The Wicked Man’s Life, Funeral, and Epitaph by
C. H. Spurgeon
A Sermon Delivered On Sunday Morning, June 13, 1858, By Pastor C. H. Spurgeon,
At The Music Hall, Royal Surrey Gardens.
And so I saw the wicked buried, who had come and gone from the place of the
holy, and they were forgotten in the city where they had so done: this is also
vanity. (Ec 8:10)
1. It is quite certain that there are immense benefits attending our present
mode of burial in extra mural cemeteries. It was high time that the dead should
be removed from the midst of the living—that we should not worship in the midst
of corpses, and sit in the Lord’s house on the Sabbath, breathing the noxious
effluvia of decaying bodies. But when we have said this, we must remember that
there are some advantages which we have lost by the removal of the dead, and
more especially by the wholesale mode of burial which now seems very likely to
become general. We are not frequently met by the array of dead. In the midst of
our crowded cities we sometimes see the sable hearse bearing the remains of men
to their last homes, but the funeral ceremonies are now mostly confined to those
sweet sleeping places beyond our walks, where the bodies rest of those who are
very dear to us. Now, I believe the sight of a funeral is a very healthy thing
for the soul. Whatever harm may come to the body by walking through the vault
and the catacomb, the soul can find much food for contemplation there, and much
material for thought. In the great villages, where some of us were accustomed to
live, we remember how, when the funeral came now and then, the tolling of the
bell preached to all the villagers a better sermon than they had heard in the
church for many a day; and we remember, how as children, we used to cluster
around the grave, and look at that which was not so frequent an occurrence in
the midst of a rare and sparse population; and we remember the solemn thoughts
which used to arise even in our young hearts when we heard the words uttered,
“Earth to earth, ashes to ashes, dust to dust.” The solemn falling of the few
grains of ashes upon the coffin lid was the sowing of good seed in our hearts.
And afterwards, when we have in our childish play climbed over those nettle
bound graves, and seated ourselves upon those moss grown tombstones, we have had
many a lesson preached to us by the dull cold tongue of death, more eloquent
than anything we have heard from the lips of living men, and more likely to
remain with us in later years, but now we see little of death. We have fulfilled
Abraham’s wish beyond what he desired—we “bury the dead out of our sight;” it is
rarely that we see them, and a stranger passing through our streets might say,
“Do these live for ever? for I see no funerals among the millions of this city,
I see no signs of death.”
2. We shall this morning want you, first of all, to walk with a living man; it
is said of him that he “came and went from the place of the holy:” next, I shall
want you to attend his funeral, and then, in conclusion I shall ask you to
assist in writing his epitaph—“and they were forgotten in the city where they
had so done: this also is vanity.”
3. I. In the first place, HERE IS SOME GOOD COMPANY FOR YOU; some with whom you
may walk to the house of God, for it is said of them, that they came and went
from the place of the holy. By this, I think we may understand the place where
the righteous meet to worship God. God’s house may be called “the place of the
holy.” Still, if we confine ourselves strictly to the Hebrew, and to the
connection, it appears that by the “place of the holy” is intended the judgment
seat, the place where the magistrate dispenses justice; and alas! there are some
wicked who come and go even to the place of judgment, to judge their fellow
sinners. And we may with equal propriety consider it in a third sense to
represent the pulpit, which should be “the place of the holy;” but we have seen
the wicked come and go even from the pulpit, though God had never commanded them
to declare his statutes.
4. In the first place we will take this as representing the house of God. What a
sight it is to see the great crowds coming up to the sanctuary of the Lord. I am
sure, as we saw the multitudes coming up to the house of God, there must have
been a peculiar thrill of joy pass through our hearts. It reminds us of the
ancient gathering in Zion’s temple when there the tribes went up, the tribes of
the Lord, to worship at the sanctuary of God. Oh! it is a noble sight when with
joy and gladness we see the young and the old, the grayheaded and the children,
all of them pressing forward in one eager throng to worship the Lord of Hosts,
and listen to the voice of his sacred oracle. But your pleasure must have a
great deal of alloy if you stop for a moment and dissect the congregation.
Separate the goodly mass: in a heap it sparkles like gold; pull aside the
threads, and alas! you will see that there are some not made of the precious
metal, for “we have seen the wicked come and go from the place of the holy.”
