously flow at his feet.” And yet, though he was Lord of all he had so fully taken upon himself the form of a servant and was so perfectly made in the likeness of sinful flesh, that he cried with fainting voice, “I thirst.” How truly man he is; he is, indeed, “bone of our bone and flesh of our flesh,” for he bears our infirmities. I invite you to meditate upon the true humanity of our Lord very reverently, and very lovingly. Jesus was proven to be really man, because he suffered the pains which belong to manhood. Angels cannot suffer thirst. A phantom, as some have called him, could not suffer in this fashion: but Jesus really suffered, not only the more refined pains of delicate and sensitive minds, but the rougher and more common pangs of flesh and blood. Thirst is a commonplace misery, such as may happen to peasants or beggars; it is a real pain, and not a thing of an imagination or a nightmare of dreamland. Thirst is no royal grief, but an evil of universal manhood; Jesus is brother to the poorest and most humble of our race. Our Lord, however, endured thirst to an extreme degree, for it was the thirst of death which was upon him, and more, it was the thirst of one whose death was not a common one, for “he tasted death for every man.” That thirst was caused, perhaps, in part by the loss of blood, and by the fever created by the irritation caused by his four grievous wounds. The nails were fastened in the most sensitive parts of the body, and the wounds were widened as the weight of his body dragged the nails through his blessed flesh, and tore his tender nerves. The extreme tension produced a burning feverishness. It was pain that dried his mouth and made it like an oven, until he declared, in the language of the twenty-second psalm, “My tongue cleaves to my jaws.” It was a thirst such as none of us has ever known, for the death dew has not yet condensed upon our brows. We shall perhaps know it in our measure in our dying hour, but not yet, nor ever so terribly as he did. Our Lord felt that grievous drought of dissolution by which all moisture seems dried up, and the flesh returns to the dust of death: those who have begun to tread the valley of the shadow of death know this. Jesus, being a man, escaped none of the ills which are allotted to man in death. He is indeed “Emmanuel, God with us” everywhere.
8. Believing this, let us tenderly feel how very near akin to us our Lord Jesus has become. You have been ill, and you have been parched with fever as he was, and then you too have gasped out “I thirst.” Your path runs close by that of your Master. He said, “I thirst,” in order that someone might bring him a drink, even as you have wished to have a cooling draught handed to you when you could not help yourself. Can you help feeling how very near Jesus is to us when his lips must be moistened with a sponge, and he must be so dependent upon others as to ask for a drink from their hand? Next time your fevered lips murmur “I am very thirsty,” you may say to yourself “Those are sacred words, for my Lord spoke in that way.” The words, “I thirst,” are a common voice in death rooms. We can never forget the painful scenes of which we have been witness, when we have watched the dissolving of the human frame. Some of those whom we loved very dearly we have seen quite unable to help themselves; the death sweat has been upon them, and this has been one of the signs of their approaching dissolution, that they have been parched with thirst, and could only mutter between their half-closed lips, “Give me a drink.” Ah, beloved, our Lord was so truly man that all our griefs remind us of him: the next time we are thirsty we may gaze upon him; and whenever we see a friend faint and thirsting while dying we may behold our Lord dimly, but truly, mirrored in his members. How near akin the thirsty Saviour is to us; let us love him more and more.
9. How great is the love which led him to such a condescension as this! Do not let us forget the infinite distance between the Lord of glory on his throne and the Crucified dried up with thirst. A river of the water of life, pure as crystal, proceeds today out of the throne of God and of the Lamb, and yet once he condescended to say, “I thirst.” He is Lord of fountains and all depths, but not a cup of cold water was placed to his lips. Oh, if he had at any time said, “I thirst,” before his angelic guards, they would surely have emulated the courage of the men of David when they cut their way to the well of Bethlehem that was within the gate, and drew water in jeopardy of their lives. Who among us would not willingly pour out his soul to death if he might only give refreshment to the Lord? And yet he placed himself for our sakes into a position of shame and suffering where no one would wait upon him, but when he cried, “I thirst,” they gave him vinegar to drink. Glorious stoop of our exalted Head! Oh Lord Jesus, we love you and we worship you! We would gladly lift your name on high in grateful memory of the depths to which you descended!