Gathered in this throng this morning we have here men who almost profane the
spot in which they are found. Last night’s revel has left its imprint upon their
faces. We have others who will, before this day is closed, be cursing God in the
house of Satan. There are many to be found here who have during this week been
spending their time in lying, cheating, and swindling in the midst of their
business. I do not doubt there are some here who have taken every advantage that
was possible of their fellowmen, and if they have not come within the clutches
of the law it certainly has not been their fault. We have too, I do not doubt,
in such a multitude—yes, I may speak with confidence—we have men here who have,
during the past week, and at other times, defiled themselves with sins that we
will not mention, for it would be a shame for us to speak of the things which
they do in secret. Little do we know when we look here from this pulpit—it looks
like one great field of flowers, fair to look upon—how many a root of deadly
henbane and noxious nightshade grows here; and though you all look fair and
good, yet “I have seen the wicked come and go from the place of the holy.”
5. Shall we just take the wicked man’s arm and walk with him to the house of
God? When he begins to go, if he is one who has neglected going in his
childhood, which perhaps is not extremely likely, when he begins to go even in
his childhood, or whenever you choose to mention, you will notice that he is not
often affected by the sound of the ministry. He goes up to the chapel with
flippancy and mirth. He goes to it as he would to a theatre or any other place
of amusement, as a means of passing away his Sunday and killing time. Merrily he
trips in there; but I have seen the wicked man when he went away look far
different from what he did when he entered. His plumes had been trailing in the
dust. As he walks home there is no more flippancy and lightness, for he says,
“Surely the Lord God has been in that place and I have been compelled to
tremble. I went to scoff but I am obliged, in coming away, to confess that there
is a power in religion, and the services of God’s house are not all dulness
after all.” Perhaps you have hoped good for this man. But, alas! he forgot it
all, and cast away all his impressions. And he came again the next Sunday, and
that time he felt again. Again the arrow of the Lord seemed to stick fast in his
heart. But, alas! it was like the rushing of water. There was a mark for a
moment, but his heart was soon healed, he did not feel the blow; and as for
persuading him to salvation, he, like the deaf adder, “charm we ever so wisely,”
he would not regard us so as to turn from his ways. And I have seen him come and
go until years have rolled over his head, and he has still filled his seat, and
the minister is still preaching, but in his case preaching in vain. The tears of
mercy are still flowing for him; the thunders of justice are still launched
against him; but he remains just as he was. In him there is no change except
this, that now he grows hard and callous. You do not now hear him say that he
trembles under the Word—not he. He is like a horse that has been in the battle,
he does not fear the noise of the drum nor the rolling of the smoke, and is not
affected by the din of the cannon. He comes up, he hears a faithful warning, and
he says, “What of it? this is for the wicked.” He hears an affectionate
invitation, and he says, “Go your way, when I have a more convenient time I will
send for you.” And so he comes and goes up to the house of God and back again.
Like the door upon its hinges he turns into the sanctuary today, and out of it
tomorrow. “He comes and goes from the place of the holy.” It may be, however, he
goes even further. Almost persuaded to be a Christian by some sermon from a
Paul, he trembles at his feet. He thinks he really repents; he unites himself
with the Christian church: he makes a profession of religion; but, alas! his
heart has never been changed. The sow is washed, but it still is the sow. The
dog has been driven from its vomit, but its doggish nature is still the same.
The Ethiopian is clothed in a white garment, but he has not changed his skin.
The leopard has been covered all over, but he has not washed his spots away. He
is the same as he always was. He goes to the baptismal pool a black sinner, and
he comes out of it the same. He goes to the table of the Lord a deceiver; he
eats the bread and drinks the wine, and he returns the same. Sacrament after
Sacrament passes away. The Holy Eucharist is broken in his presence; he receives
it, but he comes and he goes, for he does not receive it for the love of it. He
is a stranger to vital godliness, and as a wicked man “he comes and he goes from
the place of the holy.”
6. But is it not a marvellous thing that men should be able to do this? I have
sometimes heard a preacher so earnestly put the matter of salvation before men,
that I have said, “Surely they must see this.” I have heard him plead as though
he pleaded for his own life, and I have said, “Surely they must feel this.” And
I have turned around, and I have seen the handkerchief used to brush away the
tear, and I have said, “Good must follow this.” You have brought your own
friends under the sound of the Word, and you have prayed the whole sermon
through that the arrow may reach the white and penetrate the centre of the mark,
and you said to yourself, “What an appropriate discourse.” Still you kept on
praying, and you were pleased to see that there was some emotion. You said, “Oh,
it will touch his heart at last.” But is it not strange that, though wooed by
love divine, man will not melt; though thundered at by Sinai’s own terrific
thunderbolts they will not tremble; yes, though Christ himself incarnate in the
flesh should preach again, yet they would not regard him, and maybe would treat
him today as their parents did only yesterday, when they dragged him out of the
city and would have cast him headlong from the summit of the mount on which the
city was built. I have seen the wicked come and go from the place of the holy
until his conscience was seared, as with a hot iron. I have seen him come and go
from the place of the holy until he had become harder than the nether millstone,
until he was past feeling, given up “to work all manner of uncleanness with
greediness.”
7. But now we are going to change our journey. Instead of going to the house of
God we will go another way. I have seen the wicked go to the place of the holy,
that is to the judgment bench. We have had glaring instances even in the
criminal calendar of men who have been seen sitting on a judgment bench one day,
and in a short time they have been standing at the dock themselves. I have
wondered what must be the peculiar feelings of a man who officiates as a judge,
knowing that he who judges has been a lawbreaker himself. A wicked man, a
greedy, lustful, drunken man—you know such are to be discovered among petty
magistrates. We have known these to sit and condemn the drunkard, when, had the
world known how they went to bed the night before, they would have said of them,
“You who judge another do the same things yourself.” There have been instances
known of men who have condemned a poor wretch for shooting a rabbit or stealing
a few pheasants’ eggs, or some enormous crime like that, and they themselves
have been robbing the coffers of the bank, embezzling funds to an immense
extent, and cheating everyone. How singular they must feel. One would think it
must be a very strange emotion that passes over a man when he executes the law
upon one which he knows ought to be executed upon himself. And yet, I have seen
the wicked come and go from the holy place, until he came to think that his sins
were not sins, that the poor must be severely upbraided for their iniquities,
that what he called the lower classes must be kept in check, not thinking that
there are none so low as those who condemn others while they do the same things
themselves; speaking about checks and barriers, when neither check nor barrier
were of any use to himself; talking of curbing others and of judging righteous
judgment, when had righteous judgment been carried out to the letter, he would
himself have been the prisoner, and not have been honoured with a commission
from government. Ah! is it not a sight that we may well look at, when we see
justice perverted and the law turned upside down by men who “come and go from
the place of the holy.”
8. But the third case is worse still. “I have seen the wicked come and go from
the place of the holy”—that is, the pulpit. If there is a place under high
heaven more holy than another, it is the pulpit from where the gospel is
preached. This is the Thermophylae of Christendom; here must the great battle be
fought between Christ’s church and the invading hosts of a wicked world. This is
the last vestige of anything sacred that is left to us. We have no altars now;
Christ is our altar: but we have a pulpit still left, a place which, when a man
enters, he might well put off his shoes from his feet, for the place where he
stands is holy. Consecrated by a Saviour’s presence, established by the
clearness and the force of an apostle’s eloquence, maintained and upheld by the
faithfulness and fervour of a succession of Evangelists who, like stars, have
marked the era in which they lived, and stamped it with their names, the pulpit
is handed down to those of us who occupy it now with a prestige of everything
that is great and holy. Yet I have seen the wicked come and go from it. Alas! if
there is a sinner that is hardened, it is the man who sins and occupies his
pulpit. We have heard of such a man living in the commission of the foulest
sins, and at length has been discovered; and yet such is the filthiness of
mankind, that when he began to preach to the people again, they clustered around
the beast for the mere sake of hearing what he would say to them. We have known
cases, too, where men, when convicted to their own face, have unblushingly
persevered in proclaiming a gospel which their lives denied. And perhaps these
are the hardest of all sinners to deal with! But if the garment is once defiled,
away with all thoughts of the pulpit then. He must be clean who ministers at the
altar. Every saint must be holy, but he, holiest of all, who seeks to serve his
God. Yet, we must mourn to say it, the church of God every now and then has had
a sun that was black instead of white, and a moon that was as a clot of blood,
instead of being full of fairness and beauty. Happy is the church when God gives
her holy ministers; but unhappy is the church where wicked men preside. I know
ministers to this day, however, who know more about fishing rods than they do
about chapters in the Bible; more about fox hounds than about hunting after
men’s souls; who understand a great deal more of the spring and the net than
they do of the net for catching souls, or earnest exhortations for men to flee
from the wrath to come. We know such even now: still uproarious at a farmer’s
dinner, still the very loudest to give the toast and clash the glass, still
mightiest among the mighty found, of the carefree, the wild, and the dissolute.