10. While thus we admire his condescension let our thoughts also turn with delight to his sure sympathy: for if Jesus said, “I thirst,” then he knows all our frailties and woes. The next time we are in pain or are suffering depression of spirit we will remember that our Lord understands it all, for he has had practical, personal experience of it. Neither in torture of body nor in sadness of heart are we deserted by our Lord; his line is parallel with ours. The arrow which has recently pierced you, my brother, was first stained with his blood. The cup of which you are made to drink, though it is very bitter, bears the mark of his lips around its brim. He has traversed the mournful way before you, and every footprint you leave in the sodden soil is stamped side by side with his footprints. Let the sympathy of Christ, then, be fully believed in and deeply appreciated, since he said, “I thirst.”
11. Henceforth, also, let us cultivate the spirit of resignation, for we may well rejoice to carry a cross which his shoulders have borne before us. Beloved, if our Master said, “I thirst,” do we expect every day to drink of streams from Lebanon? He was innocent, and yet he thirsted; shall we marvel if guilty ones are chastened now and then? If he was so poor that his garments were stripped from him, and he was hung up upon the tree, penniless and friendless, hungering and thirsting, will you henceforth groan and murmur because you bear the yoke of poverty and want? There is bread upon your table today, and there will be at least a cup of cold water to refresh you. You are not, therefore, as poor as he was. Do not complain, then. Shall the servant be above his Master, or the disciple above his Lord? Let patience have her perfect work. You do suffer. Perhaps, dear sister, you carry about with you a gnawing disease which eats at your heart, but Jesus took our sicknesses, and his cup was more bitter than yours. In your sickroom let the gasp of your Lord as he said. “I thirst,” go through your ears, and as you hear it let it touch your heart and cause you to gird yourself up and say, “Does he say, ‘I thirst?’ Then I will thirst with him and not complain, I will suffer with him and not murmur.” The Redeemer’s cry of “I thirst” is a solemn lesson of patience for his afflicted.
12. Once again, as we think of this “I thirst,” which proves our Lord’s humanity, let us resolve to shun no denials, but rather court them so that we may be conformed to his image. May we not be half ashamed of our pleasures when he says, “I thirst?” May we not despise our loaded table while he is so neglected? Shall it ever be a hardship to be denied the satisfying draught when he said, “I thirst.” Shall carnal appetites be indulged and bodies pampered when Jesus cried “I thirst?” What if the bread is stale, what if the medicine is nauseous; yet for his thirst there was no relief except gall and vinegar, and dare we complain? For his sake we may rejoice in self-denials, and accept Christ and a crust as all we desire between here and heaven. A Christian living to indulge the base appetites of a brute beast, to eat and to drink almost to gluttony and drunkenness, is utterly unworthy of the name. The conquest of the appetites, the entire subjugation of the flesh, must be achieved, for before our great Example said, “It is finished,” wherein I think he reached the greatest height of all, he stood as only upon the next lower step to that elevation, and said, “I thirst.” The power to suffer for another, the capacity to be self-denying even to an extreme to accomplish some great work for God — this is a thing to be sought after, and must be gained before our work is done, and in this Jesus is before us our example and our strength.
13. So I have tried to spy out a measure of teaching, by using that one glass for the soul’s eye, through which we look upon “I thirst” as the ensign of his true humanity.
14. II. Secondly, we shall regard these words, “I thirst,” as THE SIGN OF HIS SUFFERING SUBSTITUTION.
15. The great Surety says, “I thirst,” because he is placed in the sinner’s position, and he must therefore undergo the penalty of sin for the ungodly. “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” points to the anguish of his soul; “I thirst” expresses in part the torture of his body; and they were both necessary, because it is written about the God of justice that he is “able to destroy both soul and body in hell,” and the pangs that are due to law are of both kinds, touching both heart and flesh. See, brethren, where sin begins, and notice that it ends there. It began with the mouth of appetite, when it was sinfully gratified, and it ends when a kindred appetite is graciously denied. Our first parents picked forbidden fruit, and by eating killed the race. Appetite was the door of sin, and therefore in that point our Lord was put to pain. With “I thirst” the evil is destroyed and receives its expiation. I saw the other day the emblem of a serpent with its tail in its mouth, and if I carry it a little beyond the artist’s intention the symbol may illustrate appetite swallowing itself up. A carnal appetite of the body, the satisfaction of the desire for food, first brought us down under the first Adam, and now the pang of thirst, the denial of what the body craved for, restores us to our place.
16. Nor is this all. We know from experience that the present effect of sin in every man who indulges in it is thirst of soul. The mind of man is like the daughters of the horseleech, which cry for ever “Give, give.” Metaphorically understood, thirst is dissatisfaction, the craving of the mind for something which it does not have, but which it pines for. Our Lord says, “If any man thirsts, let him come to me and drink,” that thirst being the result of sin in every ungodly man at this moment. Now Christ standing in the place of the ungodly suffers thirst as a type of his enduring the result of sin. Still more solemn is the reflection that according to our Lord’s own teaching, thirst will also be the eternal result of sin, for he says concerning the rich glutton, “In hell he lifts up his eyes, being in torment,” and his prayer, which was denied him, was, “Father Abraham, send Lazarus, so that he may dip the tip of his finger in water and cool my tongue, for I am tormented in this flame.” Now remember, if Jesus had not thirsted, every one of us would have thirsted for ever afar off from God, with an impassable gulf between us and heaven. Our sinful tongues, blistered by the fever of passion, must have burned for ever had not his tongue been tormented with thirst in our place. I suppose that the “I thirst” was uttered softly, so that perhaps only a few who stood near the cross heard it at all; in contrast with the louder cry of “Lama sabachthani” and the triumphant shout of “It is finished”: but that soft, expiring sigh, “I thirst,” has ended for us the thirst which otherwise, insatiably fierce, would have preyed upon us throughout all eternity. Oh, wondrous substitution of the just for the unjust, of God for man, of the perfect Christ for us guilty, hell-deserving rebels. Let us magnify and bless our Redeemer’s name.
17. It seems to me very wonderful that this “I thirst” should be, as it were, the end of it all. He had no sooner said “I thirst,” and sipped the vinegar, than he shouted, “It is finished”; and all was over: the battle was fought and the victory won for ever, and our great Deliverer’s thirst was the sign of his having defeated the last foe. The flood of his grief had passed the high-watermark, and began to be assuaged. The “I thirst” was the bearing of the last pang; what if I say it was the expression of the fact that his pangs had at last begun to cease, and their fury had spent itself, and left him able to feel his lesser pains? The excitement of a great struggle makes men forget thirst and faintness; it is only when all is over that they come back to themselves and notice the spending of their strength. The great agony of being forsaken by God was over, and he felt faint when the strain was withdrawn. I like to think of our Lord’s saying, “It is finished,” directly after he had exclaimed, “I thirst”; for these two voices come so naturally together. Our glorious Samson had been fighting our foes; heaps upon heaps he had slain his thousands, and now like Samson he was very thirsty. He sipped of the vinegar, and he was refreshed, and no sooner has he thrown off the thirst than he shouted like a conqueror, “It is finished,” and quitted the field, covered with renown. Let us exalt as we see our Substitute going through with his work even to the bitter end, and then with a “Consummatum est” [it is finished] returning to his Father, God. Oh souls, burdened with sin, rest here, and in resting live.
18. III. We will now take the text in a third way, and may the Spirit of God instruct us once again. The utterance of “I thirst” brought out A TYPE OF MAN’S TREATMENT OF HIS LORD.