Pity on the church that still allows it! Happy the day when all such people
shall be purged from the pulpit; then it shall stand forth “clear as the sun,
fair as the moon, and terrible as an army with banners.” “I have seen the wicked
come and go from the place of the holy.”
9. II. And now WE ARE GOING TO HIS FUNERAL. I shall want you to attend it. You
need not be particular about having on a hat band, or being arrayed in garments
of mourning. It is not necessary for the wretch we are going to bury. There is
no need for any very great outward signs of mourning, for he will be forgotten
even in the city where he has done this: therefore we do not need particularly
to mourn for him. Let us first go to the funeral and look at the outward
ceremony. We will suppose one or two cases.
10. There is a man who has come and gone from the place of the holy. He has made
a very blazing profession. He has been a county magistrate. Now, do you see what
a stir is made about his poor bones? There is the hearse covered with plumes,
and there follows a long string of carriages. The country people stare to see
such a long train of carriages coming to follow one poor worm to its resting
place. What pomp! what grandeur! See how the place of worship is hung with
black. There seems to be intense mourning made over this man. Will you just
think of it for a minute, and who are they mourning for? A hypocrite! Whom is
all this pomp for? For one who was a wicked man; a man who made a pretension of
religion; a man who judged others, and who ought to have been condemned himself.
All this pomp for putrid clay; and what is it more or better than that? When
such a man dies, ought he not to be buried with the burial of an ass? Let him be
drawn and dragged from the gates of the city. What has he to do with pomp? At
the head of the mournful cavalcade is Beelzebub, leading the procession, and,
looking back with twinkling eye, and leer of malicious joy, says, “Here is fine
pomp to conduct a soul to hell with!” Ah! plumes and hearse for the man who is
being conducted to his last abode in Tophet! A string of carriages to do honour
to the man whom God has cursed in life and cursed in death; for the hope of the
hypocrite is always an accursed one. And a bell is ringing, and the clergyman is
reading the funeral service, and is burying the man “in sure and certain hope.”
Oh! what a laugh rings up from somewhere a little lower down than the grave! “In
sure and certain hope,” says Satan; “ha! ha! your sure and certain hope is folly
indeed. Trust to a bubble, and hope to fly to the stars; trust to the wild
winds, that they shall conduct you safely to heaven; but trust to such a hope as
that, and you are a madman indeed.” Oh! if we judged properly, when a hypocrite
died, we would give him no honour. If men could only see a little deeper than
the skin, and read the thoughts of the heart, they would not patronise this
great, black lie, and lead a long string of carriages through the streets; they
would say, “No, the man was good for nothing, he was the outward skin without
the life; he professed to be what he was not; he lived the scornful life of a
deceiver; let him have the burial of Jeconiah; do not let him have a funeral at
all; let him be cast away as loathsome carrion, for that is all he is.” Ah! when
a godly man dies, you may make lamentation over him, you may well carry him with
solemn pomp to his grave, for there is an odour in his bones, there is a sweet
savour about him that even God delights in, for “precious in the sight of the
Lord is the death of his saints.” But the gilded hypocrite, the varnished
deceiver, the well accoutred wolf in sheeps’ clothing—away with pomp for him!
Why should men bewail him? They do not do it; why should they pretend to do so,
then, and give the outward semblance of a grief, where they feel none?
11. But possibly I may have seen the wicked man buried in a more quiet way. He
is taken quietly to his tomb with as little pomp as possible, and he is with all
decency and solemnity interred in the grave. And now listen to the minister. If
he is a man of God, when he buries such a man as he ought to be buried, you do
not hear a solitary word about the character of the deceased; you hear nothing
at all about any hopes of everlasting life. He is put into his grave. The
minister well remembers how he did “come and go from the place of the holy;” he
remembers full well how he used to sit in the gallery and listen to his
discourse. And there is one who weeps; and the minister stands there and weeps
too, to think how all his labour has been lost, and one of his hearers has been
destroyed, and that without hope. But note how cautiously he speaks, even to the
wife. He would give her all the hope he could, poor widow as she is, and he
speaks very gently. She says, “I hope my husband is in heaven.” He holds his
tongue; he is very silent; if he is of a sympathetic nature he will be quiet.