19. It was a confirmation of the Scripture’s testimony with regard to man’s natural enmity towards God. According to modern thought man is a very fine and noble creature, struggling to become better. He is greatly to be commended and admired, for his sin is said to be a seeking after God, and his superstition is a struggling after light. Great and worshipful being that he is, truth is to be altered for him, the gospel is to be modulated to suit the tone of his various generations, and all the arrangements of the universe are to be rendered subservient to his interests. Justice must fly from the field lest it is severe to so deserving a being; as for punishment, it must not be whispered to his polite ears. In fact, the tendency is to exalt man above God and give him the highest place. But such is not the truthful estimate of man according to the Scriptures: there man is a fallen creature, with a carnal mind which cannot be reconciled to God; a worse than brutish creature, rendering evil for good, and treating his God with vile ingratitude. Alas, man is the slave and the dupe of Satan, and a black-hearted traitor to his God. Did not the prophecies say that man would give to his incarnate God gall to eat and vinegar to drink? It is done, he came to save, and man denied him hospitality: at the first there was no room for him at the inn, and at the last there was not one cool cup of water for him to drink; but when he thirsted they gave him vinegar to drink. This is man’s treatment of his Saviour. Universal manhood, left to itself, rejects, crucifies, and mocks the Christ of God. This too was the act of man at his best, when he is moved to pity; for it seems clear that he who lifted up the wet sponge to the Redeemer’s lips, did it in compassion. I think that Roman soldier meant well, at least well for a rough warrior with his little light and knowledge. He ran and filled a sponge with vinegar: it was the best way he knew of putting a few drops of moisture to the lips of one who was suffering so much; but though he felt a degree of pity, it was such as one might show to a dog; he felt no reverence, but mocked as he relieved. We read, “The soldiers also mocked him, offering him vinegar.” When our Lord cried, “Eloi, Eloi,” and afterwards said, “I thirst,” the people around the cross said, “Let him be, let us see whether Elijah will come to save him,” mocking him; and, according to Mark, he who gave the vinegar uttered much the same words. He pitied the sufferer, but he thought so little of him that he joined in the voice of scorn. Even when man treats the sufferings of Christ with compassion, and man would have ceased to be human if he did not, still he scorns him; the very cup which man gives to Jesus is at once scorn and pity, for “the tender mercies of the wicked are cruel.” See how man at his best mingles admiration of the Saviour’s person with scorn of his claims; writing books to hold him up as an example and at the same moment rejecting his deity; admitting that he was a wonderful man, but denying his most sacred mission; extolling his ethical teaching and then trampling on his blood: thus giving him drink, but that drink vinegar. Oh my hearers, beware of praising Jesus and denying his atoning sacrifice. Beware of rendering him homage and dishonouring his name at the same time.
20. Alas, my brethren, I cannot
say much on the score of man’s cruelty to our Lord
without touching myself and you. Have we not
often given him vinegar to drink? Did we not do so years
ago before we knew him? We used to melt when we heard
about his sufferings, but we did not turn from our sins.
We gave him our tears and then grieved him with our
sins. We thought sometimes that we loved him as we
heard the story of his death, but we did not change our
lives for his sake, nor put our trust in him, and so we
gave him vinegar to drink. Nor does the grief end here,
for have not the best works we have ever done, and the
best feelings we have ever felt, and the best prayers we
have ever offered, been tart and sour with sin? Can they
be compared to generous wine? Are they not more like
sharp vinegar? I wonder why he has ever received them,
as one marvels why he received this vinegar; and yet he
has received them, and smiled upon us for presenting
them. He knew once how to turn water into wine, and
in matchless love he has often turned our sour drink
offerings into something sweet for himself, though in
themselves, I think, they have been the juice of sour
grapes, sharp enough to set his teeth on edge. We
may therefore come before him, with all the rest of our
race, when God subdues them to repentance by his love,
and look on him whom we have pierced, and mourn for him
as one who is in bitterness for his firstborn. We may
well remember our faults today,
We, whose proneness to forget
Thy dear love, on Olivet
Bathed thy brow with bloody sweat;
We, whose sins, with awful power,
Like a cloud did o’er thee lower,
In that God-excluding hour;
We, who still, in thought and deed,
Often hold the bitter reed
To thee, in thy time of need.
21. I have touched on that point very lightly because I want a little more time to dwell upon a fourth view of this scene. May the Holy Spirit help us to hear a fourth tuning of the dolorous music, “I thirst.”
22. IV. I think, beloved friends, that the cry of “I thirst” was THE MYSTICAL EXPRESSION OF THE DESIRE OF HIS HEART — “I thirst.”
23. I cannot think that natural thirst was all he felt. He doubtless thirsted for water, but his soul was thirsty in a higher sense; indeed, he seems only to have spoken so that the Scriptures might be fulfilled concerning the offering of vinegar to him. He was always in harmony with himself, and his body was always expressive of his soul’s cravings as well as of its own longings. “I thirst” meant that his heart was thirsting to save men. This thirst had been on him from the earliest of his earthly days. “Did you not know,” he said, while yet a boy, “that I must be about my Father’s business?” Did he not tell his disciples, “I have a baptism to be baptized with and how I am constrained until it is accomplished?” He thirsted to pluck us from between the jaws of hell, to pay our redemption price, and set us free from the eternal condemnation which hung over us; and when on the cross the work was almost done his thirst was not assuaged, and could not be until he could say, “It is finished.” It is almost done, you Christ of God; you have almost saved your people; there remains only more one thing, that you should actually die, and hence your strong desire to come to the end and complete your labour. You were still constrained until the last pang was felt and the last word spoken to complete the full redemption, and hence your cry, “I thirst.”