And when he speaks about the deceased in his next Sunday’s sermon, if he
mentions him at all, he refers to him as a doubtful case, he uses him rather as
a beacon than as an example, and bids other men beware how they presume to waste
their opportunities, and let the golden hours of their Sabbath day roll by
disregarded. “I have seen the wicked buried who have come and gone from the
place of the holy.” As for the pompous funeral, that was ludicrous. A man might
almost laugh to see the folly of honouring the man who deserved to be
dishonoured, but as for the still and silent and truthful funeral, how sad it
is! But brethren, after all, we ought to judge ourselves very much in the light
of our funerals. That is the way we judge other things. Look at your fields
tomorrow. There is the flaunting poppy, and there by the hedge rows are many
flowers that lift their heads to the sun. Judging them by their leaf, you might
prefer them to the sober coloured wheat. But wait until the funeral when the
poppy shall be gathered and the weeds shall be bound up in a bundle to be
burned—gathered into a heap in the field to be consumed, to be made into compost
for the soil. But see the funeral of the wheat. What a magnificent funeral has
the wheat sheaf. “Harvest home” is shouted as it is carried to the garner, for
it is a precious thing. Even so let each of us so live, as considering that we
must die. Oh! I would desire to live that when I leave this mortal state, men
may say, “There is one gone who sought to make the world better. However crude
his efforts might have been, he was an honest man; he sought to serve God, and
there he lies who did not fear the face of man.” I would have every Christian
seek to win such a funeral as this—a funeral like Stephen’s: “And devout men
carried him to his sepulchre, and made great lamentation over him.” I remember
the funeral of one pastor—I attended it. Many ministers of the gospel walked
behind the coffin to attend their brother, and pay honour to him. And then came
a long string of members of the church, each wept as if they had lost a father.
And I remember the solemn sermon that was preached in the chapel, all hung with
black, when all of us wept because a great man had fallen that day in Israel. We
felt that a prince had been taken from us, and we all said, like Elijah’s
servant, “My father, my father, the horses of Israel and its chariots.” But I
have seen the wicked buried that have come and gone from the place of the holy,
and I saw nothing of this sort. I saw a flickering kind of sorrow, like the
dying of a wick that is almost consumed. I saw that those who paid a decent
respect to the corpse did it for the widow’s sake, and for the sake of those who
were left behind; but if they could have dealt with the corpse as their nature
seemed to dictate, they ought to have dealt with the man when living; they would
have said, “Let him be buried at the dead of night; let him have some unhallowed
corner in the churchyard where the nettle long has grown; let the frog croak
over his tomb; let the owl make her resting place over his sepulchre, and let
her hoot all night long, for he well deserves to be hooted at; let no laurel and
no cypress grow upon his grave, and let no rose twine itself as a sweet bower
around the place where he sleeps; let no cowslip and no lily of the valley deck
the grass that covers him; there let him lie; do not let the green grass grow,
but let the place be accursed where the hypocrite sleeps, for he deserves it,
and even so let it be.” “I have seen the wicked buried who have come and gone
from the place of the holy.”
12. But there is a sad thing yet to come. We must look a little deeper than the
mere ceremony of the burial, and we shall see that there is a great deal more in
some people’s coffins besides their corpses. When old Robert Flockart was buried
a few weeks ago in Edinburgh, he was buried as I think a Christian minister
should be, for his old Bible and hymn book were placed upon the top of the
coffin. Had he been a soldier, I suppose he would have had his sword put there;
but he had been a Christian soldier, and so they buried with him his Bible and
hymn book as his trophies. It was well that such a trophy should be on that
coffin; but there is a great deal, as I have said, inside some people’s coffins.
If we had eyes to see invisible things, and we could break the lid of the
hypocrite’s coffin, we should see a great deal there. There lie all his hopes.