24. Beloved, there is now upon our Master, and there always has been, a thirst after the love of his people. Do you not remember how that thirst of his was strong in the old days of the prophet? Call to mind his complaint in the fifth chapter of Isaiah, “Now I will sing to my Well-Beloved a song of my Beloved touching his vineyard. My Well-Beloved has a vineyard on a very fertile hill: and he fenced it, and gathered out its stones, and planted it with the choicest vine, and built a tower in the midst of it, and also made a wine-press in it.” [Isa 5:1,2] What was he looking for from his vineyard and its wine-press? What except for the juice of the vine that he might be refreshed? “And he looked that it should produce grapes, and it produced wild grapes,” — vinegar, and not wine; sourness, and not sweetness. So he was thirsting then. According to the sacred canticle of love, in the fifth chapter of the Song of Songs, we learn that when he drank in those olden times it was in the garden of his church that he was refreshed. What does he say? “I am come into my garden, my sister, my spouse: I have gathered my myrrh with my spice; I have eaten my honeycomb with my honey; I drank my wine with my milk; eat, oh friends; drink, yes, drink abundantly, oh beloved.” [So 5:1] In the same Song he speaks of his church, and says, “The roof of your mouth is as the best wine for my beloved, that goes down sweetly, causing the lips of those who are asleep to speak.” [So 7:9] And yet again in the eighth chapter the bride says, “I would cause you to drink of spiced wine of the juice of my pomegranate.” [So 8:2] Yes, he loves to be with his people; they are the garden where he walks for refreshment, and their love, their graces, are the milk and wine of which he delights to drink. Christ was always thirsty to save men, and to be loved by men; and we see a type of his lifelong desire when, being weary, he sat on the well and said to the woman of Samaria, “Give me a drink.” There was a deeper meaning in his words than she dreamed of, as a verse further down fully proves, when he said to his disciples, “I have food to eat that you do not know about.” He derived spiritual refreshment from the winning of that woman’s heart to himself.
25. And now, brethren, our blessed Lord has at this time a thirst for communion with each one of you who are his people, not because you can do him good, but because he can do you good. He thirsts to bless you and to receive your grateful love in return; he thirsts to see you looking with believing eye to his fulness, and holding out your emptiness so that he may supply it. He says, “Behold, I stand at the door and knock.” What does he knock for? It is so that he may eat and drink with you, for he promises that if we open to him he will enter in and sup with us and we with him. He is still thirsty, you see, for our poor love, and surely we cannot deny it to him. Come let us pour out full flagons, until his joy is fulfilled in us. And what makes him love us so? Ah, that I cannot tell, except his own great love. He must love; it is his nature. He must love his chosen whom he has once begun to love, for he is the same yesterday, today, and for ever. His great love makes him thirst to have us much nearer than we are; he will never be satisfied until all his redeemed are beyond gunshot of the enemy. I will give you one of his thirsty prayers — “Father, I will that they also whom you have given to me be with me where I am, so that they may behold my glory.” He wants you brother, he wants you, dear sister, he longs to have you completely to himself. Come to him in prayer, come to him in fellowship, come to him by perfect consecration, come to him by surrendering your whole being to the sweet mysterious influences of his Spirit. Sit at his feet with Mary, lean on his breast with John; yes, come with the spouse in the Song and say, “Let him kiss me with the kisses of his mouth, for his love is better than wine.” [So 1:2] He calls for that: will you not give it to him? Are you so frozen at heart that not a cup of cold water can be melted for Jesus? Are you lukewarm? Oh brother, if he says, “I thirst” and you bring him a lukewarm heart, that is worse than vinegar, for he has said, “I will spue you out of my mouth.” He can receive vinegar, but not lukewarm love. Come, bring him your warm heart, and let him drink from that purified chalice as much as he wishes. Let all your love be his. I know he loves to receive from you, because he delights even in a cup of cold water that you give to one of his disciples; how much more will he delight in the giving of your whole self to him? Therefore while he thirsts give him a drink today.