The wicked man may come and go from the place of the holy, but he has no hope of
being saved. He thought, because he had attended the place of the holy
regularly, therefore he was safe for another world. There lie his hopes, and
they are to be buried with him. Of all the frightful things that a man can look
upon, the face of a dead hope is the most horrible. A dead child is a pang
indeed to a mother’s heart; a dead wife or a dead husband, to the heart of the
bereaved must be sorrowful indeed; but a coffin full of dead hopes—did you ever
see such a load of misery carried to the grave as that? Wrapped in the same
shroud, there lie all his dead pretensions. When he was here he made a
pretension of being respectable; there lies his respect, he shall be a hissing
and a reproach for ever. He made a pretension of being sanctified, but the mask
is off now, and he stands in all his native blackness. He made pretensions about
being God’s elect, but his election is discovered now to be a rejection. He
thought himself to be clothed in the Saviour’s righteousness, but he finds that
he justified himself: Christ had never given him his imputed righteousness. And
so he sleeps. The tongue that prattled once so pleasantly concerning godliness
is now silent. That hypocritical eye that once flashed with the pretended fire
of joy—it is now all dark, dark. That brain that thought of inventions to
deceive—the worm shall feed on it. And that heart of his that once throbbed
beneath ribs that were scarcely thick enough to hide the transparency of his
hypocrisy shall now be devoured by demons. There are dead pretensions inside
that rotting skeleton, and dead hopes too. But there is one thing that sleeps
with him in his coffin that he had set his heart upon. He had set his heart upon
being known after he was gone. He thought surely after he had departed this
life, he would be handed down to posterity and be remembered. Now read the
text—“And they were forgotten in the city where they had so done.” There is his
hope of fame. Every man likes to live a little longer than his life—Englishmen
especially—for there is scarcely to be found a rock in all England which even a
goat might scarcely climb up where there may not be discovered the initials of
the names of men, who never had any other mode of attaining to fame, and
therefore thought they would inscribe their names there. Go where you will, you
find men attempting to be known; and this is the reason why many people write in
newspapers, else they never would be known. All of us have a hundred little
inventions for keeping our names going after we are dead. But with the wicked
man it is all in vain; he shall be forgotten. He has done nothing to make anyone
remember him. Ask the poor; “Do you remember So-and-so?” “Very hard master, sir.
He always cut us down to the last sixpence; and we do not wish to remember him.”
Their children will not hear his name; they will forget him entirely. Ask the
church, “Do you remember So-and-so? he was a member.” “Well,” one says, “I
remember him certainly, his name was on the books, but we never had his heart.
He used to come and go, but I never could talk with him. There was nothing
spiritual in him. There was a great deal of sounding bell metal and brass, but
no gold. I never could discover that he had the ‘root of the matter in him.’” No
one thinks of him, and he will soon be forgotten. The chapel grows old, there
comes up another congregation, and somehow or other they talk about the old
deacons that used to be there, who were good and holy men and about the old
lady, that used to be so eminently useful in visiting the sick; about the young
man who rose out of that church, who was so useful in the cause of God; but you
never hear mention made of his name; he is quite forgotten. When he died his
name was struck out of the books, he was reported as being dead, and all
remembrance of him died with him. I have often noticed how soon wicked things
die when the man dies who originated them. Look at Voltaire’s philosophy: with
all the noise it made in his time—where is it now? There is just a little of it
lingering, but it seems to have gone. And there was Tom Paine, who did his best
to write his name in letters of damnation, and one would think he might have
been remembered. But who cares for him now? Except among a few, here and there,
his name has passed away. And all the names of error, and heresy, and schism,
where do they go? You hear about St. Augustine to this day, but you never hear
about the heretics he attacked. Everyone knows about Athanasius, and how he
stood up for the divinity of the Lord Jesus Christ; but we have almost forgotten
the life of Arius, and scarcely ever think of those men who aided and abetted
him in his folly. Bad men die out quickly, for the world feels it is a good
thing to be rid of them; they are not worth remembering. But the death of a good
man, the man who was sincerely a Christian—how different is that! And when you
see the body of a saint, if he has served God with all his might, how sweet it
is to look upon him—ah, and to look upon his coffin too, or upon his tomb in
later years! Go into Bunhill Fields, and stand by the memorial of John Bunyan,
and you will say, “Ah! there lies the head that contained the brain which
thought out that wondrous dream of the Pilgrim’s Progress from the City of
Destruction to the better land. There lies the finger that wrote those wondrous
lines which depict the story of him who came at last to the land Beulah, and
waded through the flood, and entered into the Celestial City. And there are the
eyelids which he once spoke of, when he said, ‘If I lie in prison until the moss
grows on my eyelids, I will never make a promise to stop preaching.’” And there
is that bold eye that penetrated the judge, when he said, “If you will let me
out of prison today, I will preach again tomorrow, by the help of God.” And
there lies that loving hand that was always ready to receive into communion all
those who loved the Lord Jesus Christ: I love the hand that wrote the book,
“Water Baptism no Bar to Christian Communion.” I love him for that sake alone,
and if he had written nothing else except that, I would say, “John Bunyan, be
honoured for ever.” And there lies the foot that carried him up Snow Hill to go
and make peace between a father and a son, in that cold day, which cost him his
life. Peace to his ashes! Wait, oh John Bunyan, until your Master sends his
angel to blow the trumpet; and I think, when the archangel sounds it, he will
almost think of you, and this shall be a part of his joy, that honest John
Bunyan, the greatest of all Englishmen, shall rise from his tomb at the blowing
of that great trump. You cannot say so of the wicked. What is a wicked man’s
body but a rotten piece of offensiveness? Put it away, and thank God there are
worms to eat such a thing up, and thank him still more, that there is a worm
called Time, to eat up the evil influence and the accursed memory, which such a
man leaves behind him. “All this have I seen, and applied my heart to every work
that is done.”