26. V. Lastly, the cry of “I thirst” is to us THE PATTERN OF OUR DEATH WITH HIM.
27. Do not you know, beloved, —
for I speak to those who know the Lord, — that you are
crucified together with Christ? Well, then, what does
this cry mean, “I thirst,” except this, that we should
thirst too? We do not thirst after the old manner in
which we were bitterly afflicted, for he has said, “He
who drinks of this water shall never thirst”: but now we
covet a new thirst, a refined and heavenly appetite, a
craving for our Lord. Oh you blessed Master, if we are
indeed nailed up to the tree with you, give us to thirst
after you with a thirst which only the cup of “the new
covenant in your blood” can ever satisfy. Certain
philosophers have said that they love the pursuit of
truth even better than the knowledge of truth. I differ
from them greatly, but I will say this, that next to the
actual enjoyment of my Lord’s presence I love to hunger
and to thirst after him. Rutherford used words somewhat
to this effect, “I thirst for my Lord and this is joy; a
joy which no man takes from me. Even if I may not come
to him, yet I shall be full of consolation, for it is
heaven to thirst after him, and surely he will never
deny a poor soul liberty to admire him, and adore him,
and thirst after him.” As for myself, I would grow more
and more insatiable after my divine Lord, and when I
have much of him I would still cry for more; and then
for more, and still for more. My heart shall not be
content until he is all in all to me, and I am
altogether lost in him. Oh to be enlarged in soul in
order to take deeper draughts of his sweet love, for our
heart cannot have enough. One would wish to be as the
spouse, who, when she had already been feasting in the
banqueting house, and had found his fruit sweet to her
taste, so that she was overjoyed, yet cried out,
“Sustain me with flagons, comfort me with apples, for I
am lovesick.” [So
2:5] She craved full flagons of love though
she was already overpowered by it. This is a kind of
sweet of which if a man has much he must have more, and
when he has more he is under a still greater necessity
to receive more, and so on, his appetite for
ever-growing by what it feeds upon, until he is filled
with all the fulness of God. “I thirst,” — indeed, this
is my soul’s word with her Lord. Borrowed from his lips
it well suits my mouth.
I thirst, but not as once I did,
The vain delights of earth to share;
Thy wounds, Emmanuel, all forbid
That I should seek my pleasures there.
Dear fountain of delight unknown!
No longer sink below the brim;
But overflow, and pour me down
A living and life-giving stream.
28. Jesus thirsted, then let us thirst in this dry and thirsty land where there is no water. Even as the hart pants after the water-brooks, our souls would thirst after you, oh God.
29. Beloved, let us thirst for the souls of our fellow men. I have already told you that such was our Lord’s mystical desire; let it be ours also. Brother, thirst to have your children saved. Brother, thirst I urge you to have your workpeople saved. Sister, thirst for the salvation of your class, thirst for the redemption of your family, thirst for the conversion of your husband. We ought all to have a longing for conversions. Is it so with each one of you? If not, bestir yourselves at once. Fix your hearts upon some unsaved one, and thirst until he is saved. It is the way by which many shall be brought to Christ, when this blessed soul-thirst of true Christian charity shall be upon those who are themselves saved. Remember how Paul said, “I say the truth in Christ, I do not lie, my conscience also bearing me witness in the Holy Spirit, that I have great heaviness and continual sorrow in my heart. For I could wish that I myself were accursed from Christ for my brethren, my kinsmen according to the flesh.” He would have sacrificed himself to save his countrymen, so heartily did he desire their eternal welfare. Let this mind be in you also.
30. As for yourselves, thirst after perfection. Hunger and thirst after righteousness, for you shall be filled. Hate sin, and heartily loathe it; but thirst to be holy as God is holy, thirst to be like Christ, thirst to bring glory to his sacred name by complete conformity to his will.
31. May the Holy Spirit work in
you the complete pattern of Christ crucified, and to him
shall be praise for ever and ever. Amen.
[Portions Of Scripture Read Before Sermon —
Mr 15:15-37
Ps 69:1-21]
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2014/03/25/shortest-of-seven-cries