13. III. We are to WRITE HIS EPITAPH; and his epitaph is contained in these
short words: “this also is vanity.” And now in a few words I will endeavour to
show that it is vanity for a man to come and go from the house of God, and yet
have no true religion. If I made up my mind to hate God, to sin against him, and
to be lost at last, I would do it thoroughly, out and out. If I had determined
to be damned, and had calculated the chances, and made up my mind that it would
be better to be cast away for ever, I know there is one thing I would not do, I
would not go to the house of God. Why, if I made up my mind to be lost, what is
the good of going there to be teased about it? Because, if the man is faithful,
he will prick my conscience and wake me up. If I am determined and have made up
my mind to be lost, let me go to hell as easily as I can; what need is there
that my conscience should be pricked, and this great stone laid in my way to
keep me from going there? Besides, I hold that, for a man who has no love for
the house of God, regularly to attend because he thinks it is respectable, is
just one of the most pitiful kinds of drudgery that can be met with. If I did
not love the house of God, I would not go there. If it were not a delight to me
to be found in the sanctuary of God, singing his praises, and hearing his word,
I would stay away. To be seen going to chapel twice on the Sabbath, sitting as
God’s people sit, rising when they rise, and singing about what you do not feel;
hearing that which pricks your conscience, and listening to the reading of
promises that do not belong to you; hearing about heaven, that is not yours,
being frightened with hell, which is to be yours for ever—why, the man is just a
born fool that goes to the house of God, except he has an interest in it. We may
commend him for going; it is a respectable thing, perhaps, and right that it
should be so; but I submit it is an intolerable drudgery to go always to the
house of God, if you have made up your mind to be lost. Now, on this man’s tomb
must be written at last—“there was a man who would not serve God, but who did
have enough courage to stand up against God. There is a man so silly that he
pretended to be religious, and so wicked that he was a hypocrite for his
pretensions.” Why, although you must deplore a wicked man’s wickedness as a
fearful crime, yet there is some kind of respect to be paid to the man who is
downright honest in it; but not an atom of respect to the man who wants to be
religious and a hypocrite. He wishes, if he can, just to save his neck at last;
just, as he thinks, to do enough to let him get off free when he comes to lay
dying; enough to keep his conscience quiet, enough to look respectable; enough
as he thinks, when he dies to give him a little chance of entering heaven,
though it is, as it were, to save his neck or nothing. Ah, poor thing! Well may
we write over him, “This also is vanity!” But, sir, you will be more laughed at
for your pretensions than if you had made none. Having professed to be
religious, and having pretended to carry it out, you shall have more scorn than
if you had came out in your right colours, and have said, “Who is the Lord, that
I should fear him? Who is Jehovah, that I should obey his voice?” And now, are
there any here who are so wicked as to choose eternal wrath? Have I any here so
besotted as to choose destruction? Yes, yes, many; for if today, my hearer, you
are choosing sin; if you are choosing self-righteousness, if you are choosing
pride, or lust, or the pleasures of this world; remember, you are choosing
damnation, for the two things go together. Sin is the guilt, and hell is the
bread beneath it. If you choose sin, you have virtually chosen perdition. Think
of this, I beseech you.
Oh Lord! do you the sinner turn!
Now rouse him from his senseless state;
Oh let him not your counsel spurn,
Nor rue his fatal choice too late.
14. May the Lord lead you to Jesus Christ, who is the way, the truth and the
life! And when you are buried, may you be buried with the righteous, and may
your last end be like his!
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